We had a good Christmas - quiet and quick. I actually did quite well for time off with the way my normal days work and had a three-day weekend just before, three days over Christmas itself and then four days over New Year, so I can't really complain. We did our usual family tour the weekend before which was good if a little rushed. Laura came for a few days over Christmas before travelling around seeing family and friends and then calling in overnight on her way back to Scotland yesterday. As I said, Ben was busy with lots of hours at M&S, but finishes there on Saturday. Best news though is that he has a job starting at the end of February working for the company who did our bat survey when we first moved here. Ben had met the chap at a volunteering day a few weeks ago and then on Christmas Eve he knocked on the door completely out of the blue to ask if Ben wanted some work as his assistant doing bat/newt surveys - fantastic. I think Ben was beginning to think he'd have to find any old job for money and do lots of volunteering to gain experience. Now he'll be able to kill two birds with one stone (oops, probably not a good choice of phrase given the job we're talking about).
Our main project at the moment is hedge-laying. We've started on the neighbour's hedge which was part of the deal for having a bit of their field. It's going quite well I think and we're getting better at it. We have done several sessions and got about 20m done which is about a third of the total. It's quite good fun, but you certainly know you've done it after with aching shoulders and arms. There are some gaps of course, but once this is done we need to plant a hedge across the field and so we'll get extra plants and put them in the gaps protected by some of the brushwood and, come the Spring, you won't recognise it.
So, now our 'carpark' bit looks exposed and open, the far end of the field is opening up and over the last two days the bit right next to our house has undergone a transformation! The land the other side of the bridleway is still owned by the quarry although it is no longer worked. There is a wooded slope which opens onto a flat piece which is covered in wild flowers in the Spring including lots of orchids. In the last year or so the small saplings have started to take over and it's not as pretty as it used to be - that's what happens when land is just left to its own devices.
Sorry, this is a bit dark, but it was getting a bit late in the day. |
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