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Archive for the ‘Goat Care (and General Farm)’ Category

As the fog lifted this morning I enjoyed the beauty, the quiet, and the cool air.  It (the cool air) did not last long, but I am still purposely treasuring summer, despite the drought and the heat.  Winter will be on its way before we know it. 

I mentioned drought because, as you can see in the photo, between the sidewalk and the trench to the right of it (not quite filled in yet from our well installation last spring), there is no grass, and what is available is brown. 

The goats are struggling to find grass to graze on. 

The goats are on hay, which is important to their well-being.  A good alfalfa blend is fed twice a day on our farm during times when pasture is scarce. 

I also feed minerals from a bag, but a truly top-notch mineral for a goat is browse.  Goats are browsers in their natural habitats (mountains and hill-sides).  A large shrub or tree, a deep-rooted plant, supplies an immense value of natural minerals to a goat.

I made a track around the farm this morning, slicing off branches from various trees such as apple, maple, and spruce. 

The goats had a feast, one that was healthy-as-it-could-be.

Fall is a great time to gather up leaves for goats.  Have you seen a goat chase after a leaf? Sometimes they catch them as they drift down from a tree, before the leaf has been able to float to the ground.  It really is an entertaining sight.  Exercise, fun, and minerals combined into one great escapade!

When feeding browse, be aware that certain plants, especially ornamental yard plants, are highly poisonous to a goat.  A good reference point is the list of edible and poisonous plants at the Fiasco Farm website.

Enjoy your goating…or even if you don’t have goats, I hope you enjoyed a few tidbits on raising goats!

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Kitten Little, Psycho as my husband calls her, reminds me to think about human life from time to time.

She is curious, alive, frisky, with something to learn from the world.  Yet, when it is time to rest, she renews her soul and body cells with the slumber that is needed.

We were probably designed to be the same way.  We should remain curious, like a youngster, eager to learn new things, nearly always ready to look at our world, the gift of life, with a fresh set of eyes.

Then, when it is time to rest, we should enable our minds to shut it all off, and truly slip away with little effort. 

Thank you, Kitten Little, for your company, your subtle reminders.  We have a lot to learn from you and others like you!

-Kitten Little is 9 weeks old.  She hasn’t had a bottle since her 5th week in life.  She had her 2nd vet visit today, came out with flying colors.  Now she is resting, recovering from a busy morning traveling in the pet carrier (meowing her pleas to be let out), and forgetting about her unpleasant shots.-

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Distasteful or not, I am writing about it

It would be the smell in the air.  The smell that stamps in place the bucks are in rut. 

What does the smell also mean? Sticky bucks, yellow coats, and does that have come in contact that do not smell so pretty either.

When the girls come to the milkstand I no longer give them a big hug as they leave.  Well, some of them still get one.  They do not know they are offensive, and probably would not understand my desire to not smell like a buck. 

Love is in the air.  The bucks make sure they smell oh-so-odorous for the girls.  I have never understand why urinating on your own beard, belly, and legs, time and time again, is so attractive.  But I guess there are mysteries in the animal world that we will never quite understand.

So, I lead my “girls” with 2 fingers under the collar as needed.  I keep my distance. 

And I use a lot of goat milk soap to erase the inevitable brush of eu-de-parfume-de-buck from my own skin. 

Aren’t you glad men don’t have to go to such great lengths to attract their mates?

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I sat on the yard swing at daybreak this morning in the cool air.

As I sat down I felt the dampness of dew against my legs.  It was not a bother.

I held a warm coffee mug in my hands and closed my eyes.

I listened to the morning doves, the chirping birds, the frogs, and the goose enjoying his bath on the pond.

It was beautiful.

The words “Thank you” came from my lips.

It was nothing short of pure life, nature’s awesome goodness.

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It had been years since I hand milked goats, but the last couple of weeks I have done so. 

We experienced string after string of thunderstorms.  During one of those runs I lost my milk machine. 

My milk machine is an antique.  It is bolted to the feed room floor, with compressor air forced through PVC pipe, down the other side of the room to the valves and hoses where the milk stands are located.  It is a dandy system. 

I have 14 dairy does in  milk.  All but 3 have kids nursing on them.  As soon as I lost the machine I dropped my hand milking down to the 3.  Problems with my wrists would not allow me to milk over a dozen goats twice a day!

Hand milking really is enjoyable, except when the milk room is nearing 100 degrees.  A fan helps.  I am wearing shorts again in the barn, forget the long jeans! The humidity and heat has been nearly unbearable.  One day as I milked I laid wet cool wash cloths on my legs.  It worked.

No complaints here. I chose dairy goats.  Milking, picking up loads of feed and hay, tending to kid goats, and a dedicated schedule are all a part of it.  I said to my husband one day, “I feel like I am neglecting my soap-making time.”  He reminded me that the jobs that I do are, “All a part of it.”  It definitely is, the wise-man was right.

I will continue to hand milk until the kids are weaned.  Then I will have more than 3 does to milk. 

The decision making starts.  Do I spend a royal fortune on a new machine, or have one built, buy another one used, or attempt to hand-milk them all? Milking is a peaceful type of thing.  I do enjoy it, but it affects me day and night.  I will figure it out. 

Life on the farm, full of surprises and challenges.  All loved.

Have a beautiful day!

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Amish Pepper Butter

I joined my husband on his inspections yesterday.  He had a busy week doing contract work in Columbus and was scrambling to catch up with his own clients before a new week began.

It was a beautiful day, very hot.  We traveled across the southern-most portion of the state.  We didn’t lose site of the Ohio river during most of our trip.  It was a treat.

As we headed back home we spotted a new Amish produce store.

The children were sitting on the front porch as we drove by.  Waves commenced, and my husband honked. 

We ended up turning back, visiting the store.  What a joy.  Not only was the produce beautiful, the family was just as special.  The husband was proud of the new kitchen.  We could see the wife cooking through the glass paned door.  The family was barefoot (our Mennonite neighbors are often barefoot too), except for the men.  The kitchen floor was absolutely gorgeous.  The gloss on the white oak floor was mirror-like.  The husband grinned at us and said, “Well, it is new, it won’t look like that for long!”  He was definitely proud of his work.

We headed straight to the tomatoes.  They were marked as grown in an area just a short distance from our farm.  I looked at my husband and said, “How do they have ripe tomatoes already?” The Amish husband said, ” They are grown by the Mennonites, in their greenhouses.  They are not hydroponic though.”  Honest.  Thank you.  The tomatoes are wonderful, by the way.

I moved on to the back shelves that contained jams, fresh bread, and assorted jars of beautiful canned items.  I picked up a nice-sized jar of honey.  Have you priced honey recently? Goodness! And then the one jar caught my eye, pepper butter.

The wife was heading to the basement as I  began asking about the pepper butter.  She stopped and talked about the pepper butter being her sister’s recipe, canned by her.  It contains peppers, mustard, onions, sugar, salt, and a few spices.  I cannot wait to find the perfect use for pepper butter!

And now I am homesick for canning.  I still do not have a garden in (except for a small herb and flower garden).  My husband taught me how to can about 9 years ago.  He was the teacher, based on childhood memories.  I fell in love with canning as soon as my nervousness went away.  I was sure I was going to poison us somehow! Right now, I would love to hear the pressure cooker doing its thing, canning beautiful green beans.

So…the garden has to happen.  No later than next year.  I want to move the garden shed, put in a propane tank, move the extra stove to the shed, and begin canning away.  Dried herbs, infused herbs, canned and frozen vegetables, and beautiful flowers.  And, Omar, our local hay person, is supplying the plans that he used to build his wife’s greenhouse.  You ought to see his wife, Naomi’s, begonias.  She starts her seeds and plants each spring in her greenhouse.  Ask her about her plants, she lights up and forgets her shyness.   

I am tired today, after yesterday’s 10 hour drive, but renewed in so many ways.  I am going to sit outside with the goats, contemplate a garden spot, contemplate making more farm-house goat milk soap (not today), and thank God for our many blessings.  And rest.

Have a beautiful Sunday!

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Yesterday I talked about being soft-hearted for animals.  Today I’ll tell you another animal family I watch each year.  When the Canadian goose pair show up each spring I cannot help but pay attention, in anticipation of the nesting and forthcoming goeslings.

Canada geese (or Canadian) are wild, and migratory.  They mate during their 2nd year, and pair of up for life.  They lay between 3-8 eggs.  Both parents guard the nest during the incubatory stage, between 25-28 days.

Mr. Goose has nose-dived at me twice during incubation (hence the long-distance blurry photo).  When he came after me I was not near the nest.  In fact, one time I was taking clothes off of the line near my house, minding my own business.  I thought I was going to be struck by him.  I grabbed a blanket off of the line and was ready to take cover! He normally doesn’t get that protective.  He had been fighting intruding geese off of the pond all week. 

I have a murky pond in the summer months, despite it being spring fed.  It is a rather large.  And, honestly, I do not want to put any money into it.  I let nature take most of the course.  The only problem we have is with the large turtles that occasionally seize a young goesling.  It isn’t a fun site to see, as the parent geese are somewhat defenseless against the large turtles.

This pair raise 6-7 goeslings each year. They are trouble free, claiming their own pond, except for the occaisonal threat from the turtles and cranes.  So, what do I end up doing? I watch, I look, and I count, at least once a day.  I know, it isn’t going to help.  But, I still have concern and cannot help but notice. 

Nature is a tough thing.  Beautiful, yet difficult.

I enjoy seeing the parents train their young each spring.  They do have an amazing method.  I love seeing the fluffy goeslings, almost ugly at that early stage, change into beautiful geese that eventually become independent. 

Each fall numbers of geese show up.  Seemingly on one particular day.  It is a very loud reunion, of sorts.  When it happens I know the nearly full-grown goeslings will depart with the other youngsters, leaving the pond they were raised on.  And it happens, just like that. 

A new season for all.

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I heard it come from my husband’s mouth, talking to the 2 1/2 week old bottle fed kitten, “You are going to have to be declawed if you stay in the house much longer.” 

I thought I was a softie.  Goodness, it isn’t just me.  It looks like we will be adopting the orphaned kitten.

The boxer dogs have always been terrible with cats.  I have no idea why they are being good with this kitten.  Perhaps it was all of the training they have had with newborn goat kids? Newborn goat kids are perfect matches for the dogs.  They hover over the kids with a great deal of interest and care. 

Are you an animal softie too?

I ask you, how can anyone mistreat an animal? Like a child, don’t abuse.  They do not deserve mis-treatment. They depend upon us for so much.

As soon as we get a good photo, I’ll share one here.  The little one is just now beginning to act like a kitten should.  It was touch and go.  I do, though, keep catching her in my husband’s shoes (like the kitten in the photo).  Cute.

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Farm-house goat milk soaps carry with them a rememberance of days gone by.  A simple farm life.  My goal is to some day own a farm with a working farm store (filled with goat milk soap of course), with a beautiful petting area for the visitors to meet goats.  Who knows, I may even have a guest home for the occasional overnight stay. 

But at this time, there is no farm store.  My insurance agent strictly forbade me from allowing visitors to cross the threshold.  I adhere. 

There is a beautiful retail store, called Country Home Crafts, located about 10 minutes from my farm, filled to the brim with wonderful handcrafted items that include furniture, handbags, candles, assorted home decorations, linens, and of course, Annie’s Goat Hill soaps and lotions. 

Until the day arrives where I meet my goals of a farm store located right on the premises, purchases will need to be made online or at the retail store.

The location is:

Country Home Crafts, 8446 St. Rt. 62, Hillsboro, OH  45133

I feel genuinely sorry for those that have called to say, “I am on my way (to the farm).”  I swiftly redirect.  If you want to meet me, give me a call, I’ll be more than happy to meet up with you at the store!

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Lamb's Ear

Today I come to you with a photo of two sadly neglected plants.  Neglected before they were given the opportunity to be planted in soil.

Yes, I did it (or didn’t do it). 

I purchased two Lamb’s Ear plants (Latin name Stachys byzantina).  I have always admired Lamb’s Ear.  I love the fuzzy fine “fur” on the leaves.  I also love how they bloom and spread.

What did I do to neglet the plants so badly? I set the newly purchased pots on my back porch and did not plant them.  I kept watering them.  I kept watch over them.  But I never could find a place to set them in the soil until today.  I figured I had better do the deed before I killed them altogether. 

We have had a lot of rain.  What is normally soil that is easy to rake is saturated, almost like clay.

I have a plastic tag that came with the plants.  It says they like full sun, and to plant them 12″ apart.  Ooops…they are planted side by side.  Nothing like planting first and then reading.

What I like best about tending to any new plant, is learning from the “experts.”  Hearing from folks that have grown a particular plant.  Folks that know how to divide them, what type of sun they like, how often they like to be watered.  That is you, hopefully.

I think the Lamb’s Ear plants are salvageable.  I can even see them being moved in the future.

I hope you say the same.  Any experience with Lamb’s Ear?

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