When Tom and I met, it didn't take long for us to strike some common ground. We had both wanted to live on farms since we were little people. The longer we were together, the more we knew that our future together would involve making that goal a reality. So, some 6 years later, we sold up Tom's house (and our home where we had just experienced our second baby's homebirth) and began our farm change adventure.

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Dung Beetles!

Spot the farmer...
Yup, that's the one - excitedly pushing a horse poo into a manure collector and inspecting the exposed ground for holes and jumpy, black beetles. Our summer season dung beetles have come out to play again! We definitely didn't have any beetle activity over the cooler months, so we'll have to look into getting them in, though they're probably not compatible with pugged paddocks and constant rain - we'll find out soon enough.
Spring rain. It's ubiquitous! Which is a nice change from previous years, and if I thought we had lots of grass last year, this year is really taking the cake. And like dessert, the horses are filling themselves with gusto. So much so that we've had to muzzle the small ponies to protect them from explosion. We'll give them a few days' break from the grazing muzzles, because their facial skin is adjusting to them and needs resting. Then back to gastric restraint.
The animals are in more abundance than I thought possible. The frog-song is just sensational at night, which must be giving the snakes plenty to be happy about. We've not noticed a problem with mozzies, so I'm assuming there is a finely tuned balance that I'm happy to work with, there!
The kids and the Big Fella saw an echidna on the train tracks the other day, and the wombats are pottering about, oblivious to our daily goings-on.
Just recently I've been pondering the acquisition of some bird life. Big Fella has been working on learning chooks, and they're not too far off. My own ideas are less immediately useful in terms of food production, but may be useful for house yard safety measures: peacocks. Granted, I've never had to live with one, but I think I would love it. Noisy, yes - we have some very insulated walls and our neighbours have constantly barking dogs and some roosters, but they are all about a kilometre away from us, so that shouldn't be too much of an issue. We'd have to figure out how to give them an aversion to roosting on our roof, to keep our water supply clean, but there are plenty of trees around here for roosting we can divert them to. We have a fox population, and we have dogs, too - the dogs easy, the foxes...we're already not seeing eye to eye. On the plus side, peacocks are associated with lowered snake activity - which I'd only appreciate around the house yard, as we all accept that snakes are around and serve a purpose in the bio-habitat. We is cool with snakes. Just don't want to have the kids stumble across them when they're playing where they're supposed to. So. Peacocks. Watch this space...

Friday, September 2, 2011

Horse Whispering

Big Fella has started training the littlest fella - Hawaii, the Shetland Pony. He's been getting him used to having his feet handled, a pony pad on his back, being led up the road with Small Boy whizzing by him on the pushbike. Who'd have thunk it?
Airborne
Small Boy and Mia are progressing in leaps and bounds. Not literally, thank goodness! Boy has got his pony to canter this week, and that's a huge achievement. The next thing, of course, will be to teach him how to ask for a canter without chasing her into it, but she's a responsive little thing, and that won't take long, I suspect - some time in our small yard on the lunge should be productive. At this rate, he'll probably be working Hawaii for Small Girl, and improving his horsemanship out of sight.
She's always up for a chat and a smooch
Dante is getting a ride once weekly, at this stage, and getting fitter in body and brain. He's even stopped 'stalling' on the road, and those large rolls of silage no longer threaten his self-esteem - it's just shadows in the late afternoon that send him packing, ever so slightly.
We've had a solitary young koala come back for a few days, before winding it's way back up or down the creek's biolink. It watched as we fed horses, put out washing, showered and arrived and left home. We're pretty sure it's the baby of the mama and baby dyad we had from last Cup Day, and from time to time this year.
Going solo this Spring
Snakes are getting their snakey groove on again. We had a sighting near the caravan last week, as one was attempting to grab a spot of take-away frog. Unfortunately, the beautiful reptile went hungry after a certain Big Fella pursued photographic glory and moved the prey onto the road. Amphibian killed, snake hungry and no photo taken...t'was, sadly, all in vain!
We're reconsidering the proposed house site up the top, taking into consideration orchard siting and how to orchestrate horse yards and function areas. As the shed dwelling takes shape we can stretch out in here, get comfy and get our thinking caps on. It gives us time to save some bikkies, gather knowledge and think about what we need and want from this farm caper.
Big Fella is nearly finished with all his course requirements and has a map with several overlays for all the farm planning he's going to have to fill me in on.
I cleared away the grass that was growing over our veggie patch and rediscovered the beetroot, the spring onion, silverbeet and carrots hidden in there. At the next Coal Creek Farmers Market it is rumoured that there will be seed potato for sale, and for that I am impatient! Although, if we grew our own potatoes, what excuse would I have to go to the Kongwak Market every Sunday morning? Hmmm...I'll have to get my thinking cap on. Herbs that I have growing in planters are largely happy, still - parsley, chives, thyme, marjoram (or oregano, I can't remember now!) and sage. The lemongrass is nonplussed about how much water the planter retained over winter and will need to be sweet talked back into growth. Big Fella has a collection of bare rooted apple and pear trees that need a home in the ground. He's still shaking his head over my cumquat tree purchase - can someone tell him that cumquats are a perfect little sourbomb, and that it's quite reasonable for a sour-tooth like me to forget to also buy a lemon tree, in my fervour to take home said cumquat?
The paddocks are drying out after a particularly wet winter and summer couldn't be more eagerly anticipated! I sort of can't believe outdoor showering as a mode of cleansing survived the soggy, wet season...and that I don't hate showering on a wooden pallet with corry walls...

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Can you hear it? The sound of grass growing!

Yes, followers, the rain is on a Mexican stand off with some weathery thingies going on that the Bureau can explain, and I barely understand but know it means warm weather!
When the cold returns (and surely it doth) our flora will be thrown into melee and shock, as will the animals, who's skins and fur are completely confused and think it's time to do unseasonal things - like molt. Meanwhile, the paddocks that were looking beaten and near-barren are springing to life - new grass shoots rise from the pugging, the wattles are in full, yellow splendour and...the flies are out.
Anyhow, I can't wait to cut our first season of hay. Oh, and to build some fashion of hay shed for it. Now I'm just getting ahead of myself. Easy to do when the breeze blows cool off the creek, interrupted by gentle thermals coming in off the hills and it's the first week of August, when buds and baby native animals are tucked away out of the frost!
I guess I'll have to take some photos soon...

Friday, July 29, 2011

Still here...

You'd be forgiven for believing we'd been shaken off or washed away from our farm...but, no. My absence is due to getting caught up in all this life caper I've opted into. Meanwhile, we have survived one of Korumburra's infamous quakes (well, it's a quake by Oz standards - 4.3 magnitude), and what is increasingly being reported at THE WETTEST winter EVER down here in South Gippsland. So, at least it's not just us who are wading through mud to get to our cars and veggie patch...
So, we've got the paperwork that formalises the works on the creek through the CMA! A machine will come through and excavate these willows out of the creek, then the fencing will be done and in 12 months' time revegetation will be underway. I'm busting out of my sides for this to happen. What I'm also quite pleased about is that the CMA will be bringing a Cultural Liaison Officer on the day the machine will be here, in case anything of significance is found that needs recording or preserving. As the area will be locked up for biodiversity, I don't mind anything being protected in there (and I'd like to think I wouldn't mind protection of anything that were important to Bunurong Dreaming, no matter where on the farm it was). It's not likely, given how deep into the Great Southern Forest this are would have been, but being a waterway, you just never know.
Pasture has taken a great hit in South Gippsland, and giving the horses somewhere to hang out has been a challenge - they have been leading a very nomadic life, moving from strip to strip, with the help of some electric strands. Hay nets are de rigeur and the horses go just a bit nuts for their supplementary feed when it arrives. Not that the ponies need it - they are hardy little critters!
The shed is close to completion for moving in, and the wood stove is proving itself as a focal point for our family. We cook on it, we huddle around it to eat our dinners, and when children go down to sleep, I slip out to read and collect my thoughts in the evenings. I just can't wait to be living in this space.
This week, also, saw contamination of the creek via diesel spill, that I found myself attending, in my capacity as a firefighter. As soon as I realised it was in a drain closer to town, the mission was set to follow how far down we could smell the fuel. Despite reporting to the relevant authorities that we could smell it down as far as at least seven kilometres away, the Shire and DPI only got round to warning farmers today (two days later) that it was dangerous for stock to drink from the creek. All seems well here, and I hope the rest of the creek is unharmed. So, even if we'd fenced off the creek sooner we would still be facing the danger of contamination, because the troughs would be fed from the creek. Interesting scenario.
After a few days of beautiful sunshine, giving the caravan and road a chance to dry out from the ever-present mud, we are anticipating rain tomorrow again. It will flush out the creek, at least. That's the only upside I can think of at the moment - there IS such a thing as too much rain!

Friday, June 24, 2011

Concessions

Oh, *sigh*!
Today we took receipt of a delivery of hay. For the horses. Had to bite the bullet. The grass finally got the memo that Spring is over (because we never actually got summer before Autumn came!) and has slowed right down, so the horses have had to have their diet supplemented and they are happy. Jack, the borrowed grey, is going back this week. He just hasn't responded to the grass the way he could have, and as he's established himself as a loner he doesn't even cut it as a paddock buddy anymore. He came to us before I knew how far off we were from acquiring a pony, and as we now have two of those, Jack is now redundant as a herd member. He's a nice boy, but he needs to have a purpose in order to remain, and his lovely owner will come to get him and ply him with extra feed over the cooler months. It takes some pressure off the feed situation here, especially as we don't have horse paddocks set up down here (the grand plan is for the top of the hill) and are making do with boggy facilities.
The big paddocks are fine for the bovines, and it has been decreed that they be left solely for bill-paying bovine use. It costs to bring in hay for horses, but it would cost so much more to bring in hay for the steers, so it was an easy call to make. I bought a hay square from one of the local rural supplier chains and I wasn't impressed, especially given that I don't normally even pay that much for hay. Dusty with a slight mouldy smell. For $10! First and last. I then called a guy from the local classified listings and even though it was on dark when he arrived, I liked the look of his hay and there was no dust cloud. I did have to go and buy the biggest tarpaulin I could find, though, as we have no hay shed. That is next on the agenda, I think!
The cattle market is down - weather, live export backlash etc, so these boys have to stand around and eat more grass before we send them off to the great big grass paddock in the sky. Half their luck! I'm learning to pay more attention to the stock reports in the local papers and the national rural rag. It's slowly making more sense to me, even though I get there after flicking through looking for horse news. And now that we've sold a mob, I feel less fraudulent talking to the staff in the rural supply shops who ask what we farm, and I say "Beef cattle"...cos we've turned cattle into beef! They really are lovely animals, and I'm not quite reconciled with their ultimate purpose. Things are so busy around here, though, that I have hardly any time to really think on it and go over it.
So, the cold is setting in, our Winter nights routine is forming itself and the shed will be ready soon. It's the season to make mulled wine and listen to the frogs singing a riot out there!

Sunday, June 12, 2011

Observations

The thing about living on a place before you build the final home is learning the environment and climate. There are things we will be able to tell a draftsperson or architect right from the word go to consider in the design, orientation and elevation of the strawbale house on the hill and its angles.
Down here for the shed there are elements we've come to realise will affect us differently through the seasons. The biggest one that comes to mind is the angle of the sun in the Winter. In Summer the sun rises and makes its arc up high over the hill all day long, until it sinks into the west, down by the neighbours' trees and hills. Just this week I came to a realisation about our hill - it's too high in Winter for the sun to reach over for parts of the day! The sun hits the shed and streams in through the windows in the early morning, by mid-morning it has crept behind the hill, peeks out again at about 3pm and from 4 onwards we are left in cool shadow again.
Luckily, we'll be toasty warm with our wood stove and all walls insulated.
Bringing me to the next point. In certain wind conditions, even if it appears to be a still day, we can hear the roar of the trucks on the highway (about 3kms away as the crow flies) as if they were on the next road down from us. Again, an insulated shed means that it can't be heard from inside, but the peace of the valley is certainly broken if one wishes to sup a mug of hot coffee under the trees, on these days!
Learning, always learning. And glad we haven't committed our ideas in strawbale and render just yet...

Thursday, June 2, 2011

Progressions

Plaster is ordered.
Flue kit is ordered.
One weekend organised where children will be absent (and, by default, their mother, who may even enjoy spending a rainy weekend in drier climes) so that much internal work may be accomplished, unhindered.
It's good for the psyche to tough it out in the caravan these cold nights, knowing that a warm and toasty, insulated, wood-stove heated, two bedroomed, large loungeroomed shed conversion will save us from the tyranny of South Gippsland caravan living. Don't go and tell me any different, because it's these little epithets that get me through the days. And nights. And mornings. Good for soul. Good for psyche. Good for character-building yaddiyaddah...I think. I MUST believe!
Tonight, Mr Nekked Farmer attended the first of many Thursday nights run by DPI (Department of Primary Industries) on Whole Farm Planning. Now, WFP is what my Horse Property Management course drew heavily from, so the Mr is already a bit familiar with the principles involved after I came home last November gushing about shelter belts, fencing along contour lines, protecting waterways, and all that environmentally responsible farm planning stuff that still gets me just a little exciteable. So, now we'll have two of us on board with the sustainable farming caper - the more the merrier.
Oh, and in some ambivalent news...we sold steers! 15 of our biggest fellas were sold at market on Wednesday morning, in Koonwarra (where many of ours were bought from), and some were sent to Warrnambool, some to Cranbourne. My heart is heavy for the ones heading out west. They had quiet, happy lives here for the past 11 months, only to be packed onto a truck for hours before meeting their fate. I think I'd prefer to have the choice of sending them closer. More next week, we think. I suppose we'll get used to it, given time. Here are the hefty boys in the holding yard, waiting for a truck to arrive...

I expect the next installment to include pictures of plastered walls...watch this space...

Sunday, May 15, 2011

Ya know when ya just can't forget something?

Once upon a time, there was a girl who lived by the sea. One day, her family moved to a small place that was a little further, by foot, to the sea, but it was still near the sea. Then this family travelled to a far away, colder country called Ireland, where the girl retained in her keen memory images of her great grandfather's dairy farm in Co. Kerry and her first encounter with a horse at this farm. This experience would serve to ignite a very strong and stubborn desire in the girl's heart and mind that would buoy her through the remainder of her childhood and into an adolescence of wistful hope without foreseeable means of realisation of the dream. The girl's parents decided to come back to Australia and prepare to move to this Ireland place. For reasons never explained to her while she was a girl-child, instead of moving back to the cold country the family remained in Australia and moved to another house in a place called North Dandenong. They lived here for fifteen years, where the girl and her sister went to school, played netball, joined the school swimming and athletics teams, and the girl woke every morning of her birthday or Christmas to whip open her bedroom curtain, hoping to see the horse she dreamed of tied up waiting for her to spend the rest of her youth with.
It took the girl many years to realise, finally, that her parents and sister were just not interested in giving her a horse, not convinced she needed her desperately wanted riding lessons, and most certainly had no interest in selling up their little life in North Dandenong to live on a farm, further away from traffic and school bullies who taunted her for her near-obsession with horses and her non-compliance with peer-pressure.
One year, when the girl was a little older and a university student, her family and her took a break over Easter. It was a surprise to all of them, as they had never left home for Easter before, as her mother preferred to dedicate this time to contemplating the religious festival. They took off to their favourite place called Buchan, in East Gippsland, Victoria. The family had spent many summers camping here and had always wanted to wake up to a crisp autumn morning here. They booked a simple and cosy cabin in the town, and very quickly were very happy to be there.
That first night, the girl's family went to dinner at the pub and walked past the real estate agent's window. There was a farm for sale and some other properties that had a wonderful feeling about them. The family had been talking about moving, and although the two girls were aching at the thought of moving from their happy and humble home, the possibility of living in this quiet hamlet was enticing, and the older girl was bursting with hope.
The quiet Easter break became booked with farm viewings and the chance to attend an auction, but no-one minded, because they were together and they were doing something that the parents had wanted to do many years before, a little while before the girl was born; follow their hearts. The first farm was an easy ten minute drive from Buchan, into a valley, through grazing country and down the driveway of a cedar house that had been well-loved and wanted someone to love it to its former glory. The property was lush and had ample acreage, and it was decided that it would require too much work for first time farmers, so it was passed over.
The next property was inspected prior to auction set for the following day. It was also a large grazing property, sat atop a hill overlooking much of the Buchan Valley and the house was quite liveable, with an attached, self-contained unit. The family was keen on this property, as the expected sale price was not unreasonable and the house was adequate for immediate living, with much room for personalised improvement.
The day of the auction itself brought much quiet excitement, and all four of them dressed, breakfasted and left the cabin with giddy reserve to the farm. All four of them sat together amongst the crowd and listened to the auctioneer as he did his work with the potential buyers and began the bidding process. The girl's father raised his hand a few times later into the bidding and the family suppressed any outward displays and crossed all fingers in the hope that the remaining bidders would recede and leave them with the farm.
Sadly, bidding continued, and the girl knew that it had surpassed the family's set highest bid. Forlornly, they walked back to the car and spent the rest of the afternoon in glum silence. The girl broke open her books for the study she had been hoping to get done whilst away, and distracted herself from the morning's disappointment in this way.
There was just one appointment left, and it was for later that afternoon. They met the agent in town and followed him to a property out and away from Buchan, driving for another twenty minutes before reaching a property on five acres, with a forest setting behind the creek that formed the property's boundary. The family sighed a collective sigh of appreciation at this most appealing setting. On this day the mist set into the trees and the crisp air nipped at their faces. Before them sat an enchanting creation of two mudbrick, hexagon shaped connected structures. They were taken through the 'antechamber', where the owners had collected trophies and also kept some saddlery, into a passage way that then took them into a larger hexagon with a centre post and open plan ground floor. A spiral staircase invited their eyes upwards and onto a loft area that served as a study. The girl had already created an image of herself, deeply entrenched in books, with a small electric typewriter (for that was the more prevalent form of word processing in 1994 for less affluent university students) with which to create story and rhyme, on weekends of retreat from the busy metropolitan life.
The tour continued outdoors to a deck overlooking the gully to the forest. From here, the girl imagined herself riding out on her horse to follow a forest trail, in Drizabone and moleskins. Such thoughts of a long-held dream caused tears to prick her eyes, and she surreptitiously swiped them away with a brush of the hand. Following the agent, the family was shown where the household bathroom was sited, and the girl could no longer contain herself. She exclaimed at the perfection of a rustic, vintage enamelled handbasin and corrugated iron lined shower that faced directly out onto the forest she dreamed of exploring on horseback. This was the bliss she knew she wanted. At that moment she knew there to be no other perfection, no other aspiration.
The family returned that night to Buchan for dinner abuzz with discussion about how this property would fit in with the family's lifestyle, given that the revised plan was for a weekender and holiday property. It was decided that the family would drive out the following morning and put an offer on the property. That evening was spent admiring the hexagon shape, the appeal of the loft, the forest outlook and the girl was able to convince her parents that she would be so happy to call that house her own she would gladly have outdoor showers, even in the depths of a Buchan winter. Of course, her family chuckled and believed she would renege and eventually lobby for the installation of an indoor washing area.
The family woke up and the girls were keen to make the journey to that hexagon house, willing to miss breakfasting in order to make the offer. The parents, however, did not want to appear to be as keen, believing that it would give too much power to the seller, as if the property market played by the same rules as in the city. Breakfast was had and the girls bid on all the patience they could muster to not force their parents into their car seats to drive out of Buchan town.
It was late morning when they did set off to that geometrically pleasing abode, and the girl's belly was busy with acrobatics inspired by thoughts of idyll and tranquility that had occupied her imagination since childhood. The passing scenery was more vibrant in autumn colour this time, the winding roads more enchanting for the promise of pastures they might call their own and the morning fog veiled a knowledge the girl did hunger after, a feeling so close yet without name, scent or texture.
The car ambled through the gates, and a late fog was lifting lazily above grassy paddocks, the agent's car parked at the front of the house to confirm the appointment arranged. As the family's car crawled to park further inside, another car came into view by the side of the dwelling. The girl's stomach gnawed, despite the pancake breakfast. Her fingers almost sounding that name, almost identifying the scent and very nearly grasping the texture of that elusive dream; reaching, reaching and stretching to seek relief in satisfaction. She thought herself too whimsical, shaking the feeling that her senses were supernatural and able to reveal truth. She disembarked with the others and approached the agent, who had, by now, emerged from the side door of the house.
The agent walked over hurriedly and his expression revealed an anguish that recalled in the girl the senses she had suppressed only moments before. The weight of knowledge that had yet to be confirmed crushed her hopeful heart. As he spoke the words she flailed wildly inside her head for a way to reverse the reality he retold now: "older couple", "arrived early", "signing cheque book now", "missed only by minutes". Words captured in syncopated form that held enough power to extract her breath, induce a momentary dizziness and then generate a silent, great piercing cry of loss and shattered hope. The girl wished to run into the house and demand that this new offer be retracted, instructing that this was no place for an older couple when a younger family simply needed it in order to thrive and fulfil dreams and ideals.
Of course, she did not. She preserved her composure and retreated to the warmth of the car, defeated and sensing the opportunity of a life she deserved and desperately wished for slip from her visual foreground, she replaced it with the small, humble life in North Dandenong, as it had existed before the journey to Buchan had been made for that hopeful Easter. She recollected her reality and drove it forward into thoughts of assignment due dates, exam timetables and social arrangements, as her mother formulated philosophical statements designed to soften the heavy blow to a rare moment of family unity in planning an unexpected aspiration. The girl berated herself for allowing the whimsy of country life, deciding that she ought to have known it would never happen because girls from patchwork backgrounds like her own didn't just get farms or horses, or horse riding lessons, let alone a hexagon-shaped house where a writer could unleash passionate prose and breathe space and freedom.
Life carried on for the girl, and from time to time she would remind the family of the opportunity lost and reconciled by ministrations of "what was not meant to be", and the pain subsided, replaced by a dull longing, until years would pass between rememberings of this bittersweet occasion in their lives. Indeed, it became necessary to forget, and it would be not far off before the family did make a move to the enchanting Dandenong Ranges, where the girl continued to study at university, take a job, make new friends. She did get a horse, on her twentieth birthday, and her heart soared once more, this time held aloft by the knowledge that the horse was real and could not be revoked by cruel coincidence.
Many years later, when the girls had grown up and out of the family home, to establish lives and families of their own, the unrealised dream returned and haunted her. She had a family now, and there was talk of fusing two dreams into one, where they would imagine and work towards life on a farm. The impossible became more possible until one day it could be denied no longer. The decision was made and irrevocable steps took place that led the girl and her family to a farm in the south of her State where cooler winds blow and sweeter rains fall from the sky.
One day in February during a hot summer, she set foot on a property that sang out to her and held her close in its warm air. She had a name for where this new place was and there was a definite waft of blue gum in the air for scent. In her hands she held the galvanised chain for the gate that opened to the future she never ceased to believe could exist. This was where she could bring her horse and raise her own family in the way she had dreamed of so many times in the past. Life on the farm could begin slowly because now that it was tangible to her, she knew it could not be snatched easily from her.
In fact, this story, the farm story, is in its infancy, despite the paragraphs that have just been retold, and more stories await. For now, though, dear reader, whilst a simple shed life materialises and plans for a strawbale home atop a hill await her, the story of the hexagon house and its outdoor shower is recalled fondly, and the girl knows that her mother's comforting words did hold true. Such great disappointment could only mean that greater things were afoot.
And now, under clear skies or drizzling rain, a shower made up of an army-surplus canvas shower, a packing pallet for a base and strategically erected corrugated iron serve to signal to the girl, to me, that my time has come. I'm here. And it's the beginning of the rest of our lives.

Monday, May 2, 2011

And here they are...

These are our latest additions to the equine aspect of our farm! I did it! I converted us all into horsey types! Believe me when I say that I am done for now. No more horses. Not till we have a house on the hill, with the horse paddocks better organised so that I can keep a Friesian or Andalusian (leave me with my fantasies, please!) as well...
These guys were picked up near Bendigo just before 11am and arrived her, via Warragul, after 4pm. They were tired, they were sweaty and then they had to contend with the eejits in the paddock who believed themselves to be wild stallions. Hawaii (the little one) was chased, but out-manoeuvred Dante, and Mia is learning that her kick has currency in THIS herd, too. Being the only mare, she can teach them some manners.

They both came from Brosha Pony Stud, though only Brosha Hawaii was bred there as Karedon Mia was bought in for breeding, but never grew big enough for their liking. Mia is partly educated and I just need to finish her off. Hawaii hasn't a scrap of education, is strong and, as I discovered tonight, very cuddly. I gained his trust a bit and I hope to work on that over the next weeks, before I even try to do anything else with him. I'll stick him in the small paddock and hang out with him, touch him all over, pick up his feet, groom him and work from there.
Mia will also get work in the yard I'll be getting on her soon - she needs a weight-loss regime! I'll let her settle in before I stress her and ask some more demanding questions of her. She took a shine to Tom, as he led her around, away from the paddock bullies. Oscar also led her down the road a bit and she was lovely in hand - very promising. She'll teach HIM some manners, too.
The search for these ponies was quick, but not easy. I thought about it long before I eye-balled any ponies. The gamble is the Shetland, as he is very unbroken and unhandled. If we play our cards right he'll be a dreamy pony for Small Girl. Mia is going to be a gorgeous ride for Small Boy at Pony Club and at local agi shows (we'll have to update her Buckskin registration), and there is a new section called Ridden Native Ponies that both of these fall under for shows - none of this in hand showing, or being snorted out of ridden classes! But only for local agis - I will NOT be travelling the countryside for showing...!
Anyhow, that's the latest headcount and I'm sure Tom wants it to stay that way...that's a lot of feet to trim now...

Sunday, May 1, 2011

Shed Converting

Wow, it's been a long time between posts! Life has just gotten in the way, and now it's time for an update on where we're at for the farm change.
Life in the caravan is losing its novelty, and only because winter is approaching. Our little ceramic heater does a great job of heating the van, but nothing seems to keep the mud out when the rain sets in! And no matter how much stuff I move from the van to the shed (as I find spaces to stash things there), there doesn't seem to be a lot of sitting room...not that we've been indoors during the day much, anyway. There is so much to do.
We've started a veggie patch and though we don't have much there for now, we do have some lettuces, some pak choy, beans, rhubarb and beetroot growing. There is plenty of composting material to feed our veggies, including mountains of collected horse poo. We'll have to give serious thought and action to fencing off an area at the house site for a veggie patch and orchard, so that we can start planting as soon as possible. Nut trees are next on the agenda.

While the kids and I were in NZ Tom was able to continue with putting up some wall frames, pull off the walls and make some window frames. With his new angle grinder he's been able to cut the corrugated iron, and once the windows are in the floors are next. A jack hammer will be required to cut out some chunks of cement and even up the floors a bit. Once that's done we'll require wiring up by an electrician, insulate the walls and then the plastering can begin!
 The bedroom window, looking out to the horse paddock:
We have windows from the local recycler, and have been offered a glass door from dear friends - we won't have to crane our necks too far to see what's going on outside.
What IS going on outside?
We've mowed grass around the shed, the yards and in front of the creek side paddock because of snakes - we just need to see them before we step on them. We've developed a healthy respect and admiration of our reptilian friends and killing them is not an option (apart from also being illegal). Bindi Irwin has definitely impacted my life with her work! We've seen many copperheads and the other day we found a red-bellied black snake sunning itself right up against a fence post. These two are copperheads - pretty, huh?

The horses graze either in the paddock behind the shed or the paddock by the creek (until such a time as the creek is fenced off and troughs installed). We've collected two more horses - a warmblood cross gelding who I have found wonderful to ride (Tom hasn't, but then I know what to ask for and how to get it) and a grey gelding with ringbone who was retired from showjumping and should be fine for some road riding. Three's a herd. Five is a better herd and that's all we will need. Five? No, my maths isn't up the creek with the willow debris...we're getting two more equine lovelies soon. The kids have scored an Australian Pony and a Shetland Pony, coming all the way from just beyond Bendigo, and that will provide so much learning for them - the mare (Oz Pony) requiring more training, and the gelding (the Shettie) complete starting. I'm happy to report that we have become something of a horsing family. Tom is even learning how to trim their feet - saves costs and also enhances his understanding of horses.


We had some big rains while I was away and the erosion that has caused is evidenced in the creek and on our steeper hills. The revegetation of the creek will mitigate a lot of this kind of slippage, as will revegetating the steeper hill sides. The raging creek always fascinates, and the sound of the water rushing under logs and over rocks is soothing.


So, now, we continue with the shed conversion, keep riding the horses, and soon the time will come for Tom to find work. Until then, living on our patch is so satisfying and there are no misgivings about our move. None at all!

Sunday, February 27, 2011

Four Weeks

I've been here for four weeks. In one week Tom will be living here, too!
The night of my birthday we welcomed back two previous visitors - koala and joey. They've been here since, browsing from tree to tree, and finding them snuggled together in the mornings.
The CMA guy came out again, and told me some good news - in with the works will be factored in watering troughs, because the cattle will be precluded from direct access to the creek (which we wanted to do, anyway), so that's a bonus. It's a shoe in. Something drastic would have to occur for it not to go ahead, so sure is our man of our property being prioritised for rehabilitation.
I did some brushcutting last weekend and discovered an old stock ramp by the parking bay - old sleepers and rock, with some bricks as well. I'll have to look over the bricks to see if they are locally fired ones and worth preserving.
Having my horse here is my dream come true and today I took him up the hill at a trot (after some rearing and objecting, initially) and did some canter, hill and flat work up at the top. What a treat, what a view!
Next week we're expecting our stock agent to come and draft the big steers from the little ones and give the big ones the best pasture, till we send them to market in a couple of months. Prices are good, so we're hoping there's no sudden decline.
Tom's been out spraying the last few weeks and most of the work is done...for now.
One more week of doing it alone and then we hit our stride.

Friday, February 11, 2011

The big move

It's official, I live on a farm!
I moved the kids and I two days after Australia Day, and haven't looked back. Tom is still based in Melbourne because he hasn't quite got round to quitting work (how does that slip one's mind?), but he IS on two week's leave with us to get a few things done, ready for when he does move down and take on new work in the area.
Now, I've spoken to the CMA guy again about our creek. In a couple of weeks he'll bring round those investors and he is positive that we'll be green lit for this work. He assures me it the willows will be out by Christmas and the reveg will be done for next winter (2012). Like everything else, I'll believe it when work starts, but it doesn't hurt to look forward to something. This work will pave the way for our farm planning on that creek section and we can put in some paddocks that will be easier to work with than the current configuration.
I'm really looking forward to establishing a better quality wildlife corridor. We've seen our second koala passing through just this week, so we know we could get more of these wonderfully interesting creatures (two thumbs! On each hand!) when we have more to offer them.

Thanks to an observant and resourceful friend, I have tracked down and bought a tube of a tree I have fallen in love with at the local outdoor pool. It's a Weeping Peppermint, and when I've chosen a location and planted it I'll post a picture. Also, I have some gums that koalas like to munch on, but I've already forgotten their names! Not to worry, I have two that I'll put in a nice spot for shade and a nice, native welcome to the hill track.
We've started a veggie patch (by 'we' I mean 'Tom'), and we're recycling the sheep poo pellets and straw from the cow shed/sheep shed. As we empty out the shed floor for converted living space, we're growing our own food. We'll soon peg out an orchard and start planting our fruit trees. A neighbour has suggested we plant some nut trees as soon as possible, too - good idea.
It's rained in the last week, but as the ground really needed a wetting it has soaked it all up and gone spongey, instead of spilling out of springs in the hills. It's raining as I type, and this rain may start to run off, if we get a good fall.
The annex is up on the caravan, so we have some more undercover living space until the roof gets put over the van. It's nice to sit out here and watch ABC's iView offerings (when the mobile internet network is working!) in the evenings after the kids have gone to sleep. And after our ritual outdoor shower!

I've adapted surprisingly well to living out of a caravan and shed, and wouldn't go back to suburban living in a pink fit. This is the life for me. I always knew it was true and I have to keep pinching myself every evening when I sling the Small Girl onto my back and take her for a walk down the road, along the creek, watching out for wombats, picking up signs of fox activity, calling the dogs alongside me and taking in that wonderful air full of the scent of eucalypt and creek water. It's a smell I fell for as a child whilst camping annually at Buchan Caves, in East Gippsland, and now it's mine to enjoy for as long as we're lucky enough to live here.
I'm expecting my horse, Dante, to join us in the next week, and I am making preparations for his arrival. I will order some salt licks, follow up on getting his paddock buddy down here, I have his rain sheet hanging on a fence (to wash some of the dirt off in the rain!), his tack is down here and now I just have to get his other rugs and feed down here. Though with this grass, my boy won't need extra feeding! All my puzzle pieces will fall into place once that critter is here. Then begins the fun work of finding someone to trim his feet, establishing a new vet relationship and seeing how far down the road I get on him...
What else? The moths around here are impressive - I'll have to get a photo of one of them, too! We've taken some photos of Wedge Tailed eagles in flight up on our hills, and they are truly majestic.

Tom has put in a tap from the water tanks to the shed. The meter reader was finally able to gain access to the meter for a reading and we may even get a bill this time! It won't be pretty, because they haven't been able to give us a bill while the shed's been locked.
Oh, and I installed the letter box! By myself!! I've become a lot more resourceful since moving here - I used a cordless drill in anger for the first time ever. And almost completely ruined the letter box installation, but it all came together in the end.
So, we're in residence and work on the shed is in place - photographic evidence forthcoming!

Monday, January 10, 2011

Weeds and Dry

It's been a tough gig for Tom, who has been getting very cosy with his backpack sprayer, whilst keeping the world safe from Ragwort. Ok, so maybe not the world, but definitely our paddocks! I'm sure he's dreaming Ragwort eradication at this stage of the game. Ragwort has a seeding time of 5-6 years, so time will tell how many summers will be spent roaming the steeper hills on foot. A quad bike will take care of flatter areas and save on Tom's poor feet.
Meanwhile, the actual move to the farm is delayed by a few factors. Water is one - since we put in our tank there has been no rain. Today may see some, and more is promised by the Bureau. As a new South Gippslander, I'm supposed to be asking if it ever stops raining and instead I'm asking when the rains will come. The worn pathway in front of the caravan is so dusty, and Saturday night's smattering of wet stuff didn't even cover enough to act as a dust suppressant. Weird weather, lately!
I went to the Coal Creek Farmers Market on Saturday and picked the brain of a local garlic grower. His farm has been growing garlic for 15 years, and it's now organic and all work done by hand. Initially, I thought that my plans to grow commercial garlic may be treading on toes, but I think that having two garlic farms in the same district may just mean the world has more nice garlic to go round. Plus, I'll hardly be 'competition' for the foreseeable future - I have so much to learn, and a phobia or two to overcome...
Plans to move my horse down are also stalled because we'll explore local employment options for Tom. I'm champing at the bit to move, but between low water storage (for household use - the animals are fine), one car between us and his job being in the Melbourne Metro, I'm having to put off the move with the kids. Gone are the days when you could live solely off your farm - not on under 400 acres!
Still, we now have a letter box - just have to sand and paint it, and we'll have postal service...