Might finally be summer 
Apparently we'll be getting some sunshine this week. We did get a few weeks in early January, but it's been rather variable since then!

Ross's funeral went well, and we were able to share it with more overseas. His funeral was in the catholic church and his burial plot was in the Anglican cemetery. Before he died, we asked him what songs he wanted. He was quite insistent on one particular song. So as they lowered him into the grave, we played him Another One Bites The Dust, while we all tried to keep a straight face. He certainly kept up his sense of humour. At the reception, we brought over his Fordson Dexta that he'd used for most of his life, and had quite a reunion of many of the longstanding personalities of the district

Since then, we've been trying to tidy up the running of the farm. I put in several fence posts after locating the old post hole borer, and Bronwyn has been changing over the accounts. Janet has been coping remarkably well; we just need to check up on her to make sure the bins get emptied and the payments made. Christmas was a bit more subdued, but we had the chance to see most of the family as they popped in. Bronwyn has retrieved Ross's old jumper and polo shirts in order to make memory bears once she gets the chance.

We had some good sunshine after Christmas. Allan dug a trench and built a water slide. The trench digger turned the earth into dust and spread it over a huge distance, so everything got covered with dirt. Didn't stop the fun.

The sunshine lasted up until the Festival One week. I'm told we had record rainfall for the site, and for a couple of days, all vehicle movements were banned unless directly authorised by the senior management. We then had a couple of days of sun, after which the ground was looking much better. Then after the hordes arrived on Friday, it rained for most of Saturday and the happy campers turned it into a mud bath. But that didn't seem to dampen anything. In terms of numbers and pre-sales for next year, it's been the most successful one yet. It was also great fun helping out in the kitchen during the build week, and doing the ticketing on the gates. The kitchen tent was at a slight angle (2.5 degrees; we measured it). We had to raise one side of the sinks, and I had to take care when walking through in case I found myself veering to one side. Plus all the people slicing vegetables with recently sharpened knives!

For our favourite band, the Pineapple Hedz, I had obtained four inflatable pineapples which I'd intended to fix to our hats. Didn't get time, so we just waved them around instead. We got called to the front, and had a whale of a time copying each other's moves, and handing the pineapples out to nearby teenagers to wave them too. Turned out that many were children of the band members, and at least one walked home with a pineapple, so we shall definitely be remembered.

We hired a motor home to take down to the festival. We were planning to buy it, and the festival gave us a good chance to test it out, particularly with all the mud. We found several faults, which have now all been fixed. So yesterday we drove down and collected it. It's going to be quite a responsibility, but we've got many plans for it.

It's been a busy few weeks. I've been trying to get some new people signed up and ready to authorise transactions for the brass band after our main man was taken ill before Christmas. I've also taken my trombone in for a service and various repairs. And Sarah is getting ready for a driving test. Her cousin Paige came over a couple of weeks ago, also for a driving test. We arrived in good time. Alas, she'd left her license at home, so she's rebooked. It'll be her fifth attempt. Sarah has her test this week, and she's nervous. But she's a perfectly good driver, so hopefully she'll nail it. Paige, well, we'll be seeing her again next month!

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The end of an era 
Sadly, Bronwyn's father Ross passed away last Sunday. He went to sleep in his favourite chair after lunch, and at 4pm we got the call that he wasn't responding. We nearly lost him a week or two ago, when he was taken into hospital and went down with an infection, but then started talking, and moving, and then attempted to get up and go home. He finally got that wish on the Friday, and we were due to get a home help on Monday. The funeral will be on this Friday at 11am our time, and let us know if you want the Zoom link.

Him and his father were born farmers, working the same land that was bought by his great grandfather, and now full of history. Many of the techniques that he's passed on to us have been around since the 1930s, and many of the implements and tools are still around, somewhere. He (and his father) made this place very much a part of them, and it's fitting that his last hours were on the farm, with his family all nearby.

One thing that I've been learning this year is the art of mending fences. I've got a few tools and bits and pieces, but I do need a bit of practice. The Aussie youtube videos show them tying a high tensile fence wire like it's a shoelace. I need to use a bit of ingenuity to achieve anything remotely like it! But now we have 8kV around much of the farm, and the cows no longer roam free. Well, not until they smash the gate again.

After all these years, it still seems odd having Christmas trees up in the blazing sunshine. We had our first supermarket playout on Thursday, two rehearsals for the Waitakere junior band (plus my regular Saturday lesson), the Kumeu Parade and a quick rehearsal to go over the music I'd written for a carol session later in the month. The next couple of weeks will be action packed, and then it will all go quiet. And just as it's starting to get busy again, it's our turn to pack up and spend a week in an isolated paddock with every excuse to turn off the phone!

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Moving on 
Sarah has a car! We've been looking for one for months, and finally settled on one that's the same model as Rachael's, and the same age as Sarah. It's a Hyundai Getz, and a rather nice cornflower blue. Sarah has been driving it as often as possible, and has been looking up decals in order to decorate it to the same level as Rachael's.

Only 12 lambs this year. We've been winding down the herd in order to move over to cows. It's not really economic; the wool costs more to shear than we get from selling it. And sheep need a bit more looking after than cows. Although the fences definitely need more looking after when the cows have been in!

There's 9 ducklings on our pond now, and they're getting big. They're also quite tame, and will get within two metres of me when I'm feeding them. Plus a few others that wait until I'm gone, and the two big muscovy ducks that come so close they've nearly ended up in the chicken coop.

Alas, we've just had to say goodbye to an old horse. We're left with just the one now. They were retired racehorses, running in the trotting races, and for several decades they've had the run of the farm, generally making their own decisions when someone foolishly opens a gate. It's the end of an era.

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Mud 
So Allan put up the electric tape across the paddock and let the cows in. It took them about a day to get past the tape. So we just let them stay. Now we have a paddock of much less grass, covered in mud and holes.

I found a tennis ball! It happened to be sitting in one of the holes, covered in mud but still circular. There's about three more out there somewhere; I guess some distant archaeologist may marvel at the ancient artifact, and ponder its ceremonial burial.

We've acquired some geese. They probably came from a neighbour up on the hill, and five of them flew over and landed in our paddock. OK, three in the paddock, one in the driveway and one in a paddock on the other side. The one in the driveway eventually worked out how to cross the fence, but the fifth goose must have got fed up honking, and presumably flew back home. So we now have four geese in the paddock, and the sheep are attempting to make friends with them.

Sarah somehow passed the maths! So chemistry is back on. So are the trips fighting through the traffic to get her to the bus stop. Got held up last week by a festival of traffic cones; each one placed by hand by someone clinging to the side of a truck. Took 25 minutes to crawl along behind. In the end, we gave up on the bus stop and I decided it was faster to take her to the university direct!


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A quiet winter 
Sarah hasn't got the results for her maths yet, but she got 80% for psychology. Once she gets past the maths, she can finally get on with chemistry again. Meanwhile, Rach has decided against doing her Masters thesis because they are trying to steer her into studies that have already been covered. But she's really keen to get onto an Emergency Medical Technician course, which is the first step towards becoming a paramedic. It'll be several months down south, but she'll get paid for it. There's several hundred applying for 26 places though, so we'll just have to wait and see.

One of our chickens went missing. It was probably over 8 years old, and we just assumed that it had quietly died somewhere. We searched around but couldn't see it. It was missing for about four weeks, and then just turned up last week as if nothing had happened. It's probably laid some eggs somewhere and was quietly sitting on them, and eventually gave up. Pity, we haven't seen any eggs for a while either.

While chaos reigns around the world, it's been relatively peaceful here. No sign of a frost yet, although we did have some localised flooding. The grass is still long, and getting longer. Two more tennis balls missing. The plan is to section off the paddock so that the cows don't eat it all at once. It's not the flattest of paddocks, so we'll need some careful fencing. And we still have the cow that destroyed a five barred gate and an eight inch fence post. Plus now another section of fence, and probably two since we found her out on the road this week. We're planning to buy some young calves to boost the herd. And probably sell one too.

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