Gluttonforpunishment
Well-Known Member
Pointless post but I have a new found respect for farmers of yesteryear. I have just hand turned, with a pitch fork, 1/2 acre of hay. Absolutely shattered!
Pointless post but I have a new found respect for farmers of yesteryear. I have just hand turned, with a pitch fork, 1/2 acre of hay. Absolutely shattered!
I'm not really ancient..no reallybut saving hay was how all and any sunny or dry day was spent doing when I was a child. I hated it with a vengeance. First it was shaken out so it would dry. It was then made into little stacks to continue drying and then made into bigger haycocks with a waterproof covering over the top and left for about a month before it was bought into the hay shed or made into an even bigger hayrick (sp?) near the barns. The land was pretty rocky so not machinery friendly hence the hand saving process. It also allowed the corn rake to nest and raise its chicks safely. People there now cut the grass early for silage and no more corncrakes
crake.
I have very fond memories of how the hay fields looked and smelt this time of year with lots of wild flowers, bees and insects and the way the shadow moved across it when it as windyI have no fond memories of the hard work it generated for the very rebellious child which I was
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Well done and hope you don't have too many blisters![]()
Dry Rot.
Well done! I'm from Connemara. Land with more rocks than soil in most cases although my father had somehow wrestled reasonable sized fields out of it somehow. Centuries of small subsistence farms with dry stone walls built from the stones they'd cleared from the ground. The hay was seldom dusty or mouldy and smelt wonderfull when freshly cutThe corncrake is still absent though
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I used to go to Connemara for summer holidays and stay with a man called Ronald Stevens who bred and flew falcons. I also knew a priest (Fr Martin O'Connor?) who kept pointers and bred Connemara ponies. (Do priests still do such things?). There was a fishing estate (Zetland Estate?) where we'd go to ring young merlins for The British Trust for Ornithology....But that must be at least 50 years ago!You've brought back a few memories!
Yes, I remember the lads scything, turning and tossing the hay onto massive horse dawn wagons over 40 years ago in the west of Ireland. I don't think there are many people nowadays that have the strength or fortitude to do that, or the time............
Dry Rot.
Well done! I'm from Connemara. Land with more rocks than soil in most cases although my father had somehow wrestled reasonable sized fields out of it somehow. Centuries of small subsistence farms with dry stone walls built from the stones they'd cleared from the ground. The hay was seldom dusty or mouldy and smelt wonderfull when freshly cutThe corncrake is still absent though
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My family farm in Galway, I remember them making hay by hand 40 years ago. Even my Grandma would be out helping with the hay and building the haycocks. It had to dry quickly as there was seldom a lengthy period without rain, lol.
About the right time periodage or gender allowed no get out. It really was a case of make hay whilst the sun shone. Being little I was used to tramp the hay down when the cocks were being made. I even have very early memories of a the thrashing machine coming around when the oats or barley was done. Now that Was exciting
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About the right time periodage or gender allowed no get out. It really was a case of make hay whilst the sun shone. Being little I was used to tramp the hay down when the cocks were being made. I even have very early memories of a the thrashing machine coming around when the oats or barley was done. Now that Was exciting
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TrasaM, did you ever have to help with cutting turf on the peat bog?, that was back breaking work too.
I must admit I find haymaking an overrated pastime thes days. We used to make our own but it was such hard work we buy in now. I love to see those old steam driven combine harvesters at County Shows.
I remember one wonderful haymaking when our Farmer Friend brought along half a dozen YFC lads to stack for us as a storm was approaching. They did a great job and I expected them to get stuck into the cold cans of lager. Unfortunately they all asked for pop and to my eternal shame they had to make do with large glasses of tonic water or ginger ale. I make sure I always have pop now especially as the Shearer is due shortly.