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16 October 2014

home on the range


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The ducks are for enjoying only not eating, we couldn't do that, they are lovely, they greet us each morning for their breakfast, they spend their days rummaging about the place for slugs and bits and pieces, they have taken over the wildlife pond that we have started work on last summer, which is a nuisance but it is also nice to see them in the morning paddling about. They do have their own pond at the back of our place away from the house and their own path through the fence to the plantation of pine trees behind us. Their is also a man made pond up there which they enjoy spending their days on. Some times in the summer they go missing for a couple of days, we then go up the hill behind us with the binoculars (every island house has at least one pair, usually on a predominant windowsill) and find them happy as anything rummaging about in the fields behind us.
The bushy shrubs in the photo is montbretia also known as crocosmia, it grows really well here, almost to weed status. It seems to grow almost any where, just throw a clump where you want it and away it goes. We found this out by accident when dividing up old clumps, we had placed them ready to plant and forgot about them, now they are an established line of the most amazing orange flowers, just when you need them right at the end of the summer coming in to autumn. They make a very nice colorful arrangements for a vase but are at their best outdoors, in the spring when the leaves are brown and dead we light fire to them to clean the plants up, they seem to enjoy this as they leap into life soon after this.
Now onto the weather, today we awoke to Ward Hill (the highest hill in Orkney,just happens to be on our island) covered in snow and a few of the lower hills as well, and a slight dusting at sea level nothing to get exicited about though, no chance of a snowman yet. As a matter of interest from the top of Ward Hill you can apparently see all of the Orkney Islands except a small one called Rysa little which is just off our island. The view is spectacular, on a good day, of which we have many, contrary to many peoples opinion. We may not get tropical heat but we have lots of lovely days, both summer and winter.
Posted on home on the range at 14:15

Comments

Ward Hill? There is one in Shapinsay as well. Has the Ward family been getting around in Orkney, and do they have a predilection for high ground? Thanks for info. re: crocosmia. Good to see you are enjoying life.

mjc from NM,USA


Yes we have a Ward Hill here but it is only 64 metres high, not the majestic 479m of the Hoy Hill (if you can call that a HIll !! Lovely Ducks too watch mjc though he will be round for a feed.

Barebraes (on Ward Hill too) from Shapinsay


There is a Ward Hill in just about every parish in the Northern Isles and plenty more besides. The root word, from the norse, gives us words like warder and warden and it meanss to guard as in keep watch. They are usually the highest points but not always, a goood outlook being important. The same word occurs in Norwegian as vardifjell which gives rise to some interesting philological changes. At each end of the Isle of Man are hills called respectively North and South Barrule direct descendants from the days of the norse earldom of Suder酶y which became the Lordship of the Isles. Vardifjell/Barrule/Ward Hill, I believe there are other examples.

Hyper-Borean from Vardifjell


was only being funny when i made the comments about stocking up the freezer i have never been able to eat an animal i knew when it was alive, all our hens and rabbits died of old age or was boredom? don't anyone dare answer that! only our goldfish were eaten by one family member--pablo--a black and white living version of garfield!!

carol chauveau from france


Carol, two thoughts :- 1/ Don't get to know the creatures give you hens, ducks ( sorry on the range ) goats or whatever to your friends to eat and accept theirs in return. 2/ Just don't give them names, it's easier to cook and eat that hen than Mrs Chicken Licken.

Hyper-Borean from Carnivorous corner


dear hyper-borean,u sound like my hubby(or rather late hubby) unsensitive ? only joking-i'm far to sensitive where animals are concerned!!

carol chauveau from france


Hyper-b.: thanks for the information. I am also impressed by your encyclopaedic (or is it confined to etymological?) knowledge. Come to think of it: where does the name for "Hoy" originate?

mjc from NM,USA


mjc. Not encyclopaedic more like a dustbin, everything gets thrown in and sometimes I can retrieve them. Etymologically, I love the connections between languages. I learned french and a little german at school and actually used the french for a while on islands very far away where i also used Bislama ( a variety of pidgin ). When we arrived in Orkney I took an interest in norwegian and through that and my love of boats a little swedish. Enough already! Hoy, prosaically comes straight from the norse H酶y or high island.

Hyper-Borean from Smug corner


Bislama, eh? How do you say in Bislama: "Please, I would rather keep my head on my shoulders. Can't you find something else you would rather boil?" Adult education, that is what I need!!

mjc from NM,USA


" Plis yufala mi mi wantem keep head blong mifala long top blong body blong mifala. Yufala yu no savvy catchem sam nara ting blong boilem." Or something along those lines, twenty odd years subtracts a little from the old grey matter, apologies for the late response I've been in the west for the last two days, purchasing some of Mr Barley's renowned black pud amongst other activities.

Hyper-Borean from Haus blong mifala


I shall trust your imaginative translation, Hyper-B. Many others would not. # Did you get any white pud? If not, Scallowawife could send you her heirloom recipe. All you have to do is ask.

mjc from NM,USA


She's got two sofas as well. What you might call a well-setteed woman.

Flying Cat from Cheshire Grin


Really, FC? I thought it was a sofa for two.

mjc from NM,USA




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