Looking Forward

In November I was debating what goals to set myself for 2026. Those for 2025 which I reviewed in my previous post had been helpful and I want to go on exploring local places (But hopefully not Hospitals!), trying new ways of growing and new plants, making different meals and sitting down to enjoy them and marking the 8 pagan / Celtic Festivals. But I didn’t want to add more of that type of aim. When I was learning Welsh the tutor spoke of asking an elderly neighbour how she was and her reply was Cadw Mynd, Cadw Mynd – Keeping Going, Keeping Going. I concluded that that would be my goal for this coming year.

After all I am in the middle of the redesign of the veg patch and when I finish that, including building a fruit cage, there will be only another acre or so of garden to do! And as I get more tree saplings the new Woodland which I started in memory of John will continue to need planting and the paths will keep on needing clearing. Then there is the knitting for Gaza – both my own knitting for the refugees and the encouraging of others to do the same. And I am still a Trustee of Dyfed Permaculture Farm which means attending meetings and workdays if I can, plus sometimes work in between researching or setting out ideas for discussion. And I am a director of the company my daughter set up with the money from her divorce which owns a student flat in Falmouth. At the moment that requires very little from me but it may demand more in the future. The kitchen needs redecorating too if I can manage it. Surely that is enough. No need to add any more.

Then Danny and Helene left and I started to reclaim the workshop which I had invited him to use and he had taken over more and more. In doing that I realised it needed another major declutter. I did it a few years ago but was still unsure what I would feel I wanted to take on in the way of repairs and maintenance and so which tools and materials I would use. Well now I am pretty sure I know what I want to keep but also what I want to add – like a big sturdy bench all along the South wall. And guess what? I have another big project! But at least it is a rainy day one.

Then the gutters fell off. I have paid a very nice handyman to cut away all the rot and redo the timber and plastic and put up new gutters re-routing some of them. I will be paying someone else to pressure wash the walls so that I can repaint the concrete render, at least all the high up stuff, while the scaffolding is up. Which means that has to be done by March or I will be charged extra by the scaffolders but it can only be done in dry weather with no risk of frost. Hmmm.

My eldest Grandchild, my son’s daughter, now lives in China and has got engaged to a Chinese airline pilot so it is unlikely she will be returning to the UK to live. As she is in her late 20’s she plans to start a family soon and has asked me to use a website called Remento to record, on video, answers to various prompts she has chosen. When she asked if I would be willing I thought how much I wish I knew more about my grandparents. Both my Dad’s parents died before I was born and my Mother’s mother died when I was 2 months old. I have a photo of my maternal grandmother holding me at my Christening but of course never knew her or spoke to her. My Mum’s father was bedridden until he died when I was 8 so I hardly knew him either. So I agreed to do the recording and my son paid for a camera to go on my computer and Laura helped me set it up. Remento will send me one prompt each week but I can do them in batches if I prefer. Each recording is at most 30 minutes but I want to do it properly so there is time thinking about the prompt and what I want to say. Not a huge project but another one to add to the list.

Way back before Covid I contacted the local Council’s footpath Officer because I wanted to see if I could find an off-road circular walk I could do with the dogs without having to drive somewhere first. He was very helpful and printed off for me copies of bits of the ‘Definitive Map’ which is the legal record of Public Rights of Way. There are quite a few near here but most are overgrown and crossed by barbed wire fences because they are rarely used and where there were wooden bridges over the river those had gone. Between one thing and another I didn’t do much about most of them. I am not a good map reader and it was hard to work where the path should be if it had become invisible. But I did use one section which ran through 3 fields until the farmer put a chain on the gate. There was no real reason for the chain – there was a working bolt to keep the gate closed and he didn’t ever put cattle in those fields. When he realised I was undoing it and putting it back as we left (but not necessarily quite the same way) he started making it tighter and tighter until I had to climb the gate and lean all my weight on it from the inside to be able to undo it. So I contacted the Officer again and he had a letter sent to the farmer explaining that he had to allow access. But my query and the ensuing conversation prompted him to send one of his team to survey the paths around here and quite by chance I met her when I was walking the dogs. She was lovely and reckons it would be fairly easy to re-open most of them but the footpaths team rely on local volunteers to do the work – did I know anyone else who might be interested in using them and putting in some effort? Well, I had been asked by one chap who has recently moved in if there were any good dog walks and Laura is up for it. As it was me who started all this I think I have to get involved and do some of the work. Whoops! Another project! I have downloaded the Ordnance Survey App which the surveyor was using so that is a start.

I started to feel overwhelmed! But I have decided I just need to go back to Cadw Mynd, Cadw Mynd, and keep nibbling away at them all. There is a Permaculture Principle which I find very useful and reassuring – Start where you are, Use what you have, Do what you can. The first 2 are fine, the third may turn out to be ‘ not much’!

I will try to update you all from time to time.

Two Big Beasts

A couple of weeks ago I had a message from my son – could he have the use of a space 3m x 3m in my workshop? He had put a shipping container on the garden of a house he owns and rents out in the same road as his home with the intention of using it as a workshop. But the a neighbour complained to the Council who told him it was ‘not in keeping’ and must be removed. That left him with all his tools stored in a small shed in his own smaller garden (which already houses his office) but nowhere to use them. Of course I said ‘Yes’ and by rearranging my stuff created the space he needed.

So a flurry of parcels and packages arrived and he sent me a list of materials he wanted me to order from the local Builders’ Merchant. Then they were followed, last Monday, by the man himself plus his cat. Not your average moggy, not even a pedigree cat. This is an F3 Savannah Cat, at least twice the size of my more humble ones. But a lovely softie who acts more like a dog in many ways and obviously thought that my garden was Heaven! He did give my dogs and cats a bit of a shock though – not quite sure what sort of big beast had entered their domain!

Odin explores this new territory

My son is a software developer but, like his father, my father and my paternal grandfather, loves making things in wood. It transpired that the workshop space was needed to build a computer controlled wood cutting machine thus combining his two passions. He has a small one at home which can cut things about the size of an A4 sheet of paper but having seen its potential he wanted one which could do handle anything up to a full sheet of plywood – 2.4m x 1.2m! Hence the large area of floor space required.

With intermittent help from me to ‘hold the other end of’ and a couple of trips out to get things he hadn’t realised he would need, he built the worktop the sheet of wood will sit on. It is 2 layers of heavy ply with framing and 2 sheets of insulation between them to stop it flexing.

The cutting head has to move in 3 dimensions – up and down the bed, from side to side and deeper or shallower, so he also needed a gantry which travels along the sides of the bed (the x axis)) with another piece which moves side to side (y axis) and can also raise or lower the cutter (z axis). The gantry and other wooden parts run on small wheels on tracks and are pulled into position by motors which have thin rubber tracks around a cog wheel – think caterpillar tracks. The motors are controlled by the computer.

This bit travels from side to side on the gantry and the top part raises or lowers the head

By Friday evening the thing was built and he had wired up 2 of the 4 motors but ran out of time (he had to drive home early on Saturday morning) to connect the other 2 let alone test it all and make something. He will come back as soon as he is able to finish it and then we can start playing with it! As you can see it is pretty massive – definitely a big beast!

Now all I have to do is tidy up the rest of the workshop!

My reward is that I will be seeing my son more frequently and can ask him to programme the machine to cut wood out for me and drill the holes where they should go – a sort of ‘made to measure’ IKEA in my garden 😉