Burra Maluca

out to pasture
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since Apr 03, 2010
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Biography
Burra is a hermit and a dreamer. Also autistic, and terribly burned out. I live near the bottom of a mountain in Portugal with my partner, my welsh sheepdog, and with my son living close by. I spend my days trying to find the best way to spend my spoons and wishing I had more energy to spend in the garden.
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Recent posts by Burra Maluca

Audio track available in either Spanish or English.

The creator, Eugenio Monesma, says that...

The knives from Taramundi (Asturias) are among the most famous in Spain. In 2000, I had the opportunity to discover, with two young artisans, how they crafted these knives step by step, complete with hand-carved handles and inlays.



10 hours ago

Nancy Reading wrote:I wonder whether a sawdust container could be built into the steps?



Well it's a possibility, though at the moment the steps are just a couple of breeze blocks and offcuts of wood left over from renovation jobs. Also, dare I say it, the shed is a bit of a dumping ground for stuff that doesn't have a proper home so fancy storage steps might be a bit of overkill. The wood shavings are currently just in a big bag.

Rosa seems to have moved in there and is waiting patiently for her friend Nigredo to come out of the barrel but he doesn't seem inclined to. I suspect he may be some time...

12 hours ago

It's 3:00 AM. A blizzard hits and the power goes out. Outside, it's minus 40 degrees Fahrenheit. Within three hours, your bedroom drops to 30 degrees. You're buried under three layers of blankets. You paid $300 for that memory foam mattress and another $200 for a weighted comforter. Yet you're shivering. Your expensive mattress feels like a block of ice against your back. You're sweating and freezing at the same time.

Now imagine a medieval peasant in 1315. No electricity. No central heating. Outside temperature? Same minus 40. His bedroom, if you can call it that, is a drafty stone hall with gaps in the walls. Yet he's sleeping soundly under a pile of straw and wool. He'll wake up warm. You'll wake up hypothermic.

What did a medieval farmer with literal garbage know that your $500 bedding system doesn't?



3 days ago
We finally installed the willow feeder!

This is it, after hauling the old lovable loo outside and just before taking the new throne inside. Roxa and Austin both look very pleased with their handiwork...




Those concrete blocks are going to be pressed into service as makeshift steps. We want to test them out to make sure we have the size and design absolutely right before committing to anything long-term and thought they'd do until we're absolutely sure how we want them.

Even Newton came out to see what it was all about. I think he's trying to catch his tail in an attempt to explain something about closing nutrient loops. He can't quite reach it though. I think he might need a bit of help...



And we haven't quite figured out what that naughty raven is up to.



I'm sure the dragons will put it all into a suitable story before long though.

Now, I wonder how long it will take us to fill the first barrel...
4 days ago
I found this link about a saddler's clamp or stitching pony which had this image of a

saddlers stitching ‘horse’. As the name suggests, it's a four legged wooden stool which is straddled for comfort during long stitching sessions with straps and belts etc.



4 days ago

Kathleen Sanderson wrote:A big advantage of having some kind of chute system is that it prevents a lot of stress on the animals (and on the animal handlers). Quietly running them through a properly-designed system (see Temple Grandin's work on livestock handling facilities) is much better than having to chase and catch and wrestle with each animal..



I found this video of Temple's work designing animal handling systems.



5 days ago
What you need is a rubber duck, or equivalent.

Instead of calling in a supervisor, call in a rubber duck (OK, I admit it, I'd use a plushy dragon...) and explain the problem to them until they fully understand it. By which time they will telepathically transmit the solution to you. Or maybe, just maybe, shifting mental gears into explaining mode rather than solving-it mode will allow the answer to form in your own mind.

Either way, it's a recognised technique, and cheaper than a supervisor!
5 days ago
When I had the donkey I would pick up bags of free bark-chips from the timber yard and pour them in a heap at the back of her stable.

She would have a lovely time pulling them down onto the floor, pounding them to dust with her dear little hooves, and pooping on the dust and pounding that in too. It made the most awesome mulch!
6 days ago
A few more photos to show some of the construction...

The entire top/seat lifts out of the way to make changing the barrel easier. There's a chain to stop it flopping over and breaking its hinges, and a rod is pushed through to stop the lid flopping open.

One side panel is completely removable so the barrel can be more or less dragged out instead of lifted right up and over the sides, which sounds far too much like hard work for old ladies like me...



There's an eyelet in the lid to hold a bit of rebar to stop the lid flopping when we're changing the barrel.

Those three bits of wood are for accurate positioning of the barrel so the holes line up!



Removable side being replaced.



It's a nice snug fit and clips into place.

The chain just folds out of the way down the outside of the barrel when the top is closed.



Top/seat fits snuggly and is clipped into place.

The bit of iron bar that pinned the lid in place has been removed too.



It looks a long way down to a little plushy dragon...



Roxa is testing it by sitting on it.

Which isn't quite its intended purpose, but close enough. It is her Throne, after all...



The intention is to install it within the next couple of days and use some scavenged blocks as steps until we are quite sure what size we want them to be, and then build some more appropriate and permanent ones. We figured it was better to experiment until we got it just right, for us, rather then guess and have to live with it if it was wrong enough to be annoying but not quite wrong enough to be worth re-building.
1 week ago
Roxa is delighted to report that the willow feeder is essentially ready to deploy!





Austin's been working on it with her in an attempt to keep her out of too much mischief.

We might take some more photos later to illustrate its finer points, but Roxa is exceedingly proud of her efforts and is keen to show the rest of the gang what she's been up to.

I'm also pretty sure a kid-friendly dragon story will ensue, too...

Oh, and I think she's going to name it The Philosopher's Throne.
1 week ago