When Andrew and Chris Hammacott first arrived at their smallholding in the outer Hebrides, Chris wanted to go right home again. “I’m London born and bred, we’d had a nice house in Wales, and there we were in the middle of nowhere on the Isle of Lewis, in a damp run-down croft house that had trees planted right up against the windows so one couldn’t see out, and it was night-time when we got there, of course,” she recalls dramatically. “I remember standing in the kitchen and wailing to Andrew ‘I just want to go home! What are we doing here?!?’
“Being a sensible chap, Andrew said ‘This is home now’ and went out and bought me three sheep that very week, just to remind me why we wanted to do this.” Twelve years, four dozen sheep and a bit of house renovation later, Chris admits, tongue-in-cheek, that “there are compensations”. Only a few minutes walk across their 10 acre croft is the beach – “four miles of golden sands, mostly all to ourselves apart from the put-put of little fishing boats going past. Behind our house is open moorland, with red deer and a patch of woodland with ravens, and if we stand outside on a winter night, we can see the Northern Lights.”
BORN TO WEAVE
Chris and Andrew’s journey to becoming smallholders started with weaving. “I learned spinning and weaving as part of a six month apprenticeship when I was 18,” explains Chris, “and that was over 40 years ago. Then when I met Andrew, I taught him to weave too. I loved rare breeds wool, and worked with the RBST promoting it – we’d take our looms round to the major shows and weave ‘in public’!”
Bu hikaye The Country Smallholder dergisinin June 2024 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye The Country Smallholder dergisinin June 2024 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
How to Buy a Smallholding in France- Long-time smallholder Lorraine Turnbull looks at the practicalities of moving to rural France
Aspiring smallholders are continually thwarted by the prices of smallholdings and property with land located within the UK. Even the humblest croft in Scotland comes with a substantial price tag and conditions which would make even an adventurous wannabee consider carefully. But all is not lost. For those willing to take the adventure of a lifetime, there is always Europe, and one of the most popular places is France.
Meet the Bournemouth goats and their supporters
These capricious animals are hard workers preserving the natural habitat
Still warm enough to sit outside with a Pizza
Henrietta Balcon uses fresh figs to create an unusual dish at Harvest time
Goodbye to the birds of spring and summer
If you look and listen you might be able to see them preparing to leave says The RSPB
Get ready for the colder weather in the warmth of late summer
Claire Waring advises on doing the best to make sure your colonies survive until next spring
Preparing the Veg Patch for Winter
Lee Senior says, a well-run plot can excitingly continue to produce good quality, tasty, fresh food for much of winter
Time to prepare to plant your orchard
Wade Muggleton, smallholder and author of The Orchard Book, shares his practical experience so you can create your own fruit collection
Choosing feed for the autumn
As autumn approaches, Joanna Palmer, nutritionist at the Smallholder Range, offers advice on choosing the right feed to support your adult birds through their annual moult and ensure your young birds grow and finish well at this time of the year.
Vet advice from an experienced poultry vet
Reflecting on how much the humble hen has helped people world wide plus advice on stopping the scourge of red mite
Give your hens some support
Paul Donovan looks at the right and wrong ways of handling birds