Wednesday 8 August 2012

To every season...

It is with a sort of melancholy that I read an email from a friend today who has returned from a travelling adventure abroad and is now setting up home again in England. But the same sense of yearning fills me when I read the blog of another friend who is the throes of planning their travelling adventure for next year. I question whether a wanderer ever really settles or remains forever a wanderer at heart?

By the same token as I embark on the relatively small task of planning a two night stay back on the mainland to attend to medical matters for child and dog, larder restocking and possible reintegration to the masses along with purchases of essentials such as underwear, charity shop rummaging and clothes we can try on before we buy them I am rather daunted at the prospect of leaving the island. The expense, the return to the rat race and schedules and clock watching, the thought of all the traffic! Maybe we're better staying home :)

As I turned over a new page on our calendar last week and realised it was the fourth such page turn we'd done while here, therefore we are over the three month mark I thought I should mark the occassion with a return to getting the others to talk about how they are feeling, what we have achieved, how life has changed. This is probably a more than one post sort of topic really and indeed Ady has yet to come up with his contribtution but I can share Dragon and Star's words along with my own summing up of what has happened in our first quarter of a year here on Rum.

Dragon
Bad - The static move. I didn't like it, it was too much stress for everyone. Just not very nice.
Good - Everything! I love having animals and experiencing all the different weathers and being part of the community.
Learnt - Loads from Mike (Ranger), lots about biodiversity and loads about different plants and animals like lungwort, maidenshair spleen wort. Learnt about red deer on Rum and bookbinding with Claire.

Star
Bad - The static move was the only bad thing. It was horrible moving it with Daddy stressing.
Good - getting animals, especially the geese arriving.
Learnt - Loads on Rum. Jewellry making with Mumma for craft fayres to make money. Lots from Mike about nature, stuff from Claire about bookbinding and doing Teashop, doing shop stuff with Jinty, learning about Craft Shop with Fliss (can you tell she is spending lots of time with different adults?!)

I'll post up Ady's and mine in another blog soon.

I've been revisiting our original business plan, written way back last December at the end of our WWOOFing adventure on the basis of a 3 hour trip to Rum. At the time it felt like a useful exercise in spilling out all our hopes and dreams and trying to fit them into neat little boxes. To be honest it still feels rather like that and on a tough day it can feel like the whole mountain is all still infront of us to climb with no clear path and no suitable footwear or kendal mintcake in our rucksacks. We don't have many tough days though really and frankly the view of that mountain is so breathtaking we console ourselves with it's beauty instead!

But a quick round up of what we have already achieved in those three short months won't go amiss...

Livestock. We have a cockerel (Dave), ten hens (I've lost track of the names but I know they include Mrs Nesbitt, Mumma, Chip, Pecky and Ginger) - one of whom is currently sitting on three eggs due to hatch this weekend, five ducks (again I've lost track of names), a goose and a gander - Margo and Jerry. We have our pigs Tom and Barbara (who have definitely been practising at being a breeding pair so maybe wee piglets will be with us before too long) and of course Bonnie the dog who is more pet than livestock.




This was all challenging, involving sourcing the livestock, getting it here (both here to Rum as in on the ferry etc. plus getting it from the ferry to the croft, specifically for Tom and Barbara who could not be carried along the rough track in boxes like the birds were). It also involved putting up fencing, creating houses / shelter, making feeders, digging ponds / wallow pits and coping with the inevitable mud that so many pairs of tiny feet create in wet weather.

Getting our home onto the croft. Again those six words can never quite sum up what a challenge that was. But look, here it is :)

Our house, on our hill, on our land. With the most amazing, breathtaking views in all directions. We watch Hallival disappear and reappear in cloud, sunshine and mists, we watch eagles soar over the peaks, gaze at stars as they twinkle in the inky black skies we are getting now the nights are drawing in and we have no light pollution, the moon wax and wane it's way through it's cycles, the sun climb high into the sky and then create shadows and gorgeous pink and orange skies as it sets away behind distant peaks. Our home with real beds, sofas, table and chairs, a shower, running water, our stuff around us once more.


We have made a start on living off grid, partly relying on modern technology - we now have internet, superfast speeds, mobile phone signal and I have just ordered a landline number using the broadband line. We have power in the shape of our petrol generator for running my Kenwood mixer for cake making, giving things a boost and seeing us through the darker days of winter. But we also have renewable, sustainable, greener energy by way of two large solar panels and inverters. We're using 12 volt batteries which I know are not a green solution really but enable us to harness and store the free energy the sun chucks at us. We have the pigs electric fence wired up with a solar panel trickle charging it.

We have a rainwater harvesting set up on order and in progress and plans for various other water solutions in hand. We have a compost loo waiting to be ordered and a whole loads of exciting plans for projects including earth oven, solar cooker, solar showers and more.

We have become part of the community - we know who everyone is and they all know us too. We have had people round for coffee, beers, dinner. We have accepted favours and done them in return. We have helped and been helped. We are involved in weekly events such as the Market Day selling produce, we have crafts for sale, cakes for sale, eggs for sale. We are involved in community projects such as venison processing, events organising, community polytunnel. We have joined in with various community events including Beach cleans, ranger events, Jubilee celebrations, Midgefest, danced at ceilidhs and are part of in jokes and catchphrases. We have made friends, put down roots and feel properly involved in what is happening here with the community.







If I try and quantify the things I feel a bit sad about leaving behind when we stopped travelling it is adventure, possibility, new sights, sounds and experiences. When I round up our first three months and what a rollercoaster ride it has been so far and promises to continue being then I realise that 8 acres of our own and 8 miles across in each direction as an island is probably more than enough to wander for the time being.

7 comments:

  1. What motivated folks you are & what a fabulous place - looks like you're having a wonderful time!

    Hope all goes well on the mainland!

    Kay :)

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  2. Love reading how things are going, started to follow you when you first got Willow :-)
    Saw you mention your Home Education blogs in your last post, are they still available to read, we thinking about the whole Home Education route for our little one and would love to read an actual account of how it went for you all.
    Keep having fun :-)
    Arlie

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  3. Hi Arlie, thanks for de-lurking :) Yes, the Home Ed blog is still there, albeit a bit on on the out of date side. Maybe I'll write a post or two on here as there is interest about how it works for us and why we do it.

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    1. Thanks for the reply. A quick google found it so am reading for a good blog reading session. :-)

      Please do write more about how you home educate in your new life. Will be really interestinf to read.

      Cheers
      Arlie :-)

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  4. I liked the Good/Bad/Learnt bits - glad to see them back!

    Can I ask what the current water and "sewerage" arrangements to/from the static are pending the long term solutions you mentioned? I expect they took a lot of thinking about!

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    1. indeed you can - another post to be done as soon as I have time :) I like that you have become a sort of blog post in waiting director! :)

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  5. Hi Nic,

    I read that email too - and apart from being envious of the gorgeous way the words flowed on the page it reminded me of that quote about arriving back where you first started and knowing it for the first time that you had on your wall at your leaving party.


    It is interesting that you talk about what you miss in relation to your year of travels with no mention of missing anything about your life before travels!!

    You are still a local home ed celeb here :) I thought about you at Clymping Beach in the sunshine yesterday and remembered that pouring raining day I couldn't find you because I was looking for a man called Nic not a lady!!

    Your name came up at the home ed adults evening social too as we talked about how hard it can be for the worker bee in the family to slip into the autonomous unschooling flow of the rest of the family when their weekend is only two days long and how some home ed families find radical solutions to this problem to find a way to all be together more of the time.


    Love reading about what you are up too x x

    ps do you carry wine back on the ferry or can it be delivered ;-) I'd really miss ocado!!

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