Hope everyone has managed to find a shady spot to enjoy the sunshine from this last few weeks. We've been enjoying the latest dry spell and getting some additional silage cut for winter feed. With the drought conditions down south many farmers are having to feed their livestock from their winter stocks of hay and silage. It may then follow that prices for hay and silage could rise for those with good supplies. Most likely though balanced out by a drop in cattle prices (as no one has any feed for them). Its hard to predict - I stopped trying to forecast the vagaries of farm economics a long time ago.
Our salad unfortunately has no shade. The outside beds have bolted in the heat, the leaves wilting under the sun, and we haven't got near the tunnel with autumn seedlings due to stupidly high temperatures inside. Alas we are then going to draw a line under the salad for 2022. Always a sad day - but with the additional problems with an ever increasing flea beetle burden its been a hard year all round on the growing front. Hilary will get everyone's accounts adjusted this week and I'll get to work figuring out a way to run the hens into the tunnel as soon as weather allows to see if they can help us control the wee blighters.
On the hen front we have changeovers planned for both our hen houses in the coming 2 months. As we retire our current Leckie Layers and bring in new pullets we have to wait 8 weeks for each flock to start laying. This means we wont have enough of our eggs to meet our usual order numbers. As in previous years we will be partnering with award winning Corrie Mains Free Range Eggs from Ayrshire. This family run farm uses a very similar feed to us and maintains really high standards. The only alternative to this would be for us to have a 3rd hen house to tide us over these relatively short periods (that happen every 16 months or so) but this would also then mean we would massively overproduce for the other 14 months which seems like a very wasteful model. Any queries re this let me know. I'll update in due course to let you know when we are back onto 100% Leckie Layers.