Good morning all! After the disappointment of a cloudy dank day yesterday today is shaping up nicely to be dry and sunny. It’s been just a tad lighter on the early run for the school bus and those of you out and about may well have seen the first snowdrops – anyone else feel like a slumbering spring is beginning to stir?
As with many of you who make a positive choice to eat meat from grass fed animals we’re really passionate about this system – for many reasons – taste, welfare and the environment. With our location and climate we know we grow grass really well, and it allows us to rear and finish our animals with minimal inputs from elsewhere – letting them take their time to naturally mature.
Passion aside however you just can’t grow new grass in the winter so we need to find ways to store and feed the animals over winter, and we also need to find ways to maintain our grass pastures with young growth. Making and storing hay and silage through the summer months is a very traditional way of storing grass, but this last year or two we have also been experimenting with kale and silage as both a winter crop for our ewes who stay out all winter, and as part of a cyclical programme of grass re-seeds.
Kale brings a welcome fresh nutritious crop to the ewes through the winter. We plant a whole field with it at the end of summer, then place silage bales like soldiers at regular spacing up the side of the field. Electric fencing is then used to regulate the area available to the sheep to graze. They start at the bottom of the field, working their way up as the fencing is moved every 4 days. Kale has the added benefit of having long roots that help aerate the soil and break it up, so once the sheep have fed their way through the winter the field is nicely prepared for a new grass re-seed – meaning we can avoid having to plough the ground for planting – neatly avoiding unnecessary carbon release and soil degradation. With the exception of there being no way to walk through a field of Kale on a wet day without getting completely soaked from waist down it would appear to be a win win all round.
For order this week we have some tasty outdoor reared pork chops, pork and beef burgers, pork mince and a variety of roasting joints. Next weekend we’ve got meat due back from the butchers on Friday and Saturday – outdoor pork and highland beef boxes available to pre- order through the online shop. Just aswell as we are completely out of mince – for those of you expecting your repeat orders of mince this week I’ll be in touch with options. Back to normal then w/c 24th Jan.