Monthly Archives: December 2024

Not the Weather for Outside

Today has not been the weather for being outside. Not even slightly.  When the sheep refused to go into their field, I completely understood and I gave them three haynets in their shed.  Dahlia and Gussie also got a haynet in their’s.

Pepper agreed and wanted to be inside too.

  

Despite this, the old ladies (Vitamin and Fivla) went out for most of the daylight hours (in a Force 9/10) which I think was very tough of them.  They didn’t want to stay inside and so I took them outside and they trudged off to find their grazing for most of the morning.

I think Tiddles was rather glad to be staying indoors.

Waffle wasn’t. He had wanted out, trotting around his stall being annoying, and I think this is something we will work towards once the weather calms down.  Possibly next July then.

However, I got Vitamin and Fivla in early as the wind is going to get up to dangerous levels shortly.  Inside, us hoomans continued with our Christmas traditions and watched our favourite film – Tři oříšky pro Popelku (Three Wishes for Cinderella).

I will have to go out later and am slightly worried how I am going to achieve this.  Hope I don’t get blown over.  It’s not much fun out there.

All Home Safely

Everyone is home for Christmas.  I am now officially happy.

And we have the Christmas decorations up.  This was the first thing to do after lunch.  We had waited for everyone to come home before doing this.

Lots of help from everyone made things much easier.

Apparently (Daisy took this photo).

It is lovely to see the old familiar decorations.  They are part of our family Christmas tradition.

Even Lambie is immortalised on the tree.

And I have half of Mum’s decorations too.

The festive branches are up.  As Flossie said “there is stuff everywhere” with no theme.

I wonder if it will bring out the festive spirit in us all now.

Vegetables

After doing all the ponies, sheep, horses, etc I drove off to Turriefield for the last time this year.

We were weighing, packing and labelling veg ready for Christmas.

My job was carrots. I had “a few” carrots to pack up and distribute.

This the stack of  veg going to a shop in Lerwick tomorrow.

The veg boxes were getting fuller and fuller.

Wonderful.  Worth all the effort in my book.

I got back home around lunch time to find the containers were full of little ponies who were thoroughly bored of the weather.

Every time I see a pony in a container, I think this was definitely the right decision.

So I threw them all some unsellable little swedes which they were very happy to scoff down.

I was surprised to see Vitamin and Fivla even having a go – their teeth are not great but they managed.

This time tomorrow…….

A Bit of a Day

The weather is revolting and descending further into utter nastiness – F10 tonight and tomorrow.  Not nice.  The girls plus visitor have had to postpone their arrival. ETA Friday now.

And I worry about the Icelandics.  They, on the other hoof, are not worried about much.  They are out 24/7 and last night was no fun – I don’t think it stopped raining all night but this morning they all traipsed up the hill for their breakfast buckets.

I looked at Iacs’ coat (and I know I always go on about this) but the Icelandic horses really are well designed for bad weather. Their winter coat is called a “double coat” and the long hairs makes the water drip away, leaving a dry finer undercoat underneath.

So that is why I am very reluctant to wash anyone or rug because they would lose this insulation.  Also add the fact that none of them have ribs (read ** fat **) that I can find or feel. I do try.

The field they are currently living in is perfect for winter.  It has lots of very sheltered areas and a good growth of grass means the horses can get out of the worst of the weather and are safer outside.  If anyone is shaking tomorrow with cold, then obviously I will get them inside but, as they get all panicky and anxious, I think they are better off outside at the moment.

But this is what we call nice weather for ducks.   They can keep it.

The Trudge of My Sledge

After breakfast (none for me, I needed to get on), I drove off to Lerwick to finish all my Christmas shopping.

It was a dreich day but no wind, for a change.  It’s the little things.

I had a list and a limited amount of time to do everything in as daylight is very precious these days – we get 5 1/2 hours to be precise and I like to home before dark so I can get do the ponies in daylight.

And eight days before Christmas, the Street was empty.  Most strange and very sad.  I was shocked. Maybe it is busier at weekends, I told myself.

I wished the Christmas light were switched on.  It would’ve cheered up a grey day and there was not a carol to be heard either.  If I wasn’t feeling particularly Christmassy before, then I certainly wasn’t going to find it here.

Still, the shop windows were very good and innovative.

These felted mince pies were very clever.  I smiled when I saw them.

So that’s me on the shopping front.  No more.  If we don’t have it, we don’t need it – that’s my theory.  I’m done.