07-05-2021, 09:33 AM
16533
Re: Leisurely Scribbles (part 5)
Originally Posted by
bret
->
Ah ah - I remember sometime ago watching a british tv series on the re-emergence of local villages shops and in particular the butchers. a segment would be devoted to the butcher and his/her shop. This one I recall in particular farmed their own sheep on their own lands and it was salt marshes - the declared quite honestly that in their opinion it produced the tastiest lamb they had even tasted - God honest truth!!
some farmers out here who have over-fertilized their farms are going back to an ancient form of farming were cows horns are buried in the ground full of ; can't remember now ' but left for a season and the contents dug up and made into a slurry which is sprayed on the land - with remarkable results of recovery!! God's honest truth 2
We have a number of TV channels over here as you do too. One is simple called World Movies - the range is quite formidable - I am watching The Duchess atm - the 18 century aristocract Georginia Duchess of Devonshire and ancestor of Princess Dianna and living extremes of lifestyle - v'good acting and scenery majetic!
There are parts of the UK where ponies run free, and piggies too. The pigs were introduced to eat the plethora of acorns produced each year because acorns are poisonous to horses.
I've never tried the resultant pig meat, but I am told it has a very pleasant and distinctive flavour.
Ground up deaded aminals have been used for fertilizer by here for as long as I can remember. My dad used to use dried blood, bone, and fish fertilizer when I were a lad.
There is a cave system not far from here where thousands upon thousands of animal bones were found. There was some sort of depression in the land above and a hole down to the cave forming a natural funnel. Over thousands of years, possibly during the ice age, hundreds of animals either died and fell in, or fell in and died.
When the bone cave was discovered during the last century, thousands of these bones were taken out and ground up to make fertilizer. The problem was that the bones had been fossilised over the millennia, and no longer contained any nutrients, so the exercise was a complete waste of time, and history.
We have a couple of small power stations by here that run on methane produced from animal manure. It's called Mooclear Power.
We have many TV channels devoted to nothing but films, and my Lovely Cousin and I often settle down to watch a romance or period drama. Some of them involve amateur detectiving so we have great fun trying to predict whodunnit.
Ah yes, there's many a joke made around the different dialects pronuncification of words. What fun!