It's Monday morning. I'm sitting in the lounge thanking my lucky stars that I am feeling so much better then I did yesterday. A weekend of summer flu is not my favourite way to spend the first days of spring. None the less, feeling better, I am planning a big final push to tie off quite a few half finished, or almost finished jobs. Little annoying things.
I have the front garden to mulch, and sow. It is tear drop shaped, with a solid rough sandstone rock border. I have planned a beautiful cottage flower bed circling the whole garden, and a palm lined path winding through it. I have the stones almost all in place, I have the garden bed prepared, just waiting for me to sow the flower seeds and mulch over and I have half the palms in place. I also really need to finish my winter planting for the surrounding orchard. Which means I need to make a phone call.
What else, well, the new expanded goose pen. I have the fencing wire for it now, so it's just a matter of banging in 10 star pickets, nail up about 30m of wire, and build a shelter. I have a goose sitting on a clutch of six eggs. I have decided this spring is the season to start expanding by natural birth. So hopefully, soon the gaggle will be six geese stronger. The new pen is in the middle of the orchard. It will shelter the birds from the cold winter westerlies, and the on shore winds we get through spring. I am planning a eight by four metre shelter, something I can expand on later. Big enough to shelter 20 birds, and expand to cover 100 birds. So I have some corrugated iron to screw into timber beams, that I yet have to fix to the posts that I have in the ground. I am going to need an extra set of hands for that job.
The potting shed has become a magnet for all manner of 'stuff'. So I might take some of this week to clear it out some what. I might throw up a couple of shelves while I'm in there. I am hoping to get in there a lot more over spring and summer.
What else, well I still have to put easier locks on the duck pen, and fix the bottom of the fence to help fox proof the yard. I need to divide the yard up and build a second pen to allow me to separate the ducks and drakes. And move the fuel tank out of the yard. And dismantle a small shelter half built that sits in the middle of the yard. I need the corrugated iron for the goose shelter.
Stealing from Peter to pay Paul. That's just the way it is. We aren't rich farmers that can afford to go out and just buy the things we need. Sometimes we have to earn the money before we can afford building material. This does cause delays, but it also gives the opportunity for us to look over things again. To have a couple of weeks to walk the idea around in our heads. Hopefully this approach will allow us to build with more thought than was applied in the first seasons of plantings. Which leads to the new vege beds out the back. I need to collect quite a lot of manure to dig in these new beds. The soil is a little sandy, it doesn't look like it will retain a lot of moisture, so I plan on fertilising, and heavily mulching over spring and maybe even through summer as well. This is the area I plan to use as the kitchen garden. I will get to building my commercial beds over the summer. If I can use the rest of spring to finish the construction jobs that are taking so much of my time, then I can concentrate on husbandry and seed cultivation.
Anyhoo, enough rambling for today, it's raining outside, which is good news. I have to go feed the birds, and take the spoilt dog for a walk. Let's see how much we can knock over in the next couple of days.
I have the front garden to mulch, and sow. It is tear drop shaped, with a solid rough sandstone rock border. I have planned a beautiful cottage flower bed circling the whole garden, and a palm lined path winding through it. I have the stones almost all in place, I have the garden bed prepared, just waiting for me to sow the flower seeds and mulch over and I have half the palms in place. I also really need to finish my winter planting for the surrounding orchard. Which means I need to make a phone call.
What else, well, the new expanded goose pen. I have the fencing wire for it now, so it's just a matter of banging in 10 star pickets, nail up about 30m of wire, and build a shelter. I have a goose sitting on a clutch of six eggs. I have decided this spring is the season to start expanding by natural birth. So hopefully, soon the gaggle will be six geese stronger. The new pen is in the middle of the orchard. It will shelter the birds from the cold winter westerlies, and the on shore winds we get through spring. I am planning a eight by four metre shelter, something I can expand on later. Big enough to shelter 20 birds, and expand to cover 100 birds. So I have some corrugated iron to screw into timber beams, that I yet have to fix to the posts that I have in the ground. I am going to need an extra set of hands for that job.
The potting shed has become a magnet for all manner of 'stuff'. So I might take some of this week to clear it out some what. I might throw up a couple of shelves while I'm in there. I am hoping to get in there a lot more over spring and summer.
What else, well I still have to put easier locks on the duck pen, and fix the bottom of the fence to help fox proof the yard. I need to divide the yard up and build a second pen to allow me to separate the ducks and drakes. And move the fuel tank out of the yard. And dismantle a small shelter half built that sits in the middle of the yard. I need the corrugated iron for the goose shelter.
Stealing from Peter to pay Paul. That's just the way it is. We aren't rich farmers that can afford to go out and just buy the things we need. Sometimes we have to earn the money before we can afford building material. This does cause delays, but it also gives the opportunity for us to look over things again. To have a couple of weeks to walk the idea around in our heads. Hopefully this approach will allow us to build with more thought than was applied in the first seasons of plantings. Which leads to the new vege beds out the back. I need to collect quite a lot of manure to dig in these new beds. The soil is a little sandy, it doesn't look like it will retain a lot of moisture, so I plan on fertilising, and heavily mulching over spring and maybe even through summer as well. This is the area I plan to use as the kitchen garden. I will get to building my commercial beds over the summer. If I can use the rest of spring to finish the construction jobs that are taking so much of my time, then I can concentrate on husbandry and seed cultivation.
Anyhoo, enough rambling for today, it's raining outside, which is good news. I have to go feed the birds, and take the spoilt dog for a walk. Let's see how much we can knock over in the next couple of days.