Saturday, 31 December 2016

10,9,8.........Happy New Year!!!!

Baby WillyWag Tails
Happy New Year's Eve.   

It's that time of year again when we are either jubilant, relieved or indifferent. At the stroke of midnight we shall all move from 2016 to 2017 and in a heartbeat we will start the cycle of a new year once again. For some of us, we will merrily countdown 10, 9, 8 .... you know the drill, and then kiss anything that breathes, others will dream through the whole event, some of us will sit and reflect on a year that has been, while others will look forward to achieving those fabulous new year's resolutions.  So how are you bringing in the new year?  For me I am home alone (abandoned by my shift-worker husband and partying teenage daughter), tapping away at this keyboard, savouring a glass of red, and musing about what 2017 may have in store. I've never been a new year's resolution kind of girl, I prefer to work with whatever is thrown my way, and this year is no different. In fact, I don't think I could have wished for the past year and even tried to pre-empt the many challenges we faced; nor could I have imagined the highs and lows we have experienced. But we have thrived and definitely survived with the help of special friends, neighbours and the internet! 
Freshly cut hay
We have finished the year with hay cut, sold and the remaining bales safely stacked away; calves have been weaned from their mothers (despite much objection from mothers and babes alike) and the chicken pen is now complete (except for where the calves jumped through the fence trying to get back for their mother's milk) - so lucky they are not steaks right now!! The landscape is rapidly changing with the grass growth slowing and the once luscious green having now turned a pale yellow colour, crunching underfoot as the harsh summer sun dries the paddocks out. With increasing temperatures, water is a priority for the animals and it will be a relief when an efficient watering system is put in place.  
Bumper season
The farm has undertaken quite a transformation since we moved in and I have no doubt it will continue to thrive and develop into 2017 but the reality is without time (and an endless bank account) it is a slow and sometimes heartbreaking process. Farming, whether on a small or large scale is not for the feint hearted, it is however, for the determined and brave-hearted, it is a wonderful lifestyle (except when there's a heatwave-then it's the pits). Speaking of heatwaves, the lead up to Christmas saw us all stretched a little more than usual with fatigue our best friend. For me, undertaking seven weeks of intensive training for a new role, finishing a few days before Christmas and then launching into the realms of shift work with 12 hour days, during a heatwave, was hardly blissful. Christmas day started early with the animals' welfare a major consideration when the forecast announced 37 degrees and for once they were not wrong - scorching sun was the order of the day, making it a hot sticky affair. We knew we would be away all day so it was important they would be ok. Despite the forecast, my dad ventured out from the nursing home and lasted until mid afternoon before needing a rest, not bad when your 82. The day was filled with festivities, food and gifts. Celebrating at three different locations the day ended here, around small campfire under millions of stars. It was just beautiful.
Scooby(Ruby), Mia and Penny
 We also introduced a new pup into the mix this week - Ruby (otherwise affectionately called Scooby so as not to confuse her with the neighbours dog) is a small bundle of five-month old cuteness. A combination of Border Collie and Jack Russell she is happily running amok with Penny and Mia. Having already mastered the ride on the quad bike she is a quick learner and already showing signs of a good farm dog.   
Scooby and D
So here I am, me, the two cats and three dogs, sharing this calm, balmy new year's eve night together, sending messages of thankfulness and best wishes to the special people in my world and thinking of those who have left us. I am not melancholy but content in the knowledge that I am blessed beyond measure. Whatever 2017 brings, it will be ok.  So, whatever it is you are doing right now, however you choose to bring in the New Year, I wish you happiness and joy the whole year through.  

Thank you for sharing our Rivergum journey and I look forward to writing to you all throughout 2017. 


Happy New Year 

Until next time,



Thursday, 27 October 2016

Winds of change


Ryder James with his Grandma
The winds of change recently visited  our little patch of dirt. We have been graced with a new grandson, born from my eldest daughter. He is a picture of contentment and charm. Before being sucked into the influenza vortex (more of that joy later) I was fortunate enough to share some time with them both and marvelled in the feeling of bliss. I watched as my girl caressed and cared for her infant son, with confidence and the ease of an experienced mother. I listened as she spoke about her hopes and dreams for them. I remembered my own first days as a new mum, and I smiled a very satisfied smile, one that began from deep within my heart. For a moment I saw myself 26 years ago - young, determined, and very happy. And I found myself feeling proud and at peace. The past and the future in beautiful symmetry.
Living poetry
Since those moments of living poetry, I have been deprived of cuddles and kisses from either of my grandchildren thanks to my other two darling daughters who generously shared their flu germs (the real one) with me, again.

Not feeling so youthful these days, it has taken two weeks to feel nearly human again. In between bursts of coughing, so intense I felt like I might faint from lack of oxygen, and sleeping like a sloth I got offered a new job and I handed in my resignation at my current one.

In our little patch of dirt,  the winds of change blow through with comforting regularity.


Until next time,

N

Sunday, 9 October 2016

Rivergum update

Tree roots & concrete!
Progress is happening at Rivergum. Slowly, with hefty amounts of determination and grit the clean-up is showing signs of success.
Work conference

During the previous long weekend (thanks to the AFL) we hired an excavator from Coates in Sale, such a nifty little machine and boy was it put to work. Coates won the tender from us after ‘CanDo’, situated right next door to Coates, ‘Couldn’t Do’ – they wanted to charge an extra day’s hire due to the public holiday on Friday. No deal, they lost and we went next door.

That machine removed tree stumps and roots, concrete pathways, agapanthus and dug the foundation for a new carport. It also dug holes for fruit trees to be planted in the ground after becoming pot bound since the move. 

Daryl and Owen (plumber extraordinaire and awesome friend) worked that excavator as hard as it could go, despite Owen being desperately unwell he still rocked up as planned at 6 am on Friday morning. Our other faithful friends, Carol and Zac, had stayed over Thursday night (after enjoying a belated birthday dinner for me) and set to work before the sun warmed our hands. Once our little treasure, Bek, dragged herself out of bed, and enjoyed a hot bacon and egg sandwich, she too donned her work gear and began to sweat.
Carport foundations
Saving the wildlife

Throughout the day the three men excavated and we ladies worked the scrap metal pile, reducing it to random nails and bloody barbed wire which despite being rusty and brittle can still scratch any exposed skin. We also started a fire, because you can’t have a working bee without one I say. What started as a small endeavor, lasted for five days, and that fire glowed brightly throughout the night. 

The next day Owen finally succumbed to his dreadful virus and stayed home to rest and recover.   Despite our offer to extend our hospitality Carol and Zac bid us farewell and we collapsed into bed. During the continuous clean up and excavation work, tragedy struck and Daryl discovered the eaten carcass of a new born calf, its mother suffering from paralysis in the top paddock. We suspect a fox started at the calf before it was fully born. A horrendous experience I cannot begin to imagine for both cow and calf. Daryl and I were devastated by the loss and struck by the cruelty of wildlife. Daryl is still hunting the fox and it is an elusive one.
Girls at work
We had expected him at home to install a new hot water service. Instead, the four of us (Bek got to go to work to rest!) put on our work boots and got dirty. Over the course of the day, Carol and I managed to find more rotten wood to stoke the fire and more barbed wire to fill the metal bin. While we sweated and injured ourselves, the boys were ‘busy’ driving the tractor and the excavator. The day ended with chainsaws revving and a mountain of old fence posts cut, ready to stack.

Sunday saw a new hot water service put up after our old one died. This task took about 10 hours and it was doubly difficult for Owen who came out despite his dreadful lurgy.
Snake pit gone
In my enthusiasm I managed to smash the back window of the ute while cleaning timber stacked in the old piggery. Certainly not on the agenda.


Snake pit
Thankfully Daryl and I needed to go to work during the week, which allowed us to have a break from the labour-intensive farm cleanup.
Old piggery
New solar hot water
Yesterday it kicked back in with more metal being thrown into the skips. The remaining tin was removed from the piggery. With every piece of metal moved it was hard not to be jumpy at the prospect of meeting a snake or two resting in readiness for summer. But no snakes, lots of lizards and spiders, but all with legs. We then moved onto the old dairy and just when I thought we were making progress, I found myself briefly slammed back into despondency at the never ending clean up. With every piece of rubbish we pick up and every broken piece of machinery we find, I am reminded that while we physically pick up rusted and damaged goods we are also cleaning up someone’s dreams.

The old dairy
At one stage this farm functioned like a well-planned party. Organised, coordinated and using top quality goods. The farm was home to a range of poultry, a piggery full of pork, a few dairy cows whose milk fed the piggies, herds of cattle ranging from Herefords in the early days to Limousines and then mixed bred steers. A few horses, dogs, and cats finished off the menagerie. Big machines were bought on a whim, and
money was never an issue when it came to equipment.
Penny on the job



Like all good parties, it eventually ended and in this case no-one came to clean up. Slowly over time the party goods lost their festive feel and began to look second hand. Slowly over time the hopes and dreams, the plans of a family disintegrated to little more than rusty wire and rotten wood.


I hope my family never have to clean up after me, to this extent. I hope our work restoring Rivergum will be the beginning of a new opportunity, a lifestyle we will all enjoy, our family and friends will benefit from, and one day, to be passed on to the next generation.

Until next time,
N.
Why did the chicken get in the tractor cab?