Our Bear River Adventure

Entries categorized as ‘Digby County Exhibition’

Horses, Kitchens and Sunflowers

August 31, 2009 · 10 Comments

Horses wait to compete at the Digby County Exhibition.

Horses wait to compete at the Digby County Exhibition in Bear River.

This weekend while we tried not to work like horses ourselves, we did watch some horses in Bear River working pretty hard.

On Saturday it poured rain so we went down our road to the Digby County Exhibition, a small, but sweet county fair where farmers can show off the pulling strength of their oxen and horses.

It is also a place where kids in the 4H club (head, heart, hands and health) can show off their farm animals. Here is a sweet rabbit, just for my daughter who has a special affinity for rabbits.

Last year we watched the oxen displays, but this year we watched the horses. They too were powerful and willing to pull enormous weights.

It was good to see such majestic animals up close and personal.

The

The horses seemed keen to perform.

Watching the horses work so hard was inspiring and we decided to work on our kitchen when we got home. I want to say right here and now that I LOVE our new kitchen. I’m having fun with the open concept because I can be doing kitchen things but still have a wide view of the rest of the room and out of several windows too. BUT….like every kitchen, the storage is already a  challenge. In spite of the fact that we got rid of alot of stuff when we came here 22 months ago, we’ve collected more stuff like yogurt containers, plastic bags, interesting empty containers and other bits of “might need this someday for something” type of stuff that doesn’t really fit anywhere. I’ve already rearranged the things in the cupboards a couple of times, which just confuses me as to where on earth the cling-wrap is?

This week our friend Peter made me some shelving for the kitchen to fit all my glass jars of lentils and beans and flour and rice and other dry goods. Today I coated them twice with a concoction that is 1/3 linseed oil, 1/3 varathane, 1/3 urethane with a squirt of earth green oil paint. I was going to carefully wipe the solution on the shelves. I didn’t think I needed any paper to protect the walls or the counter. Fortunately Larry, who is more patient and realistic than me, decided to help me out by taping the entire area with folded newspapers. It was a good thing too, because I still managed to drip some of the stuff on some of the wall that he’d not covered.

While it dried, I went outside to check out the garden and noticed that the sunflowers are growing rather tall.

Im growing two kinds of sunflowers.

They’ve survived two weekends of tail ends of tropical storms. The accompanying rain was actually welcome as it’s been very dry. Larry and I checked out the hole we had dug for a future pond and found a little waterfall happening as the rains continue to drain down through our field from higher places.

I keep hoping that the water wont find a way out of this space. You can see that our well needs new shingles.

Our sunflowers aren’t that only tall plants on our land. We’ve neglected a huge section and the weeds have grown up to our shoulders. We wanted to see the shape of the land for planing future pathways, so I tried out our weedwhipper. The sound in this movie is poor, but please note the long linen smock I’m wearing. I bought it at Frenchy’s for $3 to use as a painting smock. The weedwhipper deposited plant bits on it from top to bottom! Who knew that cutting weeds would be as messy as painting!

So that’s my weekend report. Horses, rain, yardwork and a little reward for all the hardwork. Some really tasty vegetables!

Fresh, organic and homegrown.

Fresh, organic and homegrown.

Categories: Bear River · Digby County Exhibition · gardening

Strong as an Ox – at the Digby County Exhibition

August 23, 2008 · 6 Comments

There are many summertime fairs and exhibitions in Nova Scotia and there is one in Bear River that is over 100 years old. 

 

prize winning vegetables

prize winning tomatoes

Along with the small farms, the Digby County Exhibition shrinks a little every year which is such a shame, because it is a great opportunity to  take part in the agricultural heritage of the Annapolis Valley.

Take oxen, for instance. Without them, this part of Nova Scotia would have been impossible to farm. These strong animals pulled away rocks and stumps and could plough up land that was otherwise inaccessible.

Ox team waiting to pull

Ox team waiting to pull

They pre-date tractors by at least 4,000 years, and even after that invention, oxen were more reliable and economical. They didn’t require much mechanical maintance or gasoline, but they did require an experienced and patient trainer and handler.

Oxen pull wagons and ploughs more efficiently in twos, but in order to work in unison, they have to be raised together and they have to learn to read the body and talking language of their teamster. Tricky stuff.

We attended our first ox pull competition ever. Watching it was both disturbing and exciting. It was tough to see the animals yoked and obviously having no say in the spectacle. Even more bewildering was seeing how docile they were or was it patient? Is it possible to breed or castrate willfullness out of a being? (Oxen are castrated cattle) They didn’t complain and they didn’t resist and that seemed so unnatural in so powerful an animal.

Bargaining for one last pull

Bargaining, unsuccessfully, for one last pull

On the other hand, it was quite suspenseful to watch the ox team pull loads that increased by hundreds of pounds each try. We watched a team pull 6 thousand pounds! We really sat on the edges of our seats wondering if they could pull any more. “Strong as an Ox” took on a whole new meaning.

There’s not much call for working Oxen these days, so mostly these animals are trained for the competitions.

You can see in this video I took that half the battle for the teamster is to train the animals to wait until it’s time for them to pull. The first teamster has a tough challenge to prevent the oxen from going. The second teamster has more experienced animals who easily follow his lead.

I found the culture of the ring to be part of a world that I haven’t really been exposed to and I’d like to go again next year. In the meantime, I’m mulling over some expressions I’ve heard that suddenly have new meaning.

  • pull together
  • follow my lead
  • stubborn as an ox
  • bull headed
  • a yoke around my neck
  • lead around by the nose
  • strong as an ox
  • pushed around
Flowers by Jean Smith, Bear River

Flowers by Jean Smith, Bear River

Categories: Bear River · Digby County Exhibition