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Wealden Times | WT168 | February 2016 | Wedding supplement inside

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competition<br />

win an overnight stay for two<br />

people in the 5 star exclusive<br />

Maiden’s Tower at leeds castle,<br />

with a full cooked breakfast<br />

Visitors never forget their first breathtaking vision of Leeds Castle<br />

in Kent, rising majestically from the moat as it has done for over<br />

900 years. With 500 acres of beautiful parkland and formal gardens,<br />

daily activities, free flying falconry displays, special events and year<br />

round attractions, Leeds Castle is one of the best days out in Kent,<br />

you will want to come back time and again! Open all year, there is<br />

something new for everyone to discover every day. Your admission<br />

ticket allows you to visit as many times as you like across a whole<br />

year.<br />

Leeds Castle is also an idyllic setting for the most romantic of<br />

weddings whatever the season. The choice of historic venues and<br />

packages will be tailored to meet your requirements by the team of<br />

experienced <strong>Wedding</strong> Co-ordinators. From your initial enquiry to<br />

the day itself, a superb level of service will be provided to ensure you<br />

have the perfect wedding at “the loveliest castle in the world”.<br />

During its 900 year history, Leeds Castle has been a Norman<br />

stronghold, the private property of six of England’s medieval queens<br />

and a palace used by Henry VIII and his first wife Catherine of<br />

Aragon. More recently, the castle was an elegant early 20th<br />

century playground for the rich and famous, as Lady Baillie, the<br />

last private owner, entertained high society down from London<br />

for the weekends. The Maiden’s Tower is a 16th century stone<br />

building that was used for weekend house parties in the 1920s. It’s<br />

now a glamorous self-contained venue perfect for your wedding<br />

ceremony, evening celebrations and overnight accommodation. For<br />

more information visit www.leeds-castle.com/<strong>Wedding</strong>s<br />

For your chance to win an<br />

overnight stay for two people<br />

in the 5 star exclusive Maiden’s<br />

Tower with a full cooked<br />

breakfast, just answer this<br />

question: ‘Who was Henry<br />

VIII’s first wife?’ Enter your<br />

answer with your contact details*<br />

in the online form at www.<br />

wealdentimes.co.uk/competition<br />

or post to: The Leeds Castle<br />

Competition, <strong>Wealden</strong> <strong>Times</strong>, 21 Stone Street, Cranbrook, Kent TN17 3HF by 19<br />

<strong>February</strong> <strong>2016</strong>. There is no cash alternative and the prize must be taken midweek<br />

by March 2017 *All entrants’ details will be passed on to Leeds Castle and <strong>Wealden</strong><br />

<strong>Times</strong> Events. Please let us know if you do not wish your details to be passed on.<br />

Fables<br />

From<br />

The Farm<br />

Jane welcomes more<br />

calves and prepares<br />

for lambing<br />

W<br />

e started calving at Christmas and now, as <strong>February</strong><br />

approaches, we’re almost half way through. We should<br />

be finished by the end of the month – apart from the<br />

stragglers – and at Coopers Farm there always seem to be one or two.<br />

On many farms, these out-of-step girls wouldn’t be allowed.<br />

Labour is one of the most expensive costs of running a beef suckler<br />

herd and during calving the stockman needs to be on 24-hour call<br />

– and get up at 3am to check all is OK. So, not surprisingly, steps<br />

are taken to ensure the whole herd calves in a tight block of about<br />

six weeks. This includes some simple and obvious measures like only<br />

letting the bull run with the cows for two cycles (six weeks) but it<br />

also pays to have a youngish herd.<br />

When people discover we are livestock farmers the two questions<br />

we are most frequently asked are: a) what time do you get up in the<br />

morning? (answer: not as early as most) and b) how long do farm<br />

animals live? This is more difficult to answer. A cow is capable of<br />

producing a calf well into her mid-teens but as she ages it takes<br />

longer to conceive – often not the statutory two cycles – so she will<br />

be culled in favour of younger models. I should, I know, adopt such<br />

a sensible strategy and, when I’ve been doing that 3am shift for two<br />

months, I always swear I will. But somehow those favourite cows<br />

always seem to get the benefit of the doubt and a few more weeks<br />

with the bull.<br />

While the cows are nearly done and dusted, we’re just getting<br />

ready to start lambing in March. The scan man has been to PD<br />

(pregnancy diagnose) the ewes. Like a human scan he simply rubs<br />

the camera under their belly (though the sheep version seems to<br />

work through wool). A dot is then sprayed between the shoulders<br />

if they are expecting a single, above the tail for twins or a strip across<br />

the rump for triplets – vital information when you have a tricky<br />

birth and need to know how many lambs are involved.<br />

We also have to go shopping for all the necessary bits and pieces<br />

such as iodine navel sprays, castration rings, colostrum powder,<br />

bulbs for the heat lamps, lubricant jelly, latex gloves, dried milk,<br />

bottles and teats. The list goes on and on. And finally we need to<br />

get the lambing shed ready; lots of deep clean straw and individual<br />

‘mothering up’ pens where the ewe and her lambs will spend the first<br />

24 hours or so just to make sure everyone has got the hang of the<br />

mother/ baby bond.<br />

All that will then remain is to bring the ewes in. When the rams<br />

went in with the ewes in November they were fitted with a harness,<br />

known as a raddle, that holds a block of coloured wax between their<br />

front legs. As they mount the in-season ewe they leave a waxy mark<br />

on her rump and, as the colour of the wax block is changed after 18<br />

days, it’s possible to know the order in which the ewes will lamb.<br />

The shepherd, my husband Adrian, is every bit as sentimental in<br />

giving the ewes plenty of opportunity to conceive, so the rams stay<br />

in longer than six weeks and he’ll be getting up in the night well into<br />

May – when at least it should be heavenly weather!<br />

Follow Jane on Twitter @coopers_farm<br />

Congratulations to Shona Brown who wins the January competition for a<br />

comedy night, supper, an overnight stay and breakfast at The Bell in Ticehurst.<br />

119 www.wealdentimes.co.uk

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