Tuesday 24 June 2008

Fabulous Friends

I’m blessed with some wonderful friends, some who have been mentioned in the blog and some who haven’t. Some have helped me if what are outwardly little ways but they are there and many little ways mount up to a very large way, there are others who have stood by me through my emotional crises and their contribution is really unlikely to be acknowledged in a blog but they are always there and there are those who step in when something needs to be done and help me to get things finished. I’m also lucky to count my children as friends too. I am really grateful to all of them. I know it’s always dangerous writing about particular friends as it’s possible to make the others feel they aren’t appreciated as much but today I’m going to risk it. Over the last couple of days I’ve had major help and it’s lifted a great weight from my shoulders.

On Monday, Regis came round as promised; he’d asked round his farming friends on Sunday and had been told how to use my tedder to combine the rows of drying hay to reduce the amount of traversing the baler would need to do. The hay from the paddock field being really sparse had by now thoroughly dried. Having combined some rows it was onto the baler. With great in trepidation we got it started; it clanked, it whirred it chopped and compressed and then it broke the baler twine.

Half an hour or so later; once we’d worked out how to correctly thread the twine, Regis set off again while I checked to see if it was working. Everything seemed fine but when it chucked the bales out the back they fell apart, the twine wasn’t being knotted. More adjustments, try again and the same results. Time to call in help in the form of Mr Bonetti who has the local agricultural machine repair place. After riding on the back of the baler watching what was happening he decided that he couldn’t see anything wrong and suggested that the baler twine might be the culprit.

I’d tried to get sisal but the local agricultural merchant didn’t have any so I’d got the plastic baler twine as time was of the essence. Luckily Regis had some sisal twine in the back of one of his barns, left over from when his father was farming and raised cattle. Once they were run through if worked perfectly. I spent a very hot morning running along behind the baler stacking the bales in groups to speed up the collection of them later in the day. Ann then came round following here morning commitments and after a communal lunch we loaded the bales onto the trailer and from there into the barn. All in all I think there were a hundred bales, which should see the alpacas through until they get into the fields. I then have another field to cut for the winter hay but I don’t think that will be until July because of the waterlogged ground.

As if that wasn’t enough cause for joy, C and S who have a home nearby popped round and C said that if I was around in the morning he would pop over and put up the errant corner cupboard. Can you imagine my elation?

C duly arrived and after a good couple of hours got the cupboard up and more importantly level. It had taken a great deal of adjustment, repeated trials against the wall, packing in some areas and eventually a cold chisel to make a recess in another area before it was up. After that the two flanking cupboards were relatively easy although a couple of strategic battens are still required for long term piece of mind just to ensure there is no chance of the cupboards being able to lever themselves off the wall.

So in the space of 48 hours the two most pressing jobs to be done have been done and I know what a lucky person I am having the friends I do.


5 comments:

Georgina said...

Deborah, I am so pleased you managed to get you hay bailed, and your cupboard up! I think back to hanging new doors toute seulle using anything to had to balance them level and it's hard work. Well done you! Debs x

Alan said...

I'm pretty sure balers were designed by Bloody Stupid Johnson (if you don't read Terry Pratchett that wont mean anything, and if you do then you just learned a bit more about me...).
I know that the knotter uses trans-dimensional space in some way that no one quite understands. Glad you got it worked out. Last time I tried I ended up bringing in one field loose and hiring someone to put up the rest.

Anonymous said...

Almost a mirror-image of me! You were excited about getting a cupboard up - I once had a new water pump! I then asked for a muck-fork for Christmas! I wanted a nice light one that I could leave in my department and not have to traipse about to find the other one. W, too, get problems with stringing. Good luck.

aims said...

Gosh - what great friends and neighbours all around! I'm so glad Deborah. I just always dreaded you having to do every single thing yourself.

Thank God for friends. You must be really special to have so many. And I think you are and do deserve them. As they say - it takes a friend to be a friend.

dND said...

Life here may be tough sometimes but it's knowing that I have some wonderful friends both here, back in the UK and around the world that keeps me going.