Windy hill chickens - first flock(s) of my own

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I know people who take breaks abroad in that time! :gig

Do you need good sea legs too? I imagine that wind you talk of can have quite an effect on the seas round there.
Some people struggle but I've always been alright and they cancel the boat if it's really bad. That's just something you plan for here and it's usually fine - no one is in that much of a rush.
 
Some people struggle but I've always been alright and they cancel the boat if it's really bad. That's just something you plan for here and it's usually fine - no one is in that much of a rush.
Island life!

Several years ago we spent an unexpected extra three days on Ocracoke Island NC over Easter when gale-force winds halted all the ferry service.

(I loved it.)
 
That's both Sussex pullets laying now at just over 21 weeks old. Yellow Legs (egg on the right) laid her first double yolker yesterday too.
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I was wrong, the egg on the left is from one of Hylines. Caught her in the act today when I heard her screeching at Yellow Legs (who's twice as big and wouldn't tolerate that in many other situations) to wait her turn for the current favourite nest.

Found two shell-less eggs under a roost which I think might be from the other Sussex pullet. One still warm, which at nearly 2pm suggests she's actually getting up on the roost to lay :rolleyes: At least this hopefully means she's not started a secret nest somewhere though - I was getting suspicious since she's redder in the face than all my confirmed layers. I'll try to hang around tomorrow to work out who the wonky layer is and listen out for anyone emerging from a hidden nest.
 
fwiw, I've known about brochs for decades, since the 80s - thanks to Katharine Kerr, an excellent old guard fantasy author, who uses ancient Britain as inspiration for her Deverry series (which is excellent classic fantasy).

Brochs figure prominently. She does excellent research and they were communal living spaces and centers of leadership in her books, which is what current thought (at the time) believed them to be in use for.

I've visited a couple in Scotland. Iron Age Britain is probably my most favorite time period and landscape after the pre-pottery Neolithic.

*coughs in huge nerd* sorry :)
 
fwiw, I've known about brochs for decades, since the 80s - thanks to Katharine Kerr, an excellent old guard fantasy author, who uses ancient Britain as inspiration for her Deverry series (which is excellent classic fantasy).

Brochs figure prominently. She does excellent research and they were communal living spaces and centers of leadership in her books, which is what current thought (at the time) believed them to be in use for.

I've visited a couple in Scotland. Iron Age Britain is probably my most favorite time period and landscape after the pre-pottery Neolithic.

*coughs in huge nerd* sorry :)
I don't think I've read any of her work, so I'll have a look out. Thanks!
 
I don't think I've read any of her work, so I'll have a look out. Thanks!
The first book is Daggerspell


It's a big whopper 16 book series overall, those late 80s/early 90s authors cannot seem to get away from that -- but I loved it.


It is ahead of it's time and the magic in it, to me, is the best I've ever read in any series. It's all based on British folklore.

Well, until I read Susannah Clarke, that is. <3
 

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