Tag Archives: Kids

The Darby Show

You’ll have to excuse us….and indulge a bit in our love for a certain little lamb.

Darby has made a complete recovery and is now officially our shadow.  He likes to follow me out to the garden, he likes to follow Emily while she feeds the chickens.

He is happy to let Oona and Neve bestow a suffocating amount of snuggles upon him.

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It creates no end of amusement to the kids when he follows me into the house, or hangs out in the garage to see what Paul is up to, crying out little “maaaaas” every so often (it sounds just like a child calling his mom……spookily so some times).

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Occasionally we’ll even find him standing at the back door, having gotten up on the deck but not knowing how to get back down.

He’s finally starting to put on weight and no longer nurses from his mama – though they do hang out and snuggle together.

Still, I’m not sure he realizes any longer that he’s a sheep!


Tagged: Farm, Pets

Weekend In Pictures

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We let the ducks out in pairs to swim.  A couple of them took right to it; a few others were more interested in escaping.

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We worked on brushing the dogs and getting them treated with Frontline now that ticks are out in full force.

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I made a batch of homemade granola using a variation on  THIS recipe from Susan.

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I add cinnamon and maple syrup along with the honey to mine.  This time of year I always use dried blueberries or cherries;  in the fall I like to use pumpkin seeds and dried apples or cranberries.

What did you do with your weekend?


Tagged: Farm, food, Pets

Days Like This

I want to share with you what my day has been like thus far; not because it’s been remarkable in it’s awfulness, but because it’s fairly average for me.  The last week I’ve been feeling really unwell on top of it all, and that has contributed to the over the top terrible that has been assaulting my sanity since I woke up this morning.  It also seems that with blogs like this people can get the idea that I am able to do so much and live such an “idyllic” looking existence, when the reality is much dirtier, more frustrating, much more difficult and crazy – inducing than I let on most of the time.

It is also incredibly rewarding, but you have to be willing to look for that; to search out those moments and recognize them as they come.  Sometimes that can be tough to do in the moment.

This morning I woke up to the sound of thunder and pouring rain.  It was pretty dark in the bedroom and I had Oona’s foot resting on my stomach and a cat curled up covering half my face.  My stomach and lower back were both hurting so I slid out of bed and crept into the bathroom – and heard Oona yell for me.  So much for some quiet time.

As I do every morning, I peered out the window to check on the animals out back and make sure all the dogs were inside the fence line.

They weren’t.

There were Cini and Lucy standing chest – deep int eh muddy stream while the other dogs barked at them from behind the gate.

I trudged out into the driving rain and mud just as the UPS truck was pulling up – causing the dogs to come running full bore, splashing mud everywhere and all over me.

After getting them back where they belonged I went back in the house and noticed a smell.

A dog smell.

There on the living room rug, Gulliver had deposited some “gifts” for me.   I cleaned that up and sat on the couch next to Oona, who immediately began demanding breakfast foods we didn’t have.  The thing about Oona is that since allergy season began, she almost always wakes up in a foul mood.  I listed her options and tried to ignore the tantrum that followed.  Abruptly she announced she had to pee, and got there too late, soaking her clothes and two of my bathmats.

Neve came down soon after and I asked her to wake up Maddie and Emily so we could get our morning routine started and get to work on our school work and bring Darby in for his morning bottle.

And then I noticed the dogs out again.

I went upstairs to get actual clothes on rather than my pj’s, and came back down to find that all of my children had run outside after the dogs.

Oona was wet and muddy – in fact despite knowing she wasn’t supposed to be out in her good shoes, she had gone anyway and pretty much trashed them.

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Very disappointing.

After I sent her back into the house (fighting and screaming the whole way), Emily and Neve and I managed to eventually get the dogs back through the gate.  I identified numerous spots where Lucy had dug under the fence – and even one where she had bent it down by going OVER – and fixed them as best I could in the rain.  I tied Lucy under a tree in the middle of the pasture as a temporary measure until I could work on getting the large kennel sections out to make a larger run to contain her but still give her plenty of room.

By the time I got out of the muddy field and back up to the house I was completely winded and beat down, but it was past Darby’s bottle – feeding time.  So, I grabbed a few clean barn towels and fetched the sweet little boy and brought him into the house.

He peed on me on the way.

It took an hour to get about 18 oz of lamb milk replacer into him, and then I gave him his shot of BoSe (vitamin E & Selenium), a drench of Power Punch (concentrated nutrients) and forced a baby aspirin down his throat. Every ten minutes or so during this time  Oona had begged me for a snack and shrieked whenever I said no.

Darby was looking much perkier, and since the sun had come out I put him out in the grass by the house where he wouldn’t get trampled by the goats or dogs or other sheep.  I then proceeded out back to get his mama, Amelia, so she could graze with him.

Now, Amelia is a great sheep.  You’d think she was a dog the way she took to a halter and leash.  So why today she decided to pitch a fit and thrash around when I tried to put her halter on, I’ll never know.  I do know I had a very heavy sheep stamp her hoof onto my foot several times, and it HURT.

By the time I got her out with Darby he had flopped back to his side again and I had to right him.

I was now thoroughly covered in mud and lamb pee, and it was nearing mid – afternoon.

I hadn’t eaten yet, and we hadn’t cracked our schoolbooks, either.

Neve was throwing a fit when I got inside (after stepping on goose poop on the front porch).  She wanted to make an espresso.  Of course I said no, and she flew into one of her trademark rages.  Then she complained that it was unfair I would make her do school work on a dark and rainy day, and even worse that I was making her read “terrible books she hates” (in other words, actual literature rather than ‘Bunnicula’ for the tenth time).

Meanwhile I was finally taking in my surroundings.  Despite having been cleaned a few days prior, the house was a raging disaster.  It smelled of dog, and I ended up stepping in congealed Gulliver pee at least twice while trying to find paper towels.

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This is a stinky corner of my kitchen right now.  That box is full of wet hay, lamb poo and paper towels used to clean up both.  It was supposed to have gone out with the garbage the night before, but since I hadn’t expressly stated it the requisite one thousand times, it remains here.  Also notice everyone’s muddy boots thrown everywhere and the paper towels thrown down on the dog pee in the pantry room behind it.

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The kitchen island.  I can take blame for the syringe and BoSe bottle, but remember I had JUST used them.  This is where Emily dumps the fresh chicken eggs she finds every day.  Yes, we have a stack taller than Neve of empty egg cartons, and YES Emily knows where they are.  But for some reason, she never, not ever, puts them away.  They slowly (well, lately it’s quickly) multiply and take over the whole area until I finally get mad and put them away myself.  Also notice all the other clutter that’s been left there.

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The entirety of my wooden floors look pretty much like this.  The darker spot in the upper left is special because I can tell it’s where Gulliver had peed during the night and it’s congealed and attracting dirt.

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Another congealing pee spot.  There’s at least four more of these downstairs; don’t even ask about upstairs (on the white carpeting!)

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What a cleaner area of the house looks like.  I keep hiding the school scissors, but Oona keeps finding them.  Whenever I am distracted, she leaves a trail of scraps behind her.  This is still a much cleaner area than most of the rest of the house.  Upstairs is a wasteland of ruined carpeting, dirty walls, overflowing garbage cans, overflowing cat litter boxes, a mountain of dirty laundry (who am I kidding – that will always be there, no matter what I do) and the pee – soaked clothes and bathmats from Oona.  My kids are destructive and efficient at it.

This is where I found myself after 3 in the afternoon.  No food yet, nauseous, aching, tired, no school work done, plenty of nastiness to clean up and mutinous children.  Quite honestly, this is where I usually find myself at this point in the afternoon, although generally we’ve at least gotten school done.

Now it’s thundering and darkening again and I have a tiny, sick lamb out in the grass that I’ll have to move.  And soon bottle feed again.  Then it will be time to make dinner.

Until then, I am going to lie on my bed, call the cat up, and cry into his fur a bit.

 

 

 


Tagged: Farm, food, Homeschooling, Pets

Sick Lamb Brand

My cousin in law always told me that as kids, whenever they were sick their grandfather would refer to them as “sick child brand”.  For whatever reason, that stuck with me.

But today we have sick lamb, not child.

Poor little Darby has been unwell.

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Here he is last weekend, eating grass with his mama, happy as a clam.  I’d known for awhile that Amelia wasn’t able to produce enough milk for him, and she was drastically underweight herself owing to only having one tooth up front.  I’d tried to bottle feed Darby several times but he absolutely refused it, and honestly, was so happy eating grass and hay I figured he’d be fine.  He was never a weak lamb, so I had little reason to worry.

Except that this past Friday he was looking pretty hunchy to me.  I checked his eyelids and they looked pretty pale so I gave him a dose of levamisole and sent him back to mama, figuring he’d be fine in a few days.

Nope.

By the next morning he wasn’t walking, and could not even stand on his own.  Panicked, I called the vet.  She advised me to try the bottle again, or tube feed him if necessary (basically, you insert a tube down their throat and into their stomachs and pour in the milk.  I’ve done it several times, but it always makes me nervous, so I don’t like to).

I heated up a bottle – he reluctantly accepted it – and within ten minutes he was back on his feet and eating grass with his mama again.  The vet advised me to keep giving him bottles, that perhaps his rumen was not yet able to handle the grass or hay without the milk.

Yesterday he was back down again, and though we fed him several bottles, gave him a couple doses of power punch (super vitamins and energy) he would not stand on his own, but rather lie on his side and try to munch the grass that way.

Today wasn’t much better.

The difference today is that it is cold and rainy and miserable out, so I brought him into the house.

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I called the vet again today, and she is still sure of her diagnosis, and after checking a few other things and adding a few other remedies to my list for him (baby aspirin, a small dose of selenium and vitamin E just in case) she reassured me that although his recovery will be slow, she feels pretty certain he WILL recover.

I could have flown, I felt so relieved.

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The kids loved the novelty of a lamb in the living room all day.

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I’ll be heading out just after dark for his evening bottle, which I am NOT looking forward to, but it will be so worth it when he’s back to running about with the other lambs.

 


Tagged: Farm, Pets

May Day!

It’s finally May!  Hopefully this means soon my tomatoes seedlings can be transplanted outside.  We’ve still been getting temps dipping into the 40′s at night and I am rather restless for that nonsense to stop!

It also means that all of the local hay people are just about out of their stock of last year’s hay and are soon going to be making their first cuttings.  Now that Paul’s splurged on a tractor, we decided we could stock up on a big load of hay at the cheaper prices.

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As you can see, we made out pretty well!

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Oona and Neve ran around begging us to make a giant hay maze for them.

All I know is, there’s nothing like seeing a solid store of feed for your animals to get you through for awhile.  I am going to be thrilled come winter when I don’t have to move giant wheel-barrow loads of hay out to the pasture by hand!

Tractors, as it turns out (duh) are a wonderful thing.  I’m wishing we bought one sooner.  After digging out the front garden last year it was absolute heaven to have the tractor do all the work this year digging up the giant squash garden out back.

The other wonderful thing right now is LILACS!  Every year my lilac bush gets just a bit bigger (making me wish I had planted dozens more with it!) and I spend time smelling the blooms and wishing I had enough to cut big bunches to bring inside like we used to when I was growing up.

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Looks like I am not the only one who likes lilacs!!!!

 


Tagged: Farm, Garden

Neve and The Giving Tree

No, not the book.

We have a small line of those crappy scrub pines in our front yard – the kind that we really want to take down, but we don’t have anything nice and tall to replace them with, and we like the relative privacy they afford.

One of them has a bird’s nest about 10 feet off the ground.  Neve spotted it quite a few weeks ago while playing outside, and has been keeping an eye on its inhabitants ever since.

Yesterday when she was strolling by she noticed a tiny baby bird on the ground under the nest.  Carefully, Neve picked up the little baby and climbed up the tree to the nest.  As she peered into it to find a place to deposit the tiny bird, she spotted two other babies and a dollar sticking out of the nesting materials.

Deftly she placed the baby back in the nest and swiped the dollar, stuffing it into her pocket so she could make the careful descent back to the ground.

Then she carried on with her day – telling us all excitedly how she got to hold a little baby bird.

She completely forgot about the dollar in all her excitement.

But wait…….it gets even more far-fetched!

While watching tv on the couch with us last night she was re-counting her story and suddenly remembered the dollar.  She reached into her pocket, unfolded the bill and – it was a twenty!

Can I just tell you how incredulous and skeptical we all were?  I think we grilled her for half an hour on the truthfulness of finding a twenty dollar bill in a bird’s nest.

However, in the end, no one was missing any cash, Neve’s story never wavered, and we were forced to believe the incredible tale.

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I think that little Neve leads a charmed life!


Trying To Craft

Some people say I have too many irons in the fire.

Other people say “jack of all trades, master of none”.

I disagree with both.

True, I have waaaaaaay too much going on for most normal, rational people.  Especially now that it is spring and I am working on getting gardens in, dealing with new lambs and kids, raising new ducks, clearing out brush, managing four homeschoolers and reorganizing much of the house.  It makes it pretty difficult to find time to knit or sew; never mind learn how to use my spinning wheel or loom.

But I think having many varied interests and projects can be a really good thing.  For one, I am never, ever bored.  Not ever.  There is always something that can be done, and always something that can be learned.  I can also generally find something to talk about with new people.

It does, however, make it challenging to find the time to do some of the things I enjoy.  Often by the time I’ve taken care of all the things that need my attention I am too tired for the things I want to do.

But it’s okay, because soon school will be done for the summer and the gardens will not need such intensive care during the day (in fact once the heat hits for real I’ll be doing outside chores early in the morning and late in the evening).  The animals will be in need of more attention, but nothing that I can’t knit in between.

So I have plenty of projects lined up waiting for this magical time of less things to worry over.

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This lovely Joel Dewberry fabric is waiting to be an A-line skirt for me.  I have a bunch of projects waiting to sew, actually, but right now this one is my favorite.

And just what does one do when one’s best friend is a star in the yarn and fiber world?

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You horde all the yarn she makes. (My craft room is looking better now that I’ve got this unit for all my yarn and fabric!)

Oh sure, I get plenty of free samples of her yarn.  The problem is, once you’ve held and petted the yarn it becomes imperative to get your hands on as much of it as humanly possible.  I’ve spent plenty of time trolling WEBS and buying out quantities of JMF yarn whenever I can.

SO there are plenty of yarn projects lined up.

The one I am tackling first is this lovely Honeybee Stole pattern with some luscious yellow Findley.

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Such a fun, light, summery project and I CANNOT WAIT to get started on it!  I have a flowy white sundress it will look perfect with.  Also, this yellow Findley just cried out for it!

I am hoping to cast on tonight – barring a thousand distractions.  It is lace, afterall, and as I have said many a time before, lace knitting and children  JUST. DON’T. MIX.


Tagged: Farm, Garden, Homeschooling, Knitting, Sewing

Our First Shearing!

Today we had the luck to see both our friend Lisa and our friend Emily, Shearer Extraordinaire!

I was excited to see what kind of condition our sheep are in underneath all that wool, and to see if Alabama still looked like a planetarium once he was shorn.

He does.

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Emily sheared everyone in no time flat.  She always has good advice and pointers and I got to see how my sheep are looking through the eyes of an expert.

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Lisa’s littlest one came along, as did her older brother Alston to play with Oona.

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Mountains of luscious wool sit in bags now, waiting to join with Susan’s and be turned into yarn and blankets.  Lisa and I got to spend a lovely day together while the kids played,  and Emily is on to her next shearing gig.

Cheers!

 

 


Tagged: Farm, Pets

Spring Seedlings

First,  I should say that internet access at our house has been spotty; the ongoing Cyber Attack that has been in the news has affected people and websites everywhere, and we are no exception.  Whether or not I can access my blog host is hit or miss lately, so bear with us until this works itself out.

Onward to spring!

This past week I finally started my tomato and pepper seeds inside.  I used the tutorial from By Hand Magazine, found HERE to make soil blocks.

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The crazy thing is that I had sprouts the next day!

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The garlic I planted in the fall is coming along nicely, and I am seeing sprouts from the arugula I planted outside about 2 weeks ago now.  I planted carrots, beets, peas, and radishes as well.  I’m not positive, but I think I saw the faintest hint of beet sprouts starting.

In a few weeks – once we’ve past our last frost date – I will direct – sow the squashes and cukes along with  potatoes and horseradish.  I plan on buying a bunch of berry plants this year as well to get them started.

Paul’s been hard at work clearing the remaining tree trunks so I have a larger spot for the squash garden and all of the wood burning we’ve been doing means we have lots of wood ash to add to the soil with the compost.  Hopefully we’ll add bees in the next few weeks as well and our garden should fare much better than past years.

In the meantime we are airing out the house whenever we can and slowly putting away all of our winter clothes and boots.  Everyone is happy to see the warmer weather return and I’ve got an itch to make dresses and skirts.

Summer really is just around the corner.

We’d better get a move on if we want to be ready for it!

 

 

 


Tagged: Farm, Garden, Sewing

It’s A Girl!

Last night around 10:30 I started having a funny feeling.  A feeling like maybe I shouldn’t wait to do my normal midnight check.  That I should do it now.

I don’t know where that feeling came from, but I am glad I went with it.  I found Piper laboring out in the field, struggling to deliver a large lamb (maybe I fed them too much grain???).

Maddie, Emily and Oona came out with towels and other supplies and stood back to watch.  The only real difficulty was that Jerry and Orzo were very curious and kept trying to sniff and lick Piper and get in the way.

I am not sure how long Piper had been trying to push that lamb out, but once it was born she put her head down on the ground and closed her eyes.  On the one hand, I knew exactly how she felt.  On the other hand, it worried me.  But, once I got the baby up to her face and rubbed her nose a bit she did a fine job cleaning off her new ewe lamb.  We had some trouble getting her to the shelter, and then some trouble getting her to nurse, but once we got her going, she was fine.  As of this afternoon mama and baby look great.

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Say hello to darling little Beatrix!  She is jet black like Darby, but has white splotches on her head, nose, and under her chin.

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Neve is hooked.  I never have to ask twice for her help with the sheep.

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Orzo loves her, too.  Thankfully she is safely penned in with her mama so he can’t hurt her in his enthusiasm.

I’ll do a check on Fairfax and Wren this evening at feeding to see where they stand lamb – wise.

 


Tagged: Farm, Pets