I, like many, headed down to Birmingham and to LAMMA Show recently.
It has been another busy month on-farm. Calving is almost over, barring a couple of stragglers. As is the way with calving or welcoming any new life onto a farm, some things have not quite gone according to plan.
Spring on the farm is a crazy balancing act which comes with the territory of being a mixed farm.
There are many farming ‘anchor points’ throughout the year which provoke memories and underline how yet another year has flown past.
We are after a secure FBT – let us know if you are after tenants.
February and March are typically my least favourite months of the year, with winter dragging on and any developments in the heavily pregnant ewes generally being one problem or another.
It has been one of those fortnights when every job takes far longer than it should do.
Mid-March and the February storms seem to have passed. Officially in spring, it is nice to get a taste of lighter nights.
An amazing result was achieved at Talybonton-Usk livestock market last week, when a grand sum of £2,000 was raised for the Ukraine Trauma First Aid Project, recently set up by a local, ex-military man.
March came in like a lamb for us here in the Scottish Borders, so let’s hope the old saying isn’t accurate as we’ll be lambing at the end of the month and could do without any roaring lions.