Thursday, 10 April 2014

Garden Fish Pond

You may remember we put a post on May last year when we began the groundwork and foundations for the garden pond and then in July we did an update on our progress. We decided to put that project on the back-burner until the following Spring (now) so during a spell of lovely weather in March we took to the spade and started to dig out the earth. Shovel after shovel of soil began piling up which was useful as we needed to fill up some veggie beds and use on the back garden for a new border bed. Once the earth was dug out and tamped down we had a delivery of sand and began to line the pond with sand before fitting the butyl pond liner. Rob had previously installed the electric wiring and cables to fit the pump for the pond and the filter which sits inside the garden shed so it was a matter of connecting them up once the pond was filled with water (my favourite part!)
With the pond filled it was then onto finishing the cladding of the stone over the pond liner to seal it. Rob built a waterfall from concrete blocks and used the stone to clad it.
Some pictures showing the build stages of the pond:-
Rob has began entering fishing competitions and has won 2 of them! One on the matches he fished we were allowed to bring some small fish back for our pond. The main fishing season is closed at the moment but in May when my brother comes to visit they will go and catch other fish to add to the pond. And that makes Rob a happy chappy !!!!

Wednesday, 9 April 2014

Enjoying the garden

Last month on the 20th March we had our first BBQ of the year. We invited our friends and enjoyed the spring sunshine with a well earned "day off" and soaked up a few rays!
This time of the year I think the flowers are at their best. Mostly in other people's gardens though as ours isn't established yet. There are many fields displaying splendid shows of cherry and other fruit blossoms. Also lots of colourful shrubs, and garden flowers which are unknown to me. I am still learning which plants do well here as I have had to learn the hard way by finding out that some flowers I used to grow back in the UK just get burnt to death in the heat of the summer! Keeping them well watered is a major task in the summer and a lot of flowers just cannot tolerate the heat.

On the more productive side we are harvesting onions planted last October with another batch to harvest later which were planted in January, and very soon the next lot will be planted. We use lots onions either fresh or for cooking so I am trying to keep a succession of plants always in the garden, as thankfully this is one plant which will grow all year round here. Last month we planted a full bed of seed potatoes and this last week they are sprutting like mad! It is our first attempt at potatoes so fingers crossed we are successful. Garden peas are now planted, they don't seem to be growing as quickly as last year but they are up and on their way. Last week-end (5th April) we planted tomatoes and sweet peppers and in the small greenhouse we have courgettes and french beans waiting to be planted out. I know I am doing well with my onions as I can proudly say that when our locals pass by they always comment on my "grande cebolas" - big onions !!! Drying this batch out to use soon:-


Tuesday, 8 April 2014

Back Garden Sorted !!!!

Finally we have got round to "sorting out" the back garden. Last year we put in a flower border but left the rest to die off after applying weed killer and strimming.

This year we decided to put down weed suppressor and then lay gravel on top as it is such a huge job to kill off the 2 ft tall weeds and strim it all down after the winter on a yearly basis. The heat kills off the weeds and the ground goes hard if you leave it but it's not really a pretty sight so we decided to get some grunt work done and deal with it! Under the back garden we have a "fossa" which is a soak-away where the sewage and water runs in to and "just in case" we ever have any problems with it, it's advisable not to lay a hard surface on it and so gravel seemed to be the best way to go.
After the weeds had been killed off and strimmed.
Last week we had a full week of incessant rain (well it seemed like it) and then it turned 3 days ago (6th April) and we have been enjoying temperatures of 25/27 degrees and so we have put 2 sun-loungers there and have taken full advantage of an afternoon and sat with a beer, crossword puzzle book and sat back and enjoyed the view!
I am in the process of germinating some flowers and will be putting some plants in and adding a few potted up planters to pretty the back garden up. We also have to buy new garden furniture as we lost 2 tables and a chair after they went flying off the veranda ending up in various parts of the garden after ferocious winds last February.

Saturday, 8 March 2014

Sunshine, goats, chickens and pigs ........... our neighbours !!!!!

The joys of spring are definitely upon us now, the fields are full of wild flowers, the sun is shining from dawn till dusk and temperatures are hitting low 20's and it feels like absolute bliss .... (although I'm not foolish enough to think it is here till the summer sets in, as I'm sure there will be more cloud, cooler days and rain to fall the before summer!) Anyway the goats are out grazing, the familiar sound of petrol strimmers and chainsaws humming away, small fires burning spent branches from the pruning of trees and tractors buzzing up and down the lane, the fruit trees bursting out with blossom are all signs that spring is here and nows the time to be cleaning and tidying up in the garden and planting out ready for harvesting our crops in the summer.

For the first time ever I am attempting to grow potatoes. We bought a sack of seed potatoes (white potatoes) and at the moment they are spread out on the cellar floor waiting for them to sprout. My Portuguese friend Filomena gave me some of her seed potatoes (red potatoes) which had already sprouted and has shown me how to plant up these seed by cutting the potatoes and placing the sliced potatoe with its tuber on end upwards then covering with soil, spaced out in rows so hopefully, fingers crossed and the weather helps me out, we are looking forward to producing our own delicious spuds! Red potatoes seem to be more commonly grown here and Filomena assures me they grow better here than white ones.

I called on my friend Filomena yesterday and she took me to see her goats as one had given birth 4 hours earlier and another one born the previous day. Ah soooo cute, the new born was having a little play around and happily sucking away at his mother's milk.

Newborn just four hours old and the darker one a day old





Thursday, 13 February 2014

Update on the loft conversion ......................

The dreaded loft conversion project is continuing at a steady pace for various reasons, mainly difficulty at times in sourcing materials, and now Rob is having problems with his elbows which is the result of mixing up around 130 buckets of sand and cement then climbing 3 lots of stairs to render the walls and to his great sorrow is only half-way through completing the task!

All three rooms now have the roof insulation and either plasterboard or pine cladding fitted to the roof.
We then painted the cladding and plastered the plasterboard ready for stippling and painting. At this stage we decided to concentrate on completing the first bedroom as this was the only room where the walls had been rendered (apart from above the window which was finished off when the window was fitted). We had a new double glazed window with shutters fitted on the outside once the hole where the previous blinds had been bricked up the room started to take shape. Pictures showing the old and the new -much more pleasing on the eye!
Bedroom 1




More pics from different angles:-


So in bedroom 1 the ceiling and walls have now been plastered, stippled and painted. The floor has been tiled and we are now just awaiting some skirting board to be made (a more difficult task than you would normally expect to achieve as carpenters here seem rather difficult to pin down!). We ordered some wood to make door frames (from a local carpenter) but after waiting and waiting we gave up and went down a different route and finally achieved it ourselves by using MDF purchased from the DIY shop!!!! So once we have the skirting board and on site it will be fitted and painted and then we can finally hang a door and the result will be "FIRST BEDROOM FINISHED" !!!!!!!!!!!

Sunday, 5 January 2014

Fishery filling up .......

Firstly, we wish all our readers a Very Happy, Healthy and Prosperous New Year !

On the weather front we have had a rainy start to the new year, which on the one hand we are pleased to see the fishery filling with up water, but on the other hand, feel downhearted as we don't like rain and more rain !!!!!!!!!!!! Although after watching the news reports from the U.K. our sympathies do go out to all those who have been heavily affected and have suffered greatly with the floods and so all in all we shouldn't be complaining about the rain here.


The fishery is filling up quite nicely but we are not expecting it to retain the water, we knew it was a bit of a "long shot" but no-one could tell us for sure whether the water would hold or not, so it was a case of letting nature take its course and then making a decision on how to deal with it at a later stage. The terrain has a mixture of soil, clay and stone but unfortunately we don't have the necessary equipment for tamping the earth down to form a hard surface. Other solutions to it are either to line it with plastic or concreting the base and sides. The obvious permanent solution is to concrete, so that is most likely the way we will decide to go.

These two pictures were taken on the 2nd January 2014

This picture was taken on the 4th January 2014






Friday, 29 November 2013

The Loft Conversion has commenced !!!!!!!!!!!!

Now we have completed the floor we live on the time has come to bring new life into the loft and I (Caz) must say that this is one project I was not particularly going to enjoy the challenge of doing - "endure" me thinks is a more appropriate word!!!The entrance to the loft is from the hallway on the main living floor with the staircase already in place we will be creating two bedrooms with a lounge and shower room. The loft has been crying out to be insulated both for keeping the heat out in the summer and the cold out during the winter.

Rob was full of enthusiasm for this project and so we commenced the arduous task about a month ago and, can now say, that at after a month at it, and at this particular moment in time, after a gruelling week for Rob (doing his dreaded "electrical side of things") and now onto some intricate and fiddling ceiling cladding, his sense of humour has now almost diminished and the air is mostly blue and I am just pleased that most of our neighbors do not speak English (although I guess they can imagine just from his tone) that his patience is wearing thin!!!!

Firstly it was a trip into town for certain materials and several deliveries from our local builder's merchant and wood merchant for plasterboard, wood, insulation, etc., etc., Then the fun started to commence and, to be fair, it didn't seem too bad. Just tedious!!!!!! Cutting polystyrene insulation to size and fitting between the beams, sawing wood to fit batons, measuring, cutting plasterboard, passing screws, drilling holes, treating timber, plastering, filling up holes, sweeping up, and sweeping up again and again, and that's just to mention a few of the tedious jobs and then, of course, being up against it as all the original timber beams, walls, floors, etc., are never square or equal !!!!!!!
!!!!!
A couple of pics here showing how the loft looked originally. The previous owners never had it finished off sadly!
A few pics showing the progress :- Bedroom 2 has pine timber cladding to the roof and 2 walls plasterboarded, the other two walls will be rendered and stipled and painted.
Bedroom 1 below has plasterboard cladding with the outer wall being stipled and painted and a new double glazed window will be fitted later :-