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A Week on the Estate: Parched June, Owl Census & Tristan’s Alchemy

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Flaming June is well and truly here and next Wednesday, 21st June, marks the solstice; at our latitude, we’ll enjoy nearly 17 hours of daylight. If you’re not a lover of summer heat, the week to come may suit you better than the last, with highs of 24C and lows of 13C.

We’re farmers so naturally we keep a beady eye on the weather. One recurrent and serious concern for farming and public infrastructure across the East of England is lack of rainfall. According to the latest bulletin from the Environment Agency, after a drier-than-average May we’ve had precisely 0mm of rain in June. Extremes of wet and dry weather alongside higher temperatures may now be the norm for our region and beyond.

Our regenerative and forward-looking approach to land management will help us roll with the punches. Clear and well-maintained water courses and ditches help with drainage in the wet and irrigation in the dry. Kilometres of thick, healthy hedgerow and stands of mature trees provide shade and shelter for livestock and wildlife. Soil that is minimally disturbed, not saturated by agrochemicals and protected by cover crops establishes strong root networks and resists both wind erosion in summer and wet run-off in winter.

dry june

That said, there’s always plenty to be done across our arable land, whatever the weather’s doing. The new vineyards are growing apace and Andy and Jonny did a spot of inter-alley power harrowing. Elsewhere, the pea-and-oat mix is enjoying the sunshine but, like much of our wild and farmed flora, could do with a long soak. We aim to harvest the pea-and-oat mix as a home-grown feed to supplement the foraging diets of our Lincolnshire Buff chickens and Norfolk Black turkeys.

Our wild spaces are doing well too. Bird guru and licensed ringer Jim Lennon took a roll-call of some of our owl and kestrel boxes. Highlights from Jim’s notes include:

– Female barn owl on 1+ egg at Driby

– 3 x jackdaw chicks ringed near Manor Farm

– Last year’s female barn owl on 3 x chicks or eggs near the Old Rectory

– New female barn owl ringed on 4 x eggs, in company with male ringed near the Ovens last year

– 1 x jackdaw chick ringed at Ketsby

– 1 x cold, abandoned kestrel egg on Bluestone Heath Road

Jim Lennon and Adrian Blackburn will be back later in the summer with more good news. In the meantime, Jim is off to the Outer Hebrides for five weeks to monitor seabirds. We’re a little bit jealous.

tristan jorgensen

Finally, and in case you missed it, Master Distiller Tristan Jørgensen is leaving the Massingberd-Mundy Distillery for fresh pastures. In last week’s blog, we looked back at four years of botanical alchemy. Click HERE for tastes, textures, history, craftsmanship, business basics, awards and a splash of creativity.

We’re losing Tristan but we’ve gained so much from his time with us. We’ve seen world-beating artisan gins devised from scratch. We’ve tasted a beguiling medley of botanicals inspired by our native flora and our long history. We’ve been inspired by our loyal, discerning customers and retailers, and we’ve made new friends over a snifter or two. We’ve seen awards galore, plaudits from gin aficionados and alchemy in action.

We know we’re biased but Tristan’s last Massingberd-Mundy limited edition is a bobby-dazzler. Nettle Infused Burrell’s Dry Gin is a savoury delight that embodies our landscape and reveals its depth one texture at a time. The citrus-forward edge of award-winning Burrell’s Dry is paired with freshly (and carefully) picked wild nettles from the distillery garden. The resulting blend greets you with aromas of grateful greenery after a summer shower and follows up with a complex earthiness lifted by a tang from the stingers.

Whether you’re a gin aficionado or not, it’s a truly fascinating tipple. Tristan has distilled fewer than 100 bottles of Nettle Infused. To check availability, click HERE.

 

Tristan will call last orders at 12-noon on Tuesday 20th June. We’ll then be closed to online orders until our new distiller takes charge in the not-too-distant future. To claim your piece of distilling history while stocks last, head to our gin page HERE.

 

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