December 2012

After a long break I’m back. I’ve waded through 18 months of shite and now I am finally coming out the other side. The Blog needed a break while I got myself together. Who knew it would take a year?!

A Tale of Woe

A lot has happened in a year, and not much of it good, or so it has seemed. The disastrous business partnership took a huge toll mentally, physically and financially. Right from the point of deciding we needed to get out I decided that no matter how we felt about the situation we should put emotion aside and be nothing but pleasant, polite and professional. That backfired horrendously, with the other couple deciding this was a weakness they could exploit and in the end they screwed us over big time. Morals, scruples and ethics were nowhere to be seen from the other side. They weren’t even prepared to talk except through their lawyer while they dragged settlement out over a 9 month period and then to add insult injury they stung us for their lawyer’s bill.
I wasn’t happy but in the end hubby and I just threw up our hands and said enough is enough and walked away with what little sanity we had left.

I’ve heard so many horror stories about business partners splitting apart with unrestrained anger and animosity. I was determined we would be better than that. Surely if we were professional and courteous we would come out relatively unscathed? Why wasn’t that possible? I struggle to believe I’m really that naive or stupid. The other party had nothing to lose but seemingly all they could think about was what they wanted to gain.

So now I’m back fulltime at work trying to make up for our losses. At least I’ve enjoyed being back at work! Hopefully we can pay that debt off next August when the fixed mortgage comes up for renewal.

Livestock

We’ve been in animal reduction mode this year, although most people probably wouldn’t realise that. We’ve reduced numbers everywhere – cows, pigs, sheep, chickens and ducks. We just about have the numbers right except for the Runner ducks. I’ve debated with myself on and off whether to get rid of the ducks altogether. For great layers they’re actually pretty useless and for non-breeders they’re actually pretty prolific. They taste great but the lack of meat on them makes them almost too much hassle to process.

We’re giving them another chance though. We’ve got 3 HelpXers in at the moment and their task is to refence the entire duck enclosure so we can once again keep them contained in the orchard. It’s all very well them roaming the entire property (and the neighbours, although the less said about that the better) but all that good duck poop is not ending up under the fruit trees where we need it most. This whole permaculture ideal of incorporating animals into productive garden design is great but only IF the animals co-operate.

Permaculture

I really do think Permaculture is a wonderful concept, and to be honest it fits mine and hubby’s ideals more than straight organics. I really feel we’re starting to get somewhere with it in the vegetable garden. The only real issue we’re having though is our utilisation of animals. Standard permaculture practice includes animals, but it does tend to restrict their free-ranging abilities. This doesn’t really sit all that well with us so in essence we are trying to merge the 2 ideals together.

This of course creates a number of problems, which we are slowly but surely finding solutions for. The trick really is to keep trying things until we get the solution right and then not lose the plot when an animal eventually finds a weakness in that solution.

We did start the conventional way a few years ago, by adding a chicken tractor to our vegetable garden. However, the knowledge that we were free-ranging our vegetables and not our chickens was plaguing me with guilt and so we reversed our practice and let the chickens free and caged the vegetables. For the most part this worked. But the chickens were free 24/7 and when last winter hit they got fed up with their lot and went looking for more suitable digs. This unfortunately led them to take up permanent residence on the verandah.

Coppa the doormat!
Having 2 dogs, 20-odd chickens and a few ducks camped permanently outside the living room eventually became something of a Hitchcock type nightmare. The entire verandah became coated in an ever thickening layer of poop until we were forced to step from the living room straight into gumboots to avoid stepping straight into muck. We were mobbed as soon as we opened the door and the birds would continually watch our every inside move, ready to strike up a chorus of clucking and quacking as soon as it looked like we were going to go anywhere need their feed. As for the poor dogs, they were continually harassed and Coppa literally ended up as a door mat on more than one occasion. He would lie in front of the door seemingly barring the way but in the end the various fowl would just walk over him to gain access.

Enough!

Reigning In The Chickens

In the end hubby and I were forced to raid the bank account and dedicate several weekends of work to solve the problem. Even dad volunteered his weekends to the cause just so he could visit free from chicken harassment.

Wooden Pallet Chicken House
Now we have 2 large chicken runs, with large, comfortable housing for both the bantams and the Sussex, Rhode Island, Barnevelder, Orpington mob. At the moment the chickens are kept in their runs 4 days a week and are let out on weekends and Wednesdays. As for the ducks, well, once the chickens were rehoused the verandah seemed to lose its appeal and so for the most part it is now bird free.

That’s not to say things are perfect but once we’ve fully fenced the house site I think we’ll be sweet.

Chicken Run Curtain
Our plan is to eventually have the chickens out most days again but there is still work to do before we can be sure the chickens will free range within their own designated permaculture space. Our HelpXers are in the process of fully fencing the vege garden and once we have that sorted (this weekend, if all goes well) we should be able to let the big chickens out. One of the most challenging problems we’ve been trying to find a solution for has been how to stop them flying over the gate. We really didn’t want to go down the track of installing an exceptionally tall gate so what hubby has done is place a horizontal bamboo pole above the gate (high enough so we don’t bang our heads) and I am going to hang a homemade curtain from it. I’ve made it out of a square of PVC tarp (ex-billboard) and I have cut into it 3cm wide vertical strips. The idea being based on those multi-coloured, PVC fly curtains that used to hang in shop doorways. I figured a full, 1 piece curtain would be unpleasant to walk through, especially if it’s raining, so I’m kind of hoping this will be a good solution. This is our no-money option anyway. There’s no guarantee it will work of course. However, if the concept works but our version doesn’t, possibly due to lack of weight, I can get the manufactured version from one of the big Hardware chains cheap enough. I guess we’ll see.

The fencing around the entire garden was just 900mm high chicken wire. Effective when the chickens were in their chicken tractor but useless when we let them out. To stop the chickens flying out hubby has hammered vertical battens to the top of each fence post and HelpXers have attached horizontal bamboo poles to the top of the battens. Other HelpXers have attached used lengths of wind netting between the chicken wire and bamboo poles. The netting’s a bit old and tatty but in the end we needed a cheap solution and that wind netting is now on it’s 5th or 6th use since we first purchased it 7 years ago.

I suspect the odd bit will shred if a storm blows in but a recent HelpXer suggested an alternative solution should this happen. She has been to a number of farms in the US that apparently use string, in crazy, vertical patterns that allow the wind through but not the chickens. I love the idea as it could in theory be as artistic as one wants it. Damn, I’m almost wanting the netting to shred now!

Prior to the netting we did try using dried flax poles but for a vertical fence we needed hundreds. The horizontal version, with the flax seed pods still on worked for a while but eventually the chickens discovered the parts they could actually land on and that killed that idea.

So anyway, that’s the escaping issue taken care of (hopefully). The other problem we were encountering was the chickens scratching all the fresh vege waste from the compost onto the garden paths.

All our vege/compost gardens are on a slight downhill slope and it seems the chickens like to scratch the compost downhill to the edge of the bed and then onto the path. Once again we’ve enlisted HelpXers in the battle and they have erected tyre retailing walls at the back of several of the problem vege gardens. Now the chickens are scratching it to the tyres but not out of the garden. Much more manageable!

Woodchip Paths: The Compost Theory Actually Works!

Way back when we were designing the vege garden we took the advice of lining the paths around the vege gardens with only a thick layer of woodchip. The idea being that it’s a natural resource, that in theory it could be sourced from the property (although it wasn’t) and the chickens would enjoy scratching through it looking for bugs while at the same time turning over any poop they may have deposited in the process. Kind of an outside deep litter system I guess. Eventually the woodchip becomes compost.

In the last 6 months the woodchip has looked less than appealing so it was time to replace it. 2 months ago another HelpXer scraped it all up and put it into our vege gardens. And what fabulously rich, rotted compost it was. It was teeming with worms. We should have dug it up sooner but we had no funds to replace it. Eventually the funds became available though and after scraping up all the old chip the same HelpXer spread out 8m³ of new chip. Of course the new chip instantly made the gardens look fabulous, even in their state of partial repair.

We’ve also decided to trial the deep litter system in the 2 new chicken houses. Woodchip or sawdust is the preferred medium but we could only source post peelings at the time. As expected, these have proved too big for the chickens to turn. The upshot of it is that once a week we need to turn the chip in the houses. It takes about 15 minutes all up and requires a bit of muscle but so far the system seems to be working okay. Each week the chickens have a clean floor and there doesn’t seem to be any nasty bug or bacterial issues. I’m hoping we have the litter deep enough that we generate the heat required to counter these problems. I’m also hoping that in winter there’s enough heat generation to take the chill off the air for the chickens. The theory being that heat rises and the chickens all nest on high roosts so will benefit from this.

Then of course, there will be the manure-infused compost at the end of it, which will also end up in our vege gardens.

Getting Into The Christmas Spirit

It’s a sad state of affairs that as I get older I seem to have less time or desire to decorate my house. Once a upon a time it was an absolute must and I have a cupboard chock full of Christmas decorations to prove it. Maybe it’s not because I’m older though. Maybe it’s because I don’t have kids and there’s no one to appreciate it but me. As for hubby, he’s quite bah humbug about the whole affair.

However, it seems sad to not get into the Christmas spirit, so I’ve made the effort this year, but not at home. Instead my office and surrounding environment are an explosion of colour. There’s tinsel everywhere, and beads and baubles and decorations and… I couldn’t resist… a Santa’s Little Helper outfit. I am now radiating the Christmas spirit 8 hours a day.

Even some of the bah humbug employees are managing just a twitch of a smile as I walk past. What the hell eh? The eccentric in me wants to let my inner child out. It’s the one time of year I can get away with it and so I am.

For the most part the reaction is good. There’s the odd, stunned double-take but hey, if you want to be miserable about it…

I’ve had my photo taken several times and I have appeared on at least 2 Facebook pages from what I hear. I’m not sure that’s a positive thing though so the less I think about that the better.

Then a staff member from another department said to me yesterday that I’m quite the extrovert. Uhhhh, possibly not such a good comment. If there’s one thing I’m not it’s ‘extrovert’. I don’t even like going to fancy dress parties. So if I’m not extrovert and I don’t like dressing up in a safe dressing up environment that leads me to just one conclusion – I must be crazy. Damn.

Speaking of Christmas, I almost forgot about the obligatory Christmas mince pies. I only thought about them on Wednesday, which is hardly the time to be thinking about making fruit mince. Too bad. I made my fruit mince late Friday night. Of course it was only when I was making it that I realised I didn’t buy any mixed fruit and what I thought was brandy was in fact bourbon. So to my sultanas and currants I added dried apricots and a packet of antioxidant rich dried plums, cherries and blueberries. Which is just as well because I then added bourbon, cointreau and the obligatory whisky.

Saturday lunchtime I rolled out the pastry only to discover I don’t actually own small tart tins. What?? I know I’ve made them before so I’m wondering if they were part of the dodgy old rusty tin collection I threw away last year. Ah well. I pulled out the muffin tins and briefly contemplated muffin-sized Christmas mince pies. Hmmm. But then I realised my biggest pastry cutter was only tart size and so I put the small tarts in the big muffin pans and hoped for the best.

Mum and dad were visiting and 3 HelpXers were also there to judge my haphazard efforts.

Well wouldn’t you know it, they were a great success and the cointreau worked a treat, even if I do say so myself!

Shared Meals: A Sign of the Times

A couple of weeks ago friends invited us to a pot-luck lunch for this weekend past. Somehow I got pot-luck confused with a ‘bbq lunch’ and we took along raw lamb chops for the non-bbq.

I didn’t stuff up entirely though. Usually I’d take along a salad but I decided to throw caution to the wind and instead took along my new favourite, a raw, vegan chocolate tart.

Of course being completely discourteous I never RSVP’d and then when we arrived first it seemed like we’d got the day wrong. We hadn’t but half the guests had RSVPd a decline of offer. Still, there were a dozen of us and hubby and I had a good time. We ended up staying the longest because everyone else had other things they had to do and they flitted off all a bit too quick. That time of the year I guess.

None of this however is/was really the issue. No, what was the issue is that the invitation was pot-luck. Which my interpretation (bbq confusion aside) is that one makes a dish of something, savoury or sweet, and brings this to the party. One surely does not, as half the guests interpreted, bring something they grabbed at the supermarket on the way. Supermarket rolls, a container of dip, budget pizza, mini toblerones and bags of chips do not constitute pot-luck in my eyes. Thankfully there was potato salad and mesculin leaves provided by the host because all the savoury dishes contained concentration camp pork. Most surprising of all was that the vegan family, who surely struggle to eat at such parties, brought the dip and some carrot sticks. Hardly a healthy meal for their family of four.

The hostess kindly let me cook our chops on the stove so in the end I was happy enough.

The chocolate tart was not the success I anticipated. I had to mention it had nuts and fruit to avoid harming someone with allergies and that seemed to instantly squash any interest. God knows it looked wonderfully glossy and stunningly rich.

You must try the chocolate tart I told one of the females after she mentioned she was craving chocolate. Her eyes lit up, until I mentioned its obvious character flaw – that it was healthy. Suddenly she had an overwhelming craving for savoury food instead.

Am I really so far removed from reality now? I’m beginning to think I am. The shop bought products positively turned my stomach. It all looked rather like a sad kid’s birthday party thrown together by a ‘couldn’t care less’ parent. This was not the gastronomic affair I would expect from 40-something year olds.

Where were the pasta and rice salads, the quiche or frittata, the mini savouries? Where were the club sandwiches and the retro curried eggs, or asparagus rolls?

Are people in the city really so busy that they can’t even make their own hummus dip?!?

I’m working fulltime, running a farm and hosting HelpXers and still I manage to make my own bread, dips, alcohol, chutney and salads and do my own baking.

So are city people really busy or is it they can’t be bothered? If I think back to when I was a city person I remember thinking I never had enough time. Which is interesting because compared to now I must have literally had hours on hand. What did I do with that time???

Living this lifestyle has forced me to manage my time better. There are things I have to do and so I just do them. That’s not to say I get everything done that I want but that’s where prioritising comes in. I don’t care how busy I am, the next time I’m asked to attend a potluck or bring-a-plate function I intend to plan ahead and make the effort to provide really good food.

HEALTH: Conventional vs Natural

Not so long ago I was very much on the side of Conventional Health. Just as I was Conventional Agriculture and Conventional Horticulture.

Why would I doubt these medical and scientific experts? Years of training and thousands of $$$ of education were proof enough for me that I was in safe hands. I believed the media – Vitamins are dangerous and Natural health is something pushed by charlatans who are in it only for profit and they don’t give a damn about the suffering of others.

And then a sense of unease started to creep in as I started to discover that some of the things I held true were in fact blatant lies designed to mislead me.

Surely this new opposing information couldn’t be right? There must’ve been a piece of the puzzle that was missing, something I wasn’t seeing. After all, scientific studies proved the scientific perspectives didn’t they?

Documentary after documentary after book after magazine after anecdotal evidence is confirming again and again that to blindly trust conventional practice and theory is to put one’s life in danger.

More and more my husband and I test out natural remedies, treaments and practices and more and more we find the natural option over the conventional option is far superior. That’s not to say conventional doesn’t have a place but to assume all that is modern is superior is to do yourself a disservice. Corporations and governments constantly tell us what is best but the overriding factor behind their decision to do so is the almighty dollar.

Food: Raw vs Processed

I’ll be honest, I was, once upon a time (not so long ago), well and truly suckered into believing that scientifically formulated pet food for dogs was best for my boys. After all, according to ‘Research’ a raw meat diet is unhealthy for domesticated animals.

For over 5 years of their 6 year old lives they have been fed a medium priced brand of biscuit. This has been interspersed with the odd week here and there of fresh offal from some of our slaughtered animals. Yes I would have liked to have bought the most expensive, top shelf dog biscuit but it was a cost we just couldn’t stretch to.

And so my boys coped okay up until this year. Then I started to notice an increase in some issues – lethargy, less shiny coats, an increase in aggression, weight fluctuations and occasional skin problems. Add to this the increasing sense of dis-ease I was feeling every time I visited a veterinary practice and saw numerous posters about what product was best to purchase for your cat or dog if they had obesity issues, diabetes issues, allergies or age-related issues. WTF??

Now right from the word go hubby and I were determined to raise our pigs on a raw, fresh vegetarian diet.

So impressed by the results were we that in the last 12 months my husband and I have made a concerted effort to also eat more raw, fresh, vegetarian food.

I’ve even been feeling a bit stink about giving the chickens and ducks pellets.

So what about my poor dogs??

Dog Food: Reducing Aggression in Dogs

12 months ago I was convinced something was missing from their diet and my main concerns were Coppa’s increasing aggression levels and Whisky’s lethargy. I pondered this situation for a good 6 months, even religiously reading all the ingredient labels on the back of dog foods and changing what I bought to try make a difference.

Suffice to say that nothing much changed, except the price of the products I was buying.

And then I got to thinking about a chapter I read in a Felicity Lawrence book about the affects of Omega 3 on humans, specifically aggression levels in males. Research in a UK prison showed a marked decrease in aggression levels in male prisoners when given Omega 3 supplements. Was it possible dogs would respond in the same way?

And so we started giving the dogs a raw, free-range duck egg in every evening meal. Now the reason I chose duck eggs is because our ducks have the entire property and stream to free-range and they spend a lot of time sourcing wild food. The more free-range the bird the higher the Omega 3 levels.

3 weeks the growling had started to decrease and after 3 months the decrease in growling was not only quite noticeable but there was a marked improvement in his general demeanour.

I knew I was on to something and that more needed to be done. Just by chance I was discussing this issue with a colleague and he told me he was forced to revert to a raw meat diet for both his dogs after they developed some severe health issues. He insisted the change had been so good he would never feed his dogs processed food again.

He put me onto Jimbo’s wholesale pet foods in South Auckland. I checked them out and spent a few days working out what products would be best and then discovered the food would be cheaper that what I was currently paying for processed. I bought several products in bulk and then created a diet plan for my boys.

Breakfast now consists of minced green tripe, minced beef and minced beef offal

Dinner is chicken necks and egg

Everything is weighed so they get the right amount for their weight. They also supplement through hunting getting the occasional possum or pukeko and sometimes a wild bird that strays into the glasshouse.

After 3 months on this new raw meat diet I am so impressed with the change in my dogs that I will never ever, ever go back to processed foods.

What the hell was I thinking?!

Their coats are beautifully shiny and their demeanour is so much more pleasant.

Not only that but there appears to be another unexpected benefits.

Coppa’s hunting behaviour has changed. Not so much his hunting but his behaviour towards his catch.

Previously he has always eaten his catch. If he lived in the wild, as the submissive dog, this would never be allowed to happen. Here though, in the safety of domesticity he has jealously guarded and consumed every catch. This changed though when we changed his diet. Now when he catches something he brings it most of the way back to the house and then he drops it very deliberately for Whisky. Whisky then, in most cases, eats two thirds and leaves the rest for Coppa.

Gone are the jealous rages. Gone are the days when Coppa would lord over his prizes, growling constantly while Whisky fumed and fretted and plotted revenge. Coppa now not only hands over the prize but I swear he also does it with a smile.

It is clear to me now that the only reason he defied the natural law of dogs before was because we were starving him of vital nutrients that he can only get from raw meat. An instinctive need for these nutrients was overriding his instinctive need to follow dog law.

I should probably point out at this stage that our dogs are not 100% carnivores. When hubby and I sort through the many crates of fruit and vegetables for our pigs our dogs also have a sort through and they are very partial to Broccoli leaf steams, Cauliflower leaf stems, avocados and the occasional apple or cob of corn.

Where Does All the Money Go?

If there is one truth about owning a small farm, it is that money goes out as fast as it comes in. There is always something we have to spend money on.

Just when we think we are getting ahead financially, something comes along to quickly dispel that notion.

Usually it’s vehicle costs but car troubles aren’t our issue right now.

It’s fair to say hubby and I have felt slightly positive on the cash flow front in the last couple of months, and so we bought each other moderately expensive Christmas gifts.

Of course, as is the want of the universe, that was precisely when things decided to go wrong.

For 6 weeks we have been hanging out for rain. It’s hit Whangarei and Auckland but somehow it’s only ever got as close as neighbouring towns. So the upshot is our dam ran dry and with 3 HelpXchangers in the house we suddenly found our water tank getting horrendously low. With maybe only 2 days water left in the tank and no rain in sight we were forced to consider buying in a tanker load of water. Hubby phoned around and discovered it would set us back $500. How much?!

Instead we forked out $400 for a water pump and spent a whole day pumping water from a spring on neighbour G’s property. 5 of us took the opportunity to spend a day making sure everything and everyone was watered. We worked our butts off and then all came in at 4:30 to shower and to get a fresh glass of water to replenish thirsty bodies.

Hubby turned on the tap. No water. What??

We went outside and checked the house pump was plugged in properly. No issues there. We unplugged it and plugged in Aaron’s shaver. The plug was definitely working. We decided to give the pump an hour unplugged in case it had overheated.

It was Saturday afternoon just 3 days before Christmas. This was not a good time for a breakdown. What the heck was it going to cost for an electrician? What if an electrician came and told us we needed spare parts? Hubby went straight onto Trade me to ascertain what a new pump might cost us. He found someone selling new pumps, with 2 year warranties, from their home in Auckland. Unbelievably the seller was more than happy for us to go down that evening and buy a pump if we wanted to.

A new pump was going to set us back $600. Our old pump would probably cost less than that to fix but there was the unknown question of when it might get fixed.

We debated the merits of each option and then decided it was easier to buy a new one and then get the old one repaired. At least we can use the old one in the next house we build.

Anyway, we tried plugging our old pump in again. It hummed but it wouldn’t pump. We rang back the pump seller and told him we were on our way.

It was close to 8pm when we got home and the 2 of us set to removing the old pump and installing the new one. This was to give us about 2 hours of fun.

We couldn’t find a valve to stop the water draining out of the tank so it quickly became obvious that as soon as we removed the old one the water would come gushing out. The space under the house is too small for hubby to crawl under and although I could get under I’m not strong enough to lift pumps and unscrew fittings.

The pumps are also different sizes so that meant cutting off a small piece of the pipe between the tank and the house.

First we removed the old pump and then I jammed a piece of rag into the end of the pipe to stop the water pouring out. I had to hold it in place though as the water pressure was too strong to keep it there. Meanwhile hubby had to work between me and the pipe to get the new pump into place and connected. The upshot is things didn’t go as easily as we would have liked and we both ended up soaking wet and covered in mud.

Eventually the new pump was installed but the angle of the pipe connecting to the pump wasn’t quite right and so we had a slow but steady drip. Add to that the continually dripping tap in the laundry and we were leaking just a little too much for my liking during a dry spell.

It’s 9:30pm and I still haven’t made dinner. I’m tired and filthy but we have to eat. I walk over to the pantry and something catches my eye next to the fridge. There’s a puddle of liquid under the tetra packs of milk on the floor. Oh please no.

I look closer and realise it’s what I think it is. I have 20 packs of oat and almond milk next to the fridge and once again some sodding little mouse has been nibbling the corners of the boxes. The floor is a congealed mess of milk and I end up with $20 of ruined tetra packs.

I am suddenly frustrated beyond belief with the amount of money that is slipping through our hands this week and I let fly with just how I feel about the mouse and the money and the mess. I’m cleaning the mess and swearing and stomping and just going for it and then I look up and notice the livingroom has cleared of people. Oops.

The next day we send our HelpXers out to tackle the inkweed in one of the pig paddocks. After an hour or so the HelpXers return with the fork they have been using to dig out the roots. I had mentioned it was too dry to dig out the roots and that we would have to wait for winter but they have misunderstood what I am saying. Instead of just cutting and snapping the branches back to the base they have attempted to remove the roots as well. And there they stand with the gardening fork in one hand and 2 of the steel tines in the other.

Sometimes I can laugh these things off but not today. Hubby saves the day and has the laugh and I sit there aware my face is probably revealing my thoughts “Oh shit, there goes another $70” but I can’t help it. This week has cost us over $1000 already and it’s all repairs. That was our fencing money and it’s all gone.

Hubby sends a text to a plumber acquaintance and asks if he would consider popping in sometime over the Christmas break to help us out.

Not only does the pump leak need fixing but the laundry tap needs a ceramic disc replaced. I find out the place to buy the spare part is closed over the Christmas break. So we went and bought a cheap replacement tap down at Mitre 10. The other tap we’ll get a replacement part for and take it with us when we go. Or maybe we’ll swap it because I actually like the cheaper tap more!

Our plumber acquaintance arrived New Years eve and I showed him the pump and the leak. I explained we couldn’t find a valve and that it had been an absolute mission to get the new pump installed and then I walked over to the water tank and there, underneath a fern, is the valve. I turned it to the shut position. “Hey, we have a valve! And it works!” Plumber dude looks at me and laughs “So hubby had a man look did he?”

In less than and hour we had a new tap and no leaks anywhere. Then plumber dude comes into the kitchen and washes his hands. He comments that our kitchen tap is loose. “Yeah, the damn thing broke 18 months after we installed it. We’ve had numerous friends try to fix it but no luck.”

“Let me have a look” plumber dude says “Grohe, that’s an expensive brand. I know what your problem is, they use cheap crappy grease on the fittings. It goes hard and then your tap won’t move and then the whole tap works loose. Give me a couple of minutes”

Plumber dude plays around in the kitchen for 5 minutes.

“There you are, all fixed.” Hubby and I look at him suspiciously. Hubby gets up and checks it out.

“Hey, it’s fixed!”

Not quite convinced I check it out myself.

“OMG, you star!” Plumber dude has rapidly elevated himself to plumber god in my eyes and I frantically scrabble around in my brain for other plumbing issues he may be able to fix. Almost disappointed I realise there are none. We ply plumber dude with a range of meat and a few beers and hubby offers him petrol money but he declines. He’s more than happy with our offerings and hubby and I are convinced we got the better end of the deal.

Here Today, Gone Tomorrow

3 December 2011

Sadly, 3 months into butchery ownership we have had to pull out. Constant disagreements about the way to run the business was driving it into the ground. We’re gutted of course. We put in at least 85% of the work but got fed up with being constantly challenged and criticised.  In the end we wanted the main focus to be on locally sourced products for local customers. They wanted to focus on organics and heritage breeds. We thought incorporating all 4 aspects would be a winner but they just wanted to focus on organics and breeds. It seems that in their eyes incorporating a local aspect watered down both the supplier and customer pool.

There were other issues too of course. One of them being that the business didn’t break even in the first 3 months. As hubby and I had done most of the work in the first 3 months, the conclusion that seemed to be reached was that we were mostly responsible for this. Hmmm. Let’s just say it’s hard to gain any traction and get a business going when all decisions are challenged and ultimately delayed.

In the end mistakes were made on both sides and both sides feel the other side is more at fault.

It’s hard not to feel a little bitter. We had so many plans and hubby was networking his little heart out with so many of the locals. Everything seemed like it was falling into place and then we hit another wall and that was one wall too many. We both agreed enough was enough. Any more and both our marriage and health would suffer.

We’re trying to keep it amicable. Our money (or the bank’s money to be more precise) is still in the business and we don’t want the business to fall over and so we’re trying to sort out a way to get out without killing the business.

We hope they make the business a success.

We hope we can get our money out.

Hubby is of course keen to look for another challenge. I’m not so sure. In the end, we can’t even contemplate that without getting our money back.

We’re Saving The World

Yep, that’s right, we’re determined to continue saving the world one person at a time.

We lost our way a bit this year. With me at home every 2nd week we couldn’t really afford HelpXers so they’ve been few and far between. We’ve still preached to the unconverted or the partially converted and then the butchery suddenly became our tool for reaching a greater audience. But that of course is no more.

We hosted some HelpXers recently and suddenly the thrill of having a captive audience again reawakened the need for action.

And so we’ve agreed the HelpXers must return.

Our next lot arrives this week and I’m looking forward to it.  With summer now here the tasks are many, the days are long and the constant sunny days are proving once again to be a farming challenge.

HelpXer Ryota had a profound affect on me. He made me look again at what is important. He made me realize I was starting to get complacent. The last thing the world needs at the moment is complacency.

We all need to take action of some sort.

Pick a cause. Any cause. And fight.

Your fight can be big or small but at least fight.

Help someone else fight if you can.  We recently had the opportunity to display a Greenpeace billboard at the entrance to the property, and we took it. In the process we met someone else also fighting. Our causes are different but ultimately the same.

When I talk to people who aren’t fighting any cause it amazes me the complete lack of interest or knowledge in what man is doing to the planet. The tide is turning though.

The elections were last week and the Greens got over 10% of the vote. I was both stunned and thrilled. I am hoping it is a sign that there are more people like me who want positive change.

No the Greens were never going to get in but if you could have a National/Green led government it wouldn’t be a bad thing.

Business is what the country needs but it needs to be ethical and sustainable. Business doesn’t have to be solely about profit. National focuses too much on money and capitalism and that’s where they fall down. We need money to run the country but why do we need growth? Why can’t we focus on making business local and sustainable so that we can function independently from other countries?

Why do we need GE? Why do we need to import Monsanto products? Why do we need McDonalds and Burger King and KFC? Why do we import meat and fruit and vegetables and export the same?

Why don’t we take a lead from Hugh Fernley-Whittingstall and plant our green spaces with fruit and vegetables? Why don’t we make our city landscapes edible landscapes? Why don’t we plant fruit trees on the suburban verges? Natives are lovely but an abundance of fruit trees is surely even better?

Imagine if every kid in NZ had the opportunity to eat locally grown fruit, for free!

I was thinking this week that every hospital in this country should have its own orchard. They could be maintained by community volunteers. There could be seating for patients and families, maybe a chicken coop as well, so that chickens could free range and keep the orchard bug free.

There could be compost piles for the hospital food waste, giant worm farm tubs so that the compost could be used to mulch around the trees and the worm juice used as a fertilizer. Surely it would be nice for a patient to be able to wander into an orchard in summer, to sit and eat a freshly picked apple, and for just a little while take their mind off the sterile environment of the hospital.

Garden Centres in the region could be asked to donate a couple of fruit trees each. Hardware stores could donate bags of compost and Building supply companies could donate wood and fencing materials.

Make it a community project and who knows what wonderful things could be achieved?!

I guess hospitals don’t have a lot of space, but what the heck, let’s rip up a staff carpark and plant there!

That suggestion would go down like a led balloon of course but there are plenty of staff like me who have legs so we’ll just have to park further away and walk!

Unless of course you build on the roof… (Not the helicopter one of course)

More and more roofs are becoming green spaces so why not the same at a hospital? Then the orchards would be secure from thieves, vandals and dogs.

Ahhh, but I’m dreaming.

I also think the hospital should run daily community clinics on nutrition and diet. I’m not talking technical, food-company sponsored bullshit. I mean teach people about eating natural foods and teach them how to make simple, healthy meals from scratch.

Don’t give your kid vitamin-fortified, sugary cereals for breakfast, give them a fruit smoothie damnit! Hell, make it a seasonal fruit smoothie to keep the cost down.

Why Is No One Getting It?!?

I was reading a trashy women’s mag at lunch yesterday and there was an article on a pregnant local celebrity with an autistic toddler and fearing the next one could be autistic as well.

What the hell people?!  Are you all crazy? When you were young how many kids did you know that had autism? I knew 1. 1!!! In all my years of school I knew just 1. Now I swear every 5th parent has an autistic child. This isn’t rocket science people. Something is killing your child’s brain while it’s in the womb. The neural networks aren’t forming properly and I suggest it might be what you’re eating.

Isn’t it interesting how autism has become a big thing since we started restricting a pregnant woman’s diet? Don’t eat nuts, don’t eat seafood, don’t eat eggs, don’t eat… well… just don’t eat anything that’s natural really because it might just harm your baby. No, let’s just eat good, safe, made in a factory, man-made food. Then when they’re born the best thing you can do is continue to breast feed this crap into your baby.

Women are now starving their babies of vital nutrients because of the warped ideas of giant food companies and medical professionals.

My mother’s generation ate and drank what they liked and most of us made it through unscathed.

It seems like every month I hear about another child diagnosed with autism. And now there’s not just ‘Rain Man’ autism, there’s like 100 different types of autism now. 30 years from now we are going to have a country full of mentally challenged people. How the heck are they going to function properly in society?  Will they ever leave home? Will they find meaningful jobs and fulfilling relationships? Will they have their own children?

If this shite continues then I know when I retire I will look at the world with a certain amount of horror.  I know I will be saying “OMG, it wasn’t like that in my day”.

When I retire the retirement village better have plenty of organic and free-range food and a good supply of cider because I refuse to be part of the warped system we have now.

Home on the (Free) Range

As mentioned in the last blog, this year we have an abundance of baby chicks and ducklings.

We also have an abundance of feral cats.

The latter is now feeding its young with the former.

Each morning we have less. Two a night it seems, and at that rate we’ll have nothing left by Christmas.

Every fucking year!  I’m so over this. I’m so over the overwhelming feeling of powerlessness. The instant kill traps lie untouched. Hey, what cat wants a piece of old rabbit meat when you can have fresh chicken every night?

Once again I’ve handed over my credit card and I’m expecting two live-cat traps to arrive this coming week. If we can’t catch them dead then we’ll catch them alive and dispatch them with a bullet. I’ll even put eye fillet steak in as bait if I have to. This has just got to stop.

When the dogs catch these feral cats the cats are often sick and covered in lice and fleas. It’s a hard life for a feral cat. I don’t hate them for doing whatever it takes to survive, I hate them for taking what’s mine.

What I am really angry at though is the person or people responsible for putting them there in the first place. Domestic cats don’t just go feral of their own accord. 

The situation we now face is that in giving all our birds total free-range freedom, we in fact give them a potential death sentence. They’re freedom is restricted only in terms of area (although even then they push the boundaries).  We give them houses and roosting areas but ultimately they choose where and how they live.

We give them feed but they have an ample supply of wild food. We should in fact feed them less. Some of them are turning into real couch potatoes, barely leaving home to explore the outside world. Nobody give them a Playstation!

Our verandah is currently covered in chicken poop. It’s just one big chicken toilet. We have plans to keep them permanently in their allotted areas but I’m waiting for the HelpXers to turn up before we tackle that project. Even Jemimah duck feels the need to spend her evenings on the verandah.

The dogs are constantly challenged for their dinner, their water and their sleeping spaces so enough is enough.

Free Range is good but only up to a point eh?

The Sussex and Rhode Island chicks are at a good age now. They’re big enough that the dogs no longer see them as chicken McNuggets on legs and they’re really starting to exhibit natural chicken behaviour. They love to scratch at the ground and to peck at the seed heads on weeds. Little gangs of them roam from one end of the house site to the other, constantly looking for adventure and food.

I don’t think we have a lot of roosters so either some of the girls will also become chicken dinner or we will find some new homes for some of them. I’m trying to convince dad to take some. He certainly can where he is now but I’m not sure about the suitability at his new home. He would probably need to invest in a moveable chicken house and some Electric netting so he could move them every few days. 

It would be a big financial outlay so any eggs he got would never cover the set-up costs. If he had an orchard that he could fence off that would be great but the family are keen to build big houses, leaving little land except for an area for the kids to play.

But they’re moving to Albany. How can you live in Albany and not have chickens???

It's Been a Long Time

17 November 2011

It’s been a long time.

So much has been going on and all I want for Christmas is another 6 hours in each day!

The biggest news is, along with another couple, we bought a butchery. Such a purchase was never on our radar but I guess when you think about it it’s not that far removed from wanting to building an abattoir. Anyway, the other couple wanted to buy it and they suggested we might want to join them in the purchase.

As usual the other half was an excited bull at the gate and I was the timid sheep coming up with a myriad of reasons why it might not be a good idea, the least of all that we would need to use our only monetary possession (our house) as security.

Many discussions ensued, as well as the odd suggestion that the only thing standing between us and financial freedom was my lack of ability to commit to anything slightly risky.

I dispute that on the grounds that risky is okay as long as it’s a well thought out calculated risk. The problem is that in this economic environment it is very hard to decide what is a good risk and what isn’t. Every week in the paper some high flying, big shot crashes and burns amidst debts of millions and I think – if these entrepreneurial types can’t make it work how can I?

A different ball game altogether of course but the fact is more businesses fail than succeed and this butcher shop doesn’t have a good track record of financial success.

We also have no idea of what the real societal ramifications are going to be of post peak oil. At the moment most people are oblivious to the potential problems in a sudden decline in oil. I briefly discussed this with my mechanic and he is convinced it’s merely scaremongering started up by oil companies wanting to hike oil prices.

However, if that's not the case and oil prices suddenly sky rocket it could put us out of business. Still, that’s a good 3 years away from happening and people have to eat, right?

I’m of the firm opinion that supermarkets are evil bastards that support the rape and pillage of the earth. I know others think the same as I do so we just need to convince those people (and more) to support a different philosophy and then we might just make it work, right?

And so, after much dithering, I said yes, and here we are 3 months down the track and I’m wondering what’s hit me.

The only way to fund our half of this business venture is for the 2 of us to continue working in our regular jobs. Add to that our farm tasks and about 30 hours a week each on butchery work and quite frankly we’re stretched to the max on time.

There’s far more to this than I ever imagined. As per usual I’ve severely underestimated the time it will take me to complete certain tasks. Worse still, the longer it takes, the more tired I get and the more mistakes I make.

I feel like at the moment I’m eating, drinking and sleeping butchery.

People keep asking me how much I’m enjoying it. Seriously?? If only it were that easy. The other half has been running on the adrenaline of the challenge but even he’s been flagging the last couple of weeks. As for me, half the time I feel like I’m auto-piloting my way through my days.

The odd day has been lots of fun and I’m really enjoying meeting new people but for the most part I’m just tired. Something my boss hasn’t failed to point out unfortunately. I even stopped wearing mascara because I’ve been rubbing my eyes so much and don't want black circles around my eyes.

Note to self – Don’t lose job!

The whole look and direction of the shop needs to change so in some ways it’s like building the business from scratch.

Trying to fit in all the jobs that need to be done in the spare minutes of our days isn’t the easiest. We could achieve so much more if we could work fulltime on the business for a few weeks but it’s not going to happen.

Hubby had great plans to have everything up and running properly by Labour weekend but he was the only one prepared to run on no rest or sleep for 2 months. I know my limits and quite frankly they’re a lot less than his.

I can understand how businesses can kill marriages. We barely see each other these days and when we do it’s nearly always business talk. We’re arguing more and both drinking more. (Not necessarily combined I should add!)

I don’t think I would cope if I couldn’t have a glass of cider at the end of the working day. The brain is on the go the whole time, thinking, thinking, thinking. That little shot of alcohol is usually just enough to stop the cogs from relentlessly grinding so I can relax and go to bed. Until I go to sleep of course and then I find myself sporadically waking up and I’m in the middle of a dream that has me in the butcher shop doing something stupid.

Still, the relentless grind of the basic set-up is coming to an end. Now the exciting(?) stuff starts. We’re about to repaint the shop, order in condiments, etc, install a flash point-of-sale system and install a smoker, among other things.

Now’s when the marketing needs to ramp up and I’ve been assigned the task of creating a marketing plan. Oh crikey.

Amidst all this we still have a small farm to run of course.

The HelpXers Return

It’s been quite neglected of late so we finally caved in and took on HelpXers again. It’s hard to host when you’re tired and with Aaron away from home so often these days as he networks and attends meetings, the hosting invariably falls to me.

Anyone who knows me well knows that I shut up shop when I’m tired. Communication and interaction become sporadic, patience levels drop and frustration levels increase. Unpleasant for the poor sod on the receiving end!

But selfishness overrode me and when we were asked if we would host a young Japanese man we said yes.

Ryota arrived in August and what followed was 3 weeks of constant activity, conversation and education. He was a joy to host and the property started to look a little less neglected. He returned for a week in October and returns again for a night this coming weekend.

2 weeks ago an Argentinian/French couple asked to stay. The tiredness had increased. Was it really a wise idea to say yes? I dithered and in the end didn’t reply. A week later they asked again. What the heck, they were keen, we needed help, once again I said yes.

Jose and Nadia arrived the day Ryo left and they stayed a week. They too worked hard but I struggled to host. Aaron was barely home and my host face continually slipped. My ability and desire to impart knowledge and educate was minimal at best.

Once again the property got a mini makeover and I am grateful for the help. Now I have to decide when we should next accept HelpXers. We need them but do they need us?

Pig Update

Piglet activity is well down this year. Fatboy Slim, Piggy in the Middle and Little Miss Bitey Pants are currently being turned into salami and sausages, along with our steer 40, so there is only Blossom left.

As always it was hard to say goodbye to the piggies and Aaron and I had our usual argument over loading the piggies into the trailer. For the first time Phyllis was not happy to say goodbye and spent the week mourning their absence. They were good piglets, not the usual delinquents that Phyllis seems to produce. Perhaps she’s mellowing with age and that’s rubbing off on her piglets. I spent a bit of time with Phyllis that week but she was short on patience with me.

We seem to be friends again now though.

Livestock, Deadstock

40’s departure was more upsetting than I anticipated. He was such a trouble-maker but these last 3 or 4 months he’d mellowed a lot. Only 2 days before his final day he even let me give him a good scratch. Stupidly I couldn’t see him in the paddock yesterday and it took me several hours to figure out why. I hate moments like that, when the penny drops with a sickening thud.

Once again, prior to the butcher’s arrival, Aaron suggested it might be 46’s turn. Once again I said no. It’s hard to believe 46 is the same age as the dogs. At 5 years old he is one lucky steer. Or is he? He knows the drill, his friends come and go and sometimes he gives me a look that makes me wonder just how much he comprehends. I know animals can feel sad but do they ever feel lucky?

Herb is No Longer the New Shrek

The sheep have been shorn for the year and Herb was finally relieved of 2 years wool. It was so matted it had turned to felt. As pissed off as he was at finally being caught this year I’m sure it must be a huge relief for him. The weight of all that wool must have been so uncomfortable.

We have the sheep in the southern paddocks at the moment but Aaron wants them out as they are eating grass as fast as it grows. However, it’s not an option until we can get the fencing on the bottom paddock sorted. Ryo excelled at digging the post holes so we’re half way there. We should probably cull a couple of them to lighten the load; before next winter definitely.

The Ducks are a Law Unto Themselves

For the most part 22 of them has become 17. I believe 5 of them have moved next door. They return once a week for a good feed and then disappear again. The night enclosure works well and the egg laying was so out of control I was regularly feeding them to the pigs and dogs. And then suddenly poof!, it’s all of a sudden down to 1 egg a day if we’re lucky. It seems the girls might be holding onto their eggs until I let them out and they can lay them elsewhere.

The Runner Duck nesting instinct is strong. We’ve already had 15 ducklings born and no doubt there’ll be more soon. Despite our best efforts to keep them safe, 15 ducklings have now become 11. Hopefully they’re big enough to survive now.

Our sight-challenged duck sat on a nest for about 6 weeks until the eggs started exploding. She never quacked the whole time she was on her nest but now she’s back to her relentless quacking. She’s a sweet looking girl but perhaps because of her sight issues she is completely ignored by the drakes and I have a strong suspicion one or two of the girls are picking on her. She has missing feathers but not from the usual areas.

Most nights she escapes from the run and stays the night on the verandah. It’s a bit sad she feels safer with the dogs than her own kind! It wouldn’t be such an issue if it wasn’t for her incessant quacking. We assume it makes her feel more secure but still!

She’s also taken to walking into the house and ignoring our requests that she refrain from doing so. At this point I’m stumped as to how we can solve this issue. She’s maybe only a year old. How long do runner ducks live? At some point the option of culling will need to be considered but as always it will be a debate about what can be considered justified culling. Culling for convenience doesn’t sit well with me.

Nests Galore

This year truly belongs to the chickens. They’ve all gone broody and there are nests everywhere. The eggs for humans are now few and far between. Sigh!

The baby chick count so far this spring 9 for the bantams, with 1 loss due to drowning

The count for the Sussex chickens is 22, with 1 loss to drowning and 2 unexplained losses.

As for the 2 unexplained losses, the suspicion is currently resting on Whiskey and Coppa’s heads.

The chicks were doing really well and then Sunday and Monday the head count was down. It just so happened to coincide with the Sussex mums suddenly deciding to introduce their flock to the patio area. The temptation for our boys would have been great. 19 baby chicks running here, there and everywhere. Like Ryo said “It’s like chicken McNuggets on legs for the dogs”.

On Tuesday I got home from work and 19 chicks raced onto the verandah on mass, surrounding Coppa in a blur of fluff, feathers and tweeting. How’s a dog to cope!

We have 4 hens sitting on nests at the moment so I’m guessing the head count is going to increase considerably before Christmas.

One of the Orpington girls was also sitting but those eggs exploded too. 2 years in a row and I think it’s safe to assume Laddy’s firing blanks. This is obviously not good for a rooster but it’s not like we need more chicks at this stage anyway.

With all these chicks I suspect there’ll be a few chicken dinners next year!