Wednesday 2 August 2017

Once Upon a Time ...........


..................not so long ago............ I wrote a diary page for the Suffolk Smallholders Society monthly newsletter. I came across some of the pieces I'd written when a folder fell off the shelf and emptied it's contents all over the craft room floor.

Look back with me to my August pages from 4 different years, first here's 1998, 2000 and 2007. Hope you can read them. Maybe clicking on them will make them bigger - maybe.

July was the month we held the Suffolk Smallholders Annual Show - I think the last one was in 2006 as the new committee after that year felt it too much effort to organise.
and 2012 was still saved on Word, so I can print it out.


Diary From Fareacre August 2012
We have been watching with interest (being nosy!) all the comings and goings up a track across the field near our home. Little Moor Farm is up for sale for the first time in over 40 years and any of the people we've seen going to look around could be our new neighbours. Although whoever takes it on will need to have very deep pockets as it's Grade II Listed, timber framed and needs a lot of work done to modernise it. Standing in over 6 acres, 5 of which are completely overgrown, 1/4 mile from the road, it looks like a dream home but will be a huge job for anyone to tackle. Our guess is that it will become a second home just as all the other smallholdings that have come up for sale in the area recently. We count ourselves as being very lucky to have found Fareacre in its affordable run-down condition 20 years ago before prices shot up.
Watching the weather forecast is our other main preoccupation because of the two words "Hay making". If we don't get a week of good forecasts before the end of August no hay will be made this year, something that's never happened before. The most annoying thing is that our weather here has consistently been better than the forecast and we probably could have got the hay done at the end of June if only we had dis-regarded all we heard on TV and radio.
 There is one crop in the garden that has really benefited from all the rain and that is our new raspberry bed. In 2011 we decided to take out all the very old blackcurrant bushes as they had been given a smaller and smaller amount each year and replaced them with Tadmor, a new variety of Summer fruiting raspberry. In theory these should be later than our July fruiting canes but earlier than the Autumn Raspberries. I find raspberries a very easy crop to grow but only learned that you have to be very strict in digging out the runners after several years of growing them. Our first raspberry bed was allowed to "walk" across the fruit cage and soon wore itself out. Now I ruthlessly dig out anything growing out-side of the row and take the tops off all canes at about 5 foot 6 inches tall. Given a good mulch of compost each Autumn after the old fruiting canes have been cut out, they have been successful now for many years.
On August 5th we will be packing our passports and crossing the border into Norfolk to take our secondhand smallholding books to the Norfolk Smallholders show at Holt. I hope the day is fine and dry as we have a very old gazebo which I fear may not stand up to some of the storms that have made up the summer so far.


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Looking back isn't as sad as I imagined. We worked so hard back then I'm glad we've retired!

Back Soon
Sue

14 comments:

  1. Our North Devon Show should have been today but was cancelled on Monday...it is so stormy and the ground sodden. I think all these weather forecasts are messing with our heads...do what we used to do...see what nature is doing...smell the air...what insects are flying...at what height....can you see the underside of tree leaves and all that. x

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  2. Interesting reading. I like the advice about dealing with peacocks.

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  3. It's always interesting to look back at such documents, and they form the basis of future history.
    I do wish now that I had kept better records of our weather.
    I was on a trip down Memory Lane on my own blog, yesterday ~ how things have changed.

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  4. I make my blog each year into a book, I have six so far, I have last years to work on, I love looking back on good times, even remembering sad times help makes the right decisions going ahead, plus our grandchildren love seeing themselves in books.

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  5. Ues Sue - I think reading back over the work one has done over the years is enough to make one tired. After all, the years take their toll.

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  6. How lovely to have those to look back on.

    I don't much fancy the roast peacock...lol-x-

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  7. I like to read back over what I've written in earlier years. I'm quite critical when I do! I love the peacock advice and will make sure to remember if for future use!

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  8. I usually make a note of the weather in my journal - it makes interesting reading. I saw on TV that the Bakewell Show in Derbyshire has been a wash out today - lets hope it is better for them tomorrow - as you will know a great deal of organisation and peoples time go into these big events it is such a shame they are so reliant on good weather.

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  9. You write so well. I so admire you and your Colin for all the hard work you have done through the years. Raspberry jelly is a favorite of mine.

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    1. You have some lovely photos on your blog, thank you for following here

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  10. It's lovely being able to look back over old documents, articles and blog posts isn't it. Yours make for fascinating reading.

    Only yesterday we found a 2011 edition of Countryfile magazine with us in it, one to be kept for posterity I think.

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  12. Love this! I imagine I'll love to look back on my blog in years to come.

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