Charcoal # 2 - The New Rig!
When I get these together we'll be producing 85kg of Tymawr-Farm charcoal with each burn!
Monday, 7 January 2013
Thursday, 3 January 2013
Pigs # 21 - Pastures New
Until yesterday the pigs were still in their 'barn', which, although I wouldn't have chosen to keep them inside like that, has actually provided them with warm, spacious accommodation. I've tried a few times experimentally to 'lead' them either with the bucket, or in one miserable failure, to loop a rope around their middles and to 'put them on a lead'. Easier said than done with two now quite hefty, stubborn and still-wary girls. So, having given up on leading, I had really resolved to keep them as 'barn' animals until the time comes for them to 'go' at the end of January.
I wasn't really happy about this situation, but couldn't readily see a solution that I could feasibly implement. The pigs' outside enclosure is about 100ft or more from the 'barn' and I my heart sinks every time I think about their last escape. I didn't think I could take the risk.
Reflecting on this problem, I kept half-remembering something I read about pigs eating soil (which after some research I discovered was Lady Eve Balfour's "The Living Soil" (http://www.amazon.co.uk/Living-Soil-Lady-Eve-Balfour/dp/0571107133/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1357244978&sr=8-1)). After refreshing myself on this I thought that if I couldn't bring the pigs to the outside, then the least I could do was to bring a bit of the outside to them. I shovelled a nice, dark, humussy (?!) load of soil into a barrow, and mixed their 'tea' into it, then dumped it into the barn.
What fun they had! They carefully rooted through each particle of soil, eating plenty of it I expect, and also finding every grain of food. They grunted ecstatically, noses down, tails up, happily curled! Within ten minutes I had made up my mind - by hook or by crook I would get the pigs outside for their last month with us!
The next day I surveyed the route and my materials. The route actually has the house along one side for perhaps 30 feet, which could make up one side of a secure path. There are a few other opportunities of this nature - the side of their barn, the great bonfire heap that I am hoping will eventually dry out enough to burn, the 'white container' which I use to store firewood. Using these natural advantages on one side I would then use the materials which I had on hand to make the other side of the secure path, and then, simply and easily lead the pigs to (relative) freedom! The materials consist of: various corrugated iron sheets salvaged from hedges and fallen-down buildings, a roll of stock-fence around 30ft long, lots of barbed wire, a VW Polo, some sad, rusty and mis-shapen sheep hurdles, lots of MDF shelves donated by my father in-law from a surplus-to-requirements warehouse and finally a bath-panel which I took from a '"free" - help-yourself' box outside our local branch of Homebase.
A few hours later the route looked like this:
First few yards: Barn on the left and sheep hurdles on right |
Next section: house on the right, pig fencing on the left |
Homemade Hazel fence post cable tied to pig fencing |
Coming into the 'corrugated iron' section |
Corrugated iron on the left, more homemade Hazel posts Note use of Polo and bath panel on the right! |
Sectional wooden boxes supporting MDF sheets, then bath panel |
The weak link? Bonfire / tree stump / plywood barrier |
In their natural habitat at last! |
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