the shepherd’s hut

I’m noticing quite a few new visitors at the moment… hello and thank you for visiting!

This is a re-post of an earlier blog, but it feel particularly apt at the moment. Mr S and I are writing the screenplay for Mr R at the moment and we’ve been spending a lot of time with Curtis, who lives in a shepherd’s hut like the one below.

Earlier post on the editing of Mr R…

…When I was a small girl, from aged about nine, I used to help our neighbours by minding their sheep on the top of Okeford hill. Yes, really. My first job was as a shepherdess. The sheep belonged to Sarah, but at lambing time she needed help from her husband, David, who moonlighted from farming as a geography teacher in the local school. This meant that the lambs needed to be timed to start arriving at the very beginning of the Easter holidays. So, in years when Easter came near the start of March, it was very, very cold for the new lambs. We even had little orange lamb-macs for them.

But for us, David had a shepherd’s hut. It was just like the one in this picture, although I remember his being a rather handsome shade of blue. When it got too cold out on the hillside, we would retreat into the hut and light the stove. Some of my happiest memories are of huddling around that wood-burner, listening to the wind howl across the hill and thrum against the tin roof.

It's rather cosy, isn't it?

It's rather cosy, isn't it?

I e-mailed the latest revision of Mr R to Jocasta today. There were no big changes really to this draft. A few prudent cuts. A bit like the budlia and fuchsias that Collin has been pruning in the garden. But it’s off to the copy editor now. (The m/s not the fuchsia, as that would be silly). I’ll get it back from the copy editor in a couple of weeks and then onto the final polishes.

Mr S and I are off to NYC next week, and then onto LA for a month after that. It will be a pleasant mixture of business and holiday, and I will keep blogging as I go.

4 Responses to “the shepherd’s hut”

  1. Carrie says:

    Yay! I’m a new visitor! I have gotten the book but have been feverishly reading all the backposts on your site before I start. Can’t wait to meet Jack and Sadie!

  2. Thanks for stopping by… and I hope you enjoy the book. (Watch out for the woolly-pig though).

  3. ann says:

    I was led to your blog by The Book Lady Blog and a review of the book. Scrolling down further on you site, I see the sheepherder hut. In America they are called a Sheepherder wagon. My dad is now 80 and makes reproductions of the sheepherder wagons. My girls and I slept out in one this summer visiting him on the farm. What a great experience: )

  4. Natasha Solomons says:

    How interesting. It’s wonderful to know that they are still used. I see them occasionally but they’re rarely used by shepherds any longer — more often by children as playhouses or for display (like this one which is at the National Trust property of Kingston Lacey in Dorset).

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