All caught up!

Hmmm.   I ran out of pictures and things to post about.  I’m all caught up!

I had a little build up of photos and stuff going on here at the homestead, but well, now I’m all caught up.  Guess that means tomorrow, I need to shoot some more photos!  And think about what to write about.

Spent most of the day just surfing the web, looking at stuff, learning about top bar bee hives (gonna do that this spring) and found someone with some bred shetland ewes and a lamb ewe that they need to get rehomed and oh boy, I wish I had some extra money…. haha… I would love to have some baby lambs this spring!  Alas, it’s $200 and that is money I need to spend to fix the well.  Darn.  Jessy said no.  (But I’ll bet I could whine about it for a few days and she would cave.  haha.. she’s not got her mom-sense totally grown in yet!  haha…  I’m sure she would cave after a good day or two of whining.)

Been looking at ideas for the studio and just putzing with facebook.

You know, if you want to see stuff faster, and just get my witty little one or two sentence updates, you should LIKE us on the farm page one Facebook.

It’s  www.facebook.com/WindhavenFarmOhio

I think.  Yeah, it is.

Somedays it’s easier to just post a little quick update then to write a whole blog post.  Just sometimes.  And I put a bunch of pictures and stuff up there, so you can leave comments and all that fun stuff.

I just put a couple pairs of banty chickens up for sale.  That is a new thing, a first!  I’m trying it first with the Facebook community because most of those folks are local and might be interested in our darling little BB Red English Banty Pairs.  They should be laying soon and would make some nice little pet pairs.  They are sure cute.  We’re not going to be raising banties for the most part, so I figure it’s time for them to get new homes.  And our two D’uuncle  Belgian calico banty roosters, Pete and RePete… They are getting big and need their own place and maybe a few girls to entertain.  (They used to be the chicks Petunia and Daffodil… but they turned out to be roos, so we first renamed Petunia to Pete, since he was the first to mature and crow, and then when we discovered Daffodil was a boy too, Maggie called him RePete… haha…  it is pretty funny.

If we can’t find homes for them, they will probably go out to the little coop of Marans next week or so.  They’ll be fine with Rooben and Silver.  Big roos don’t seem to think banty roos are much competition.  As long as they stay outta the big boys way, they will be fine.

We’ve been thinking about the things we would like to be offering this coming year.  It’s going to be a fun year for sure!  Can’t wait.

 

Windhaven Products…  

Wool – Shetland and Angora – raw fleece, roving and yarn

Angora Rabbits for fiber pets

Chickens – Heritage Homegrown/Hatched and Bred ; Marans – Pure & Halfbreed

Eggs by the dozen

Honey and Beeswax

Wooden Primitive Products

Heirloom Gourmet Garlic

Lavender – Cut & dried flowers – lavender buds – sachets & therapy products

Candles – our homegrown candles of lavender from our own beeswax.

Soaps – Cold and Hot poured soaps with local sourced goodies & scents

Cut Flowers & Bittersweet Vines – Zinnias and Sunflowers…  

And of course… Rocks, Minerals and Fossils for kids!  

Not a bad selection!  Hopefully, we can get it all going this year!  That is the plan.  This is going to be such a big year, our first full year without having to rehab the whole place!  When I think about how much effort and money we put into the place last year, this coming year will be a breeze!  Sure, we’ve got things and ideas to impliment, but we’ll be ready and we won’t have so much hard labor to do, just to get the place livable.  We can take projects one at a time and start to impliment them!  Way cool…  can’t wait.

Hurry up spring!!!  (gg)

Oh I would have been really annoying on those pioneer wagon trains.  I would be the one always asking… “Are we there yet?”

 

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Studio Ideas…


Oh my gosh! Isn’t this the coolest idea??? I saw it as I was wandering about looking at ideas for our art studio space! And I stumbled on this and it’s so wonderful! I just love how easy it is, and how it is such a neat way to store and display all your fabric!

Here’s the website for the product…

www.thefabricorganizer.com

Now, it’s a great idea, but I wish it was a little less expensive. I’ll warn ya, it’s not super cheap. Not exactly sure why, it’s just punched coroplast… makes a cheap gal think about just making your own. Seems to me there has to be something that is close, that might work just as nice. The little tabs are cool, but I think you could use a piece of low tack masking tape to get it started on your panels, and then a straight pin to keep it tidy. I wonder if you can just get 8 1/2 x 11 pieces of coroplast from a sign dealer or something. I do like the white and the rounded corners… hmmmm….

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Snow! Finally!

We FINALLY have some snow on the ground, real snow, measured in inches!

Considering that it’s a week until February and probably about 6 weeks till we start getting a little nicer weather, I think it’s about time.

I was getting weary of the soppy, muddy, yucky torn up grass and such in our middle yard. The hooved stock have been making it a little bit of a quagmire in some areas. It would have been so much better if it had been just colder, or snowy, something, but these weirdly unseasonable warm days we’ve had quite often are really making for a mess!
Maggie has been waiting to try out this cute little old snow plow that I got at a garage sale last summer for like $5 or $10 dollars. Can’t remember which. I know it was under $10 though. I though it was such a cool deal!

It’s old, and we weren’t sure if it would be very effective, but I am happy to report that it is! Now, it’s not great at digging all the way down to the concrete, but it makes SHORT order of clearing 75% of the snow for you. It makes GREAT paths through the yard, back to the barn and pony shed, stuff like that. And it’s easy, you just push and the snow slides away in neat little furrows, just like a plow cutting through the stuff.

In less than an hour, she had plowed all our courtyard paths, out to the barn and little coop and pony barn and all around our car and the driveway and up to the house. Pretty cool. And she wasn’t even winded. In fact, if it hadn’t been so darn cold, I think she would have been plowing all over the place, nature walks and sheep trails and all that.

Now, we only got about 3 or 4 inches, but still, it was pretty effective. I think it might be even more so if she were to give it a little coat of car wax, on the blade. Just to make it a little more slippery.

The sheepies all approved. They watched in great interest at the curious effort of Farmer Girl. Noel and Holly were very intrigued. I suppose watching Farmer TV is one of the highlights of their day. I wish I could be out there a little more, but the cold is really kicking my butt. Actually, it’s the feet. I don’t have the best circulation in my feet, long story, but this bitter cold just really makes them very unhappy. So when it’s down in the teens and more, it’s really better for me to stay inside more. Even with the lovely toe warmers that my mother in law gave us for Christmas, (AWESOME GIFT let me tell you!) this bitter cold makes me a popsicle in not time! Thank goodness that around here, super cold temperatures are not that frequent, nor do they tend to stay around. I can handle it down into the 20s or so, but much past that and I just need to stay out of the bitter cold.

The sheep seem to be handling the cold fairly well, but then walking around with a big wool coat on, that surely helps. Cody Pony is fairing pretty well, too. He was out trotting around the yard and just being silly frisky today. Being from hardy Shetland stock, both horse and sheep seem to be handling this little cold snap with ease. Haven’t seen the chickens out much, and I don’t blame them! They venture out just to the sheep paddock which we loaded up with nice fluffy straw, so the ewes have something warmer than snow to lay down on in the morning sunshine. I think that the hens like that, as they will hang out with the sheep in the morning, soaking in some vitamin D and staying off the cold snow on a nice bed of straw. But other than that brief time in the morning, they have been staying in the warm barns and just laying lots of eggs! Haha… funny… cold is supposed to slow production, but I guess they don’t have anything else to do!

Bunnies are fine, they huddle together or spend the nights in their warm boxes. Jack has been reluctantly coming inside for most of the evening, but he’s ready to get let out as soon as the sun rises. I fixed him up a box of straw and an old afghan and he will park his little kitty butt in there and stay pretty warm, out on the screen porch. The kittens and Luna are apparently not as loyal to the outside, as they have been inside most the day and night! They know were it is good! Of course, the dogs are happy to go out and run around some, but equally happy to come back in and snoooooze for hours on end.

I’m beginning to see that rural living is more seasonal, then by the months. Winter is a time for just basic chores of neccessity. It’s not a time to build and restore and do a lot of extra effort, it’s a time to relax, take naps, enjoy a little down time. Read, craft, watch TV. Everything in nature is taking it easy and slow, dormant and waiting. I believe it does a body good to have a little downtime. Thinking and planning time. I’ve already gone through a hundred different to do lists in my head for the spring, can’t wait to get started. But the waiting is good, because it makes me examine and reexamine each plan and make it better and stronger, it is just a good lesson in patience.

Just 6 more weeks… in 6 more weeks, the weather should start to turn, with more good nice days then bad. Just can’t wait!!! Can you?

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