I hid from the rain all week, but today was beautiful out and I knew I had work to do. My manure pile needed "sorting."
Oh, the blisters. Shovelful by shovelful, I dug up the oldest, composted material, and wheelbarrowful by wheelbarrowful, spread it on our hang. It is so tideous, I see the allure of a tractor. My poor back. I sat around all week last week, and made up for it today.
The steam was giving me a sickening smelling steam bath, and my rubber boots were way into the hot spots, almost burning my feet. I saw no sign of my baby rat family. Oh, except a hole in my tarp clearly chewed by their teeth!
Anyway, after spreading about half the pile, I turn the rest of it, and shovel all the relatively new manure to the back of the box. In a couple months, it will be composted and ready to be dug up again.
I pulled countless nettles (taller than me) and tried to get their evil root systems out too. I spread compost on these areas. There is no end in sight to blackberry brambles and nettles. The winter slowdown makes me feel like I have a fighting chance. Do I?
I think I may be the only person on Earth with this odd and tideous manure system. Since we have ponds and a creek, we are trying to be careful, keeping our manure box water-tight and I only spread the completely composted material, which resembles soil. (Stinky soil though!) We might be a little bit paranoid about protecting the fish, not just ours, our neighbor has 8 ponds and many more trout than we do. If anything happened to them because of us, I would feel so bad. And we'd probably have an insurance claim against us.
Baasha is such a pig in bad weather, he hides in his stall whenever possible and he must run laps in there at night, distributing manure in every possible place. The door is open! He can go outside to pee, but no. He likes to make work for me.
I've taken to kicking him out all day long, and he seems OK, he naps on the grass, and eventually goes out to the pasture where he nibbles the tips of the choicest grass only.
I am finally harvesting my carrots from our greenhouse, and they are oddly shaped and small. Hm. I wonder if it's possible to grow large, symmetrical carrots like at the grocery store. Does anyone have tips for me?
I am so exhausted, and it feels so lovely. Tonight might involve ibubrofen from all that shovelling.
(Note: The pics are of an oak/beech joining that is very special to the townsfolk because they represent a joining of their two villages. I forget which villages. Not far from our town.)
***
Something very good is going to happen this week. I wish I could talk about it! It's blue, and the result of a wishbone I pulled out of a chicken I baked. My man made his first wishbone wish (Germans don't have the wishbone tradition), and he got his wish. (But it was my wish too!)
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
12 comments:
Compost: yes, a tractor is a good thing. Hiring the neighbor kid is second best option!
Carrots: very fine soil without too much nitrogen. Nitrogen makes hairy roots. If your soil is rocky, the roots will grow around the rocks--mine look like something out of the Harry Potter greenhouse. Sigh.
Something blue: dying of curiousity! Our wishbone is on the kitchen windowsill, ready for wishing...tonight!
I totally relate to the aching body right now, lol!
Something blue . . . that does not narrow down things very much. We need a better hint!
Ouch! It made me sore just to read about it! Hope you feel better soon!
I shoveled one tiny bit of manure in solidarity with you.
Hardly compares, I know. The upside to boarding, I guess.
I can't grow anything other than two fine daughters. They prefer mud. :)
blue. blue. Hmmm. Marbles?
I know about the blue :-) ~J
Sorry you worked your butt off today..I hope tomorrow you feel better. Interesting about the Oak/breech tree I think on the country walk we take I have walked by the same looking tree. I'm so glad there was no rain today it sure has been a wet November. Take care go soak in a tub!
I have a black thumb, so I can't help with the mutant carrots.
A tractor? New car? Hmm, but then why couldn't you talk about it?
I would say you're preggers! That's my guess.
Happy to read it was mere shovelling and not a fall from the saddle. You definately have to find a strapping young lad to help you with that task next time.
Something blue: Ford, New Holland or Mitsubishi. With a loader to turn that compost for you =D
Biatip: a silver tip grizzley with two tails.
i know it too... hehe... :-)
Oh...I may be joining you too soon in the back ache department...my PBO has piles of poo gathering..so much so I run into them now if I don't watch out when I go to the outer field. It is soo stupid and ugly..I would have never chosen to pile the poo like that! It has become a poo ridden place.
Post a Comment