Showing posts with label wall building. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wall building. Show all posts

December 28, 2011

New Zealand shearing sheds - plans and construction details

By Lindsay Galloway

Click on the link below to view, or download your own copy of the document in full on Scribd, the web publishing platform.
NZ Shearing Sheds Construction or Renovation 1981

Introduction by Dr Clive Dalton

Getting information to farmers that they could understand and use to improve their profits, was the main driving force for all of us who worked for the New Zealand Ministry of Agriculture & Fisheries (MAF) in the 1970s to 1990. Our ‘Information Services' section was staffed by top agricultural journalists, and we had radio and TV producers the equal of any in the commercial world.

The core for the printed information flow to farmers was a series of fact sheets called 'AgLinks' developed by Geoffrey Moss, a former Farm Adviser, especially well respected in Taranaki, who headed MAF Information Services.

Geoff was awarded an Eisenhower Fellowship to visit America and came back with the AgLink idea, to get research information from scientists to farmers, horticulturalists and their advisers, in brief ‘fact sheets’ that were easy to read, easy to file – and were free! The were an 'information link'.

Geoff appointed Colin Gardner as the first editor – a kiwi Sheep and Wool Instructor who had come back from working in Australia. Other top agricultural journalists, editors and people like me in the different MAF regions, joined the team, which started work in 1969.

We sourced topics for AgLinks and did the first drafts, which our Head Office editors fixed up and got printed for distribution either from the Wellington Head Office or through each MAF local office.

We ended up with well over 1000 topics, and we printed and gave away thousands, from which farmers could build up into sets on different topics. The sheets were colour coded to make this easy.

The aim was that if a farmer had a question – MAF needed to have an AgLink to answer it - and we did. We were farming’s Google before Google! Clearly the concept was well ahead of its time.

Shearing Sheds - plans and construction details

A classic example of the value of AgLinks was the series on Shearing Sheds written

by Lindsay Galloway, who was the highly respected Sheep & Wool officer in the MAF Christchurch office. Lindsay drew all the plans himself and had them checked by building inspectors from the Ministry of Works.

Lindsay says that as he travels around Canterbury and beyond in his retirement, he can see the results of his 40 year's service to the New Zealand sheep and wool industry still standing proudly on farms, many of which don't run sheep now and have been adapted for calf rearing with the change to dairying.

Lindsay also worked to help sheep farmers on the Chatham Islands where many of his sheds were built, and have withstood the challenging climate there.

Linsday Galloway’s Shearing Shed AgLinks are still as relevant today as they were when produced, and are invaluable for anyone wanting to build a new shearing shed, or to repair or modify a facility that has fallen into disrepair.

The death of AgLinks

AgLinks were dumped in 1989 after a failed attempt to charge for them by the ‘new MAF business managers’ who saw the end of MAF’s dedicated service to farmers. All Head Office copies had to go to the Wellington landfill, but some of us in the regions pirated a set. The National Library holds an incomplete set.


May 25, 2009

Northumbrian poetry: "The Great Daft Laddies' Waal" by Donald Clegg

Don Clegg (on left) and Tom Batey -resting after
completion of the " Great Daft Laddies Waal"



THE 'GREAT DAFT LADDIES' WAAL

By Donald Clegg

There is a little cottage standin’ on a windy Highland brae,
The bonniest Butt and Ben inventeed, definitely, Aa wad say.
Way, way up a hillside in an Aberdeenshor glen,
It belangs to school-day friends, that stay theor noo and then.

It hes a country garden, tended both by Tom and Beth
And a view ‘cross to the Grampians to make ye haad yor breath.
But the braeside nuw is slumpin’, Tom thinks it’s gan’in te faal.
So Tom and me decideed, we wad hev to build a Waal.

A waal to keep the garden up! It wad be quite a feature.
Strang, stoot and gappy too – a heme for ivvery creature.
Bords, moosees, bugs and beetles, it meks nee odds at aal.
It’d be a boon for wildlife, wad the buildin’ of the Waal.

We stumped aboot aal day wi’ lots of scratchin’ 'o wor heeds,
Amang brambles, burrs and nettles, and plenty other weeds.
We measured and stuck sticks in – an’ then we changed wor minds.
Wor heeds was fairly abuzzin’ with the choice of grand designs.

At last we got it settled, and decided on a corve.
Not ower big or ower hee – just moderate wad sorve.
Part 'o the top might just be right to mek a viewin’ bench
So, full of hell, we started oot to dig the footin’s trench.

The soil was lowse and sandy and, tho’ the dust blew int’ wor eyes
We raked aboot and fund a bowldor – just the varry size
To get the buildin’ under way - and two/three mair anaal
‘Twad be a simple process, wad be the buildin’ of the Waal!

Sand and cement at 4 to 1 was saen browt into play
And bowldor followed muckle bowldor aal throughoot the day
We sweated, strained and laboured till the dyke began to grow
‘Till at last we reached the other end – as far as we meant to go.

Noo we’d done the footin’s, it was time to build the coursees,
So we pulled and pushed mair stones aboot, like two dementeed horsees.
Wi’ pinch bar and sledge hammor, we winkled bowldors oot
That hedn’t seen the light 'o day since Adam was aboot!

Tho’ bodies creaked and muscles groaned, we went on wi’ wor labours
Just stoppin’ yence or twice to a crack wi’ passin’ neebors.
Tea, coffee, sandwiches wor aall eaten in the shade,
Sittin’ in the wheelbarrow, or just leanin’ on the spade.

Some staenes wor easy worried oot, and quickly buildeed in
While some, nee mattor huw ye tried, ye simply couldn’t win!
But in spite of aal the akward yins, that seemed to be unwillin’
We soon got roond that problem, cos’ we used them for back-fillin’.

The day arrived for toppin’ oot, thor was a great debate.
“Where wad the initials gan? And what aboot the date?”
A flat stone from Northumberland was used to cap it aal
And we stood in admiration of wor grand, completed Waal.

It beats the one in China and Hadrian’s muckle dyke.
It beats that yin in Bykor, folks hev nivvor seen the like.
That yin in Borlin didn’t last for varry lang ataal
‘Cos it didn’t hev the craftsmen like the 'Great Daft Laddies’ Waal'.

It stands se strang and prood against the worst of Scottish weathor.
We think it’s got a canny chance of standin’ theor for ivvor.
So, if ye gan te Scotland and want somewheor to caal
Pop in to Aberdeenshor and see the 'Great Daft Laddies Waal'.

Falstone 2009

Profile of Tom Batey by Clive Dalton
Dr Tom Batey was born at Broomhill farm in West Woodburn where his parents farmed before moving 'doon country' to Gilchesters at Stamfordham in 1939. There Tom grew up and after his secondary schooling (where he met Don Clegg), he went on to Kings College, University of Durham in Newcastle upon Tyne where he did an agricultural degree specialising in soil chemistry.

While being the main stay on the home farm, Tom completed a Ph.D at Kings under Fred Hunter looking at the productivity of hill land in Northumberland. I can recall a memorable day with Tom up the Coquet 'howkin holes' on Blindburn, looking at the soil profiles and fencing some small plots to keep the yowes oot!

Tom spent the first part of his career working as a soil specialist for the UK Ministry of Agriculture 'doon sooth', initially in East Anglia then based at Reading. Then followed over 30 years teaching land use and soil management north of the Border at Aberdeen University. During this time he came to the deep sooth and had a short exchange at Lincoln College in New Zealand.

In his later career Tom acted as a soil consultant, specialising in assessing damage to the land following the installation of oil and gas pipelines. He loves 'sittin aroond a hole in the grund' spouting on about soils to anyone who will listen- including quite a few farmers in Australia! He and his wife Beth are in retirement in Aberdeenshire, where Tom recently bought himself a set of Northumbrian pipes! Now he can sit on his new waal and practise.



In 1988, Tom published an excellent book called 'Soil Husbandry - A practical guide to the use and management of soils'.
ISBN 0-951-3605-0-7.

Without question, it's the best book available if you want good, easy-to-read basic information on soils and their care, because of Tom's complete understanding of the role of science in practical farming.