Monday 17 September 2018

Autumnal

Hmmm! What mischief can we get up to today? We have
done the escaping through the electric fence lark and been
rumbled. Ian our human only went and switched the electric
on didn't he! That put a stop to our wanderings
It's raining as I write. Not much rain, little bits both welcome and not welcome. The forecast was for a clear day with rain to the north. Well most of the rain was to the north but it also drifted southwards. It wouldn't be so bad but we are in the middle of putting in a root cellar and wanted to do that while it was dry of course. It also rained a little on Saturday and the tractor broke when a log managed to break the accelerator pedal. A sheer fluke of an accident. Ian has fixed it for now but it just meant hours wasted, first trying to identify the problem and then trying to solve it. It could have been worse of course and it is a good job Ian is reasonably handy when it comes to things mechanical.
Just walk away and look nonchalant. We are being watched

Still waiting for the move into the hole.
At least we managed to get the old chicken hut into the hole that was dug and onto a layer of insulation. It was tricky trying to get it into the hole with our small tractor, but with a bit of the appliance of science and a few hefty planks to push, it went in perfectly. The roof was cut to size, as the hut doesn't need an overhang now and then some plastic on the top for now to keep the rain out. The floor has also been fixed as that was getting a bit loose in places. The forecast for the rest of the week is quite pleasant, so hopefully today's rain won't hold us up so much.

Herkules without his fashionable apparel, which he didn't
appreciate anyway
It would have been better if we hadn't been in the village this morning when the weather was fine. We had to get a medical to renew our driver's licences which runs out on Saturday. It was an amusing time, once we got in to see the doctor. We went back twice because it was too busy the first time and we had other things to do in the village. It was a joint effort with the doctor and two others. We had to have our blood pressure taken, do an eyesight test and a test for colour blindness. The eyesight test was done partly in English and partly in Latvian much to the amusement of everyone. I can do my numbers relatively easily in Latvian but I get confused with the letters so I did those in English. Ian did all of his in English.
He looks happy about that anyway. I just hope that the flies now
stay away. He kept tearing the garments made from old
t-shirts, so we gave up. He seems to be improving now.

Just chilling on a sunny morning.
Whilst doing the test for colour blindness we both said "r" with an English pronunciation and the lady said "no", which confused us, she then said "r" with a Latvian pronunciation. We laughed. The rest of the book was done as a Latvian letter practice. Maybe she could teach us Latvian? We then had a form to fill in. Many of the medical terms are familiar to us but occasionally we weren't sure of the answer, in those particular cases the doctor who was sat on the other side of the desk piped up and answered them for us. She knows her patients well and knows what they do and don't take and since we are not on any medication for anything she could answer for us.

Turbjørn and Brencis
There were the usual stupid questions about drugs and alcohol - as if anyone is going to answer those truthfully if they really did have a problem. When Ian was answering and the nurse said "alcohol?", Ian said "ne"(no) and the doctor quipped "kapec?" (why?) with a big grin on her face. Again we laughed. Occasionally we resorted to phoning our friend to make sure we understood a question but on the whole we managed well enough. It helps that the village doctor is relaxed about these kinds of things to make the process easy even though we don't have the language. If we didn't have things to do, it would have been an entertaining morning really.

Leaves on linen
Our friend who helped us with the translation was coming to us in the afternoon anyway. She was fascinated with the botanical printing I did in August with our felting tutor Galina, so we planned a session to experiment with the process. I pre-mordanted the fabrics, which is a process that helps the dye from the plants to stick to the fabric the day before, so all we had to do was to go and pick leaves and then arrange them on the fabric. I showed he which leaves should work better and explained a bit about the process from what I could remember. You can't see any photos of the finished articles yet as it was steamed over the afternoon and the great unveiling will be tomorrow.

Freddie - inquisitive as always
I have said the rain was both welcome and not welcome. Our friend was explaining this week that they have run out of water on their farm and having to use lake water for the animals and do washing in the village at the apartment that she also owns. She also told us of someone who had dug a lake a couple of years ago and that had completely dried up and the river which usually you could swim in was now walkable. She also said that someone who was getting on in years remarked that he had never seen the water situation so bad as it has been this year. You would think by this that everywhere would be brown, but it isn't as the dew in the morning keeps everything going - just! How the plants will fare over winter with so little moisture in the ground is a worry though and our friend said that many fruit trees may die if they don't get the moisture to their roots. I know a few years ago when it was very dry one summer our new fruit trees really suffered and they have only just recovered to fruit properly this year.

Mr. P. always looks so toothy, but he's not that bad really.
He had his teeth trimmed in May after shearing
The plans are coming together for the new alpacas arriving in October. We will be culling our sheep. There is no way we would be able to keep them this year due to the hay situation and the extra work they create. We have enough hay for the alpacas including the new ones, but not if we have sheep and three sheep eat about the same as five alpacas. Most people around here are scrabbling around for hay or silage and two of our friends' farms only have around a third of what they need. Some farmers in the country are selling to Sweden for nearly three times what they could get here. We heard that many farmers are reducing stock levels if they can, but sometimes that is not possible or desirable if farms are trying to build their businesses.

Some serious eating going on here
Culling the sheep means I need more freezer space and it is full with fruit and veg at the moment. I have been spending time making juices and jams so that they are in bottles rather than the freezer. I fit this in with the runs to the apartment to do the washing and fetch water for us and the animals. The recent rains have eased the situation a little, as we do catch the water off the roofs of the alpaca houses and barn. It sure makes us careful when we use water and makes us appreciate how others suffering from a lack of water must struggle, especially when they don't have the resources we do to fetch water.

Hopefully Chanel is pregnant, she is excitable enough. We
tried to give her some treatment for her feet as they look
to be having problems again, but she makes it difficult.
The most recent treatment we gave her, doesn't seem to
have worked so we have to get some more tomorrow. 
I forgot to mention last week that two of my papers have gone to review whilst I was away.  Hopefully that means I only have another five weeks to get some idea of whether they are acceptable or not to the reviewers. One of the papers is not my main responsibility, as I was only one of the co-authors, but the other one concerns the major part of my research. It was rejected over a year ago by another journal and it has taken sometime to write as other projects got in the way. At least it got past the first stage and the editor sent it out for review, it's pretty bad if it fails at that stage.
Peekaboo!

Josefs is getting quite tall now. They grow so quick. 
I also got my thesis structure kind of sorted. It didn't take me too long. I had made some notes when waiting in the airport last week and finished them off and collated them this week. I have a feeling of things beginning to slot into place now, which makes life a lot simpler. The plan is to get a good way on with putting the flesh on the bones of the structure, so to speak.
You can at least tell that Mari and Jakobs are mother and son

Jakobs is very fluffy and very cute. He looks so innocent, but
he's not! He's a crafty one!
It was interesting this week that I was able to drag up this quote from something I wrote with some co-authors and presented to a Sustainable Educational conference back in 2015.

You would think that Chanel and Josefs were mother and son, but they are not related at all. 
 
  


Adopting sustainable landscape governance needs inspiration and participation more than mere information. It has to address minds by providing a toolkit to help frame problems and possible solutions, but it also has to address hearts as well. There is a need for innovative approaches to draw artists and story-tellers, scientists and therapeutic professions, conservationists and policymakers, the public and experts into a conversation to help formulate images of a healthy, sustainable lifestyle, well connected to the landscape and the environment in which people live. This is not about portraying a utopia, but inspiring people and bringing hope. Without a dream of the future, without hope, it is unlikely people will be willing to make the tough changes needed to get there. 

These are the cranes heading south. I always have the lyrics
of Forever Autumn run through my head when I see the
birds flying off.
"I watch the birds fly south across the autumn sky
And one by one they disappear,
I wish that I was flying with them
Now you're not here."

The autumn raspberries are producing well this year. They
are easier to pick since we made a pathway down the middle.
It is hard to think that we only started with a few sticks from
a friend and now we have quite a job keeping them in check
and there are escapees showing up in various other bits of
the garden.
It just seemed to fit very nicely with what some others had been writing about. I feel very encouraged that others are beginning to feel this is a way forward. We need to change, we cannot stay the way we are. It is like my garden, it needs the rain, it looks kind of okay as it heads into autumn, but it's still dying. Not the kind of end of year death that we see every autumn, but the kind where it will not grow back next year. We need a vision for the future, that we can grasp and hang on to to make the painful changes we need to do. If we don't our civilisation will continue to die. That is not the way I feel it ends. I believe in a God who created this world that we are busy trashing and he is in the business of restoration, but we also need to be onboard. We have to catch a vision that we can change and we have to change. We need those artists and storytellers to show us that future, so we can track how to get there.

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