I am home again. And like every time I come home to the farm I am haunted by this little nursery rhyme.
To Market, to Market
To market, to market to buy a fat pig;
Home again, home again, jiggety-jig.
To market, to market, to buy a fat hog;
Home again, home again, jiggety-jog.
To market, to market, to buy a plum cake;
Home again, home again, market is late.
To market, to market, to buy a plum bun;
Home again, home again, market is done.
To market, to market, a gallop a trot,
To buy some meat to put in the pot;
Three pence a quarter, a groat a side,
If it hadn’t been killed it must have died
There are a few variations of course but this is the one I grew up with.
My Mum did not sing (due to a car accident when we were all very young) and she lost her singing voice so I grew up chanting nursery rhymes in her breathy low tone while other children grew up singing them.
This chant will run through my head for the day!
The sun is coming up. I will take a picture of the sunrise for you then get my work clothes on. Then the dogs and Camera House and I will begin the day. Tomorrow I should be able to bring you pictures of everyone. Word is they have all done well in my absence. Which is as it should be.
The pigs will be glad I am home as John has been feeding them at 4am on the way to his work. So there will be plenty for me to do over next few days getting their beds back up to date.
My trip was marvelous I feel quite refreshed and ready to go. And I am very grateful to all my guest posters.
The weather for the next ten days has sunshine and, except for tonight, will not go below freezing. So my first big job is to get the four middle sized pigs back out of the barn and into the rat house paddock with the root cellar.
One long weekend to California early next month – then I am home for another season so there is no need for everything to remain so simple.
My second big job this week is to sow the first wave of cabbages and brassicas. They will grow on in their trays for a while. I know that we will still get more wintry weather but I am going to prepare for an early spring just in case I get the opportunity. We have had such a mild winter here.
There is a high of 38f/3c forecast for today, a little bit of wind but nothing noteable.
Hard to believe that only yesterday I was breezing about London and the day before Milan and now I am back on the flat, flat, quiet, quiet prairies!
Life is grand.
I am looking forward to getting to work and so I will get going now and be back with a decent post tomorrow.
Have a lovely day
celi



42 responses to “Back on the farm.”
glad you had such a wonderful respite; welcome back;
Welcome Home Miss C!
When I travel home from wherever I have been, my family and/or friends get a text “Home Again, Home Again, Jiggety-Jog” to let them know I have arrived safely.
Life is grand – ands to be able to sample it all is grand indeed. (I love that piggy nursery rhyme and had been bouncing a baby to it this week. Had forgotten the last stanza – thanks)
Denise > Me too! Just home, and I’ve been chit ting potatoes, sowing seeds in trays and pots, pruning fruit bushes. Whilst I was away, J shifted tonnes of compost out into the growing areas, and particularly to where we’ve just now together planted out black- and red currant bushes grown from cuttings. Lovely to have the ‘season’ ahead to encourage us, isn’t it? Glad you’re home, Celi – but also your future travels to look forward to.
I read this version in a newspaper somewhere… To market to market to buy a fat pig, the butcher’s gone vegan he gave me a fig!
ALWAYS..jiggity jig…every time I drive in the driveway…
What a stunning sunrise, what a wonderful welcome to the day.
Welcome home! 😃