
Thursday, October 21, 2010
Spring was in the Air - briefly

Thursday, September 16, 2010
Our First Lamb and it's STILL Raining
Baa aaa ry (just kidding - BARRY) our first lamb at 4 days old. That's his mum, Abigail, just behind him, with 3 aunties getting in the act on the right
In the meantime, between all the rainy days, we have had fence posts dug in (five weeks ago - and it's still too wet to ram them in firmly) all around our house recreation/orchard area. We have managed to get up one small section of rails, with another big stack of palings ready and waiting (in the rain) for the weather to clear so we can use the skilsaw outside and slosh through the mud to nail on another section of house boundary fence.We have been lucky in that we ended up with 58 big bales of baleage, and we have sold all but 3, so that profit has been channelled back into fencing the house section off so we can get started late planting our orchard trees.
Bonnie and Bella, our two Dexter cows, are doing well. They are getting good break feed tucker on firm ground (sort of firm) determined by electric fencing. Bella is starting to show signs of being well in calf, but Bonnie is showing little at this stage. They continue to remain skittish and are also fed baleage every night - depending on how much green tucker they have been allowed that day.Sorry we've been a bit tardy of late in keeping the blog up to date. I have heaps more chapters to come - it just seems a little difficult to get time to get to the computer - all sorts of livestock problems keep urgently cropping up, but we promise to make much more of an effort.
Madge and Tansy sure don't mind the rain and cold and aren't complaining ...
Sunday, August 15, 2010
Rain, rain and more rain
Tansy has had a deck extension to keep her from being stranded in a lake. Our second water tank is still waiting at the gate, and it appears it will be another few weeks yet before our water table is down enough to install and connect it to the implement shed.
However, we have been able to get odd jobs done like grubbing thistles, new gate latches, raised vegetable beds in place (now awaiting topsoil) and a start has been made on the new pig house. It has a very grand solid matai plank floor. We hope to be getting a couple of weaners in 2-3 weeks' time, so pig housing has moved to the top of the priority list - completed in the rain if necessary. We were hoping to have one ready for hams for this Christmas, but it's a bit late now in the year, so it will have to be Easter Ham.
We have been making a conscious effort not to complain about the wet weather, as we are reliant on rainwater for our house use. Droughts in the Wairarapa are common, and we are very aware we could well be bemoaning the lack of rainwater in six months' time. Lucky we have baleage for the Bonnie and Bella.
Sunday, June 27, 2010
Our New Arrivals

YAHOO! We're back on line and lots of news ...
We have now been established at Fossils Retreat for about 8 weeks and have only in the past few days got our landline on and computer connected with a new email address. Lots has been happening at Fossils Retreat and lots hasn't happened due to lots of rain - good for our solo connected water tank - our second 30,000 litre tank was delivered about 6 weeks ago and is sitting waiting at the front gate. Our plumber tells us our water table is now so high it will be at least October until it can be sunk and connected to our implement shed which we hope will be delivered and assembled in about 4 weeks' time. However - thanks for your patience. We WILL be updating the blog over the next few days and more frequently and lots more photos. Check in in a few days' time.
Jennifer and Denise
Sunday, April 11, 2010
Belated Catch Up
What has been happening quietly on the scenes whenever we have had days off to get up there - is painting and cleaning up. We now have the newly built laundry/utility room painted with two large cupboards erected and painted; the kitchen dining room has been all painted (except for some window joinery); the kitchen is all installed and electric oven and gas hob working fine; the hall (12 foot stud!) has been painted, along with ceiling (ghastly job - enamel paint); the living room was completed painting this weekend (today, in fact). That's with all the skirting boards and architraves primed and x2 enamel coats, as well.
We've been busy scurrying round and about picking up bathmats, towel rails, toilet roll holders and the like. We have had and still have although tailing off, a minor cluster flies epidemic along with nearly everyone we know in the Wairarapa.
We hired the largest possible skip and made a slight dent in the three demolition piles behind the house. We made a gate and hung it and painted it one coat (1 to go).
Feijoa plants/hedge are doing just fine. Ditto the silver birches we have planted at the entrance. Vege garden is going crazy with all the mushroom compost we have virtually at our doorstep from Parkvale Mushrooms. (1 ute load for $30).
Tomorrow is moving day. The movers are coming around 8am. At Fossils Retreat, we have worn and used and paint splattered although clean, wood floorboards throughout, stuck sash windows, and peeling lino to take up in the kitchen. Over three days, the corpses of thousands of cluster flies have been discovered and disposed off. We know truly know the real truth of that old saying 'dropping like flies'. Three huge piles of wood to sort through into usable (and denail) / firewood / brazier burnoffs. But a woodshed needs to be built first ... and quotes for a fireplace and heat transfer units to be done.
FRIENDS - We apparently are going to have to get a new service and email address etc. but it won't happen for 2-3 weeks. Have faith ... the blog will continue with heaps more progress note and photos.
And we'll leave you for a few days with the most recent autumn morning photo from Fossils Retreat ...
Looking east from our dining room about 09.30 one morning. This is our only view of the Tararuas from the house. Expect lots of snowy caps in winter. We had 50 heifers from the over the road dairy farmer come and chew down our grass over a few weeks. Where the hot wire stopped you can see in the foreground and get an idea of how much long grass we had. That old deady brown tree on the middle left is the macrocarpa we had taken down last November that we haven't had time to go out and deal to.
Thursday, February 25, 2010
And Rats to You Too

These wee babies (7) were pink and nearly transparent, no more than 2.5cm (1 inch) long. Denise reacted immediately and for some reason did a rather peculiar dance consisting of stamping her feet, clutching and pulling out the front of her singlet and screaming her head off. When she had calmed down and realised none had gone down her front (remembering the mouse episode in the potato tyre), her motherly instincts kicked in. We figured they were just newly born - probably while we were partaking of a long lunch and reading the weekend papers. Sadly, motherly instincts were quashed when Jennifer reasoned that 7 rats were better taken care of now as against in the house in 3 months' time.
Note : They were given 2 'instant death' treatments by Denise. There were no survivors and the wee corpses were reverently covered and disposed of in the rubbish skip
So, now we have three still large, but flatter piles of timber - a lot of matai - to be sorted and denailed (we're looking for helpers who want to develop their arm muscles. This is hard wood). The front gate has been finished and hung after several trials and tribulations. We have two raised vege beds up - one filled with soil and mushroom compost, and have planted lettuces, silver beet and brassicas. We just hope we get some rain in between our next visit.
