Hello Hive
A beautiful new morning to our passionate hive friends and Gardeners, I hope that we are all fine, hale and hearty. It's yet another day to arise and shine and I hope that we are feeling enthusiastic about the day.
It was quite an unfortunate event for us yesterday evening when fire caught a good portion of our farm. Bush fire during these seasons are often very wild and in whatever we do we have to be really careful not to create a fire incident that can lead to any uncontrolled accident.
Having completed our work on the farm yesterday while we returned home we got the information that the garden area was on fire and we had to rush back to the scene. Some hunters have setup a bush fire that has gone really wild beyond what they planned for it, often times they set up little fire that will force their games out of hiding making it possible for them to catch these bush meats.
But while that was ongoing the fire has spread go a grass house that has been build and been used here for shelter for a long time from now. Occasionally we build huts made from grasses and trees that we often hide under them whenever we are in the farm and there is a sudden downpour.
While this particular hut was made of wood and dried leaves it made it possible for it to burn as fast as possible with the flames reaching and burning the nearby garden egg plants and corn
The entire hut was burnt down including the nearby garden eggs and corns.
It is usually not easy to contain these fire as it will require that we get a generator That will instantly begin to pump water from the river into the farm. I'm just glad that the entire farm wasn't affected and since the leaves of the garden eggs were still green they didn't burn off or flow with the tune of the fire. These are some of the reasons we often stick around to watch after our crops most especially during the dry to avoid these kind of situations.