Tag Archives: Uncategorized

What I’ve Been Doing (Instead of Blogging)

Oh, my poor neglected blog.  I’ve been lazy with you.

I’ve no real excuse except that it’s winter and I’d really just like to burrow for a bit.

It’s getting to be mid-winter here, though, and we’ve been checking the chicken coops and replenishing bedding and doing minor cleaning in them.  We’ll do a total clean out come spring, but we want them to have enough clean space to get through until then.

With Francis out hopefully breeding all our ewes I’ve also been spending some of this time taking stock of our farm supplies, organizing them,  and making lists of what we’ll need for lambing in May.  The ladies will need a good de-worming before then and hooves will have to be in proper order.

I’ve also been looking at seed catalogs and dreaming up planting schedules and new ideas for the next growing season (which hopefully will be much kinder than last year’s monsoon-a-palooza).

Other than that I’ve made some orange marmalade using THIS recipe:02.06.14a

And I’ve been making and eating a lot of this:

02.06.14b

Cinnamon Bread.

School is being done at a leisurely pace these days (all day, sometimes by the fire), and knitting is getting accomplished along side of it.

It’s winter. It’s a good time for indoor projects and eating comfort foods.


Tagged: Farm, food, Homeschooling

I’ve Got Coooooookies!!!!

Did you know sheep and goats can have animal crackers?  You know, those animal – shaped cookies we all ate as kids?

I didn’t know until I met Susan.  Nor did I know just how crazy they are about them!

01.26.14a

I don’t always give them cookies; it’s more of a treat once in a while.  I’ll stuff my pockets with them and head out, and once they see I’ve got them, they swarm.

When they’ve had a few days’ where I have them, they automatically sniff around my pockets looking for more as soon as they see me.  It’s kind of a nice trick to get them comfortable enough so I can approach them for whatever reason I may need to.

They also tend to jump on me and shove their noses into my pockets trying to get all the cookies they can.

01.26.14b

They certainly know where their bread is buttered!

01.26.14c

The goats, of course are terribly pushy and greedy, but one sheep is likewise eager for cookies, and that’s Orion.

01.26.14d

Fairfax and Alabama really appreciate treats and will follow me hoping for handouts, but Orion beats his way through the goat crowd to make sure he doesn’t miss out.

01.26.14e

01.26.14f

If you’re not careful, you can lose a finger!

01.26.14g

Inevitably I run out way before they’ve had enough.

Time to go buy another box!

 

 

 


I’ve Got Coooooookies!!!!

Did you know sheep and goats can have animal crackers?  You know, those animal – shaped cookies we all ate as kids?

I didn’t know until I met Susan.  Nor did I know just how crazy they are about them!

01.26.14a

I don’t always give them cookies; it’s more of a treat once in a while.  I’ll stuff my pockets with them and head out, and once they see I’ve got them, they swarm.

When they’ve had a few days’ where I have them, they automatically sniff around my pockets looking for more as soon as they see me.  It’s kind of a nice trick to get them comfortable enough so I can approach them for whatever reason I may need to.

They also tend to jump on me and shove their noses into my pockets trying to get all the cookies they can.

01.26.14b

They certainly know where their bread is buttered!

01.26.14c

The goats, of course are terribly pushy and greedy, but one sheep is likewise eager for cookies, and that’s Orion.

01.26.14d

Fairfax and Alabama really appreciate treats and will follow me hoping for handouts, but Orion beats his way through the goat crowd to make sure he doesn’t miss out.

01.26.14e

01.26.14f

If you’re not careful, you can lose a finger!

01.26.14g

Inevitably I run out way before they’ve had enough.

Time to go buy another box!

 

28 Weeks

27 weeks
Yes, most of my belly pics so far have been work bathroom selfies, that’s probably not going to change. (Haven’t seen the new Visitor Center at the Kansas Statehouse yet? Well, this is what the john looks like.)

I am officially in my third trimester–which means the baby will be here in just about 12 weeks. 12 weeks! It is simultaneously not enough time to get everything done before baby arrives, and too long to wait to meet this bub while I just keep getting bigger and bigger and bigger. I am still mainly focused on the knitting and sewing I want to do before mid-April, but I can feel the frantic cleaning and cooking needs starting to kick in. Last night, for instance, instead of making great headway on my knitting like I had planned, I spent hours pouring through my cookbooks thinking about recipes and food prep.

Some other fun facts:

-Baby is head down, and I’ve been doing cat/cow pose pretty much every day to make sure (s)he stays that way. (I’m pretty sure that’s a little baby booty sticking out in the photo above)

-Still not finding out if it’s a boy or a girl early.

-Still feeling great pregnancy-wise (while still being in recovery from whatever nasty bug has laid me low for most of the last three weeks. My head and chest are finally starting to feel normal again though!) And baby is super squirmy, which is all good news.

-I am starting waddle. I can’t help it, baby is riding low.

PS, Did I ever mention, I’m on Instagram? Check it out to see all my work bathroom selfies!

Snow Comes to The Farm

A few days ago we got happy reports of potential snow for our area, and started making preparations in case we got hit.  Projections were for 6 inches or so, and though Paul was very unenthusiastic and grumbly about the idea of snow, he helped me get the farm in order so that we could actually enjoy it from indoors, unlike last year when we spent an entire storm outside trying to keep everyone dry.

But I digress.

The snow was not expected until late morning, so after we made sure all of the water troughs were full (and the tank heater working), we got busy delivering extra hay to both paddocks.

01.22.14g

Once that was complete I made sure the dogs were in where they could access the bigger shelters and Paul cleared space for the tractor in the garage.  Then we went inside and I got the kids working on their schoolwork while we waited for the snow (no sense cancelling school for home-schooled kids when there is no snow actually out there to play with!).

We waited.  And waited.  And waited some more.

Susan teased me with pictures of lovely white snowfall in northern Virginia, and we heard reports of plenty of the white stuff just to our west.

Some time after noon we started seeing some snow “drizzle” and then our weather reports changed.  We would now see around two inches total.

Needless to say, the kids and I were very, very disappointed.

Fortunately by around evening feeding time the snow began to pick up and we say some actual accumulation on the ground.

01.22.14h

Everyone was fairly unfazed by it, and focused more on FOOD!

01.22.14i

Though not much snow had fallen we double-checked on everyone’s hay and water levels and made sure the chickens were tucked away safely for the night.

Happily, we did get at least an inch, and the next morning dawned super bright and cold.

The water tank without the heater had to have the ice broken up.

01.22.14f

Aside from that, everyone was rather unfazed and unimpressed.

01.22.14a

01.22.14b

Orzo and Lucy played a bit after they’d had their breakfast.

01.22.14c

The pigs and the little ones were content to remain in their shelter with the hay until I brought their grain.

01.22.14d

01.22.14e

Only the ducks seemed confused; they’re the only animals here that hadn’t seen snow before.  They weren’t sure if they should eat it or nest in it.

Although we’re still disappointed we haven’t seen a really good snowstorm, I’m glad we at least got some taste of winter.  It’s such a lovely and welcome break from the rain and mud!

 

 

 

 

 


Tagged: Farm, Pets, Seasons

Probably something you would like…

photographs by Elena Shumilova

Russian Mother Takes Magical Pictures of Her Two Kids With Animals On Her Farm . Stop whatever you’re doing right now and go look at these amazing photographs. They are simply breathtaking.

Textile Factory

Ignore the goofy headline and read this article in the NY Times about American textile mills.

AMAZING cat climbing furniture

Amazing German Designed Cat Climbing Furniture. Bet no one has ever written those words in that order before.

Balsamic Pot Roast Slow Cooker Recipe

Balsamic Roast Beef. We made this in the slow cooker during the photo shoot and it was great. My only change to the original recipe would be to flip the roast over in the sauce half way through the cooking time. The side that was cooking in the sauce was much yummier and more tender.

10 Portraits of Endangered Animals

Stunning Pictures: Ten of the Rarest Animals on Earth. These are not to be misses.

World Tattoo

World Tattoo is a blog by a man who tattooed a world map on his back and is filling in each country as he visits it.

These are some of the things knocking my socks off this week. What’s inspiring you?

Learning to Drum Card, Day One

Like I promised last Thursday, I spent some quality time with my drum carder this week, and I’m actually pretty happy with my results. I managed to make two batts that look fluffy and spinnable, and way substantially more than 1 oz.

To recap, this is what I started with
one of my first batts top
A flimsy 1 oz. batt out of mixed materials. This one is a bit of corriedale, a bit of alpaca, silk, and firestar. I was convince I had my drum carder full, only to learn after unloading it, that I had a puny, not very fluffy batt that wouldn’t be very pleasant to spin from.

Getting ready to card
To get started, I got set up with supplies, water, coffee, music, and adjusted my drum carder. It wasn’t too far off after months and months of neglect, but I’m glad I took the time to do it. In the picture you can see two unrolled puny batts. The yellow one, and another blue one that looked very much like the yellow. It’s mostly alpaca with some silk and wool thrown in for good measure, and weighed just a stitch more than yellow batt. My goal was to card them together.

After reading many blogs and watching an untold amount of youtube videos, I experimented a little bit with how I fed the the fiber.

bluebatt
The blue was mostly pulled apart and fed in straight on, like so.

yellow batt
The yellow, I pulled out into locks and fed in sideways. (This picture is not representative of how I fed the locks onto the carder. I thinned them out a lot more.)

It took about an hour to do this first batt. I was purposefully going very slow, watching how my carder fed in, watching how the drum took up fiber from the licker-in, and so on.

Here’s the finished product
blueandgoldbattrollside
blueandgoldbattroll
blueandgoldbattstratta
blueandgoldbatt
This one came out at 78.5 grams, or just under 3 oz. My carder was pretty full by the end of it. And I’m pretty happy with the results. It’s fluffy, but still layered. It’s thick and textured, and will probably spin into a really fun tweedy singles.

On my desk, I had two small balls of merino top, one dyed, one undyed, that I have been wanting to blend together forever.

orangeandcreamtop
Each little ball was about 50 grams, so I figured if I used as much of each as I could, I would get a batt near 100g.

I carded these fibers very simply, just thinning out the top and feeding them straight on to the carder in layers. It went much faster, but I still ended up with about a 78g batt.
orangeandcreambattroll
orangeandcreambatt

I’m fairly satisfied with my morning’s work.

two good batts

I’ve learned to weigh out my fibers before hand, and to go slow. I’ve watched how my carder works as a machine a little bit better, and that I can make a spinnable blended batt. I think I still need some practice, and I am certainly not going to be going into production anytime soon, but it has been fun to spend a morning at it.

Cold Snap

While the northeast has been getting hammered with snow, we’ve been dealing with rain, sleet, wind and cold.  Normally here in central Virginia we don’t get a lot of the arctic temperatures I was accustomed to growing up in northern New York State, but occasionally it gets down into the twenties, and even more rarely, the teens.  After a full two days of rain, which made the ground a muddy, sodden mess, we got sleet, which made it an icy, sodden mess, followed by cold and wind, which froze everything solid.

01.04.13f

See how the mud froze?  The deep ruts from the tractor are pretty bad.  It caused a lot of problems trying to get the gates open, as the mud around the bottom is frozen in this very uneven pattern.

Fortunately, we have a tank heater in the water trough for the flock, so their water never freezes, as long as it is full.

Unfortunately, the water lines out to the trough are frozen.  But, the flock needs water, frozen lines or no, so Paul came up with the solution to fill up buckets up at the house, put lids on them, and drive them down to the flock in the tractor.

01.04.13d

01.04.13e

It took ten buckets to fill the trough and the water bucket for Lucy and Orzo (who are in a separate pen they can’t escape from and terrorize the neighborhood).  We’ll have to do this at least once, if not twice, a day until the temperatures come back up.

The water in the pig pen has not frozen because it sits up against the house and the faucet there has (so far) been fine.  We’ve put the littlest lambs up there with the pigs (both for extra grain, extra shelter in the pig shed, and so that Mr Francis doesn’t breed any little girls that aren’t ready yet).

01.04.13b

01.04.13c

They’ve been getting square bales of hay inside the shed, and the pigs have spread it all around in there to make a nest for everyone.

Did you know pigs make nests?  I never did.

As for the rest of the flock, I hadn’t spent much time before worrying about shelter because adult sheep and goats can generally handle the cold fairly well.  It’s the ice rain we’ve been plagued with that’s been the trouble.  The Angora goats aren’t tolerating it all that well, so Susan decided to order some calf hutches for them.

01.04.13h

They’re pretty large; several goats can fit in it at a time, with room to spare.

01.04.13j

Milkshakes and Adelaide still prefer the dog house.

01.04.13i

01.04.13k

Roquefort and Martin have claimed one for themselves!

01.04.13g

The sheep have shown no interest in them at all.

I feel a lot better about the flock’s situation now, especially as we’re expecting more sleet tomorrow. Is it any wonder I’ve been feeling unwell?

Once the flock was squared away today I made a big pot of Susan’s Garlic Chicken Soup. That’ll keep us warm for the night.


Tagged: Farm, Pets

Wrapping Up 2013

Click to view slideshow.

Happy New Year, everyone!


Tagged: Farm, food, Garden, Homeschooling, Knitting, Pets, Seasons, Sewing

Sheep and Dinos

Sometime in late 2012, I bought a copy of Lotta Jansdotter’s Handmade Living. It’s the kind of book I pull out to peruse when I’m feeling dull or uncreative. In her book, she includes a set of stencils for creating your own projects based on her designs–mostly meant to be used on one kind of fabric or another. While I am inspired by her designs, I was never particularly tempted to use her stencils. What I was inspired to do was creating my own prints using linocuts.

sheep_linocut
This sheep was the first cut I did on my own, and while I made note cards out of it at first,
sheep_thankyou
I’ve always wanted to print it on fabric: make a scarf, make a project bag, make some curtains, but it wasn’t until this week that I realized that I could use my sheep on baby stuff. I mean, sheep and babies go together–and this baby is due right around Easter, so sheepy stuff makes even more sense.

Now I just have to decide what kind of stuff I could make for the baby–because working with fabric means sewing and that, if you’ve been reading this blog for long you know, is something I don’t do very often.

In the meantime, I purchased our first baby clothes this weekend, though it was pretty slim pickins out there after all the holiday hoopla.

tiny dino clothes
To start, our Tiny Dino is going to have a set of tiny dinos all it’s own. Pictured are three Gerber Sleep and Plays. These are my favorite newborn clothes–and the best infant pajamas. I was thrilled to find the dinos!