We had our first, annual Winter Woodland Walk on Sunday afternoon - we had a great turnout of 20 people, including family, neighbours and friends. We started with a hot pork roll (saddleback), homemade mulled wine and a chat around a roaring log fire. Then we put on our boots and coats and started our walk. I gave an abridged version of the below, complete with homemade cider, Wurzels songs and badger mating calls!
Thanks to everyone who came - it was great to have you here & we hope you'll come again next year!
Tymawr-Farm Winter
Woodland Walk – 16th December 2012
Fig 1: Tymawr-Farm Christmas 2009 |
The next stone is the base of a cider-press. There is one complete with its woodwork in
the Usk Museum of Rural Life (worth a visit – in many ways it is my fantasy
shed!). Two large oak uprights are
linked with a cross-member and a sturdy screw to press the juice. I’d love to get these stones set up again and
working – I’ll get to our plans for an orchard later.
(2): In the
summer this lane is covered with Wild Strawberries – tiny little things. Our neighbours told us that Auntie Catherine
advised them to thread them onto a sturdy grass stem, and when it was full to
eat them all at once. Ben loves to
search for them – they hide amongst the other plants at the base of the hedge,
and when he finds one it goes immediately into his mouth – no chance for
threading with him!
Fig 2: Cider Press in Usk Museum of Rural Life |
He’s a natural forager, I have a beautiful mental image of
him one Friday afternoon in summertime, I drove home and found Jo and Ben
picking blackberries on the Common. From
the nose down he was completely purple, with a great big grin!
(3): It’s cold tonight so I’m glad we’re all wrapped up warm. We spent Christmas here in 2009 and I only
just managed to get back here through the snow from work. The next morning, although this is only a
slight incline, it was impossible to get the car back up the road. I now keep a shed full of rock-salt and a
shovel on standby, and take a great interest in the grit container half way up
the lane to make sure it’s full!
Mum can remember
the great snow in 1947 - the drifts were so deep that the authorities were
unable to clear the roads, and local people and groups of ‘borstal boys’ from
Prescoed prison (opened in 1939) cleared pedestrian-width pathways along them. Mum can remember walking from Griffithstown
with her mother and brother to visit Tymawr-Farm as a little girl (a journey of
5 miles). What a journey that must have
been – it certainly puts the few inches of snow that we see nowadays into
perspective!
Fig 3: The Lane Christmas 2009 |
Even that Winter
wasn’t the worst – in 1962 it started snowing on boxing day, and this lane was
blocked until March 1963!
The late snow seems
to recur - it snowed here on the 7th March 1898 when my Grandmother
was born, again on the 7th March 1947, and again when my
Great-Grandfather died on the 11th March 1963. I haven’t worked the pattern out yet but it
wouldn’t surprise me if we’re stuck here again in the next few years.
(4): Little quarries are often found in the open countryside adjacent to small hamlets – they provided the stone to build the farmhouses and barns of course. Glascoed is no exception – there is evidence of two separate small quarries on Tymawr-Farm. One is near the house in what is known as the ‘Bear-Pit’, and another is in the woodland. In British toponyms ‘Bear-Pit’ usually refers to a place where real bears really were baited with dogs, most popularly from the 16th to the 19th centuries and very often in old quarries. Probably not a tradition we would like to revive!
In this area rich deposits of what, in geological textbooks
is known as Glascoed Mudstone are found.
This is actually a Silurian Limestone.
This kind of rock was formed around 430 million years ago when most of
the Southern hemisphere was land (the supercontinent Gondwana), and most of the
Northern hemisphere was a vast ocean. It
was during this period that life began to appear on land for the first time in
the form of simple plants, although aquatic life was already prolific and quite
advanced by this time.
In addition to being used as stone for building, probably
from the middle-ages when monks from Tintern Abbey (founded in the 12th
century), established a ‘satellite’ at Monkswood (Capel coed y mynach) and
quarried the limestone on an ‘open-cast’ basis.
From the 16th century onwards this limestone was also
processed in small kilns to make lime.
This in turn would be used to make a form of cement, used in mortar,
render and whitewash for house building.
The local vernacular owes its smart whitewashed appearance to lime.
The lime production process is very simple – it is just the
burning of limestone in air in a simple kiln.
The skill of the lime burner was to achieve the highest yield using the
least fuel. Fuel in this area would have
been coal from the 19th century, and prior to that charcoal – a
process which I’d like to revive here in these woodlands, but probably for a
more modern use – the barbeque! There is
evidence of 2 kilns just over the road from here in a small woodland currently
owned by the Badger Trust.
On a map dated 1892 in our woodland there is an ‘old lime
kiln’ marked, in addition to 2 house-sized buildings which on an 1896
conveyance are described as ‘Bailey Edward’, and referred to as an ancient
“messuage” (meaning a farmhouse and associated buildings). “Bailey” in this
description is the same as the ‘Motte & Bailey’ castle: The ‘Motte’ was a
circular earth mound, created by excavating a moat. Upon this mound a wooden castle would have
been built. At the base of the castle, outside
the moat, a fortified enclosure of perhaps an acre or so would have been built,
and the community’s living accommodation, stores, well and animal housing would
be situated inside. Over time, the
“Bailey”, or “Beili” in Welsh came to refer to any enclosure surrounding a farm
house, and the “fortress” connotation was lost.
So it is likely that Bailey Edward was the farm-yard and paddock
surrounding Edward’s, or the Edwards’ family’s farm.
By the 19th century most lime for cement was
produced on a larger scale, and the limestone quarried here at that time was
more likely to have been crushed and used as road-surfacing material.
It would be really interesting to uncover and fire up the
old kiln and have a go at making some lime.
I don’t know if it could be commercially interesting any more. One fact I came across in my research was
that almost all Tortillas are made using lime – the corn is soaked in a dilute
solution prior to grinding to promote elasticity. Perhaps we should start the Tymawr-Farm authentic
Mexican foods company?
(5): There has been a strong Baptist
church tradition in Glascoed for centuries, and an interesting note I came
across not long ago referred to an annual ‘Cherry Tea’ to raise funds in the
1930s to build the Manse for the minister to live in opposite Mount Zion chapel
(built in 1817). Prior to that the
minister had lived ‘remotely’ from the village, and the building of a Manse was
thought to be necessary to attract a suitably qualified and reliable
candidate. Aberaeron House at that time
had a large Cherry Orchard which provided the Cherries, and many people
attended to eat their allotted ¼ lb of cherries, drink tea, sing songs, play
games, chat and pay a small subscription towards the building fund. The house at the end of our lane is called
“Cherry Orchard” and it would be lovely to imagine a huge orchard stretching
all the way from Aberaeron House, down past Tymawr and to Cherry Orchard.
My Great-Grandfather Emmanuel Sainsbury was chapel secretary
at the time of the Cherry Teas (and until his death in the 1960’s - he served
in the role for over 60 years). Also,
and I hope coincidentally, after a 3 tender process, he was the building
contractor selected for the job of building the Manse!
One of the games they played at the Tea was called ‘Kiss in
the Ring’ – in this game all the players except one would sit down in a ring,
and one person would be ‘it’. The ‘it’
player would walk around the outside of the ring and drop a handkerchief behind
one of the sitters. They would then have
to jump up and run around the circle in a clockwise direction while the ‘it’
player ran round anticlockwise – whoever managed to sit back down first was
‘in’ and the loser was ‘it’. If ‘it’
managed to get someone out they were allowed to kiss them. I can imagine in the slower-maturing 1930’s,
particularly in rural communities where young people may not see unrelated
members of the opposite sex very often, events like these teas may have been
when many people met their future husbands and wives. I remember Auntie Catherine once telling us
how fascinating she found the ‘dark, bright-eyed boys’ at chapel – I wonder if
she enjoyed playing ‘Kiss in the Ring’?
(6): On the
subject of Orchards, at one time there would have been extensive apple orchards
around this area for the production of cider.
It was normal practice to pay a part of worker’s wages during haymaking
time in cider, and the farms with the best cider usually had their pick of the
best workers. My mother can remember
taking my Great-Grandfather’s lunch out to the fields during haymaking – she
told me that it usually included a white enamelled jug and a what she described
as a mug, which sounded suspiciously like a tankard. Although the orchard would have been long
gone by that time I like to think that sometimes the refreshments may have been
something cidery!
Fig 4: 2011 Cider making! |
(7): This little
woodland is about 2 acres in size, and consists mostly of Ash, with a decent
mix of other species – some are welcome like Wild Cherry, Oak, Silver Birch,
Hazel, and Eucalyptus. Others are
basically weeds – like Elder and thorn trees (probably evidence of ancient
hedge locations or escapees from existing hedges). We’ll make sure we keep some of the Elder
trees intact though – they make a really delicious country wine, especially
when mixed with Sloes (the fruit of the Blackthorn tree). We made 35 bottles last year, all of which
have mysteriously disappeared!
We have several plans for this woodland – as we clear the
‘weeds’ and start to coppice the Hazel, we will make charcoal from the
clearings. My prototype charcoal making
system consists of a 50 gallon steel drum, a shovel, a bag of sand, a long
stick and plenty of hope! I also hope
that some of you will be barbecuing on Tymawr-Farm charcoal next summer!
To heat the barn & hot water currently uses about 2000
litres of oil per year, which will increase when we move into the big
house. I estimate that to totally heat
the house with wood will require around 20 cubic metres of seasoned firewood
per year. That’s 20 65ft Ash or birch
trees – that kind of size of tree would be about 30 years old. We plan to fell and replant this woodland on
a 40 year cycle – each year we would fell about 200 sq.m of woodland (that’s
about 20 trees with the kind of density we have here), and replant with
high-quality hardwood species. So we
should be able to be self-sufficient and carbon-neutral for heating. Over time it may also be possible to create a
surplus for sale, and diversify into related products like wood-chip, chipped
bark, timber and so on.
Finally, I mentioned “Bailey Edward’s” messuage, the ruins
of which were here near the pond in the late 19th Century. We would love to put 2 cabins, yurts or
similar holiday lets here in the future.
We think it would be a magical place for families to come on holiday,
build dens, enjoy the tranquillity, the peace of a wood fire and gaze at the
stars. Our plan is to be up and running
with some cabins here in 2015.
I’d also love to let our rare-breed pigs roam here, but as
Jo pointed out with her usual wisdom, not many people would like to go on
holiday right next to a pig farm!
Fig.5: Beautiful Saddleback Pigs! |
Look north to see the plough or big-dipper & Cassiopeia
(the ‘W’ shaped one) – in Greek mythology she was the vain Queen of the Ethiopians,
whose boast that she & her daughter Andromeda were more beautiful than the
sea-nymphs brought down the wrath of Poseidon the sea-god who decided to
unleash a fearsome sea-monster called the Cetus upon the country. In order to appease him, on advice from a
wise Oracle, Cassiopeia decided to sacrifice Andromeda by chaining her to a
rock to be eaten by the Cetus. Andromeda
was saved in the nick of time by the hero Perseus, but Cassiopeia did not
escape her punishment, and remains to this day imprisoned in her chair in the
sky by Poseidon forever. So, the
constellation is supposed to represent Cassiopeia tied to her chair – I can’t
see it yet, but perhaps after a bit more cider it will become clearer?!
Look South to see Orion, the hunter in Greek mythology (see
his dog).
(9): In the
1890’s when my Great-Grandfather bought this land from his uncle he may have
adopted the then still fairly novel practise of having a Christmas Tree in his
home at New Inn. We usually think of the
Christmas Tree as something traditionally British but it actually only came to
Britain in the 1830’s, imported from Germany.
Queen Victoria married Albert, her German cousin in 1840 and the British
public started to embrace German customs like this as fashionable. I’m sure this custom would have taken a while
longer to reach rural Monmouthshire! We
plan to allocate an acre and a half to Christmas trees here, and in 7 or 8
years we would love to ask you to come back and ‘pick your own’, hopefully with
a glass of our cider, hopefully you’ll be able to go home with a boot full of
well-seasoned firewood, charcoal and pork too!
Thank you! If you
found this interesting please keep in touch and follow our progress on
www.Tymawr-Farm.com!
References:
Casseiopeia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cassiopeia
Chapel: www.glascoed.com Really interesting and useful resource
covering family trees, history of old houses and churches and chapels in
Glascoed.
Christmas Trees: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christmas_tree
Lime Making Process: www.newtonabbot24.co.uk/newton-abbot-lime-kilns-c622.html
Various old indentures, conveyances and plans
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