Month: April 2018

Two black cosset lambs
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Spring lambing, done and dusted

We are done with lambing this year. Months of preparation. Late and sleepless nights. Early mornings. Days of work that stretched to midnight and beyond. But we are done. Lambing is all over bar the bottle feeding. We are tired. Frazzled. Too much adrenaline. Too little caffeine. Long days and short sleeps. But we are […]

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Bottle feeding a tiny black lamb
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A thin, tattered scrap of a tiny lamb

There’s a glimmer of a thing beyond the brow of the hill. A thin little tattered scrap of a lamb just behind the arching profile of her mother, lambed in tight against the fence where the grey stone wall and the brambles back it. Shelter, shade, protection. I can see the mothers head dipping down […]

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Baling Twine and Hope

Small farms are held together with two things. Baling twine and hope. One, at least, is usually in plentiful supply. On a good day, you have both. I’m not going to complain in this post. Scratch that. I am. If baling twine and optimism are the bread an butter of farming, complaints are the marmalade.  […]

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