Miserable Weather and Work

The temperature today rose to a chilly 40 degrees, made much colder by a strong wind and overcast skies—reminding me that the hornets this past summer made many more nests than we have ever before witnessed, the majority of them on the ground, which may turn out to be the best barometer of the winter ahead. We hope that neither hornets nor frigid temps are a harbinger of what’s to come, and we pushed on with some major projects regardless.

A sign of things to come?

A sign of things to come?

Over the past week we have begun clearing a couple of hundred yards of an old fence line along the front of our farm. This is in preparation for putting up woven wire around the perimeter of the hayfield. Having that 5-7 acres fully enclosed in field fence will allow us to graze cattle and sheep more securely, and both will help increase the soil fertility and the hay yields in summer.

Installing woven wire is part of a larger pasture rotation system in the works for the past couple of years. Implementing the master plan started with new fencing for the back 40 acres, a project that is 75 percent complete. The lower 30 is primarily home, gardens, orchards, hayfield, barnyard, and pastures. Although reasonably well fenced, it previously lacked enough cross-fencing to allow us to rotate our cattle and sheep more intensively.

So we have invested, with a grant from the National Resources Conservation Service, in a substantial electric fencing system that will allow us to subdivide the farm into multiple paddocks of either electric wire or netting. Tomorrow, with the temperature projected to reach 50, we will install the charger and first cross-fence in one of the larger sheep paddocks.

As a compliment to that fencing, and with other NRCS funding, we are finishing up a 1,500-foot field watering system tied into our well that, when complete, will give us seven watering stations across the 12-acre pasture behind the house and the four-acre pasture north of the barn. The process involves first using a riding trencher to dig a two-foot-deep channel, then going back and installing PVC water lines. The trenching is now complete. Tomorrow, with the help of a neighbor, the lines will be installed. Another 24 hours to “cure” the connections and we will turn on the water.

If all is successful, what remains is the fun job of back-filling the 1,500-foot-long trench. Fortunately, we have an 18-year-old neighbor with a strong back, time on his unemployed hands, and an eagerness to earn some cold, hard cash.

This evening, as I write, the wind is still blowing hard and the temperature has begun to drop. And, with what I hope is a far better barometer of things to come than hornets or cold blustery days, Cindy is in the kitchen baking more shortbread cookies.

Cold winter, be damned.