Today we brunched at
which was undergoing work on the roof as we arrived.
I first featured their ancient farm cart in https://derrickjknight.com/2020/09/11/do-not-climb/
Here are some more details from this visit. With its injunction warning customers against climbing on this vehicle of a past age, it lies alongside the car park, its wooden boards slowly degenerating; self-seeded plants seeking nourishment from a build-up of soil and other materials; its powerful iron fittings protected from the ravages of time by the patina of rust or of red paint.
These garden obelisks are some of the many artefacts on sale in the yard.
As we turned into Ringwood Road on our journey home a grinning cyclist passed us from ahead.
The reason became apparent around the next bend where donkeys blocked the road;
pannage pigs foraging a little further on kept to the verge.
This evening, begging porcine forgiveness, we dined on Mediterranean style pork chops (with paprika, garlic, and a little chilli); crisp roast potatoes, some sweet and softer; crunchy carrots; tangy red cabbage; and tender green beans with which Jackie drank Hoegaarden and I finished the Malbec.
I love these finely observed details of the old cart!
Me too!
Thank you both very much
Thank you very much, Anne
Those garden obelisks look like they’ve been stolen from Euclid’s old shed!
Nice one, John. Thanks very much
I love photos of antiques! ❤️
Thanks very much, John
You’re welcome, Derrick. 😎
I hope you received porcine forgiveness so you could enjoy your delicious meal with a clear conscience.
Thank you so much, Liz 🙂
You’re welcome, Derrick.
I have a friend with a cart that’s been going to ground for several years. Her son-in-law keeps wanting to chop it up and toss it, but she’s having none of it. As she says, staring him in the eye, “Would you chop me up and toss me just because I’m old and falling apart?”
Thank you very much, Linda. An excellent riposte
Another set of great cart photos, and a fine group of obelisks. Regarding the porcine forgiveness, if we don’t keep eating them they will just over-run us!
Thanks very much, Quercus
What wondrously artistic photos! Love the details, the character, the well-seasonedness of the farm cart! 🙂
Well-seasoned things, and people, have stories to tell! 😀
Oh, delightful donkeys and in-the-pink pigs make for a smiley day! 🙂
Pork chop dinner! 😮 🐷 HA! 😋
(((HUGS))) 🙂 ❤️
PS…“Youth is the gift of nature, but age is a work of art.” – Stanislaw Jerzy Lec
Thank you very much, Carolyn. Another most apt quotation X
I adore the delightfully rustic Farmyard Cafe, the place’s rural ambiance looks similar to the atmosphere I enjoy at the Moorabool Valley Chocolate Cafe …
https://walkinto.in/tour/ZkR6swAPJf-1x0aoD0D1M
Thanks a lot, Ivor. That looks a good place, too
Frankie loves the courtyard ..
I hope you enjoyed your brunch… but no picture to show us, what a shame, then again it’s probably just as ell because then I’d be hankering after the same treat!
Thanks very much, Sue. I am trying to keep your work down 🙂
I noticed! Thank you very much 🙂
Perhaps they are planning a different set of decorations instead of the old cart. It’s a shame, though.
There is no sign that they will, Dolly. Thank you very much.
You are very welcome, Derrick.
Wonderful Photography sir
Thanks very much, Gary
It is always fun to revisit a favorite location, even an old piece of farm equipment! We enjoyed revisiting your September, 2020 post.
Thank you very much, Maj and Sher
More great pictures. Love those piggies.
Thank you very much, Pat
The older I get, the more I appreciate old things. It’s always nice to see the animals roaming free.
Thank you very much, JoAnna
Unfortunately for pigs, they have that quality known as “good to eat”. Unfortunately, because they are exceptionally intelligent, have super cute babies, and just because! I feel bad that I enjoy eating them, but that’s the fate of pigs and me as an apex predator. I hope you enjoyed your pork chops with what sounded like a truly delicious meal!
We did – just a little guilt. Thanks very much, Doug
I enjoyed your interesting close-ups and verbal descriptions. Pigs! Hah, and then you ate one. 🙂
Thanks very much, Cynthia 🙂
Excellent photos and descriptions of the old cart.
Thank you very much, Merril
On the hoof, then in he tummy…..
Precious memories of the past time, Derrick.
In friendship
Michel
Thank you very much, friend Michel
My great great grandfather, Thomas Insley, was a wheelwright and coach builder in Shackerstone in Leicester. It was very successful by all accounts but his business collapsed with the arrival of the motor car.
A good bit of history, Andrew. Thanks very much
I love to photograph old carts and homes and fences and the old things that get left behind in farms.. my in-laws live in farm land in Oregon and it’s a maze of abandoned goodies to click photos of history.
Thank you very much, Kerri. Perhaps you will post some
I wish I could add them here.. I’ll gather some and put some of my souls writing to it soon.. great idea!!! It all inspires me so much! Thank you for the thought!
The old cart and garden obelisks are fascinating and have an artistic aura about them. Excellent captures, Derrick.
Thank you very much, Eugi
You’re welcome, Derrick.
The garden obelisks we call “tomato cages”. We use these for our tomato plants. They are good and sturdy.
Donkeys and pigs never fail to delight!
Thank you very much, Lavinia
That cart has such mood and atmosphere.
Thank you very much, Laurie
I also love the detail of the old cart! Your road always offers something interesting.
Thank you very much, Aletta
Beautiful details! The donkeys are always so cute 😉
Thank you very much, Ribana
I love the old red metal fixings.
Thank you very much, Susan
I like the garden obelisks Derrick, nice to climb some plants around them.
Thank you very much, Agnes