La Rolandiere

A long time ago, we discovered a wonderful campsite just south of Tours, within easy reach of the Loire valley.  It was called La Rolandiere, and was run by one of the French teaching unions.  They held conferences and seminars in the chateau itself, and recouped some of their costs by letting out part of the grounds for campers and caravanners.

Alas, as with so many good things, it eventually closed.  But last October we went past it on a sentimental journey and to our surprise it had re-opened.  Not only that, but it now boasts a hotel and gites as well as the camping.  Here’s the chateau itself, all freshly painted.


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What are Ixworth chicks worth?

We’ve taken the plunge, and committed to buy a breeding four of Ixworth chickens.

The picture was commissioned by the creator of the Ixworth breed, Reginald Appleyard, from the artist Whippell. It shows his ideal Ixworth pair. I’ll be able to post an actual picture of ours when we pick them up in late August.
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The woes of public consultation

I was invited to a local council consultation the other evening.  I’m not sure why my name came out of the hat, but I was available, so why not?  The topic was performance monitoring of council services, and informing residents of the results.

I realised that I actually knew nothing at all about their costs and value for money, and except for personal experience, nothing about service levels either.  How much does it cost to empty my bin, or paint a green cycle lane on the road, or provide us with an allotment?  And even if I knew, how could I tell whether they were competitively priced?  And even if I knew that, how could I judge whether the service delivered a worthwhile outcome?

But what turned out to be so fascinating wasn’t the topic, but the process.
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What an allotment year so far!

I posted recently about the wonderful amount of fruit that we’d harvested this year.  Not only is it a bumper year for gooseberries, but all the fruit is prolific and early.


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Coop Jacques

The next project is … keeping chickens.  A few chickens in the back garden will keep us in eggs, and if we take some cockerels as well as pullets, some meat for the freezer.

We’ve sounded out the neighbours, and we can shoehorn a run and coop into our little back garden. So when this came up on eBay, I couldn’t resist it.

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Playing Gooseberry

It’s a bumper year for soft fruit at the allotment.  Our new half allotment has several gooseberry bushes and currant bushes planted under the apple trees.  They’re very difficult to net effectively, and so it’s been a year of feasting for the pigeons, too.  But the fruit cage on the original allotment is pigeon-proof, and we’ve had wonderful crops of gooseberries and raspberries, even though it’s not yet July.

We have four gooseberry bushes in the cage, two Invicta (the classic English goosegog), a Careless (also an old variety) and a red Hinnomaki, which is a sweeter so-called dessert gooseberry, which means that they can be eaten uncooked. The Careless isn’t quite ready yet, but is also loaded with fruit. The red Hinnomaki is pretty well ripe, but although the berries are beautiful, they’re not quite as plentiful as the other ones.

The picture shows the second picking from the two Invicta bushes. Just over 3 kilos, and probably as many again still on the bushes for a third picking next weekend.

All we need is for a return of the hot weather to ripen the tomatoes later in the summer, and our allotment joy will be complete!

Pumpkin Purée with Goats Cheese

We discovered this rather excellent dish by accident – but more of that later. First, the recipe. It makes a delicious vegetarian main course for 3 people or starter for 4 or 5 with a simple salad and fresh home-made bread.

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The Shooting Show

Last weekend, we went to the British Shooting and Countryman Show at Newark. It was, I have to admit, a special treat for me, and perhaps less than a special treat for Jean, who gallantly accompanied me. The show covers shotguns, rifles, and airguns, gamekeeping and gundogs, game fishing and bushcraft. It was a pretty foul day so I didn’t get many pictures, but fortunately much of the show is under cover.

This person, in what must have been the most uncomfortable job of the show, was raising funds for the England Women’s Flyfishing Team:

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Strawberry fields

We’ve just planted a new strawberry bed. Our first one was established in the spring of 2006. Florence and Mara des Bois. Here it is two years later, at the start of the season.


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The simple things are often the best

We normally make our own bread. But as with so many things, there’s a temptation to overcomplicate as we strive for better results. And I suddenly had a yen for simple but good white English bread, not sourdough, not French, no sunflower seeds, pumpkin seeds, linseeds, no malt extract, just the basics. This was the result:


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