Hello there - 6 or 7 months of photos etc here, so will try and keep it short and snappy! Not in chronological order. Usual eventful time here on the farm including a 4 week visit from my Mum (from the UK) over the summer hols, which was lovely.
Misty mountain scene from our rough area at bottom of our land |
Had a good crop of baby goats again in September as reported in last post. This is little Custard snuggled up with Mum Dusty, one of the oldest of my does. |
Couple of last year's babies. Really handsome goats. |
Goat meat mincing |
Hakea in full bloom. One of the natives we planted when we arrived here. |
I entered a few of my latest crochet things in the Huon Show (https://www.etsy.com/au/shop/sedgefielddesign) and a couple of jellies. Won quite a few prizes (but no cash). |
Birthday boy! 12 years' old. He got a lot of nice things, including Bobs the rabbit (pics above). |
Luke perched on top of a blackwood tree that I brutalised. It was growing into a neighbour's power line and the foliage came in pretty handy for feeding the goats. |
Weird rock formations on the top of Mount Misery - like a pile of pancakes! |
Yay, we did it! The second photo is a strangely pocked small cave formation right at the summit. |
Great tree on the way up. |
Blue tongue lizard that Rosie found and I rescued. What a beauty! |
Echidnas were fossicking about all summer. We saw a large one (above) and a young one was a regular visitor up and down the drive, where it was digging for ants in the bank. |
Wally footprints in the mud. |
The photo above and the serious below are of a day trip to Bruny Island. It really is a very pretty place. Luke and I swam in a beautiful bay and had enormous fun jumping into huge breakers. We saw lots of fairy penguin burrows. |
This is the isthmus separating north and south Bruny. It is a favourite area for the penguins. |
Buzzy ball made by Luke, Josh and Josh's brother Zach. Buzzies are the most annoying plant on earth. They grow low to the ground and creep great distances creating huge mats before shooting up horrible little burrs (buzzies) which are the bane of our lives (and particularly that of Bruce our old dog) in summer. This year I tried to spray them (the only way we could feasibly attempt to get rid of them) and was partially successful in some areas. They are apparently very difficult to kill. In the process I managed to kill all our lovely nerimes near the front gate. The biggest vector in their spread are the pademelons to whose coats the buzzie seeds stick. |
I rashly agreed to take Luke and his mate Josh on a big walk up to Cathedral Rock. This is at the start when we were still full of beans. What a walk that was! It was a terrifically sleep slog with a major scramble, almost a real climb right at the top. However, once we got up there the views were quite amazing. Not sure I'll be repeating it in a hurry though. It even dampened the kids and to my surprise I was able to keep up with them. A few times they claimed they had stopped to wait for me, when they were clearly whacked out! |
This was MUCH steeper than it looks! |
Various views (above and below) from the top. |
Panoramic view from the top. |
Weary but not disheartened, back at the car. |
Luke and Josh triumphant. |
This photo and the following series are all from a trip we made late in the summer holidays, down to Cockle Creek. That is the southernmost part of Tassie that's accessible by car. It's the first time we'd made it down there. It was quite a trek but definitely worth it. The odd thing was that there were a number of people camping, but the beaches were completely empty! What were the campers doing apart from tinkering with their BBQs and inverters? We went on a couple of short walks, including to whale point and across the tip of the peninsula to another bay. The scenery was that of a tropical island although the day itself was quite chilly. Luke and I braved the water for a time despite the cold and the boys played beach cricket. |
Anemones exposed at high tide - lookly eerily spaceman-like! |
Now I see why it's called 'Cockle Creek'. |
Rosie, sea-dog. |
Whale Point. |
CSIRO ship, the Investigator, moored at its home port in Hobart. It's quite an impressive ship, |
Dead crow (well forest raven actually) hung as a warning to the ugly cawing crowds of its brethren who keep eating the bunny and duck food and terrorising all the other local birds. |
Poor tiny silvereye found dead in the garage. It turned out that they were nesting in there. I went in one day and about 5 were calling and flitting from beam to beam, seemingly confused about how to get out (despite the open doors). Found another dead near the house, so I'm not sure the garage was the best place for them. It meant the fledgelings had to find their way out over the roller doors when we weren't around. |
Duckling brood outside in their new home. We started with 8 and ended up with just 5. Never did find any trace of the ones that disappeared. Think they fell foul of the the rotten little quoll that I found living in their run - which I'd thought to be quoll-proof. Since then I've filled in the giant excavations made by the rabbits under their hut. Our local DIY shop had 6 bags of pre-mix concrete they were selling off cheap as they were split. I put those in there, together with big rocks and then sprayed water on top. It is impervious to rabbit paws now. |
A huge limb dropped from a big blackwood tree near our gate over summer. This is Luke and Josh armed with bow-saws retrieving branches for the goats. It was awkward owing to the sleep slope on which it had fell. I never did manage to retrieve all of the branches before the leaves shrivelled and dried in the hot sun. |
I had a major fertilising pre hay-cutting season, with the aim of stimulating grass growth and deterring the rotten pademelons which were eating everything. Because my fertiliser has a fair bit of blood and bone (waste products from producing our meat for instance) I expected it to have a deterrent effect. Actually distributing the semi-liquid fertiliser though is a massive and pungent affair. I did several loads like the above, parking and hurling the noisome stuff out with a bucket. It certainly did help the grass but the coverage was still pretty small. Really need some sort of mechanised approach. I have several 44 gallon drums into which I put any waste bits of animals including bones from roasts, feathers etc, plus nettles, tea-bags, used cat litter - basically anything organic which can't be eaten. I let it rot down anerobically, add water and distribute. |
I still do the occasional bit of gardening for my two old pensioners in Grove. One has this lovely topiary which I trim from time to time. Above is 'before', below is 'after'. Pretty good eh? Unfortunately, just as I was about to embark on the 3rd, I cut through the electric cable! |
Goats confined to the weaning pen after misbehaving and breaking out of my electric fences. The braid is just about at the end of its tether and the wallabies wreck it and then the goats just walk through. I've reinforced the weaning pen with good grade ringlock fencing (acquired through various trips to the tip shop) and electrified it! Ha ha, thats certainly put them off. They can't just push through like they can the braid and if they try they get a good zap of around 8,000 volts. |
Haymaking selfie! Mum drove the ute for us which was a great help. I wore a mask this year and it really stopped me getting the horrible asthma and dryness I've got in previous years. The fact that it wasn't boiling hot made wearing it bearable. |
Dad sent me a number of hoes and hoe bits in the post from England! I couldn't get that style here and in fact it was almost impossible trying to get any sort of hand hoe. The little hand hoe I use constantly and Bronte fitted up one of the big hoes for me. It's great for weeds that are not too woody. The enormous thistles I have to tackle with the heavy Dutch hoe however. |
Poor old Murphy cat had to be put down much to our united distress. Luke and I were worst with days when poor Luke was inconsolable. He was very dependent on Murphy and took great comfort from him. And Murphy was just such a darling he put up with anything. In the end his stomach swelled and he was diagnosed with liver cancer. We (well I) decided to have him put down just a few days later as he was clearly unhappy. It was much the best decision as it gave us a chance to grieve rather than continuing to feel so miserable and it meant Murphy didn't have to suffer. Coincidentally that week I'd seen an ad in the Huon News about the Southern Cat Rescue organisation (which I hand't known even existed). I sent them a note asking them what animals they had and they replied almost immediately. We went to see a foster carer who was looking after about 8 rescue kittens. We all got adopted by a different cat and ended up getting 3! We weren't supposed to take them straightaway as they can't be adopted until after their vaccinations, de-sexing and microchipping. So we just fostered them in the meantime. No way we were going to be able to wait another two weeks before taking them home! Above is Barry the black one and Ed the stripey supermodel, within a couple of days of arrival. |
This one was called Lucky when we got her, but Bronte renamed her Scorch. They really are lucky little mites, all having had dreadful starts in life. Barry was found in a sack which had been thrown over a fence, Scorch was found in the middle of a road almost starved, and little Ed was born to a feral Mum on Bruny Island. |
Luke on the Kaoota Tramway. We biked this track recently, it's only about 6km each way, but is fairly rough. I certainly felt it on my old boneshaker. No dual suspension for me unfortunately. Luke disgraced himself by tearing ahead so far that we nearly went bonkers trying to track him down. |
Second Airbnb room with the colourful rugs bougtht at Willow Court. I've reorganised again since them and included a TV and fridge. |
Luke's room with the furniture I restored for him. Both the desk and chest of drawers were bought for $50 and were in a dreadful state. I worked hard to get them ready for Mum's arrival as she used Luke's room. The desk is sturdy oak, which I sanded and varnished. The chest of drawers needed a large amount of repair and rather than trying to sand the veneer I painted it. I laid down an orange emulsion and varnished it on top so it looks very much like cedar, which seems to be the base wood. I was pretty chuffed with how well they both turned out. Also managed to track down the orange office chair and a big anglepoise lamp (can't see it for the glare on the desk) second hand on Gumtree. |
There is no wardrobe in Luke's room and Mum (and Luke) needed somewhere to hang clothes. I couldn't find a clothes rail that fitted the space available and Bronte offered to make one. However, it made it absolutely huge and it was twisted. So I had to take it apart and cut all the pieces down before reassembling and painting it. I also replaced the hanging rail (which was wood) with a piece of aluminium tubing. It looks really good now. It was still a bit tacky when Mum arrived! The day I was due to pick Mum up from the airport our neighbour Annette kindly came and helped me bring all the newly restored furniture over from the tractor shed and install it in the bedroom. I would never have managed it on my own. |
Luke's old chest of drawers (which I'd painted years ago, fits lovely into his bathroom and is a splash of colour in a dull corner. It's also some handy extra storage. The narrow dark wood cupboard that was in this space, is now Luke's bedside table. |
Above and below: we had an outing to the Margate Train with Mum. |
Trip to Mona. Bronte and I left Mum and Luke there to explore while we went off to do some stuff in town. |
Steps down to the wharf. |
Waiting for the ferry. |
The 'Mona Roma' ferry that Mum, me and Luke took back to Hobart. It was quite fun cruising back down the Derwent. |
On the ferry. |
A few pics of dear old Murphy cat. |
The day before he went to the vets for the last time. Poor sweetie. |
Christmas Day - above and below. |
Above and below: me and Mum on the jet boat a couple of days after Christmas. It was a bit of an impulse decision because almost nothing else was open. I sat at the back and got well and truly soaked! I was worried Mum would hate it or be seasick but she loved it! |
I managed to back the Suzuki into a bog and Mum had to steer it out while I towed it with the ute. |
Bronte's leaving gift from Hobart City Council was a gift certificate for a swanky restaurant in Hobart. It was a pleasant meal. Bronte left Hobart City Council at the end of last year and has started in a very similar position at Kingborough Council. It's so much better for him being closer to home with no parking problems. As Luke has also now started at Kingston High School (we were worried he wouldn't thrive at Huonville High as there are a lot of disruptive kids and its last but one in the Tassie league tables), Bronte can drop him off on his way to work, which is great for both of them. Luke comes home on the bus and I pick him up from the Grove Shop which is just 7kms away. |
One of Luke's odd little Christmas gifts was a pirate egg! You put it in water and watch for the pirate to hatch and grow. It did work but the pirate was rather oddly deformed with a wonky leg. When we left him to dry he shrunk back to minute proportions. |
Rosie, me and Mum outside the Local cafe in Huonville. Rosie is such a cheeky monkey - any chance she can gets on someone's lap. |
These girls were a scream at Salamanca Market - I was entranced! |
Salamanca. |
Native blueberries (a type of vine). We have a few plants around the plot. |
I had 3 feral sheep in the back pen and needed to move them. Since they run headlong into fences I had to reinforce this central area then trap them with a spare gate. One of them has already been eaten and the fleece is being salted. |
Mack dog on the front of the little Suzuki. |
Swallow family on the deck. They make Bronte cross because they poo on all the decks. |
We went on a long day trip with Mum down to the Tasman Pensinsula. I remembered it for all the amazing coastal formations. It has some of the highest cliffs in the southern hemisphere, great climbing pitches and one of the best surfing spots in the world at Shipstern's Bluff. This is the Tesselated Pavement. Mum and I watched from above while Bronte and Luke ran down to poke around. |
The Tasman Arch. |
Old Aston parked alongside the Tasman Arch. Oddly it was one of 3 Astons we saw that day - not a brand you normally see in Tassie! |
Devil's Cauldron. |
Mum in her florals. |
Port Arthur penitentiary. Bronte and Luke did the whole tour while Mum and I listened to the guided talk and then pottered locally. It was too much for Mum to walk around the whole site. |
Part of the gardens at Port Arthur. The gardens were for the wives and families of the officers. |
Jetty to the Island of the Dead, where they buried all those who died at Port Arthur. |
We crossed a section of the peninsular following signs to Remarkable Cave, to a whole different world. Suddenly we were faced with the Southern Ocean and huge waves and fantastic coastal scenery. My little camera is completely unable to do it justice. |
Bronte, Luke and I climbed down into Remarkable Cave and Bronte and Luke jumped down and through the tunnel out to the beach. Lots of surfers were doing the same although it clearly wasn't intended as there was no ready access off the walkway. We happened upon a YouTube video shortly after this, where the sea surged through the tunnel in this photo and rose to above this interpretive sign. |
Looking up at the cliffs above Remarkable Cave. |
At the Taste of Tasmania with Mum. |
We went thistle-chopping on the big 27 acre plot we are trying to sell having finally completed the boundary adjustments that have been pending for the 3 years since we first bought an extra 65 acres. These pictures show before and after pictures of a huge thistle clump - a huge clump and huge thistles. Luke is standing triumphant but actually he was about had it at that point and I did most of it, with Bronte joining in to help defeat the last few. We have now extended our own title to the roads to the west and south thereby adding about 9 kms and a big creek to our land. The other two titles are similarly bounded by roads and are 25 and 27 acres respectively. We've already managed to sell one, although we think we didn't get the best price for it and the other is expected to sell soon. We've cleared the mortgage we took out to buy the land thank goodness which has taken the pressure off somewhat. Now we should get back the money we put into the land with a little left over - although not nearly as much as we hoped! The surveyors cost a fortune, plus solicitors, Council and Land Title fees. Seems such a nonsense when in effect all that was happening were lines being redrawn on a map. |
Start of my new little veggie patch with weed mat and heaps of goat poo and rotted hay. |
Several photos below of a lovely, if very long walk that me, Luke and Josh did from our house. To make it a little less of a slog, we left the ute at the bottom of our road and then took the Suzuki as far as we could up the 4WD track that goes up from our house. We walked from there on a big loop through the forest on tracks and old logging roads, back to the ute. About 500m from the ute my knee gave in and I had to get a lift from an obliging neighbour back to the ute! I then drove us back up to the Suzuki and Luke did his first bit of 4-wheel driving following me back to the house driving the Suzuki. It was a tricky descent and he did well.
Above and below, Luke at Willow Court antiques centre on my birthday. |
Luke in his new school uniform. What a smart boy! |