I Dunna Miss the Owd House.
This I have written some 3 months (of winter) after we moved
into our retirement house in the village just a hundred yards west of the farm
itself. We can look out of our new double glazed windows at the back over the
fields that we have toiled in over the last thirty years, and watch the
progress of the seasons and the wildlife round the wood, and all the birds that
come down to the feeders in our new garden.
I fear that some
jackdaws have followed us, but they have nowhere to nest, no open chimneys, the
Goldfinches have finally found where we are and feeding here in numbers, particularly
when the school closed at Christmas. When the school feeders go empty the
Goldfinches flood over to our feeders, and at half term, mid-February, had as
many as twenty four in the garden in one go.
A beautiful sight, the bird table and feeder is only twenty foot from the big sitting room window. There are two pairs of Robins, Wagtails, Sparrows, Great tits, Blue tits, Coal tits, Greater spotted wood pecker, Finches, Ring necked doves, a pair of Wood pigeons and a cock pheasant walked in a few days ago.
A beautiful sight, the bird table and feeder is only twenty foot from the big sitting room window. There are two pairs of Robins, Wagtails, Sparrows, Great tits, Blue tits, Coal tits, Greater spotted wood pecker, Finches, Ring necked doves, a pair of Wood pigeons and a cock pheasant walked in a few days ago.
If you want to class this as “stock feeding”, then that’s what
ov dun all me life, and there’s nowt more satisfying than standing back to
watch them come in to get there fill. I shifted the nest boxes from the farm
house walls and positioned then up here, there seems a lot of interest in them already.
So, Retirement aint too bad after all.
I Dunna Miss the Owd House
(I was asked)
Did you ever miss the farm, now that you’ve
retired?
No I aint is that reply, cus me brain it’s been rewired,
Still up early in a mornings, n’ I conna lay in bed,
So I write about it when it quiet, just pickin up the
thread.
Miss the movements and the sounds, of livestock bout the
place,
The Jackdaws on the chimneys, noisy sparrows round they
chase,
Feed troughs keep them happy, as they eat to get their fill,
Then fly off up to the workshop roof, out in the winters
chill.
I dunna miss the
work, and I dunna miss the cowd, (cold)
N’ I dunna miss the evy liftin, sacks of feed, too heavy not
aloud,
Me bones are brittle, muscles weak, they’re all wearing out,
So tek a bit o notice now, and ya know ya not sa stout.
Miss the calvein and the lamdin, the regeneration bout the
farm,
See them take their first breath, n’ keep them well away
from harm,
Watch them grow with great pride, as they run about the grass,
With mothers chasing after them, getting all harassed.
I dunna miss the owd house, with its drafts and rattlin
doors,
The Rayburn in the kitchen, and the winding corridors,
Frost inside the window panes, as out a bed ya get,
N’ down ta put the kettle on, forecast’s cowdest yet.
Love it in the new house, with its double glazing feel,
The insulation, n’ central heating, conna believe it’s real,
Comfort for our owd age, that got to be our pledge,
N’ a little bit of garden, with its well-trimmed privet
hedge.
Owd Fred