Francis Nesbitt talks to Debbie Kingsley about his beautiful smallholding in Kilkenny, Ireland.
Francis Nesbitt and wife Niamh McCole, children Charlie (9) and Martha (8) live on a 10-acre smallholding at Kilkenny, the medieval capital of Ireland. “We’ve five holiday cottages and keep pigs, goats, chickens, sheep, a cow and calf, pea fowl, turkeys and two dogs and bees,” said Francis. “Occasionally the children put on their beekeeping gear and help when I’m managing the hives. We also grow a lot of veg and fruit in the walled garden. As seems to be the case with most smallholders, I also have a day job (I run a company that builds websites).
“Heading up to the garden to pick ingredients for dinner is what I dreamed of when I was living and working in Dublin. I grew up there, studying electronic engineering and computer science. Then followed a few years working in telecommunications before a stint in Sydney. Throughout all of that I grew vegetables when I could.
“As a kid, I was inspired by the man next door who dug up the entire lawn for veg, front and back! In the first house I owned in Dublin, I had a herb garden and small pond before I had curtains. In 2000, having outgrown the small garden and gone on one too many door-to-door duck hunts, I finally got a place in the country.
Tinalintan, then Croan House
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Esta historia es de la edición March 2017 de Country Smallholding.
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Game on
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1975 And All That
Country Smallholding is 45 this month. To celebrate, Jeremy Hobson takes a look at some of the changes — both good and bad — to small-scale farming over that near half-century