Author Topic: Good neighbours  (Read 12364 times)

Rosemary

  • Joined Oct 2007
  • Barry, Angus, Scotland
    • The Accidental Smallholder
Good neighbours
« on: August 20, 2011, 04:14:42 pm »
A friend of ours posted on Facebook today that he had come home from the golf yesterday to find that his next door neighbour had not only taken in his washing, when the rain started, but also tumbled the towels and paired up his socks. Isn't that nice?

Our neighbours across the road hired a minidigger for the weekend, used it on the Friday and gave it to us for the weekend, along with their flatbed lorry, so that we could fill our vegetable beds. They wouldn't take anything for it. And he's taking Dan deer stalking.

Please add your good neighbour stories - we hear so much about bad neighbours but there are lots of good folk out there :)

SallyintNorth

  • Joined Feb 2011
  • Cornwall
  • Rarely short of an opinion but I mean well
    • Trelay Cohousing Community
Re: Good neighbours
« Reply #1 on: August 20, 2011, 05:48:21 pm »
Whenever we make hay in our Top Meadow, the neighbour over that fence jumps over and helps us stook.  She's 15 years older than me and I still can't sling bales up on my back and carry them across the field like she can!

This year, the neighbour next to our Big Meadow sent his French student for two full days' haymaking, and their foster daughter and her son came to help on two afternoons too.
Don't listen to the money men - they know the price of everything and the value of nothing

Live in a cohousing community with small farm for our own use.  Dairy cows (rearing their own calves for beef), pigs, sheep for meat and fleece, ducks and hens for eggs, veg and fruit growing

lachlanandmarcus

  • Joined Aug 2010
  • Aberdeenshire
Re: Good neighbours
« Reply #2 on: August 20, 2011, 06:13:19 pm »
My neighbour down the hill one side digs out my track when I am snowed in, it takes 3 runs with his big tractor to get through! And my neighbours down the hill the other side ski up to bring me fresh bread and milk!

OH did a bit of a favour for a local chap too, and didnt want anything for it but the chap insisted on replacing our rusty old entrance gate with a lovely new one :-)))

little blue

  • Joined Jun 2009
  • Derbyshire
Re: Good neighbours
« Reply #3 on: August 20, 2011, 07:38:14 pm »
I cat-sat for my friends down the road ... they came back to find their hanging baskets filled with strawberries & flowers!  I couldn't bear looking at the weeds where the cats fed by the glass door.  And I hoovered & wiped down the kitchen in case I traipsed mud in. :D

And regularly return my neighbours' missing dog/children.

they have taken my cockerels to market & the other side neighbours used to give us apples from the tree, I think they've gone off us now cos of the pigs :D
Little Blue

faith0504

  • Joined Aug 2010
  • Cairngorms
  • take it easy and chill
    • blaemuir cottage
Re: Good neighbours
« Reply #4 on: August 20, 2011, 10:26:15 pm »
my neighbour made me my tea tonight a lovely chicken curry and homemade lemon yogurt, yum yum,  :wave:

Sandy

  • Guest
Re: Good neighbours
« Reply #5 on: August 20, 2011, 10:28:27 pm »
Our neighbours are nice but we had wonderful neighbours in Market Harborough, they were odd balls, she was an aromatherapist and he was a majician with the majic circle and they used to sit outside with us and our G &T and Whsikey...he took my hubby to hosptial for an appointment, they were so nice, he passed away not long after we moved but she married another neighbour of mine and they are on my FB...godd neighbours are fun like ours now in Clacks...parties and fun!

doganjo

  • Joined Aug 2012
  • Clackmannanshire
  • Qui? Moi?
Re: Good neighbours
« Reply #6 on: August 20, 2011, 10:40:06 pm »
There's only two of us over this side of the railway line but we help each other.  They take my wheelies up to the end of the road becasue they know my knees are bad, and I take them back down empty.  I give them duck eggs as Neil adores them.  They look in on my dogs if I am away all day at shows, and I let theirs out when needed too.  So much better than my neighbour in my last house who used to deliberately make noises right next to the fence to get my dogs barking then phone the dog warden - he didn't know Margaret was a friend of mine though! ;) ;D  If I'd had any idea what he was like I wouldn't have sold him the house.  Apparently he told people I had buuilt my new house with his money! ::)  Technically that is true but he did get a lovely cottage and 5 acres of fields for it! ;D
Always have been, always will be, a WYSIWYG - black is black, white is white - no grey in my life! But I'm mellowing in my old age

deepinthewoods

  • Guest
Re: Good neighbours
« Reply #7 on: August 21, 2011, 07:47:16 pm »
mine is bringing my new big chook run tomorrow, its an old pheasent enclosure, and is taking a couple of pols. its good to work with your neighbours.

Rosemary

  • Joined Oct 2007
  • Barry, Angus, Scotland
    • The Accidental Smallholder
Re: Good neighbours
« Reply #8 on: August 21, 2011, 08:38:38 pm »
Our neighbour shoots and brings us venison and rabbit as his wife won't eat anything other than supermarket meat(must be in a poly tray and film wrapped  ::).

He and Dan were deerstalking last night (shot a fox) and are out looking for bunnies tonight. Dan's just there to carry heavy things - I don't think Alan will lend him his superduper rifle  ;D

plumseverywhere

  • Joined Apr 2013
  • Worcestershire
    • Its Baaath Time
    • Facebook
Re: Good neighbours
« Reply #9 on: August 21, 2011, 09:58:42 pm »
Ours are very tolerant considering we have 4 energetic children, a hubby who plays loud guitars, a cockerel, mad bottle raised lambs who think they HAVE to bleat loudly and run down the hill every time they see us not to mention the goats...The neighbours have said they enjoy hearing the livestock which is nice.
One neighbour has shoo'd the fox away from the lamb shed/chicken pens at 5am and offered to stake them out with hubby. Another neighbour took my youngest daughter in when we found our cat had just been run over and they made biscuits while I went to collect toby and bury him, she has also heard my mum calling after a fall in the garden and arranged for other neighbours to lift her up and carry her indoors while we were out for a day (mum doesn't press her careline!) so we are very lucky indeed.   
Smallholding in Worcestershire, making goats milk soap for www.itsbaaathtime.com and mum to 4 girls,  goats, sheep, chickens, dog, cat and garden snails...

VSS

  • Joined Jan 2009
  • Pen Llyn
    • Viable Self Sufficiency.co.uk
Re: Good neighbours
« Reply #10 on: August 21, 2011, 10:58:36 pm »
Four years ago we had to go away for four days to a family funeral and associated bits and pieces. It was at the end of Feb when all the stock were housed and shortly before we were due to start lambing. One neighbour came in twice daily to check and feed the housed flock (approx 200 animals). Another neighbour came in to do the pigs and the poultry. A third neighbour milked the cows twice a day and fed the cats and dogs.

At least three good neighbours. They all know we would do the same for them if the need arose.
The SHEEP Book for Smallholders
Available from the Good Life Press

www.viableselfsufficiency.co.uk

Crofter

  • Joined Jan 2009
  • Isle of Lewis
  • We'll get there!
    • Ravenstar
Re: Good neighbours
« Reply #11 on: August 21, 2011, 11:16:30 pm »
One of our neighbours gave us a (fairly old) tipping trailer and a Hay tedder not long after we moved here, he's also helped to put a new clutch in the Fergie. We've helped him out too and fed his stock for several weeks when he was very Ill one winter.
We have an agreement not to "keep score" too. Just help when needed. :)
Comfortable B&B on a working Croft on the Isle of Lewis. www.Ravenstar.co.uk

SallyintNorth

  • Joined Feb 2011
  • Cornwall
  • Rarely short of an opinion but I mean well
    • Trelay Cohousing Community
Re: Good neighbours
« Reply #12 on: August 21, 2011, 11:52:05 pm »
Around these parts the farming community still helps each other out as a matter of course.  People are liable to just turn up and start stacking hay when we're baling (as above), neighbours often stop and help if we're struggling with livestock on the road, a lot of the local farmers just collect, treat and return small flocks of sheep for their smallholding neighbours when they are doing their own larger flocks, and so on.  Our nearest farming neighbour regularly visits to borrow bits of our equipment - and now he's bought a shiny new flatbed trailer we will return that familiarity!  We keep an eye on any of their cattle that are close to calving if they are away, and they do the same for us - although the first time this happened we hadn't realised how different it is handling a beef suckler cow to a dairy cow, and apparently the neighbour and the farm-sitter had a right old night of it trying to get just the one calving cow in.  (You would normally expect to bring a friend with a suckler cow, they are very herd oriented.)  When BH lost his collie unexpectedly a few years back, just at lambing time, a local farmer who was having a dog trained by the local sheepdog trainer let it be known that if it suited BH then he could buy it.  When my friend and I moved up here to the moorland sheep farm, our neighbours were incredibly kind in terms of putting us in touch with potential buyers for our lambs, helping us with transport when it was too big a job for our little trailer, and clearing snow from our lane when we were blocked in.  One neighbour from a few miles away just kept turning up and mowing, wuffling and baling our grass - but when I tell you that he is now referred to on here as 'BH' we shall all wonder just how selfless all that haymaking really was...  :-[  ;) ;D

The closeknit farming community thing is one of the reasons items often fetch way more than their face value at farm 'displenishing' sales - everyone wants to send the neighbour on his way with a bit of money in his pocket, and will bid some items up to ridiculous prices.

This kind of looking out for and helping each other, without expecting return or reward, is how I remember neighbours when I was growing up.  The word 'neighbourly' meant exactly that.  I don't think we've lost it all completely, far from it, but I do think it is less widespread than it used to be and that in the fast-paced 'rat race', some people would even wonder what you were after if you did them a favour.
Don't listen to the money men - they know the price of everything and the value of nothing

Live in a cohousing community with small farm for our own use.  Dairy cows (rearing their own calves for beef), pigs, sheep for meat and fleece, ducks and hens for eggs, veg and fruit growing

ambriel

  • Joined Jan 2011
  • Kinlochbervie, NW Sutherland, Scotland
  • Mad, bad, and dangerous to know!
    • Harbour Cottage
Re: Good neighbours
« Reply #13 on: August 22, 2011, 12:07:25 am »
We've almost always managed to have great neighbours. The only exception to this was Ross when we lived on the Isle of Mull and he was a complete to$$er. He was barely more than a child though.

Our current nearest neighbours have been brilliant. They've not complained about us filling the garden with livestock, even when on occasion it has found its way onto their shed roof! (Thanks Alan)


Daisy

  • Joined Mar 2010
  • Near Earlston Scottish Borders
Re: Good neighbours
« Reply #14 on: August 22, 2011, 12:20:57 pm »
My neighbour has just brought me 8 round bales of hay - tho I am slightly worried as it is a bit damp and slightly warm in the middle  :o

 

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