victorian farm
- Hedgehogpie
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Re: victorian farm
I've just learned a little of the mystery of how a skep works from asking more questions of those with more beekeeping experience than me.
My tutor didn't explain that the colony itself was moved from skep to skep, leaving me with the impression that the entire lot were culled when honey was extracted. No surprise then that I couldn't understand how our forebears would be so wasteful as to dispose of healthy bees and (a perfectly good queen too!) in search of honey. Now I know that it wasn't quite as he'd described and that a major part of the detail had been left out of the telling.
My thanks to Norm for this simple but clear description of the process: http://normanweston.com/BEES/Skep%20Hives.htm
My tutor didn't explain that the colony itself was moved from skep to skep, leaving me with the impression that the entire lot were culled when honey was extracted. No surprise then that I couldn't understand how our forebears would be so wasteful as to dispose of healthy bees and (a perfectly good queen too!) in search of honey. Now I know that it wasn't quite as he'd described and that a major part of the detail had been left out of the telling.
My thanks to Norm for this simple but clear description of the process: http://normanweston.com/BEES/Skep%20Hives.htm
Chi vo far 'na bona zena magn'un erb d'tut la mena
Re: victorian farm
Yes, that makes much more sense doesn't it, thankyou for the research
Ann Pan
"Some days you're the dog,
some days you're the lamp-post"
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"Some days you're the dog,
some days you're the lamp-post"
My blog
My Tea Cosy Shop
Some photos
My eBay
- Hedgehogpie
- Living the good life
- Posts: 247
- Joined: Tue Nov 21, 2006 8:48 am
- Location: S.E. UK
Re: victorian farm
Don't mind 'fessing up when I don't know something Thanks for the initial comment though, it made me want to go and find out more and in the process it's been helpful with my beekeeping course and steered me towards some interesting possibilities.
Chi vo far 'na bona zena magn'un erb d'tut la mena
Re: victorian farm
I loved this programme and have tried making the handcream which works quite well,and no chemicals.
Sad it has stopped,hope something else simialr comes along soon,apparantly there is to be a series called Grow your own drugs which is about herbs as medicine I believe so will give that a go.
Sad it has stopped,hope something else simialr comes along soon,apparantly there is to be a series called Grow your own drugs which is about herbs as medicine I believe so will give that a go.
Re: victorian farm
She did'nt show you her cleaning her teeth with soot & salt!
captus nidore culinae (caught by the odor of the kitchen)
Re: victorian farm
Don't think I will be trying that one out!
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- Barbara Good
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Re: victorian farm
LOL not all progress is bad after all!
- Silver Ether
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Re: victorian farm
I used soot and salt quite often as a child don't remember it being vile ... but I do remember it spraying the bathroom sink with black dots...
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- Hedgehogpie
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Re: victorian farm
Could have been ground charcoal rather than soot? That's used as a mild abrasive.
Chi vo far 'na bona zena magn'un erb d'tut la mena
- red
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Re: victorian farm
when they made ginger beer - he used fresh ginger root - would they have been able to get that in Victorian times? I seem to remember as a kid you could not get it.. just the dried root. (and no im not so old to have been a kid in Victorian times!)
Red
I like like minded people... a bit like minded anyway.. well people with bits of their minds that are like the bits of my mind that I like...
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I like like minded people... a bit like minded anyway.. well people with bits of their minds that are like the bits of my mind that I like...
my website: colour it green
etsy shop
blog
Re: victorian farm
I guess you could grow ginger in a heated greenhouse, but I hardly think a small farm would have access to it.
Didn't they also use olive oil in... was it lip balm? then made handcream out of lard I think that the programme doesn't hold up very well to close scrutiny, still enjoyable... but I missed the last episode... DOH!!
Didn't they also use olive oil in... was it lip balm? then made handcream out of lard I think that the programme doesn't hold up very well to close scrutiny, still enjoyable... but I missed the last episode... DOH!!
Ann Pan
"Some days you're the dog,
some days you're the lamp-post"
My blog
My Tea Cosy Shop
Some photos
My eBay
"Some days you're the dog,
some days you're the lamp-post"
My blog
My Tea Cosy Shop
Some photos
My eBay
- mrsflibble
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Re: victorian farm
i think its still available on iplayer ann
i loved this series, but more scrutiny; would a famer's wife really have made a curry? ok it was a recipe in both eliza acton and mrs beeton (ok, much the same book seeing as beeton was somewhat of a plagerist...) but they were surely manuals for the middle classes wern't they?!
i loved this series, but more scrutiny; would a famer's wife really have made a curry? ok it was a recipe in both eliza acton and mrs beeton (ok, much the same book seeing as beeton was somewhat of a plagerist...) but they were surely manuals for the middle classes wern't they?!
oh how I love my tea, tea in the afternoon. I can't do without it, and I think I'll have another cup very
ve-he-he-he-heryyyyyyy soooooooooooon!!!!
ve-he-he-he-heryyyyyyy soooooooooooon!!!!
Re: victorian farm
Nope... though cash in the attic is Can anyone explain why they waste space on dross like that? I can't believe you can watch daytime TV on the iplayer... how very sad.mrsflibble wrote:i think its still available on iplayer ann
Ann Pan
"Some days you're the dog,
some days you're the lamp-post"
My blog
My Tea Cosy Shop
Some photos
My eBay
"Some days you're the dog,
some days you're the lamp-post"
My blog
My Tea Cosy Shop
Some photos
My eBay
- red
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Re: victorian farm
i thought the same thing... along with a lot of other new things, they would not have reached a tenant farmer. still it was interesting.mrsflibble wrote:i think its still available on iplayer ann
i loved this series, but more scrutiny; would a famer's wife really have made a curry? ok it was a recipe in both eliza acton and mrs beeton (ok, much the same book seeing as beeton was somewhat of a plagerist...) but they were surely manuals for the middle classes wern't they?!
Red
I like like minded people... a bit like minded anyway.. well people with bits of their minds that are like the bits of my mind that I like...
my website: colour it green
etsy shop
blog
I like like minded people... a bit like minded anyway.. well people with bits of their minds that are like the bits of my mind that I like...
my website: colour it green
etsy shop
blog
Re: victorian farm
Re the ingredients that were used - I reading a book called 'Taste - the story of Britain through its cooking' at the moment. I haven't got to the Victorian era yet, but I've been surprised by the ingredients which were used, for instance in the Middle Ages, which I thought were relatively modern in Britain - olive oil was one of them, various 'exotic' spices etc.
Apparently olive oil was used because butter wasn't allowed during the numerous fasting periods which the the Roman Catholic church had - Henry VIII decided that butter could be used at any time when he dropped the Pope (as it were!). Almond milk was also common until dairy milk could be drunk at any time.
Not sure how or if this explains how these things were available in Victorian Farm (which I loved and is one of only 2 programmes I have watched on iPlayer in the 3 months my TV has been 'being fixed'), but thought it was interesting!
Apparently olive oil was used because butter wasn't allowed during the numerous fasting periods which the the Roman Catholic church had - Henry VIII decided that butter could be used at any time when he dropped the Pope (as it were!). Almond milk was also common until dairy milk could be drunk at any time.
Not sure how or if this explains how these things were available in Victorian Farm (which I loved and is one of only 2 programmes I have watched on iPlayer in the 3 months my TV has been 'being fixed'), but thought it was interesting!
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