Nature Notes
May sees the Damhead Wood covered with a vivid carpet of bluebells. The
foxgloves are in full bloom in June and Dog Roses appear in the hedgerows.
Buzzards climb high in the sky and the grasshoppers are in full voice.
Field Work
Extra grass is grown in Summer and saved to feed the cows in Winter. We try to
make some hay and some silage. For silage the grass is cut, packed into big
bales and sealed in plastic bags to keep the air out - this stops the grass
going mouldy. For hay the grass needs to be drier and ideally 4 - 5 days of
warm sunny weather are needed. Weed Control is an ongoing task as is fencing
and muck-spreading.
Animals
The sheep are sheared and this helps keeps the flies away. The sale of lambs is
far more important to us than the sale of wool as is costs nearly as much to
have the sheep sheared as the wool is worth. Sheep are beset by many kinds of
internal parasite. They are dosed with a drench to keep them healthy and their
hooves need to be trimmed frequently or they become overgrown and infected. The
majority of fat lambs are sold in August and September. We start to supplement
the grass feed for the cattle with corn and other feed (for example waste bread
or grains) at the end of July. The finished fat cattle are sold at 28 - 30
months old. Cattle parasites are treated with worming drenches.
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