jeudi 29 mai 2025

sheep shearing



William, still a bit poorly after his flystrike

Sheepshearing time again. We were too tired on Tuesday night to try and get the sheep in the barn - Susie had just given her dance and yoga classes and I'd spent 2 days pick axing a 40m trench to the barn to lay the missing electrical cables. As Chystelle wasn't coming until the afternoon we left it until the morning. 

As per usual our sheep sensed something was afoot and we ended up chasing them for 2 and a half hours before we finally got them in the barn (yesterday they went in no problem at all). Chrystelle did her usual excellent job. the wet spring means most of the brown ouessants are horribly felted so their wool is unuseable. The white fleeces and couple of brown are OK. After FCO last summer its not been a good 12 months for farming. On the up side William seems to be recovering from his fly-strike.

It takes a few days for the sheep to sniff and recognise each other again after shearing.


Today I've been mucking out the barn. the next few days are busy with architecture work for me, leading a 3 day dance workshop for Susie, then excavations behind the barn on Monday!

The last few weeks we have had an occasional visit from a large eagle, finally got a photo to identify him...its a short toed eagle.



 

dimanche 25 mai 2025

A busy week


A trip to the UK as my mum's partner John sadly passed away. A busy 5 days trying to sort out the administration for mum and selling some the items mum cannot use....his car and lots of computer equipment.  

In the meantime back at Quélébu 7 chicks to our two sitting hens, teething problems with the solar installation, our apple trees devastated by a red deer and the delivery of the insulated floor for the barn.


First task on return was moving the flooring into the barn, next building a pen so the hens with chicks could get out onto the grass. 

After continuing problems with the solar system, apparently originating from a software update, the controller decided to switch off all power, even the mains! An engineer quickly turned up and unable to find the cause of the fault and in the course of analysis turned the entire system off then on again....hey presto everything works again.  I hadn't realised the system would include remote access by the manufacturer's IT engineers....may try to opt out of that as it's more trouble than it's worth. "If it ain't broke don't fix it".

Flooring laying took a day and half, not good for the torn meniscus and arthritis I ve just had diagnosed by MRI!


With sheep shearing scheduled for Wednesday we thought we'd move the sheep. Uncharacteristically, William bolted and the others followed. When I finally caught up with them I realised that he had fly strike in his horn. Since having FCO (blue tongue) William's horns have been growing without their usual had gnarly coating. Evidently a fissure or other damage had bleed and the flies had got in to lay eggs. It's a horrible affliction. A mad dash to the vet before closing and I managed to get an injection to administer. I hope he ll be ok.



mardi 6 mai 2025

Solar panels





Solar panels, battery etc installed over the last couple of days. All didn't go quite according to plan as the installer advised me that I only needed three cables between the house and the barn, when in fact I need 6. More digging in the next few weeks to connect power to the barn (at the installer's expense), but at least the house is supplied and so far, despite mediocre weather, we have fully charged our batteries, met all our needs and made our first cash putting surplus power into the grid.

samedi 3 mai 2025

lundi 28 avril 2025

Bedroom refurb continues

Bedroom refurb has continued. Boxing in the tie beam of the truss and filling the void with a bookcase, new dark green paint job, new laminate floor - the old floor boards were poorly laid by the previous owner and despite numerous sanding and repainting by me and susie, always looked awful.



 Still to do - the upper gable wall in lime and hemp, skirting boards and the mezzanine ceiling.

samedi 19 avril 2025

Wardrobes part 2


After moving our built in wardrobes about a year ago and recycling the framing to make new ones, nothing much happened because of works on the barn. Finally I found some doors which were more or less the right width. Unfortunately they were about 450mm/18 inches too high. I cut them down to size, removed the bottom rail and panel, cut the panel a bit shorter still, routed its bottom edge to match the thickness of the other three edges, then remounted and glued the bottom rail....so now they fit! Still have to frame the cubby holes on the right but I'll have to wait until the DIY place has restocked with the planed pine I used.

There's a couple of weeks until windows, doors and solar panels are fitted, so we might finally finish our bedroom refurbishment. Painting and reflooring planned.

mardi 8 avril 2025

Finally cut through the rocks and finished the rustic oak frame. Just a bit of pointing to tidy things up.




 

vendredi 4 avril 2025

Digging

A busy week with an excavator (mini-pelle) connecting the barn to the septic tank and water supply and also installing electric and internet cables for the new solar panels will need to be connected to the meter in the house. 

All tidy...it looked like the Somme yesterday with somme of the trenches 1.20m deep. Still have an inspection chamber cover to install where the vertical pipe is.

New water connection and stop valve

resculpted banks - less steep easier to strim


Pulling these cables was a sod - I hadn t counted on there being three screened data cables as well in the duct

Whilst I had the excavator, I also dug out the ground on the otherside of the new door and started resculpting the bank above the new retaining wall.




dimanche 30 mars 2025

Pashmina

After the sampling, a thousand very fine merino warp threads went on the loom and a day's weaving in linen/silk/lambswool slub single thread and the weave was over. Finishing required 55 degrees hot water to shrink the fabric to two thirds of its original width, then blocking.

The fabric has two separate almost gauze like layers joined at the squares of double density single cloth. The same single cloth at hem gives a gentle flare at the ends. It's very soft, light and drapey.






 

vendredi 28 mars 2025


One side complete and some of the massive rocks that had to be removed! The other side looks more problematic.

vendredi 21 mars 2025

Barn works resume

Now the winter is coming to an end works on the barn resume. The solar panels will be installed at the end of April so I ll need to hire a digger, and dig a trench the lay the connecting cables to the house, as well as the sewage and water pipes. The main electrical earth also needs to be replaced. Before that, I ve find shed the pointing downstairs and started the job I ve least been looking forward to, creating a new door through the 70 cm thick wall. The walls are built of mud and rock, no mortar so they are incredibly unstable once you start mining through them. The ground outside the barn hasn't been cleared yet, which at least makes access to the door head easier as it's about 18 inches above ground level. Some of the rocks are enormous, so it's just as well! I managed to needle through and install two lintols. Once the ground is removed (June) I can lower the opening to ground level. With so many huge rocks it's going to be difficult try and create two vertical door jambs.


 

lundi 10 mars 2025

More double weave experiments

More experiments with doubleweave. This is a weave whereby two layers of cloth are woven simultaneously one above the other. I designed a fabric with two layers of plain weave sandwiching free floating red threads between them. At intervals the cloths are woven together as a single cloth in a series of squares. These also trap the red threads. Between the squares the red thread is either tightbpuffing the two layers apart when it shrinks on washing, or very loose allowing it to free form.

The first sample was at two close a sett, so the red threads were only visible with back light. I widened the sett for a second sample with almost a gauze like structure.




 

I also wove a sample as single cloth with a wool warp, but used the double layers as squares. In the single cloth the wool is tightly held by the warp, but in the more open sett of the double layer it can shrink and create a seersucker effect.

Planning to use this knowledge on a scarf project next.