Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Where's the time go?


Spot and Red will be gone next week this time - they have been great fun to have around and frankly, we will miss them. I head up to Barron, WI tomorrow to look at calves - all that goats milk needs to go somewhere.

We've been battling the thistles again - mowing and more mowing - seems like a losing battle though.

The tomatoes have blossoms on them and the cabbages are going to be cut starting next week; the raspberries are just on the cusp of ripening and the cuke plants look fabulous so it seems the garden is still holding its own.

Sunday, June 20, 2010

Summer picnics



Are way more fun when you have a grand-dad to share it with and an actual picnic table!

....And maybe even a friendly dog to take a walk with you afterwards! Crystal leaves for home later this week; we'll all miss her,

Thursday, June 17, 2010

June morning





This is the lower garden behind the chicken house - it tends to be wet and this year it's kind of a swamp after the latest deluge.










Here is one row of spuds - just barely starting to flower.











And the cabbage - this is StoneCrop variety.






The pullets ~ the slender ones are brown leghorns, the others are Arucanas and Sussex.

Red


A quick picture this morning of Red next to the pig-o-tel - Red is a gilt and while I sometimes think it would be interesting to have more piggies, memories of childhood stories of pig gone wild always bring me back to reality.

Friday, June 11, 2010

Friday

We are preparing Trouble for herding trials over the weekend - we will need to be out of the house and on the road by 6:30 which means a lot of chorework done very early. I'm hoping for no more rain as we are beginning to see trees breaking from the sogginess and weight of the water. The gardens are coming along well, the potatoes are just getting ready to blossom and the lettuces are wonderful...the beans are sprouting in just a day or so which seems amazing and Jack in the Beanstalk-like!

The buttermilk from this week turned out excellent and I think we'll be making more for baking. I'm hoping the little buck kids leave this coming week as they're drinking milk I'd rather be feeding the pigs now....speaking of whom --- they are now weighing about 150lbs or more which means perhaps another month before they are off to the big pasture in the sky.

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Tuesday

Rain, Rain Go Away! It's been coming down all day, the goats are unhappy, the hens are miserable, the bees want to go out now - thank goodness I cut lettuce yesterday for the cafe rather than waited until this morning when it would have been covered in splashes of dirt. I'm trying to make buttermilk today - the milk is heated and held at 180F for 30 to 60 minutes, cooled to 77F, starter is added (from the Dairy Connection in Madison, WI) and now it sits at that temperature for 12-18 hours. I've put it in the yogurt maker (think I'm so smart!!) and will check on it in the morning. It should be great for baking.

The little peachicks are now in a rabbit cage in the henhouse where they are dry and warm with a heatlamp over them and safe from the chickens. They're okay but not really as vigorous as I'd like to see. The pigs are loving the rain, racing here, racing there and having a gay old time being pigs!

Sunday, June 6, 2010

Fecund Farm!

Not only did Ruby deliver 9 beautiful healthy puppies but we were surprised by having 3 of the peacock eggs hatch this morning! They are in our little incubator in the kitchen this morning, still drying off and are all white! What fun for us!

Saturday, June 5, 2010


To the left: Nomo's milk bottle.

The weekend is upon us - rain predicted but so far I've done chores in the dry part of the day! The pastures have grown over the past couple weeks so that it's now almost impossible to see the lambs and kids when they're only a few yards away. We'll be mowing thistles tomorrow, I suspect! I see the old goose has started up a nest in a corner of the chicken house; she's 11 years old and I doubt the eggs will hatch but Jim suggests just letting her do what she chooses. I'll be tempted to toss them to the pigs! The little chicks are now half-grown pullets ~ they should begin to lay around 4 months of age which can't come too soon now that the Australorps have decided to go broody and set. A black mark on them for this quality!

Crystal's off to visit her cousin Anthony for a week which means I'll have to feed the kids myself; it's been great to see her kind nature blossom under the responsibility of caring for them.

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Calves

Crystal has been thinking and thinking of good names for the calves - the one on the left is Patch since we already have a Spot on the farm. The others are still nameless after the first 24 hours here! They're ecstatic to be pasture calves; you can see that they are more used to a mucky feedlot by the way they walk - lifting their legs up very high. I suppose it'll take a few days for them to normalize - they seem good natured (always a good thing with animals weighing many times more than we do!)
We did get rain today; showers off and on so it became a day to pick up some fence panels to go under the bridge and by the creek where the goats have discovered they can sneak under. I made 2 batches of chevre and had whey for the pigs tonight. The peahen is STILL laying - the eggs are big and very hard - the pigs of course have no trouble cracking the shells though. Jim called the fellow who cuts hay and we're on the list to have it mowed in a week or so (hopefully when we're out of this wet cycle) and I need to scrounge up some more straw for the garden. But for now, it's time to make some dinner.

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

In my pocket


I came in from doing chores this morning and needed to throw my jeans in the wash - you can see what part of my morning involved! Latex gloves for milking, marking crayon for identifying 2 of the lambs needing to be kept separate, bands for the ram lamb who still needed banding and what's left of a package of bean seeds. Thank goodness no staples in my pocket!

The calves arrived today; big holstein steers we will use for training the dogs over the course of the summer. They leave in the fall for parts we all can imagine.

The second batch of lettuces went to the Cafe this morning; they're really quite lovely - and I transplanted some in hopes they'll make heads before bolting in our midwestern heat. We have all the garden in now - planted the last few pumpkins and cukes this morning in the black plastic up by the kennels. Also took the time to prune out the lilacs over near the chicken house since Brother Fox made a visit a few days ago and left with one of the ducks.

Looks like rain is just missing us today; it's to the south of us this time - which means I'll need to water those lettuces in the morning. Crystal is still here, helping out. She's made a chore list for herself with the promise of $1.00 for each one done well each day....her list includes feeding the barn cats but we're negotiating that one since Jim likes doing it himself.

Saturday, May 29, 2010

Good bye Joy and Lily.


Family milker Joy and her doeling kid Lily left today for their new lives and family. We'll miss them both.

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Wednesday


Roadtrip day! My granddaughter Crystal and I took the day off and drove south to look at ram lambs in Spring Grove, Minnesota and then to pick up our new bees at B and B Honey in Houston, Minnesota. We saw some great lambs - Dorpers - and will be bringing one home later in the year as our junior herd sire. The bees we (I) picked up literally - we had bought a 'nuc' which is basically a bottom super full of frames of brood. We waited until almost 7 p.m. and all the worker bees were in the hive then lifted it into the back of the truck (quickly and with bee gear on.) The tailgate on the truck went up and I raced to the cab and jumped in, my heart pounding just in case any bees had decided to come with me. But no! They are still in the back of the truck and I'll place them in their permanent position tomorrow evening after dark. What an adventure before us!

We drove home on Highway 61 (yes, of Bob Dylan fame..) - a gorgeous drive along the Mississippi River, bluffs on one side, freight trains, bald eagles, tug boats - life as it should be on this super waterway. Stopped in Wabasha for dillybars at the DQ - I didn't know they made CHERRY!! A kind of waxed cherry but cherry nonetheless!

The truck ran fine and looks great with the rust repaired and a new paint job; it should last a few years before needing replacement now.

We have sold two does, two bucklings and a doeling the past couple days; they're still here but will leave before long.

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Trouble and the Goats

Here is a little video of Trouble helping me walk the goats down the road from the barn to a side pasture. Jim is filming from one of the other pasture gates where they would like to go -

Sunday, May 23, 2010

The weekend.

A busy weekend and lots got done thanks to my boys Seth and Miles - hardly boys any longer but young men with their own families and responsibilities - they came together on Friday to help out. We expanded the pig area (yippee, say Red and Spot!) and fenced in the garden against the growing but not yet grown chicks. They then continued on to cut and split a pile of wood that I feared was going to become a piece of permanent art in the front yard. Supper with my favorite people in the whole world ended the day. I also planted acorn squash, pole beans and cukes and see that the second planting of potatoes is up.

Yogurt from the goat ladies is in the refrigerator now - a half gallon of it - and I think we may try to make frozen yogurt. I'll check back in with results. Peahen eggs keep coming....

Picked up a soil test kit on Thursday at the extention office and need to get some samples sent off tomorrow so it's off the computer now -

Thursday, May 20, 2010

Chevre cheesecake!

Okay, the eggs keep coming, the milk keeps flowing and I've got company! It's lemon chevre cheesecake for everybody - a crust made from biscotti, then chevre (creamed in the food processor) with lemon zest, eggs from the hens, a little vanilla we brought back from New Mexico, some Agave syrup - I think that's it! It is in the oven now and I"ll top it with some sour cream/sugar/vanilla. Life is so good to us!

It's quite hot today - I've turned water on the lettuces which seem to be wilty despite the soil being very moist right below the surface. The onions, potatoes (German Butterballs!) and tomatoes look fine but the lettuces.... we're putting coffee grounds from Jim's little cafe around the base of the tomatoes to help control slugs this year and I"ll report back how that works. And, oh joy! I found some sweet potato vines in Amery - okay, it's an experiment - so I have restrained myself and only put in 4 in a big tractor tire full of compost. They are heat lovers and should do well. I also brought back home some odds and ends of flowers to put in windowboxes by the barn and sunflower seed to plant by the silo - assuming the goats won't eat them on their way to and from the milking room.

The lambs are now seriously plump and milk-fed looking; I see they're cudding (meaning they are chewing cud and have developed rumens) we're very happy with this year's crop and will keep back some of the ewe lambs. I go to look at ram prospects on Wednesday....which is also the day I bring home the bees!!

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Goat news on WPR!

Friday morning at 6:30 and 8:30. That would be 88.7 fm

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Tuesday

More peahen eggs this morning! I've decided to just give them to the pigs rather than have a whole henhouse full of broody hens; after all what would we do if they all actually hatched?? After setting some cheese to drain and doing chores, it was off to Phyllis' for Trouble's herding handling session. She did great work, flanks, driving, fetching - it was very fun. With the imminent arrival of the calves we want to be sure she'll be able to help move them. Phyllis sent 4 of the old ducks back home with me (crested blue swedish) who are now in the pasture with the goats with access to the creek. Hopefully they'll stick around.

We have another young buckling this season for possible future use as a herd sire. His name is Blissberry No More Excuses - I'm calling him Nomo but am not sure that'll stick.

Got the lower garden weeded and I'm off to Stockman's Farm Supply now to pick up a few seeds and more pepper plants. Ah, hope springs eternal around here!

Sunday, May 16, 2010

Making Do

A full weekend here, lots got done - gardens planted, windowboxes installed and planted, the remaining apple trees planted, the yards mowed, Jim picked up more fencing to enlarge the pig acreage, I powerwashed the kennels, cleaned the goat shed, laid and ran tracks with Trouble and then this afternoon decided to make a batch of bread for supper. I'd just gotten a new bread-baking book (Bread Alone) and saw a recipe - I got started but realized too late that it called for buttermilk. No buttermilk here but chevre! So I thinned the chevre down with some fresh milk...then I noticed that it called for solid shortening. Well, we never have such a thing - what is it exactly?? But we did have butter so I substituted that..... when I got done mixing this dough, it called for a couple hours in the refrigerator, then a quick knead and into the oven. Wonderful??!!! Flaky, delicious chevre bread!

Things are, however, tough over in the poultry yard again - the roosters have taken a dislike to Mr. Beautiful and there's a lot of dissension involving spurs and sharp attacks. What to do? What to do? The little chicks are horrified at the behavior of the adults in the group. Tough decisions may need to be made.

Last night Trouble helped put all the sheep, goats and Khaki in the barnyard for Khaki's monthly shot of ivermectin. We have problems with meningeal worm with him and give him this monthly preventative. We also needed to check over the ewes and lambs and band the tail on the last born. She did a great job, everyone was calm, no running or chaos. A very good farm dog.

Finally, this afternoon I took a walk through the newly sown hayfield. I need to call the fellow who planted it since it sure doesn't seem to be coming in as I would think it should. Coming towards evening now and a good time to take a walk -

Saturday, May 15, 2010

Pigs


Spot, happy with his Jolly Ball, happy with his feeder full of goat milk, happy that the sun is out and the predicted high today is 70F.

Friday, May 14, 2010

Mr. Beautiful


At the end of the 'work' day I often take one or more of the dogs for a run in the pasture - Ruby's getting fairly heavy with pups now but as everyone knows, our dogs are no delicate flowers - so off Ruby careened into the pasture to run and jump and swim. I was following behind, enjoying the intoxicating scent of plum and apple blossoms, daydreaming as is often my wont. As I came up over a little rise near where I often fish and where there also happens to be a little cattail swamp, Ruby was intently snuffling, tail wagging practically off her body. "What's up?" I ask. She looks up, a grin on her face, delighted to show me what treasure she'd uncovered. And what was this?? An ENORMOUS snapping turtle - about as big a turtle as I've ever seen here, her head the size of a softball, her great thick tail evident. "Whoa, Nellie! Let's go!" We wandered away from this old mama turtle and I ran to get my camera but alas, she had gone back under the wet canes and will doubtless reappear later this evening to lay eggs.

While I had the camera in hand, I did get a pix of Mr. Beautiful - remember, he's only 2 years old - next year we'll see the long and beautiful tail.