Suggestions, Please
G'day!
We live just outside of Cavendish, Victoria, Australia. We have 45 acres. We bought it as the insurance result of a 4WD hitting my husband when he was on his motorbike. This happened in a 90km/hr. zone. My husband was not at fault but nearly died. He is now 58, the accident having happened in 2006.
We bought the place because it is relatively isolated and he suffers from PTSD. He has a bit of a farming history, having been brought up on a milking farm, although he has worked in differing occupations.
He can no longer work, due to his pain levels and an acquired brain injury.
I am 56 and have sciatica and am bi-polar with a resulting memory problem (I have actually forgotten my Christian name for fifteen minutes in my late forties).
When we bought the farm, five years ago, it was a working alpacca farm. At the first shearing, I saw the alpaccas kick out (understandably. They don't know what's going on) and realised that one kick to the small of my husband's back would put him back in a wheelchair and increase his pain level.
My husband is on unemployment benefits, I am on a Disability Pension - so we're not overwhelmed with cash.
Our soil is buckshot, underlaid with clay. We have only rainwater, and a few small dams. The bore, apparently, is unreliable, according to the previous owners.
We have agisted half of our property, which pays for the rates and taxes, but not much else.
Due to our growing infirmities, we have almost no poultry left, having sold or given away everything except nine geese, which I am trying to offload. We have eight dorper sheep, which free range on what is the unleased land.
Hunting is not an option, as there are no copses of trees in which anything can hide. Hunting native animals, such as kangaroo, is illegal. Foxes are minimal. Our dams do not hold anything larger than yabbies, and I researched the possibility of selling them (as I did with eggs from our chooks), only to find that there was an amazing amount of bureaucracy and hygiene that must needs be attended to.
We tried getting volunteers from the nearest major town to help out so that we could grow things to feed those in need, giving them to local churches for free. Only one person contacted us, and she didn't ever garden here. She's still a friend, though.
We have tried growing a variety of things for our local monthly market. I have even put together succulents in display, not much in the sales area there, either. Even tried foot massages! Nada.
We don't have the facilities to have people staying here, be they WWOOFers, home stay or for any sports.
The bee-keeping area is taken care of by our next neighbour.
So - small amount of land, bodies not functioning well, neither are our brains, limited water, bad soil, not much money, limited marketing and masses of unfriendly bureaucracy.
Any ideas? Please?