Work on a smallholding can seem endless and exhausting. Try taking ten minutes out for this little exercise in relaxation, which will also put you in closer touch with your land.
Choose a fairly calm day and find somewhere really comfortable to sit outside, well away from the road if possible.
Sit down, close your eyes, and listen to your heart beat – take a few moments to slow both your heart rate and breathing.
Now, open your ears (but keep your eyes closed) and listen first of all to the noises close to you. These may be the breeze in the leaves, a scurrying rodent, your dog breathing, hens murmuring contentedly, or your sheep sneaking up to see what on earth you are up to. This close you can even hear insects scuttling about and of course bees buzzing.
Once you have identified all those really close-up sounds, move your circle of sound out a bit to include the birds singing – try to hear them individually and identify them if you can. Birdsong changes with the seasons, so you can think of them courting, nest building, rushing about finding food for their chicks, new fledgelings yelling for mum, or the quiet time of winter when they are recuperating for the next season. Contemplate all these things. You may hear the sound of ripping grass as your flock grazes, dogs snuffling and barking, ewes calling to their lambs, your partner working not too far away, and of course the big sound of silence.
Widen your circle of sound again and you will hear a buzzard mewing as it soars, a distant tractor droning, a rookery of busy birds, a lark rising and singing its glorious challenge to the world, a plane passing overhead and traffic on distant roads. I like to imagine the passengers in cars and planes and wonder where they are going on their busy lives. Stretch your ears to hear every last sound you can.
Once you have heard as much as you can, open your eyes. You will realise that you can’t actually see most of the things you were listening to and would have missed if you hadn’t closed your eyes and relaxed into the day.