Saturday, 4 January 2025

Famous people who buy vineyards


Owning a vineyard has become quite the celebrity pass time. Brad Pitt and Angela Jolie have been fighting the 'war of the rosé' over their estate Miraval in Provence. Tom Bove, the man who buys, fixes up and sells vineyard estates in France, has a remarkable reputation for restoring the organic integrity of the vineyards. 

Meanwhile, George and Amal Clooney arrived at their newly acquired Provencal estate located in Brignoles some 30 minutes from Miraval. It is unknown if there are plans for winemaking at the Domaine du Canadel.  Of course, George and Brad are great friends and although the fate of Miraval is still uncertain, Brad continues to make well-received wines after his split with Jolie. 


The list of celebrities who own vineyards is long and includes(ed) the likes of Frances Ford Coppola, Nancy Pelosi, Cliff Richard, Sam Neill, Johnny Depp, the Beckhams, Joe Montana and Mike Ditka. 

Perhaps one day, they will be picking up vineyard estates in Ireland. For now, the weather is better in Provence and California. 

Thursday, 26 December 2024

Trench warfare

 

Mud in front of the donkey shed.

The donkeys like their new shed but just outside, the water seeping down from the hill is causing a mess of mud. It's treacherous for us and for the donkeys. So Alex got the digger driver to dig a trench the length of the shed. Alex laid the drain pipe and covered it with gravel dug from the sides of the road. 

That helped considerably and the muddy areas started to dry. Then more rain came and we realised the trench didn't go quite far enough. The area between the gate and the shed is sloping and sloppy mud. So we'll have to dig some more and lay some more pipe. 

The donkeys get a half bale of hay and a half of straw daily. They have a nice bed of straw to lay on, and they get carrots and a cup of ponyfeed each in the afternoon. They seem happy enough but this week is going to be brutally cold. They say it could go down to -10C but WindGuru is showing no less than 0C for us. 

We get a windstorm tomorrow with rain overnight but then dry, cold conditions. The southern regions are under snow with orange alerts for low temperatures and ice. 

It reminded me of the unforecast St Stephen's Day hurricane we had in 1998. We were here for Christmas and came down to breakfast on Christmas Day to normal weather. As breakfast progressed, the wind picked up. Then the windows started rattling, and the chimneys were howling. We watched out the front windows at Ross House as trees came down in the pouring rain and vicious wind. Several people died that day, roofs were torn off and cars were stranded. About 100,000 lost power. 

But the real miracle came the day after. The temperature dropped and the water fell as snow, blanketing the sea as the wind died down. The entire earth was covered in a foot of snow and silence descended on Mayo. It was one of the most beautiful spectacles we've ever witnessed. We went for a walk with a chainsaw in hand. Alex cut the trees that were down on the avenue. Horses were rolling in the snow. Cillian came walking from Ross Village with his new bicycle. There were no snowploughs, no salt trucks. We enjoyed the isolation in front of roaring fires in the house and occasional rambling with cameras in hand. It was one of the most memorable Christmas weeks in our lives. 

Water pooling at the shed

Brucie escaped while I was putting hay in the feeder

Barricade until Alex returned

Girls were very agitated about Brucie leaving them

Alex filling the drain. 

The hay shed with door in place. 

Christmas tree on the inlet

Donkeys waiting for their breakfast

Snow cap on Croagh Patrick

A bit of sneachta in Mayo

New gate into the garden

Muddy

Very muddy

Donkeys happy inside

Sunset at 5 pm - the grand stretch has begun.





Friday, 13 December 2024

Donkey shelter is finished


The new donkey shelter was finished today, just in the nick of time before it started raining. This rain is a warm front so we have gotten through the freezing spell. The donkeys are happy and the hay shed is now in its proper use. They can come and go as they please, sleep comfortably, and the sand is easy on their hooves. It's protected from the west, south and east, and open to the North, which has a hill and trees above the field. If there is a northerly, the overhang will at least keep the rain from coming in. 

Dmytro did a superb job as always. Very professional and beautifully finished. He'll be back Monday to finish the door on the hay shed. We have a bit of cleanup to do, but we are very pleased overall. A new donkey, a white male called Finian, will be arriving shortly. Apparently, he is very sweet and loves to cuddle with humans. Perhaps he will be a good influence on the girls and a pal for Bruce, who is still bullied by the girls. 

Meanwhile, Dmytro had a visit from the folks at AbbVie who need four screens installed as a start so he will be busy. Happy for him. He'll have finished the work for us on Monday. Perfect timing. 
 






Tuesday, 10 December 2024

Frozen!

 


It has been bitterly cold this week, barely getting above 0C. The breeze has been easterly all week. I didn't even go into the polytunnel today. I do not want to see what's happening there. It was sunny and still this morning, which made it easy for Dmytro to work with the metal sheeting. Progress on the donkey shelter is coming along nicely. The donkeys were fine in the field during the day, but I let them back into the hay shed after lunch. 

The reset button has definitely been pressed for renewal and perhaps some pest populations will be reduced. Let's hope the bees are okay. It's going to be even colder tomorrow.

After that, a system is coming through that will warm things up a bit with a southerly air flow.













Saturday, 7 December 2024

Winter storms

 


Storm Darragh, our fourth winter storm already and it's not even winter yet, was due in overnight. We prepared as best we could. We were under red alert. Those are rare enough out here. But they were warning people not to go out that it was expected to be violent storm force 11. I cancelled my appointment for an MRI in Galway. No sense in travelling for a non-emergency procedure. 

We got our new LED flashlights ready and put new batteries into our transistor radios. The donkeys were secured in the hay shed. Loose objects were up away. Dark clouds started wafting in at sunset. It had been breezy all day, gusting past 50 knots out of the SW. The temperature was mild. We put the cars away in the shed in case of flying debris. 

I cooked a lovely dinner of beef rouladen, potato pancakes and cooked cabbage. We had a nice fire going in the fireplace and a warm Stanley range in the kitchen. We started watching the new Transformers movie until the Toy Show would come on at 9:30 but we forgot. At 10:00 the wind shifted to the NW and increased dramatically. Almost instantly the lights went out. Power failure. Oh well. We chatted for a bit and went to bed. 

Looking at the wind history, it's frightening to see how quickly the wind shifted. It didn't build gradually. It shifted from SW gusting just over 20 knots to NW and gusting almost 80 knots in an instant. Had that happened at sea, it would likely have been catastrophic. Think about it -- 80 knots is 92 mph or 148 kph. That's Cat 1 hurricane strength. 

During the night, I awoke repeatedly to sleet showers, hail showers, torrential rain and violent wind gusts. Ghostie cuddled up with me while Alex slept through it all. 

By morning, the sunrise was lovely but it was still blowing hard. It didn't look like there was much damage, but our neighbour's tree toppled onto the road and someone cut a path through it for cars to pass. Must have been Pat on his way to work, cutting his way out with a chainsaw. Alex carries a chainsaw and pitchfork in the car after every storm. 

Fortunately, we have both a gas hob and a solid fuel range so cooking is not an issue. After breakfast, Alex got Selkie, the BYD Seal, down from the shed and we plugged the house in again. We bought the right car at the right time. Used only 1% of power for 6 hours of running the fridge, phones and laptops. 

We surveyed the damage,  The polytunnel was undamaged. A lot of stuff was scattered about. The scaffolding on the donkey shed construction site was shifted and twisted. A river coming down the field displaced a lot of the gravel laid for the floor. But overall, the damage was not too bad. 

In the vineyard, there was little visible damage. The lid was torn off my toolbox, the chairs and table were scattered but undamaged. It didn't look like any vines were damaged. The northwesterly direction must have helped. The winds continued well into the day and the power was restored at 2 pm. The showers continue and a ghastly cold has settled in. 

Next week is to be sunny and with little wind but bitter cold, with temperatures barely rising above 0C all week. The polytunnel may need to be heated but hopefully, the vineyard won't suffer. 





















Wednesday, 4 December 2024

Mild and windy


Today started out mild and progressed to very windy. It's gusting over 60 knots right now out of the SW. It's about to get much colder as the winds shift to the north. The weather rollercoaster continues. It's going to be windy for the next few days, with the worst conditions on Saturday. 

The November climate figures confirm we had much less rain than normal, 143 mm compared with 170 LTA and closer to 200 for the past few years. The temperature was consistent with the last three years. We had much less solar radiation than we've had in the past, which of course detracted from our solar power generation. 

Now to get through the short days of December. We prune in January!



Monthly values for NEWPORT up to 03-dec-2024

Total rainfall in millimetres for NEWPORT

YearJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDecAnnual
2024125.7197.5152.5119.448.880.780.8257.544.1150.7143.311.41412.4
2023183.291.6188.4121.148.577.9206.8139.8142.4144.7209.6293.81847.8
202298.8260.467.884.0107.0148.059.2104.197.3233.9187.5154.61602.6
2021225.6147.6141.145.6113.564.159.7155.6137.0265.7183.3186.61725.4
LTA166.7126.5141.296.894.789.7100.9132.5131.5176.0170.4180.21607.1

Mean temperature in degrees Celsius for NEWPORT

YearJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDecAnnual
20246.17.97.99.913.112.914.914.913.611.89.27.411.1
20236.68.07.69.913.317.414.915.815.211.98.77.911.4
20227.27.18.09.912.613.815.916.2n/a12.29.45.210.7
20215.06.77.99.010.413.317.516.415.211.99.37.610.9
LTA6.16.17.39.011.513.815.415.413.510.88.36.510.3

Mean 10cm soil temperature for NEWPORT at 0900 UTC

YearJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDecAnnual
20244.26.56.59.513.614.415.815.413.711.28.9n/a10.9
20235.26.86.69.113.718.616.316.314.711.17.66.711.1
20226.26.26.39.313.214.816.816.6n/a11.58.44.410.4
20213.65.06.88.210.914.317.916.315.211.38.66.610.4
LTAn/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/a

Global Solar Radiation in Joules/cm2 for NEWPORT

YearJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDecAnnual
202472481240123032396854733350366496323820331451166286586580323145
2023624510639214293727755732584734179736857293381622583264411326749
2022631110756333994055551569472464843951169n/a1598878696167319468
2021662013347203704569455690454884945540490224131635872353780326940
LTAn/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/a

Potential Evapotranspiration (mm) for NEWPORT

YearJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDecAnnual
202415.418.236.056.974.776.780.960.849.027.614.21.2511.6
202314.320.933.056.483.3100.670.164.450.126.114.214.7548.1
202213.723.047.260.677.776.080.482.0n/a27.217.29.2514.2
20217.622.930.762.976.370.787.867.538.325.114.114.6518.5
LTAn/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/a

Evaporation (mm) for NEWPORT

YearJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDecAnnual
202420.225.451.983.7104.9109.8112.688.367.837.518.41.5722.0
202318.828.247.681.6118.2137.199.589.167.835.518.419.0760.8
202217.932.466.586.8114.5109.2111.1113.2n/a37.022.011.4722.0
202110.932.145.489.9111.2102.0117.293.552.134.718.619.1726.7
LTAn/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/a

Degree Days Below 15.5 Degree Celsius for NEWPORT

YearJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDecTotal
20242932212341699189454177117191N/AN/A
202327521024617185183926531182032371681
202225623423517197633028N/A103185320N/A
2021325247236200167792023401141872451883

Notes on the Data

Evaporation and PE data are calculated using Penman/Monteith formulae.
The ‘LTA’ (referred to within a table) is average for the climatological long-term-average (LTA) reference period 1981-2010.
Data updated daily at Mid-day.
To view the Weather Events for Public Works Contracts data, select a station first, then click the link just below the map.