Dawn time

I have blogged about my lack of morning perkiness before, and I know I will never be able to have a civil conversation, smile or even grunt before 8.30 am (and/or after a proper filter coffee)-to be honest I am such a tw* t first thing in the morning. However! (AND WAIT FOR THIS), Being outside at dawn is actually growing on me! This morning I was up and out around 7am. The sun was shining on a frost covered allotment and everything was calm, still and quite beautiful!
Mind you, the silence of the dawn is always ruined by the hysterical runners, who always seem to know that I am around to let them out. They cannot wait patiently for release as the hens seem to do, but blunder around in the darkness of their little house, screaming and quacking at the top of their little lungs!(below).God love them, they are thick as mince!
Hearing the squeak of the gate, the pigs then start their squealing and tantrums, and this is only hushed when they are fed and watered; as long as this is done, and after the runners are calmed out on the grass, does peace return to the field

Today I have booked the memorial hall for my "hen course" in late June. The posters have been designed and I will print them up tomorrow before distributing them to libraries and noticeboards locally. I hope with the credit crunch looming and green issues being so in vogue , keeping poultry may be more popular than it once was.....who knows.....organising the course will be fun anyhow
The rest of the day has been allocated to fixing up rabbit proof fences around each one of the vegetable patches, it has been fiddly work but relaxing as the weather has remained warm and fine . It is March and I have got a touch of sunburn.....

Sunny Day

The weather has been glorious today. I was up at 7am and had completed all the household jobs (including preparing the evening meal) by 8.30am. I only stopped to have a coffee and a small heart attack ( more about that later) and then at 9am all the dogs and I went over to the field to spend the whole day in the warm sunshineToday I have started to plant out early peas and potatoes, but the work was slightly slow as a steady stream of visitors have graced the field. The two Mrs Jones' (Morwenna and Gwyneth) called down to visit the pigs. Mrs "pen-y-cefn-isa" Jones (right) ran a busy farm for most of her life, and does miss having livestock around her. Ever the pragmatist she delighted in giving Boris a good "feel" to check how meaty his breast was. She is slightly disappointed that I will never kill him to eat! Mrs Jones' grandfather actually rebuilt our cottage! Morwenna does not get out very much due to bad health, but seemed to delight at being given the guided tour. Her joy at having a morning out was infectious.
During their visit, another elderly chap called in to photograph some of the animals and stopped for a chat, and soon after Sue (who had donated her kids old rabbit hutch to me last week) turned up for some eggs and a chin wag

This morning I let Albert out into the garden and literally within seconds he had climbed onto the shed, then from there he scrambled onto the outhouse then appeared on top of next door's conservatory!..I guess it was a case of excitement over sense! The dew on the conservatory roof proved too slippy for his unconditioned paws and quite gracefully and in slow motion he slid out of view and off the roof!..............My nerves were shot to ribbons! I galloped around into the neighbour's garden expecting to see the little chap broken on the stone patio, his stiff leg fractured all over again!, but after swinging quite happily by a paw from the plastic guttering, he had scrambled down the water pipe and was nonchalantly licking his slightly whithered leg......I think he must of frightened himself just a little, as soon after he wandered back into the cottage and plonked himself down in the bedroom window seat! He has sat there all day!

The chicken wire pea supports don't look pretty but will hopefully protect the pea plants from the chickens (though not from mice).

Far North

Set in an eerily stateless, ahistorical landscape, Far North (at Theatre Clwyd this evening) is a disturbing, beautiful to look at and rather empty film about maternalism,survival and rivalry. Saiva (The stunning Michelle Yeoh) and her adopted daughter Anja (Michelle Krusiec) live isolated and hunted lives out on the tundra. A soldier Sean Bean blunders into their lonely camp, fleeing an unseen enemy. The trio battle the hardships of the frozen landscape with eventual tragic results.
Yeap not a bag of laughs and all rather obscure for my liking, but at least Yeoh is always worth the price of a cinema ticket!
7/10

Spring time

It has been quite beautiful up here today- warm with a very faint breeze All the animals in the field have been quiet and dozy in the spring heat and the pace of the field has relaxed tenfold. In between jobs I dozed for a few minutes during my daily "sky watching" moment, but with George feeling he has to copy everything that I do, I got little real rest
At midday, I took William for a walk up the lane to deliver some eggs to Pen-y-cefn-Isa. In the middle of nowhere we came across this heart symbol stapled to the inside of the field hedge. It was the oddest thing
My vegetable and seedling "swap" enterprise got off to a good start this morning. An old chap from the village called in with a plastic bag of growing garlic bulbs and very kindly refused some eggs as payment. I planted the garlic and two small herb plants in a small "rabbit proof" plot. All five of my vegetable patches will have to be protected in this way

Sunday Photos

Gladys covered in yolk after scoffing a spare turkey egg

Pirrie and the buff chick who may or not be a cockerel.Both are only 9 weeks old


Daffodils on the border of the graveyard

23 hen eggs and 8 duck eggs. No bad as we have only 9 female ducks.

It has been a lovely warm spring day. I have dug out a herb bed this morning, time enough for a brief sleep this afternoon. Working tonight

Comic Relief

These type of television charity nights usually leave me rather cold, if not a tad nauseous...but I did enjoy Robert Webb's straight faced version of Flashdance!

Inspirational People 1 - Leslie Brint and an ancient memory


From Left to right -Me (aged 22!) Sandra, Steven,Leslie Brint,Paula (Po),Noreen and Mike(The Class of 83)

As I was dog walking today, I got to thinking about the charismatic and driven Harvey Milk.(See last Wednesday's blog) As a gay rights role model, he was an inspiration to a generation, if not a whole country and people with his kind of vision and leadership often have a profound effect upon the people they meet.

As I walked , I thought about the inspirational people, (and there has been several) that have touched my life over the years. Ok , none of them has the fame of say a Harvey Milk, but all do retain his level of importance in as much that they changed lives!

Leslie Brint was one of those characters. Back in the early 1980's he was the allocated personal tutor to my September 83 Student Mental Health group, and acted as our mentor,teacher and role model for the whole of our three year training!

As many conscientious objectors during the war, Mr Brint was sent to work in his local Psychiatric hospital and I suspect his enlightened views of patient dignity,patient advocacy and his absolute hatred of poor nursing care, especially that given to the elderly mentally ill, would have shaken the asylum old guard to the core!

Our Nursing group was young , malleable and with a couple of exceptions very Liverpudlian. That fact alone meant that were were not always an easy group to challenge and to mould, but Mr Brint in his own quiet and dignified way did make us question our motivations and practice and did help us develop into top notch psychiatric nurses. He never raised his voice, (he never had to), nor did he hide(or apologise for) his religious roots and love for the theatrical (he taught us all to ballroom dance in one lesson so that we could all attend a elderly ward's social night).He was camp as a row of tents, he laughed long and often and he always celebrated the strengths of his students without any ridicule of our weaknesses. Our loyalty to him was justified and sincere.

I always thought Mr Brint to be a nurse well before his time, especially when It came to experiential learning. He spent hours in our teaching time, encouraging us to explore our feelings and self awareness,looking back on it all, he was our therapist for a full three years!

I remember discussing one red letter day with him and our group just after my first elderly placement on a long stay elderly ward (it was termed psycogerries back then).....I find it strange that the memory comes to my mind just now:-

As a student nurse working in the last days of asylum care, life was sometimes a little tough! My elderly placement was on a ward called Dunham Ward. The place was a bleak Victorian prison like building with a Nightingale dormitory for 24 senile men and had a staff of five per shift to care for them. Early shifts were a never ending slog of washing,toileting,changing, feeding and bed making. It was relentless and at times soul destroying, but generally the staff were upbeat and friendly and placements were usually only 12 weeks long!

One day I remember making the patients' drinks in the kitchen. I was tired and fed up, so was carelessly slopping tea into the variety of nhs cups and feeder beakers.Our kitchen was shared by our "sister" ward called Daresbury, which was the female version of Duham ward, as I brewed the tea I could look out from a serving hatch into the ward's day room, where 20 old ladies were all slumped in their chairs which were all set up against the walls!

As I stood there, I could see one male visitor sat presumably with his wife. He was drinking coffee from a flask and she looked as though she was asleep. I remember she had her grey hair in a small tight bun. Slowly he put down his drink and holding onto her hands, he eased the lady to her feet. I thought he must have been preparing her to go to the toilet, but he didn't call a nurse or do that thing that carers have to do from time to time,and that is to check for wet spots!, he just pulled his wife to her feet and held her close before he started to dance with her.

The woman staggered at first and then they both tottered around for a while, but slowly muscle memory kicked in and the couple started to waltz passably around the big room , infront of 20 pairs of unseeing eyes. It was an incredibly moving moment and one that remains with me over 24 years later! In seconds, I had learnt the incredible lesson of the importance of personalised and holistic care.

I remember Mr Brint's emotional smile when I recalled the story in class. By realising the importance of this little moment, I knew I had made him proud of me.

It was a nice feeling

The allotment grows and organisng a hen course

Today I set up sweet pea, runner bean and pea supports, and organised in my mind this years allotment planting. By erecting a few bamboo poles, the whole character of the field has changed from muddy brown winter moorland into a miniature farm! Chris' old white plastic electric fence poles (the ones he had when he owned Pippa), have come in handy and will support several rows of doubled chicken wire. I will plant pea seedlings in the centre of these structures, hopefully the chicken wire will support and protect the seedling from eager beaks.
I have no broody hens at the moment but I bet it won't be too long! Last year several of these moody broodies caught me unawares, so this year I have set up a separate two enclosures in which to house them. Sue and old school friend has today donated her children's' old rabbit hutch, which will make an untidy but safe nursery for a hen and her chicks

The field now looks like an Ukrainian village circa 1850! The ten motley hen houses and the newly painted pig house cover the entire space now, and all that is missing is chimney smoke and a couple of tiny old ladies with shawls and no teeth!!
Anyhow,I have decided to organise a basic "How to look after chickens beginner course" to be held hopefully at the village hall over a four/five week period ! I suspect there will be a demand from the ever greener, credit crunch masses, for some friendly guidance and information on poultry care, so I am presently designing some posters to test the waters!