Our daughter and son in law sold their house, so our lovely old "retired" ewes went to live with another family on a small acreage with good feed.
We brought their ram "Vlad the Impaler home here to the farm.
He is a lovable big boy, always wanting a pat or scratch every time you are near him, he has fitted in well.
It has been a harsh winter, with many big frosts ,many mornings dipping well into the minus figures. We have had our water pipes burst a couple of times.
We had a go at making our own pasta which was fun and reasonably successful , we teamed it with our home canned turkey bolognaise and it was delicious.
I also made jalepeno cheese balls and they have become a firm favourite to have with drinks and nibbles.
Our Hakeas have been blooming, adding a little colour to what has been a rather dismal landscape.
We did a trip to Newcastle to meet our daughter and bring home our eldest grandaughter to the farm for a week.
While there we visited a dear old friend who was ill in hospital.
We had a great week with lots of farm activities, egg collecting, cooking, feeding the sheep, craft activities, tractor rides, caught up with cousins and had several bonfires.
We Travelled to Wollongong to return our granddaughter home and were able to attend an early 8th birthday for her at the Botanical gardens.
By the time we returned home our other daughter and three grandchildren had arrived at the farm for a three week visit while they were between the sale of one home and the purchase of another.
We had a wonderful time with them, doing lots of activities with a few other special outings thrown in along the way.
During this time we still had our usual volunteer jobs, rail barracks cleaning, campground facilities cleaning and the compilation and printing of our local monthly paper.
During this period our friends up the road were on holidays and we helped out by feeding stock and pets, chickens and garden watering.
Brian helped his brother with the drenching, tagging and marking of his sheep and lambs.
The lambs are all a little sore and sorry for a while afterwards.
Brian celebrated a birthday and we had a cake,
The kids all put together and contributed a large amount of money towards a new BBQ for him.
He had to build it which kept him busy for a while.
Our son also celebrated a birthday, he turned 40 which I still find hard to believe.
We had a large family/friends gathering here at the farm , with a pig on a spit and a help yourself buffet dinner.
The next morning( as we hadn't cleaned up), there was one cute kelpie that thought he had struck gold, finding lots of little pork tidbits to scavenge.
Our older builder has been back, this time to install a "proper" toilet door instead of the horrible plastic pull across door we have dealt with for years, and a nice new aluminium window to replace the old set of window louvers.
We are really pleased with the results, he will now move onto a few more small jobs that free us up to do other things.
Sadly we had to make a sudden trip back down to Newcastle as our dear friend Vic passed away and we attended his funeral. Vic was the very first person that we befriended when we first moved to Newcastle nearly 40 years ago and we have remained friends ever since. He made many trips to the farm over the years helping Brian with many projects.
RIP Vic.
The farm is just ever so dry,Brian put the drone up again last week.
We have had horrible dust storms, the hand feeding
continues daily, both here, next door while they were away,
and also at the neighbours other block down the road.
We took a couple of days to have a small break away and travelled to Stuart Town to catch up with some old friends., we saw many, many kangaroors, wallaroos and wallabies on the road both dead and alive, more than I can ever remember seeing in my whole life,
We had several near misses, as they were just every where.
Our friends that we caught up with are struggling to feed their sheep as well but they are trialing a system where they are growing their own green fodder.
They have a "room". heated,with lights, and timed misters that "grows" their fodder over a 7 day period.
Barley seed goes into trays on day 1,
This is then kept at 23 deg, with lights and misting for 6 days( another set of trays with seed is added each day for 6 days)
By day 7 the seeds that were put in on day 1 now have sprouted and grown daily to lush green fodder.
They pull 3 big trays(9 rectangles of fodder) each day,
They chop them up into smaller pieces,
Load it into their vehicle,
and feed it in equal proportions of pellets and vetch to their mob of Australian White sheep. They seemed to be thriving on it, many had lambs and they all seemed to be in good condition..
We had a great catch up with them and really enjoyed seeing the fodder growing project first hand.
We then continued onto Dubbo and enjoyed a day catching up with my Mum.
I did a bit of a cull of my precious things. The cupboards were crammed full and I had to make some tough decisions( I just can't keep everything), the cupboards now look a little neater.
I hope that one day our kids will keep a few special things from these cupboards as many items have very special memories.
Last weekend we once again hit the road and drove to Newcastle to attend the 60th birthday of one of our old neighbours that we lived near for many years.
We had a lovely night and she was surprised to see us there. We had a night in a motel and continued on to Wollongong the next day to celebrate Father's Day and our grandson's belated 4th birthday and attend the book fair and family day at our granddaughter's school. It was meant to be grandparent's day but that was postponed to a date in November. We had a lovely 3 days there.
We called in to see our other daughter in her new home on the way back and stayed a night there also.
On our return Mother Nature finally decided to be kind and we had 7.5 mm of rain late in the evening, then the next morning
woke to this beautiful sky to the west.
A storm passed over with another 5.5 mm falling without washing soil away.
It was beautiful, we need more, but it's a start. Hopefully after a few more sunny days, we will begin to see a little green growth sprouting out in the paddock .
The sheep headed up on the hill during the storm but all came down later to look around.
At Christmas time our kids put together and bought us a family photo session to be done here at the farm. The photographer Lisa came and took the photos and overall we are really pleased with them. This one is Brian and I down near the stock yards.
We really enjoyed the session and maybe in a few years we may repeat it to have an updated photographic record of the family as it grows and changes.
We have had a huge 2 months and it seems that it will continue to be that way.
There is always something that needs doing, or somewhere to go, life is just busy, but in a good way.
So until we catch up again with you all,
Take care of yourselves and each other,
Cheers,
Jane and Brian.
I learned so much in this post - especially the barley sprouting as feed.
ReplyDeleteEven though you need far more rain I'm glad it is initially coming in amounts that start to prime the soil.
The fodder growing was really interesting, we are seriously thinking if we should set this up for future drought proofing. I had seen it online but it was so good to actually see it in reality.
DeleteHopefully a few small amounts of rain will create bigger falls and as you said prime the soil first.
Cheers
Jane.
I hope you get lots more rain, Jane, and soon! Sounds like a lovely gathering you had for you son to celebrate that milestone birthday. Cake looks delicious! Meg:)
ReplyDeleteThanks Meg,
DeleteWe did enjoy the rain and fingers crossed for more. We had a lovely weekend for the 40th birthday, and that cake was delicious. It was a mud cake and not one crumb got wasted.
Take care
cheers
Jane.
Hi from down south. Thanks for the catch up post - looks like you've been very busy. As a girl from the land its so hard to watch the affects of the drought. The closest i get these days is watching Landline on ABC but i hear you about the roo's. City people will never understand how it affects the daily lives of rural people. My family is in Narrandera NSW and you cannot drive between Narrandera and Leeton between dusk & dawn as there are literally hundred of roos on the move. In my opinion culling is a kindness as so many of them are starving for food during the drought. They are so over populated at the moment. OK, rant over. I've seen the sprouting process on Landline and there are certainly a lot of innovations being carried out by our farmers at the moment. Its funny, city people have this mindset that rural people are a bit slow and yet its the ingenuity and progressive thinking of rural people and their ability to keep going in the face of adversity that put food on their table.
ReplyDeleteCheers
Lynda
Living in the Land of Oz
Hi Lynda,
DeleteI know things will eventually turn around. I feel so sorry for the wildlife, I know it's not their fault they are on the roads, they are just hungry, poor beggars.
That mindset re: country people certainly does exist, but as you say so many country people have been responsible for so many wonderful innovative ideas that are remarkably progressive. Necessity certainly is the mother of invention.
Take care
Cheers.
it is dry everywhere it seems & the farmers are struggling to keep their stocks alive, glad you got some much needed rain. we have had a little, just enough to lay dust to rest but not enough in any gauge to measure, soon am sure we will get lucky too with the storms & rain.
ReplyDeletethose special items look amazing! i have just started looking for vintage items lately, usable even better, love them & your cupboards are awesome!
that last photo of you & Brian is lovely!
thanx for sharing
It is awful Selina, I sincerely hope you get some good rain soon, it certainly is needed everywhere. I love my special things and they come from all different sources, some from grand parents, some from dear friends long since gone and some that I have been lucky enough to find and purchase.
DeleteThe kids really don't seem that interested, but I think that appreciation comes with age.
Take care,
Fingers crossed for rain,
Cheers,
Jane.
If you have some time for a bit of reading, I highly recommend 'Call of the Reed Warbler' by Charles Massy. It's a springboard for ideas from innovative farmers in Australia. It's inspirational really.
ReplyDeleteThanks,
DeleteI will jot that title down and keep it in mind.
Take care
Cheers
Jane.