The Veg Patch

When we lived in the city we had ourselves an allotment, we loved it and we learnt so much from those around us, from books and just from trial and error (or sheer bloody mindedness). Now we have a really large allotment to play with, plus an orchard. It has taken two years of hard slog and effort to get to where we are now, however we did learn some cunning tricks along the way. We worked our guts out to get the polytunnel up and the first beds functioning, however once we got the bare minimum in order we changed tack a little. We also have a meadow to manage and that we cut late in the autumn, as we are

The Polytunnel in April

The Polytunnel in April

managing it as a flower rich meadow we cut it too late for good hay, but it does leave us with a lot of grass! We therefore decided to use it as a mulch which we then covered with a semi permeable black liner. After twelve months we ended up with  beautiful crumbly soil that is very rich and great to work with, it is also stacked full of worms, aerating the soil and giving it its wonderful texture. We are on a clay, so a fair amount of our land is bog or wet woodland, where the vegetable garden is it is protected from the worst of the elements, it used to have the muck heaps on from horses and is about the driest area, plus it was mainly grass when we arrived so we didn’t feel like we were ruining a lovely habitat. Now we have an orchard of about twenty apple, pear, cherry and plum trees and six functioning beds; I am so looking forward to this years harvest!

The Veg Patch

The Veg Patch

Pied Flycatcher

As I was walking back from the yurt, on one of the many trips we make to and fro, I spotted a pied flycatcher flitting around the hedgerow. I followed him all the way back over to the barn, where he promptly popped into one of the nesting boxes we have put up, then I spotted the female. Such a sweet little bird and it is eagerly scoffing all of the insect life it can. The hedgerows are buzzing with life. Goldfinches are singing lustily, bees are drinking up all the nectar that they can get, swallows are diving around the place  and it is most assuredly spring!

Spring has sprung

Carmarthenshire has the wonderful advantage of a lot of wildlife, much of it seemingly on our land. Over the last week or so we have seen six female red deer (who seem to have moved in), hedgehog activity, noctule bats, shrews and voles all over the field, bumble bees, toads, frogs and newts are set up nicely in the pond,  celandines and wood anenomes bursting into flower, an enormous array of birds including: linnet, pied fly catchers, house martins, gold finches, red kite, buzzard, willow tits, bullfinches, wild duck, dipper, herons, Canadian geese, chiff chaff, nut hatches, barn owls, tawny owls, pied wagtails, grey wagtails, song thrush, robin, blue tit, great tit, long tailed tit etc!