Tuesday 31 October 2017

Paths and Pumpkins

It's been another day's hard work, getting paths cleared and gravel put down. We had a lighter moment to start with, putting Sir Maurice the Black, who we acquired at Hampton Court, into position in the mulberry bed. (The mulberry, of course, is a Morus nigra.)


Sir Maurice the Black in the mulberry bed (© Ian 2017)

After that, I finished tidying up the path down the games lawn, and put suitable edging to keep the gravel in place down each side, before tipping a few barrows of gravel on to it.


Path along the games lawn (© Ian 2017)

Meanwhile, Liz was hard at work clearing paths in the colour wheel, and so I was also able to finish two paths there (the short one top left in the photo below, but not visible; and this one). As we work along the bottom edge of the colour wheel, I'm going to lay flat stones next to the edging (the mini fence made from split chestnut), so that I can mow right up to it. This will also make the transition from lawn to gravel, which you can see here.


Long path in the colour wheel (© Ian 2017)

After a long day outside, we carved our pumpkins and retired to the sofa.


Carved pumpkins (© Ian 2017)

Monday 30 October 2017

Dolls' House

While we were visiting Jenny and Philip, Jenny wanted a hand decorating a dolls house she'd found on Freecycle. It's a scale model of the maker's house, and is really intricate as a result, but she wanted to cover the walls to make it look like it was stone and slate, rather than remaining ply.


As it arrived (© Ian 2017)



So many rooflines... (© Ian 2017)



Underway...(© Ian 2017)



Mostly finished! (© Ian 2017)

We didn't quite get there before we needed to leave, but we made a good start.

Saturday 28 October 2017

Hampton Court

We're in Herefordshire for a few days, visiting Liz's parents. Today we went round Hampton Court, which isn't Hampton Court Palace: the latter took its name from the former, which is a country estate with gardens and parks. The gardens are quite something, with a big walled kitchen garden, water gardens, a sunken garden with waterfall, yew maze with central tower, and parkland.


The water gardens (© Ian 2017)




The water gardens (© Ian 2017)



The sunken garden (© Ian 2017)




The yew maze (© Ian 2017)

Thursday 26 October 2017

Steps

More gravel, today! The steps down from near the greenhouse are done, and Liz has cleared (almost) the long path from them along the edge of the lawn, ready for me to put gravel down on it. The steps needed a bit of work; I've built small retaining walls on both sides, to keep the gravel from going into the beds (and vice versa) which weren't necessary with chippings. But they look good, and an unexpected consequence is a new small bed on the outside of the lower step, which will—someday—get planted up.


Greenhouse steps re-built and gravelled (© Ian 2017)

Wednesday 25 October 2017

Gravel

Gravel is heavy. Not a surprise, but a bit of a pain when one has a ten ton heap of it to move. Anyway, we've got it down onto most of the herb garden, with Liz clearing the path ahead of me, and me shifting the gravel.


Gravel path laid through herb garden (© Ian 2017)

Tuesday 24 October 2017

Bathroom

We've spent today getting the downstairs bathroom to the verge of finished. The last dozen tiles are cut and fixed; Liz has grouted; I've cut and fitted the wooden trim (on top of the tiles, and around the edge of the cabinet tops); we've hung the mirrored cabinet; and I made a filler panel to fill the gap next to the cabinets, and a window board (machined out of spare floor t&g).

It's all looking rather good.


New downstairs bathroom (© Ian 2017)

Monday 23 October 2017

Kent

We've been away for a few days with David and Ann, which has been very relaxing. The usual activities: games, coffee, knitting, films. Lovely.

Tuesday 17 October 2017

Tiles


This afternoon we've done most of the tiling needed in the downstairs bathroom, having also put in the skirting boards. There are about another dozen tiles needed, but they're all cut ones, and we didn't really have the energy to embark on a round of measuring, cutting, and fixing at the end of it all, so it'll wait. They are, however, looking good, and I reckon the room is only one more day's work from being finished.



Bathroom tiling mostly complete (both &copy Ian 2017)

Monday 16 October 2017

Paths and Pressing


We had a rather leisurely morning yesterday, after a long day on Saturday. I spent the morning playing with some IT (getting the FreeSat box working on the LAN, and getting it to see the network storage, which means I can store recorded television on the rather larger NAS drives, which is nice). That done, we did some work clearing the weedy and composted chippings from the patio outside the dining room and the path leading through the herb garden from there. We're removing the chippings entirely, and replacing them with aggregate. The chippings are nice...but decompose, sooner or later, get full of weeds and grass, and need replacing. The aggregate, though about three times the price in the first place, shouldn't need nearly so much work or further expense. Thus, the paths are being upgraded. However, that does entail removing the mess from 150m2 of path, and barrowing in about 17 tonnes of gravel.

It'll look good when it's done.

Today, we started by hooking up a mini dishwasher we have been kindly loaned by Ann and David. We're using it for cleaning and sterilizing jars and bottles in the preservatory, so it's connected to a cold water feed in there. At the moment the waste discharge is a little agricultural (into a bucket), but I'll make something a little slicker before too long (he says). It was immediately used to clean a dozen swing-top bottles, while we pressed  this year's apple harvest. The electric scratter, which debuted last year, once again proved its worth. Not an enormous crop, but there you go.

Saturday 14 October 2017

Road Trip

It's been a really quite varied weekend, with different things each day; it's been rather fun.

Today, we went to the Thorne sale at their Lincolnshire site. We went last year, with the benefit of a van, because we had a large order of equipment to collect. This year, our order was rather smaller, because we aren't expanding as much in the coming 12 months (well, probably), so we only took the car. Still, we managed to fill it really well.


Car full of beehives (© Ian 2017)


There's parts for another five Q-type beehives in there. These are our modification of normal BS National beehives, and allow two brood boxes to be stacked on top of one another, each one split horizontally. That resembles a Q-type house, which is a cluster of four homes, each being a corner-quarter of a square-ish building (we nearly bought one, years and years ago). Anyway: they let us split smaller colonies of bees off main beehives, and 'grow them on' in the smaller box until they're big enough, but it takes less resources (in hive materials), and they stay warmer (as they share a volume), which I reckon makes life easier for them. However, it's designed so that each colony's entrance is the only one on that side of the hive (ie, one is north, one south, etc), which reduces the confusion for the bees, and the number that go home to the wrong place.

We're planning more of these, so the parts for these were the core of the order, along with lots of frames for the bees to build comb in. I also had a few bits and pieces, and then we found a number of bargains on the day. This included some Q-type parts I was planning to order later, but were nicely reduced (they need some minor repairs), and some 'mating' hives. These, you add a small number of adult bees, and a newly emerged queen. She gets looked after while she finishes maturing (after she pupates for eight days, for about four days), and then flies out to mate with (hopefully) a dozen or so drones from the surrounding area (though she has to wait if the weather's poor). After another few days, she starts to lay eggs. That's when you can tell she's 'ready', and can either move her to head up a full or part sized colony, or&emdash;if so inclined—sell her. After that, you can add another newly-emerged queen to the mating hive, and the cycle starts again. We had a number of problems with our queens this year, and so having a plan for a succession of new queens in reserve next year seems sensible.


Mini mating hive (© Ian 2017)

Tuesday 10 October 2017

Construction

It's mostly been a weekend of construction, in one way or another. On Saturday we continued work on the beehive insulation: painting the EPS with masonry paint (to protect it from slugs and UV degradation; it is, of course, waterproof intrinsically), and preparing the parts to attach them to each hive.

On Sunday, while Liz did some work on the downstairs bathroom (the paint we used appears to have created a rather unpleasant smell, so we're washing the walls down, and repainting) and other bits in the house, I built a storage rack on the hillside. It's for storing spare beehive components, especially the boxes in which they produce honey, because they aren't needed for six months of the year, and there will, in time, be the best part of a hundred of them. I've built the storage as an extension of the original platform we made, by driving three new support posts about 1.4m downhill from the lower edge of that. I've then thrown up wooden beams from the old posts to the new, and along each set of three, before adding extra joists and beams to create a set of square sites, each 460mm across. That's the footprint of all the beehive boxes for the design we use, so anything (almost) can be stacked on any one of the fifteen spaces, up to about a metre high.





Construction of storage rack (all © Ian 2017)

All of that done, yesterday we were able to wrap the bees in their insulated jackets (well, the hives, not the individual bees), which means that, between that and their fondant feed, the bees are pretty much settled for the winter. I shall keep visiting them every week or two, to make sure they don't go hungry.

Today, though, has been a mammoth list of work. We've got the plasterboard and spare cabinet boards out of the preservatory, ready to go upstairs (for the last bits of work, long overdue, in the guest suites). To further clear the room, the mahogany shelves are going to Jenny and Philip (staged from the dining room), and the spare bathroom cabinets are also in there while we decide their fate. All the spare insulation board is now cut into manageable sizes, and is in the loft (from which I even remembered to extract the tile cutter, ready for use in the bathroom!). The smaller windows (the new ones) have almost been tidied up with reveals and caulk—they just need false fronts to the windowboards, which will happen when I set up the router for a session. I popped out to collect the car from the garage on a bike, and get a haircut, while Liz cleaned the preservatory. Then we made a set of drawer fronts for the beehive's monitoring trays, and I installed these and took some spare hive boxes up to the newstorage rack. Lastly, we've set up the dining table we received from my parents in the middle of the newly cleaned room, which is now in a fit state to press apples and extract honey.

Tuesday 3 October 2017

Hive Cosies

It's the time of year when the bees start to retreat into their hive, ready for winter, which they'll spend clustered together, gradually eating their stored honey to keep warm. To help them with this, we've been taking a few steps. Yesterday morning, we went to a wholesaler, to collect 400kg of bakers fondant, which is essentially 88% sugar, with some glucose and water. As such, it's a good food source for the bees, partly because it's a similar sugar:water ratio to honey, so they don't have as much processing to do to it to get it ready to store. We've put a 12.5kg block of this in the top of each hive, which, over the next few weeks, the bees will store in their honeycomb. The fondant is an absolute pain to slice up to fit; in the end, my preferred solution is a spade, and my full weight.

Apart from that, we've also been slicing expanded polystyrene sheets into smaller pieces, to form four-piece 'wraps' that will go around the sides of each beehive. The hive roofs already have PU foam insulation in them, so between that and these external wraps, the hives will be a bit warmer. That reduces the amount of honey/stores that the colony needs to survive the winter. It also has the effect of dissuading woodpeckers from attacking the hive—which they otherwise correctly identify as a wooden box containing highly nutritious (proteinaceous) insects. Rather valued insects.

The other thing of note was delivery of ten tonnes of gravel, which will be going down on paths at some point.

Sunday 1 October 2017

Rothwell

We've had a lovely weekend with David and Ann in Rothwell, where we congregated at roughly the midpoint between our homes, to avoid having too much travel for any of us. It's been very relaxed, with plenty of coffee, games, and cake.

The church in Rothwell is fascinating, partly as it was pretty much taken apart and rebuilt from the same material, which means you get a wonderful mashup of styles (perpendicular gothic embellishments on clearly Norman arches, and the like), which are essentially impossible to coherently analyse without knowing that it's been extensively rebuilt.



Holy Trinity, Rothwell (both © Ian 2017)


On the way home, we called in at the Triangular Lodge, which I saw a programme on in 2010, and which is worth a visit. It's purportedly a warrener's lodge, but is really a folly, as it's far larger and more ornate than a rabbit keeper would warrant. In reality, it's testament to the staunch Catholicism of the builder, Sir Thomas Tresham, and is completely packed with symbolism and meaning, none more clear than the Trinity-referencing basic elements of the building (three sided, with three gables on each face, and trefoil windows). However, there's far, far more to it, and I won't even try to cover it all here.


Exterior of the Triangular Lodge, Rothwell (© Ian 2017)



Panorama of the second floor of the lodge (© Ian 2017)