Given that it has been a while since I last bought everyone up to speed, I'll try to make this one as juicy as possible and then keep it as regular as an old lady on the old prune syrup from now on!
The Keep itself has shaped up like quite the homely little home. The living room, or snug as I like to call it when I have my snob head on, is pretty cosy. OK, the log burner is yet to materialise in the fireplace and we still have newspaper for curtains, but now that Autumn has arrived I've managed to enjoy some evenings wrapped up on the sofa with a candle or two burning and a complete lack of moving boxes in the way of my peaceful moment. Amazing what a bit of leg room can do for the soul...
One of the things that has made life feel a bit more 'real' again is finally having a functioning oven. Five weeks, yes really, 5 weeks we were without an oven or even a hob so the first time I got to turn one of the knobs and watch the gas ignite I was mesmerised. All hail the burning, oil spitting, alarm sounding, terrible, fantastic thing that is fire!!
Still no working extractor though I hasten to add... |
While we have been busy working on the inside of The Keep, my girls have been busy making the outside their home and getting the job done while they have been at it. I got an egg the very first day they came home from their stint at the chicken hotel - can't complain at that.
One of the Orpington cross's got in first with this little beauty.
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A lovely gift from some good friends - a worthy egg basket if I ever did see one. |
A big old plant pot on it's side is playing the role of a dust bath currently - again it will no doubt get traded in for a better model. |
I invested in a new feeder and drinker - both save me time, are more hygienic and save any waste should it rain. |
I have big plans for the coop - adding atleast one more and really showcasing them as 'urban farm' prototypes. Hopefully we'll make it work and get it set up in a more workable fashion.
I'm still like a magpie - constantly picking up things that nobody wants anymore and making them work for me. Just this week one of my neighbours left out an old ottoman, so ofcourse I couldn't help myself, I bought it home, re-upholstered it and it is now our bedding store!
I must be getting a name amongst our neighbours - one of them knocked on our door the other night saying they had noticed me admiring a vase outside their front door if I wanted to help myself to it... I guess there's worse things than a thrifty mind and artistic eye to be known for.
One thing I really wish I had posted about when it actually arrived is Autumn. My very favourite time of year. A time of harvest and chilly air and fires in the back garden and beautiful scenery... it's just magical - on par with a snowy Christmas (if they even exist anymore!). Our new home has not failed to provide all of the above and I find some of my most cleansing moments are simply walking the dogs on the park or by the canal and taking in all the lovely sights and sounds. They seem to enjoy it too.
With plenty still left to do inside the house before my own personal deadline of Christmas, I'm sad to say the garden has taken a sorry second place in the priority stakes.With the nights drawing in, I don't get many daylight hours in which to really crack on with it. I've taken to mentally mapping the vegetable patch, working out where each raised bed will sit, what will go in it and what it's neighbouring bed should have in it to compliment it. I know I want to pack as much into that little plot as humanly possible and this time next year I want mental mapping to be long forgotten and carrying my edible garden, still producing, through the winter to be the reality. Having unearthed a lot of my most inspirational books - the likes of 'The Thrifty Forrager' by Alice Fowler or ' The River Cottage Cook Book' by our Hugh, or Even an old little book called 'First Buy A Field' that my mum knew I would love when she gifted it to me - I am brimming with ideas and motivation, I just need a new year with which to nurture every single one of them.
So, while all at The Keep continue to settle in, I do hope some of you get to enjoy everything this stunning time of year has to offer. It is the years' last hurrah before what is often a very miserable and soggy winter. I for one adore these days every year and fill them with chilly morning dashes out to open the chicken shed door, evenings in with a good book and as many pumpkin spiced anythings as possible!
With a promise to post far, far more regularly now that we are achieving some sort of normal again, I bid you a delightful start to the beginning of the end of the year.
Come rain or shine, it'll still be mine.
G
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