Saturday, 26 March 2011

This is Mouse....

....the killer of baby pigeons.

This is his 'special' face. How can I possibly be angry with that?

Thursday, 17 March 2011

Can you grow happiness?

It may not solve the world’s problems, but I find spending time in my little piece of urban homestead incredibly relaxing and rewarding.

Like many people, I suffer from the effects caused by lack of sunshine, and am miserable during the winter months when I can’t spend much time in the garden and everything looks like a muddy Hippo wallowing-ground.

Having slipped over in the chicken run on more than one occasion after several days of relentless rain, I always feel for the girls and their mud-caked feet. We are constantly looking for ways to improve their run and perching facilities, and keep their food and drinkers off the sodden ground. On really rotten days we don’t even let them out of their enclosure, much to their annoyance and complaints, but I know it’s better to keep them dry than the alternative of letting them stand around in the rain (they never think about finding shelter) and catching a chill. 

Now we have started to landscape the area, I am suddenly feeling incredibly uplifted and positive. It may be related to the fact we have been having more sunny days, or maybe to the anticipation of watching seedlings make their way to the surface, and hopefully their bounty of produce to come. We have worked incredibly hard recently and our efforts are starting to pay off; the garden is beginning to look like a place I will enjoy spending time in again, after the recent years of neglect and destruction caused by the flock. Warning – chickens will eat their way through EVERYTHING, they don’t distinguish between weeds, shrubs, veg and flowers. They’re really not fussy and will help themselves, given half a chance.

Recent personal trials and tribulations have truly knocked me back, but I am now even more determined to focus on the positives in life and control the things I am able to, and to let go of the negative stuff, and the people who try to drag you down. I am also trying to see the positives in a bad situation – we have turned the disaster of a collapsed wall into an opportunity to do some landscaping with beautiful old Victorian bricks, and it’s coming along nicely.

We have been preconditioned to constantly want bigger and better and more, but this is not the answer to real happiness. I find it in the little things, like quality moments with my Beloved, one of Meg’s doe-eyed looks, attitude from Oily and unconditional love from Mouse, and the joy of watching my girls getting on with their chickeny day-to-day business. I am usually happiest when I’m surrounded by chicken muck and soil and my efforts actually show. Sow and you shall reap.

The daffodils have emerged, with their cheerful yellow faces. The garden is waking from its winter sleep.

So I am looking forward to growing what we can and making our environment and surroundings a nicer place to be. I get excited about the prospect of picking home-grown veg and fruit to take straight to the kitchen (munching what I can in its raw state before I even get there).

So yes, I think you can grow happiness; allow yourself to take the time and find contentment the little things. 

Wednesday, 9 March 2011

New and improved veg patch

The fruits of our labour (two weekends of furious digging, tidying and building with fully recycled materials). Filled with homemade compost. Ta-daah!


It'll look this pretty until the chickens break out of their run I expect... I'm reluctant to sow or plant anything! ;D



Gardeners Gold - all homemade


Saturday, 5 March 2011

We lost Piglet :(

Despite our perseverance and some positive signs, Piglet gave up her fight last night.

I take comfort in the fact that she had a lovely last day, sunbathing in the garden while we were creating our new raised veg beds and tidying up. We had brought her outside with us so she could scratch around in the fresh air, undisturbed by others pecking at her, and just amble around as she pleases, which she did. I held her for quite a while, then she found a lovely sunny spot by the compost bins and spread out her wings for a bathe. This is now her final resting place.

We rescued her from a life of battery cages and possibly a dog food factory, and she spent 18 months with us, so I hope we did our bit.

Sleep well x

Wednesday, 2 March 2011

We have a poorly Piglet

One of our ex-bats has been under the weather. We found her in the garden on Saturday, keeping her distance from the flock, hunched shoulders and a miserable look on her face - the classic signs. We scooped her up and promptly placed her in the cat box (used on many poorly chicken occasions), filled with nice warm bedding and brought her into the house for warmth.

Not sure if she has caught a chill or it's her age, only time will tell. It's our job to make her as comfortable as possible, if these are to be her last days.

We've been feeding her lots of warm porridge, rice and even cooked peas, which she has been gobbling down; nothing wrong with her appetite at least!

Here she is having a good old drink, and some rice :)



A few days later, finding grubs and goodies by the back door
Let's hope this is the start of the recovery. She seems to have regained colour in her comb and around her eyes anyway.

On another note, Mr Fox has helped himself to three of our neighbours girls (am really gutted for you Andi...). Not sure how he got in, as their run and coop is constructed like Fort Knox, but it teaches us all never to get complacent and take the welfare of your girls for granted. Am sending Him up to have a wee around the chicken run later!