Hazel, willow, beef and storytelling from Bedfordshire

Posts in category Around the farm

Winning a prize lifts the spirits

Winning a prize lifts the spirits

We’ve won a prize – a CPRE Mark to be precise. A slightly cryptic name perhaps; exciting nonetheless and something that has lifted our spirits. The Bedfordshire branch of the Campaign to Protect Rural England (CPRE) has run the Living Countryside Awards for three years. They aim to recognise landowners, individuals and commercial users of […]

Cold!

Cold!

Suddenly winter’s here and although we are currently sitting between huge areas of snow to both north and south, it’s been really cold (for the UK). We’ve been at or below zero degrees for nearly a week, our wood burner is running 24 hours a day and the central heating has been acting up (now fixed […]

Pictures of June

Pictures of June

It’s dark and cold; damp and miserable. the wind has been howling – rattling the roof. I took a little piece of video of cows munching grass on a perfect June evening and as a result was subject to a fair degree of ridicule and scorn from certain quarters. But now I can savour its recollection of luxurious […]

First binders from Bottoms’ Cor...

First binders from Bottoms’ Corner

  Creating a woodland is a slow old business. Since we planted Bottoms’ Corner, our small hazel wood, we’ve been watching every small development with a fair degree of excitement that we tend to keep to ourselves – we’ve found that most normal people don’t particularly see the joy in growing sticks.   The first cut of […]

Autumn movements

Autumn movements

The absence of swallows isn’t the only sign that summer is now a distant memory. The weather might have been warm and dry for the last few days, but this can’t disguise the beginnings of colour in the leaves and a couple of mild frosts give us no chance of doubting the coming change of […]

No swallows probably makes an autumn

No swallows probably makes an autumn

Through September I was watching out for swallows, Hirundo rustica, passing through, on their way south. Most seem to be going north but I suppose that must be my imagination. The summer brought lots of swifts, Apus apus, as usual, but we seemed to be poorly supplied with swallows and House martins, Delichon urbicum, something that is a bit worrying […]

Looking forward to the Last Straw

Looking forward to the Last Straw

I seem to recall being a bit smug about getting this year’s hay crop in without it feeling a single drop of rain. Well, the same feeling isn’t available to apply to the barley straw. One of our neighbours has grown a crop of spring barley and offered the straw to us. We said we’d have […]

Casual butterfly watching

Casual butterfly watching

  I’ve been trying to keep an eye on butterflies this summer. Not of course checking the company they keep; rather, taking an interest in which of the common species are around at any particular time. Butterflies in the UK ought to be a manageable subject for casual study. There are only around sixty species after all […]

Hay no rain – shock

Hay no rain – shock

    Almost unbelievably and for the first time on record the hay‘s under cover without having been rained on once. After a cold spell, we’ve had a week of scorching (for the UK) weather which has dried our grass beautifully. Even so we managed to make a meal of it. On Thursday we baled some then […]

Making hay

Making hay

Being away from home all day yesterday, I was spared involvement in the annual hay cutting decision. Which was something of a relief as it’s often a bit agonising.  A neighbour, Gordon has been cutting and baling our hay each summer since we started and whilst he and his family team do a wonderful job, […]