Wednesday 14 June 2017

Just chatting.......

It's 10am and I have just come in from doing some scything. The heat is just building up again, so it is going to be another punishingly hot day. Everything is holding up alright though, which is testimony to how living things will fight for life, and that includes things you want to survive and things you are not fussed with having life, such as the beetles who seem to rally their numbers just when we think we are winning.
 
Lester was doing his morning search amongst the potatoes, leaf by leaf, that is what he has to do. Skip a few leaves and you can be sure that  that is where the hatchlings will be. I was having a sit down on the garden chair kept specifically for that purpose, and talking about things.
My eyes were idly roaming.
And they saw that the earth itself was teeming with life. It was like London rush hour. OK, so perhaps that is an exaggeration, but there was a lot of life, the soil was not dead, and was healthy enough to sustain living things. That is why we do not use pesticides or any other types of  '....cides'. A healthy soil means healthy plants which means healthy us.
 
The scythe went through the vegetation like a sharp knife through soft butter, so I did more scything that what I had originally intended to do. There is something immensely pleasing to the soul when the you and the scythe are working in unison, the swish of the blade, the rhythm of the swinging arc of the blade, all this seems to add up to a very nice activity to do.
I was cutting the rampant vegetation behind the back of the house....ground elder, baby and juvenile brambles, large swathes of wild mint, large clumps of grass,  all jumbled together and growing merrily upwards. I shall not conquer all of this patch of wildness this year, but I shall win some ground this year. By keeping the area free of rampant weeds the grass should take over the space, which the sheep will be able to graze during the cooler months.
 
 
Off to Gazax et Bacarrisse this afternoon, to find a house called Guillane, to meet a lady who breeds chickens, and who has a pair of Buff Orpingtons to sell us.
The Chicken Hut is not finished, so they will have to stay in temporary accommodation for the time being. Unfortunately we have not had time to clear the Chicken Run of vegetation, mostly burdock, which has set up a very impressive group of plants which have all combined to capture a good portion of the run. They are huge, with thick stems difficult to cut. And if those stems are cut, the parent plant will then repay the damage done unto it by throwing up a whole lot of new heads from the original stem.
Lester said that the Chicken Run was secure enough to let the new chickens run loose in it, then put them away in their temporary shelter for the night. I said that that this was a good idea but might need rethinking as I know chickens well enough to know that once they see the glorious tunnels running underneath Burdock City, that they will very happily take up residence in them, and that would including nest building and laying eggs.
 
I would have a go at clearing those burdocks would it not be for the rather large snake / snakes which also live there. But..... I have chatted to you for long enough. I need to water the seed trays, seedlings, and juvenile plantlings in the nursery, and then off out into Veg Plot 3 to do battle with the flea beetles. Upon a quick inspection this morning my eyes were also drawn to a very pretty row of orange coloured eggs, one row on top of the leaf, one row on the underneath of the leaf. Oh so now the cabbage white butterfly hatchlings, (caterpillars) will soon be partaking of our brassicas as well!
Not to worry, this life is better than sitting in an office or spending valuable hours of the day commuting to and fro work, this I shall keep telling myself as I brace myself to go face those that would eat our food before we do.
 
Bye for now,
Vx
 

11 comments:

coffeeontheporchwithme said...

Using the sythe is a great idea. We also have tall grass and weeds on three sides of us and it is an ongoing battle. (My trimmer is now out of commission). We have an old antique sythe. I wonder if we could sharpen it up enough to do the job? -Jenn

Vera said...

JENN, I am sure that your scythe would sharpen up enough for you to use it, but I would advise that you look at some YouTube videos about how to maintain and use a scythe first!

local alien said...

Youre very hardworking! That battle of the bugs is intensive, not to mention hand scything.
I'm following all your posts with great interest wondering how on earth you have the time and energy to write!

Janice said...

Could you use the scythe in the chicken run and hopefully take care of a few snakes at the same time?!! The snakes will eat the eggs if they get to stay.

Vera said...

LOCAL ALIEN, I write when the words want to be written, so if there are no words to be said then no writing gets done! This can be frustrating if I want to do some writing but have no words in my head to write with!

JANICE, yes, I shall, but I am hoping that the sound of the scythe will make them go somewhere else. Unfortunately that 'somewhere else' will probably be the patch of brambles and ground elder behind the back of the house, which I am also on my way to getting cleared!

Lisa @ Two Bears Farm said...

I don't blame you for skipping the burdock. It's been a snaky year here - I think I've seen one at least every other day all spring.

Dawn said...

cutting back and claiming land is hard work and seems never ending but brings satisfaction when you are winning

Cro Magnon said...

My (now empty) chicken run needs scything, so maybe this morning.

Vera said...

LISA, I am watching where I walk all the time now, and imagine even the tiniest twig lying on the ground is a snake!

DAWN, you are right....it is nice to see the place tidy of tall weeds!

CRO MAGNON, I shall be thinking of you as I do my half hour scything session this morning!

Rhodesia said...

I am always impressed when you say that you have been scything, very energetic. I am sure my back would go into spasm if I even thought about doing it!
I am quite fond of snakes but not a good idea to stand on them especially if they are poisonous. Do you know what yours are? Take care Diane

Vera said...

DIANE, I don't know what the snakes are but I do know that we have adders around!