Sunday, 10 February 2013


From Red Lights to Red Tape
 Settling in the country one of the first things to focus my mind was what to do with nearly 30 acres of woodland, pastures and a walled garden - after all in Soho every square metre is accounted for and used to maxim capacity.
 I loved the idea of having some fierce-looking Highland cattle strutting around looking majestic and powerful until a local farmer advised me on vets bills, vaccinations, care of duty and how labour intensive keeping such beast could be.
 They also create massive loads of poop and you have to have a plan to dispose of the slurry which would involve a tractor and all sorts of accessories including storage tanks and contractors to remove it in bulk. In fact water and slurry removal is just the start and while I can imagine this could have greenies and environmentalists salivating at the thought of producing biomass fuel etc. I'm no eco warrior, sorry.


And the form-filling. You can't just buy a couple of cattle and throw  bales of hay at regular intervals over the fence. Most farm animals have to be registered and accounted for so they can be traced from birth to the very last field they grazed before going off to the abattoir.
 So the first thing I had to do was register my land with a Scottish Government agricultural department called the Rural Payments and Inspections Division - I thought heading to the countryside would mean an end to red-tape and form-filling but this is Britain and there's no escape. In fact there's so much red tape in the agricultural world it beggar's belief how horse meat has got into our food chain. It seems to me that every single sheep and lamb, cow, heifer, bull etc. has to be accounted for from the cradle to the grave, or from the byre to the griddle. But let's not dwell on the horse meat scandal - horses in the Scottish Borders (where I am based) are highly prized, loved and valued and just about every self respecting Border Reiver has at least one for the annual ride-outs ... one of the most booze-fuelled, anti-english festivals dating back to the 13th century.
Each town in the Borders raises hundreds of riders between June and August in memory of the honourable reivers who would rob and plunder their english neighbours with a passion only the Scots can muster. Being a Geordie, coming from the tribal areas somewhere in between, I find this equine-led hate fest against the English amusing, but I digress.
 In the end I decided keeping cattle would be too much bother and so went for what I believe to be the easy option sheep - easier to handle and just leave them to graze ... or so I thought.

 Next instalment coming soon:  Woolly anarchists

3 comments:

  1. The brown "fierce-looking Highland cattle", please don't misconstrue what I say, looks stylish. I think many models would die to get that hair-do!

    I have my deepest sympathies, given that personal experience serves me a good reminder, that you chose sheep over other livestock.

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  2. Just found your blog. I'm sure I'll have lots to say!!!

    The anti-English crap in Scotland pisses me off. I'm Irish and there is the same problem over there. It stems from a massive inferiority complex. The Jocks and the Paddys are second rate and the state of their countries show this. hence the slagging off of the English who they blame for the mess they are in.
    Des.

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  3. Blimey Sis . . . I escaped from the Cumberland fells to London via Vienna, Lancashire and Jersey C.I. I am not sure I could fit back in and there's you enjoying the fresh air and the wind blowing under your scarf. I have a sneaky feeling that the people up there are too nice to protest about Government N.I.M.B.Y.s using Cumbria and the Borders for dubious things such nuclear plants, RAF pilot training and SAS running around Kielder forest to name but a few.. . Anyway, now is the time for growing British Beef if people are willing to pay a bit more for genuine bovine meal content.

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