Tour de France
The Tour de France went through Calorguen, Dinan and Lanvallay today – very hot, but great fun!
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Little Egret
Today one of the gite clients went to St Jacut sur Mer, the lady is a keen bird watcher and had spotted a bird that at first she thought was a Heron, but there were a group of them fishing in the sea. She asked me if I could lend her a bird book and I brought out my Readers Digest Book of Birds and she identified the bird as a Little Egret, rare in these parts, but apparently moving North due to climate change.
Harvest
In our commune (village) there are 1000 habitants, so not so big, however there are 34 farms in the commune – so a large proportion of farmers. My partner, Yves, is a dairy farmer with around 50 hectares (100 acres) and 45 milking cows. Most of his fields are either pasture for the cows and heifers, or sown as maize for silaging forage for the cows to eat. The remaining fields (this year 8 hectares) are sown with wheat, mainly for the straw for the bedding in the winter, but also to sell the wheat. This week has seen the harvest start for Yves, it has been going on all around us for about three weeks, but as most of the farmers are small business, they cannot afford to buy large machinery like combine harvesters, so have to use contractors. The problem here is that everyone wants the contractor to come and harvest on the first sunny day that the wheat is ripe, so Yves has had to wait his turn.
In the mornings, the dew is heavy in Brittany, so generally it is not possible to start combining until after 3pm when the dew has been dried off, then all is clear (weather permitting) until the dew falls again, normally at about 4.30am. Yves’ first slot came at about 10pm on Sunday evening (very sociable!!). So we all went along to watch the Fiat combine start his large field of 6.5 hectares. The Fiat is very small and very old (it literally clatters along!), it has a cutting width of 3 meters as opposed to the modern machines of 5 or 6 meters, although the larger machines get the job done quicker, they have to process the wheat a lot quicker, so this means threshing it much more violently – this tends to break the straw and give a poorer quality bedding.
They worked through the night and had to finish at 4am in the morning because of rain. There is still one and a half hours combining left to do.





