About Jeremy's Farm/Farm Shop - began on 6-17-13
Our first farm was a good place to
start, I think. A cute family owned and run farm shop is where we set
up camp. While the set up made it hard to learn much, it was good
food and really great company. Two wwoofers, Manon
(the last “n” isn't pronounced), 24, from France and Jonas (the “J” sounds
like “y”), 18, from Austria. Neither were completely fluent in
English which made things fun. It's interesting how your mind works
when you're having conversations with people who won't be able to
understand everything you say. There's a lot more gesturing and
expression involved. I loved it! Definitely miss Manon, she was
absolutely awesome. As far as the work went, my favorite parts were
the days we had to go out and pick the salad lettuces they'd be
selling for the next couple of days (there were so many!) and in the
poly tunnel when we set up bamboo with string attached to the
cucumber plants for them to climb up as they grow (Pictures of this in the last post). Other than that
there was a lot of weeding, of course, and a little planting. Mark and I have decided that while we love planting experience, we most definitely prefer weeding!
Leaving Jeremy's 6-28-13
We left Jeremy's farm as soon after 2
o'clock lunch as we could. We were slowed down by Mark having to
change the Granny's spare tire. It's Friday, we've been working all
week, so we're worn out and now we're gearing up to drive (or ride
passenger in my case) for about 4 hours so that we can find where we
need to be Saturday morning, find a place to camp out for the night,
have dinner, and get some sleep before we go on our weekend bush
craft course (not exactly restful, ya know?). There was a lot going on that day. Very extreme highs
and lows. Rocking out to Chili Peppers By the Way after getting
jacked up on coffee and chocolate muffins would have to be the
highlight though. Oo that and scoring a bunch of 90s discounted CDs
in the grocery store not long after we'd talked about needing to find
some for the van. It was fate, I tell ya.
The Bush Craft Course 6-29/30-13
The Bush Craft course was not about
killing, gutting, and eating rabbit as a cook at the farm shop had
informed me it would be. We learned some knife skills for making tarp
pegs, pot hangers for our camp fire cooking, bow and hand drills, and
spoons. We did fire lighting (with our bow drills – Mark worked
with the hand drill), some useful knot techniques, shelter building,
learned about wild plants, and how to make string out of stinging
nettle (ouch! But stinging aside, it was fun!). All in all it was a very useful experience and we loved it. Mark had taken the 5 day course already, so it was a bit of a
refresher course for him. I really wish we'd taken my phone for some
pictures, but unfortunately my mind just didn't think about that when
I was gathering up my stuff. Our instructor, Dale, might have some
pics however, so we'll have to ask him. Speaking of Dale, I don't
think we could have had a better teacher. He's absolutely without
ego. I would expect someone with the skills and knowledge he has to
kind of show it off a bit, but never ever did it feel that way. He
was taught by the famous (or at least in the UK) Ray Mears and has
been asked to teach some other guy who's going to have his own bush
craft/survival television show, but Dale's head is still at a
relatively normal size. He really does enjoy what he's doing and is a bad ass at it.
7-1/2-13
After the bush craft course we knew of no where to camp and were invited to park our van at Dale's place. Not knowing how things would go, we had not set up a WWOOF host to stay with after the course, so we were scrambling around for one last minute on Monday, hoping that someone would be able to take us the very next day. Host after host either didn't have room or were not taking wwoofers at that time. Finally, after spotting a profile we hadn't seen before, we decided that would be a perfect place for us if only the lady would take us the next day... Sure enough, Elaine Brook, running a Buddhist retreat center said we could come one over the next morning!
When we arrived (late. we underestimated travel time by an hour - partly due to getting lost) we found out that Elaine didn't take wwoofers anymore, but it just so happened that the very Monday we called her she had planned to call the gardener and I guess she just figured it was fate.
Beautiful garden, full of herbs, some veg, fruit, and flowers. Kind of a chaotic set up, but really beautiful and tranquil. We new we'd love it here.
Beautiful garden, full of herbs, some veg, fruit, and flowers. Kind of a chaotic set up, but really beautiful and tranquil. We new we'd love it here.
All of these pics were taken the first week of being here.
This one is from the bottom of the yard, furthest from the house just outside the first room we stayed in.
Overlooking the middle of the garden, up toward Elaine's house.
Compost beds in the distance. There are five total in the whole place. Mark's supposed to be peeing on them ('cause man pee is awesome for it somehow), but I think he might be falling down on the job.
...I take that back, he just used it.
...I take that back, he just used it.
The house/room/hut place we stayed in the first few nights before being bumped up to the house used for retreat guests.
Circle for yoga/meditation/whatever else. The sun makes it's way right over top of it and it's perfect for sun salutations in the morning...I have not used it though.
The conservatory. Yup, that's a grape vine on the ceiling. :)
Tomatoes to the left there. This was taken about a month ago - there are actually tomatoes on the vines now!
This spot is in need of some attention and has been worked on some this week. There's a stone wall hiding in that circle somewhere. And that little place up top is the "round house." The sun is shining on it most of the day, so it stays super warm. I believe it's used for meditation and other group activities.
The entrance to "our" house.
At Elaines 7-6-13
Elaine went out of town on our first
weekend at her house, giving us her whole hedged, and thus private, garden to
enjoy for ourselves. And so we opted to do what any sane hippy-ish
couple would do – play Adam and Eve of course (Too much information? Get over
it, we're all naked underneath our clothes). If you have a private
back yard, I highly recommend it. In fact, I think everyone should
spend more time naked in general – it's just so liberating. We attempted some nude swimming pool time, but got ambushed by horseflies. So not cool. Wonderful time otherwise.
7-13-13
Over this past weekend we decided to
try out some spoon carving. We had learned a bit about it during the
bush craft course, but we'd run out of time to have any hands on
experience. I've been itching to try it out. Wood carving has always
just sounded like a good idea to me. I can't explain the satisfaction
I get from whittling away at a split hazel branch to make something
useful.
7-16-13
Beginnings of my first wooden spoon...
A little further...
It's actually nearly done now, but no pics of that yet. We don't have a spoon knife (those curved knives for the bowl of the spoon), so it takes a little longer. Plus, my hands have been so sore from some of the work I've been doing! Who knew weeding could be such an intense hand workout?!
Mark's first spoon and ladle. Nice, yeah?
My sweetie hard at work. So very concentrated that he didn't even know this picture was being taken.
7-16-13
Today is day two of our 3rd
week at Elaine's. Also nearly 3 weeks since we last saw rain or even
felt a bit chilly for that matter. Two new things happened today
though. One is that we had a little cloud coverage happening,
helping us endure the hot as hell sun. The other truly new thing
though is that, as I'm dumping my wheelbarrow's contents, I hear the
wind pick up above my head. As the sound grows I think, “huh, the
wind sounds an awful lot like bees.” I look up to see the largest
swarm of bees I've ever seen outside of My Girl (and there were much more than even that), only
thankfully they weren't interested in any humans below them, they
were off to find a new home and drawing a lot of attention in the
process. None of us had ever seen this happen before (or if Elaine had, she didn't let on). Quite a strange
experience. The Birds flashed
through my mind for a moment and I had a fleeting image of these bees
swooping down to attack us. It was a very cool thing to see.
7-26-13
Spent
the entire work day (6 hours) “clearing” a path. It's made of stone which was once held together by this cement/dirt mixture that
was supposed to be more permanent, but has not kept it's promise.
Winding a bit between a lot of raspberries, the strawberry/fruit
cage, and rhubarb, the path isn't entirely fucked. And I kind of like
the moss growing over and between the stones – it gives it
character and a kind of Secret Garden feel.
But there are sections where you see nature attempting to reclaim
it's own via the craftiest of weeds. In those areas is where I come
in; wire brush, tiny shovel, spade, and an iron pick thingy – that
I can't explain well enough to give an accurate visual – in hand.
The idea is that I'm supposed to clear out the weeds and moss to
clean it up and any areas where the previous cement mixture is
failing us, I remove the stones, brush out the cement dirt and Mark
will come behind me with cement to fix it
back up (am I boring you yet?). Thing is...under this cement dirt and stone there was a slab
of cement put down and as I started to remove the top layer I found
it wasn't the only one causing a problem. There are some sections
where the entire bottom slab is either broken to pieces or just gone
with only dust in it's place. Bad mix we're guessing. Anyway, it's a
much bigger job that originally thought and I'm really wishing I had
some before pics to show so that I could show the dramatic
transformation...Wait...I do have some before pics! Unfortunately they're not from the absolute beginning, before I uncovered the hidden path, but they're enough.
And that concludes Part 2. If you can believe it, I do indeed have a Part 3 on it's way. Wouldn't want to give you more than you can handle in a single post. That's right, I'm thinking of you.
Not the full path, but you get the idea. When I started on it you couldn't even see the stones or that there was any sort of path at all. The Valerian had taken over either side...This is after I'd taken a bunch out and look at how much more is still there! (For anyone who doesn't know what Valerian looks like, as I didn't when I began clearing, it's the tall white flowers on either side of the path.)
After pics coming soon...Please, don't get too excited.
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