natural home

Autumn Home Decor - Hygge & 'The Nature Table'

I asked my Mum, a creative writer like myself, to write a guest blog post about Autumn. Hopefully it will inspire you as it has me, and will allow us all the draw on the positives of an often tough season for many, especially at this time of year. Thanks Mummy!

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Autumn is my favourite season. by Sue Fletcher

"There is something incredibly nostalgic and significant about the annual cascade of autumn leaves." Joe L Wheeler

For me, Autumn, the transition of Summer into Winter, is when the blankets of green are replaced by reds; yellows; burnt orange; copper and gold. It's when the silhouette of a fallen leaf shows more starkly and thus more beautiful, upon the earth.

As a child I was encouraged to forage and collect. Walking home from Primary school every day I  would bring my Mum a wayside flower; sometimes just its head, plucked with plump little fingers from some crevice. One day I took her a stone because, " today there were no flowers"...

In Autumn however the pickings improved, there were acorns, with or without cups; conkers; empty hazelnut pods; spinning jennys and a plethora of fallen leaves. All lovingly curated on the Hall table that became simply ' The Nature Table', where I would deposit the day's offerings. It was a passage of childhood that I tried to encourage in my own daughter.

Image from Pinterest.

Image from Pinterest.

There are many unique joys of Autumn. It's a time of preparation where a jar of jam made, and then opened in Winter, bursts with the mellow smells and tastes of the previous season.

I don't mind the shortening of the days too much. It gives me permission to hunker down with a hot cup of something; light the candles; a good book or a notepad, the Ruth Holly notepads and beautiful linen journals prompt that fresh clean start to capturing the new season and if a log fire is thrown in - heaven! It can be a time of reflection and an opportunity to take forward positive lessons learned and the hope of new beginnings.

I like to 're-fresh my home in Autumn - make it more 'hygge-like' and there's an easy way to do this - I introduce throws and I replace Spring/Summer cushions with the more warm and earthy tones of the Ruth Holly Signature range and the Earth and Wholesome designs. When complimented by the warm light of a matching lampshade, the feeling is complete!

"Fall has always been my favourite season, The time when everything bursts with its last beauty, as if Nature had been saving up all year for the grand finale"

Laren DeStefano

Living Off The Land

THE SIMPLER THE LIFE, THE GREATER THE BLESSINGS.

In these challenging times, I have turned to the simple things in life. Finding joy from small pleasures and priceless pursuits, spending more time in nature, and looking at ways to protect our environment, doing my very small bit to contribute where I can.

Not entirely selfless though! - these changes are benefitting me, and will hopefully continue to in the coming years. I have stopped eating meat, travel far less (including car travel), tend to my garden more, protect insects and wildlife where I can, and am generally more conscious, and live life a little slower.

Taking a step further than I am able to right now, are my lovely friends Rachel and Nick. Once Halifax dwellers like myself (in fact I met them as they bought my old house!), they uprooted from Yorkshire back in 2019 and are now the proud owners of a beautiful property, with outbuildings and farm land, in Dunbar, Scotland.

Rachel and Nick always aspired to live off the land, and live a sustainable life away from the rat race. In June 2019 they made decision to set up small-holding and Nick swiftly started looking for properties. By August they had made offer on Beltonford Villa, and got keys end of September!

I was lucky enough to join them for a day and had a full tour of the property, including polytunnel and 40 tree orchard! We had a beach walk, I picked veg for our dinner and I left feeling happy and content, and100% more wholesome than when I arrived.

I asked Rachel for a little break down of events as she really has made it look super easy - especially with 2 little ones under 5!

Here’s her timeline…

  • we moved in September 2019

  • we spent the Winter sorting out the house, and repairing, securing fencing & borders etc.

  • in February 2020 we put up poly tunnel and the first animals arrived… six hens and two piglets!

  • March saw us planting the 40 tree orchard – apples, plums, pears! We planted fruit bushes gooseberry, redcurrant, blackcurrant, loganberry, blackberry, raspberry and 300 hedging plants for wildlife corridor along property boundary.

  • Late March we sowed seeds in the poly tunnel and dug the field in preparation for the veggie patch.

  • In April the lambs arrived! (Pet lambs from a friend’s sheep farm) – Timmy, Jimmy and Hope.

  • This Summer was sowing more seeds! maintenance weeding, harvesting, digging and potting up in the polytunnel.

  • More recently we have been picking apples, freezing blackberries and other fruits & making jams and chutneys etc!

I can honestly say, this is the way forward.

If we can somehow embrace digital world, but loosen the grip it seems to have on all our lives, and move towards whats real and raw and good, them I’m pretty sure civilisation would be happier and healthier.

I asked Rachel to share her pro’s and con’s - and it’s clear she agrees.

PROS

  • watching the kids pick and eat veg straight from the plant (peas/ strawberries/ berries are their favourites!)

  • giving the kids the opportunity to help feed and clean out the animals

  • 100% home-grown meals – no nasties!

  • Spending more time outside and noticing the seasons

CONS

  • we haven’t found any yet!!