This one is both interesting and difficult because there are so many words that aren't familiar anymore... don't know whether the letter-by-letter interpretation is correct or not. So here's what I see, you probably see it too but what does it mean?

hotes and cards -- no clue what cards would be
a tubb ij care sadles -- although the e at the end of care isn't the style this scribe usually uses at the end of a word, and no idea what kind of sadle that would indicate...
a flesh tubb and two lyttle tubes -- if one tub has an extra b, why do two of them not? But it does fit in context.
Gelet -- do you have a reference indicating that this was a common term for sheep? I'm not challenging, just interested because modern castrated sheep are called wethers, and I was led to think that was a word that came from very old England along with most of our good sheep breeds... and maiden sows are called gilts, also an old husbandry word. Your farmer was probably more likely to have had sheep than hogs, though...... so just rambling and wondering!