Hauling Water…

Maggie and I went and got water for the homestead today.

And as I was filling up a gallon jug at the artesian spring, it just sort of hit me.  I was starting to think that my hands were a little chilly, because I had forgotten my gloves.  And I was thinking, this isn’t as fun as it was last week, in fact, it’s getting a little old.  And I was thinking how we just did this on Friday, at Miss Julia’s house, which was 4 days ago.

Four days ago.

And just about the moment I was going to start feeling sorry for our situation, this image of little children, lugging big heavy bottles and buckets of water came into my mind.  Young kids, even little teeny kids, all doing their part to lug water to their family home.

And I just snapped out of it.  I mean, we have a car and lots of jugs and we can haul nearly 30 gallons back for our use and the livestock.  30 gallons.  It’s pretty easy too.  We even stopped and got a dozen donuts at the party stop and listened to music and all that.  We only have to go every couple days.  We even got to shower over at the neighbors so we didn’t have to use a bucket of warm water and washcloths.  And we have electric and internet and fancy computers and a home we bought with no mortgage.  Fancy pet livestock, chickens that feed us, family and friends that love and support us in our times of need…  hospitals and banks and law and order!

My gosh.  I’m never going to complain or even begin to think to complain about getting free, clean, beautiful water for free.

Even if we have to haul it home a few miles.

Take a few minutes and consider the blessings all around you.

 

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Sunday Evening Recap…

 
I’m so excited to begin my spring garden in the middle of January.

Yep, January 9th…   it was 48 degrees out today.  Sunshine, fair breeze, it was sweatshirt weather!!!  I can’t hardly believe it.  So after we did an errand and had lunch, I went out and got started on my raised straw beds.  Took me a little while before I decided on this design.  I wasn’t sure if I wanted them 3 bales long or 2 bales long.  And I wasn’t sure if I wanted the end bales on the inside between the other bales or on the outside.  I decided on inside because it gave me a lot more inner area.

The inside of the bed measures 3 and a half feet by 7 and a half feet.  About 26 square feet.  I’m going to take some of the plastic fiber feed bags we have been storing and slice them open.  And then put them over the bales like a saddle blanket, tucking the sides into the binder twine.  My thought is that it should help to keep the bales a little longer in my gardening plan.  I think I’m also going to get a spool of twine and wrap a couple lengths around the outer part of the bed, just to keep from having a compost blowout.

 

 

Maggie and I measured and we can get ultimately 12 of these beds into this space, if we want to.  I know for sure I want four to run parallel with the poultry barn.  Because that is the lowest area of the garden and was under a good deal of water in the spring last year.  I know these will not last forever, and that’s fine.  I plan to build up the area so that eventually, they will just be raised mounds that I can plant directly into.  And hopefully, by raising the area up a good foot it will help to control some of the water issues.

I might not have to worry that much after this spring, the good news is that my big farmer friend that lives all around us, he is putting in new drainage tile all around our property in his fields.  And he is going to put in a larger tile, because he’s worried about us flooding!  It should help to drain our eastern side a bit more in the heavy spring rain season.  However, he probably won’t be doing this until June or July, so we just have to get through one more soggy spring!  That is really fantastic news!

And of course, I’m not going to mind having everything raised up a bit.  All that bending over can be hard on the old back!

Jessy is the real photographer of the family, but every so often I think I get a good shot!  I really love how this shot of Jack turned out.  It’s got that lovely professional looking quality with the background a little blurry and the foreground so nice and sharp.  Just love a good Nikon camera…  they can make even a novice into a decent photographer now and then!  Jack is always ready to pose out in the farmyard.  He is our ever present farm buddy.  He just loves it out here.

Well, hopefully tomorrow, we will be filling up the first bed.  I’m anxious to get it going because I have 5 or 6 neat varieties of garlic to get planted!  I know I should have gotten it in the ground a month ago, but it’s not been that cold, so I think it will be fine.  You can plant it all the way into the spring, but it just won’t have that extra bit of growing time.  I think I’ll have it planted by Wednesday.  Monday we are going to see just how many wheelbarrow loads of compost and dried leaves it takes to top off one of these beds.  And then on Tuesday errand day, I’ll stop and get a few bags of topsoil to add on the top.  I know that we could probably dig it up from somewhere on the farm, but the ground is a little hard to dig in right now.  With all the good organic matter, I don’t think I’ll need too much to make the bed nice.

Some of the spent hay around the yard manger finds its way into the dog yard.  Evee is a fence runner and she has this neat racetrack all around the dog yard.  But this area right by the fence just gets muddy if there is any rain or snow!  So we just rake up any leftover hay and lay it in this area and that keeps our kitchen a bit more tidy!  And of course, Evee too!

Everyone is just watching me and wondering what I am up to.  It’s funny, they just all find me very amusing.  Cody is usually tagging along like a big dog.  But, even the sheep are learning to do it.  And of course, there are usually a few chickens in the mix.  You can see Bucka hanging out around the blue spool.  Darn pony keeps leaving that shovel and hose out in the yard… I’m going to have to have a talk with him about picking up!

Keeping everyone hydrated has been a little bit of a challenge, but not too bad.  We worked hard this weekend to make sure that we filled up the 55 gallon trough and all the watering stations around the homestead.  Got a couple nice 7 gallon containers and that really helps.  Doing okay without easy water, but I’ll admit, it’s getting a little old.  I’m hoping that within the week perhaps, we’ll have enough of a cushion that we can call around and get started on getting that pump re-wired and running.  Going to call another county resource for winterization and see if we might qualify for heating assistance since the fire took out the corn stove.  We just might now.  We’ll see… not going to hold our breath, but hey, you just never know.  We heard that they just received another $150,000 in grants and need to use them or loose them.  They might be able to fix the furnace that is in the basement…  who knows?

I love this shot of Iris and Molly.  Iris just has the sweetest soul.  She’s fast becoming one of my favorite ewes…   she just has these eyes that seem so old and wise, even though she’s not quite two yet.  I was reading that Shetlands have some of the longest lifespans of sheep, easily past 10 years old.  Even into 15!  I hope that Iris is with me in ten more years.   Oh, the things she will see here at the farm.  I hope many lovely improvements.  I hope she will be able to lay in the back pasture grass with her babies, in the warm spring sunshine.  I hope she will see these little baubles in the road smooth out and everything running wonderfully.  She is letting me touch and pet her now, and doesn’t flinch or act hesitant at all.  Of course, the boys, Fergus and Angus, are attention hounds.  They have learned that I am also their favorite human scratching post.  Little Molly is torn.  She wants to be in the circle with her lamb buddies, but she’s still just a little shy.  If I have sweet feed, she will now take it from my hand, but you can tell, she’s still not totally sure.  Iris let me tickle under her chin this afternoon and that was neat.  She’s a sweetie.

The hammock hay net!  Pretty cool, eh?  I like that it also gives them a little extra warmth and insulation to the shack.  I imagine laying down under the net would be nice and cozy.  I think we could almost get two bales fluffed in there, but I don’t want to risk it falling.  So one is fine.  There’s a little shelf in there that we can stack a bit more hay on if we want.

Cody shows you how convienent it is to nibble hay from the underside.  It’s just about perfect pony height, though I don’t think he could get underneath it.  I have some new rope that I am going to try and use to make him a hay net for his workbench.  But that will be another day.  Got a busy work week ahead of me, so I might not have time for farm macrame till the weekend!  Still, I’m pretty pleased with the hay net for the sheep.

The only real drawback is that the ewes are getting hay bits in their fleece.  I suppose that I might have to revisit the hay net next winter, but for now, it’s fine.  Hay bits can get picked out of spring fleece!  I might consider fleece blankets next year after I spend 200 hours this year picking bits out of our fleece all summer long!  haha….

We made a lot of progress inside the house this weekend.  This is our new studio art space.  It was the parlor, but we decided that we would rather have an art studio rather than another living room.  We love our new living room but to be honest, we don’t have that many sit down visitors and we don’t spend a lot of time watching tv or anything.  So there is absolutely no need for two living room spaces.

it’s still very much in the early stages of development and the furniture is all mis-matched and such.  However, we’ve got plans!  (as always!)  I still can’t believe we got that nice cherrywood storage unit for free off Craig’s list!  Yahoo!  It’s wonderful.  I believe I’d like to keep my eye out for a little thin cherry table or shelf to tuck in the open area and then properly utilize for craft and arts supplies.  Right now, it’s a little, well, free form.

I like the table and chairs and am planning on giving the chair seats a new fabric uplift.  Just not sure what color and all to go with yet.  I’d like to paint most of the furniture in this space, and probably just white.  Not the cherry shelf though, it’s pretty nice as it is.  But the rest of the stuff… it would help to tie it in better and lighten the space.

That little desk in the first studio picture, that is a desk we got for Jessy’s room.  It’s going to be totally rehabbed and made upbeat and beautiful.  She has a beautiful armoire in her room that is that newer dark mocha stain color, almost a woody black.  We are going to string this desk, take off the dated hardware and stain it to match.  And then at Sauder outlet, we got matching brushed silver knobs that match her cabinet and it will really make this neat little desk match in her room nicely.  It’s a project that I hope we can get to pretty soon.  (So you can take it out of the picture, if you’d like!  haha…. it’s not going to be there forever.)

Going to keep an eye out for a nice big piece of vinyl or maybe short pile carpet for the middle space, and then perhaps, carpet in the sewing area.  Not totally sure yet.  Maggie’s woodworking area is going to get a little attention as well, but she has her space pretty nicely decked out.  She is gathering quite a nice stash of wood and materials for sure .

Doesn’t the ceilings in the alcove look lovely?  I can’t believe how much nicer it looks!  They still have to be mudded, sanded and painted, but still, they look fantastic as compared to the yucky exposed nasty old porch ceiling.

There is place a few towns away that is like a surplus junk shop and they have these lovely fabric bulletin boards for next to nothing.  Lots of them.  I guess they were going to be used for something that fell through.  So I think it would be neat to get a handful of them, maybe duct tape the backs together and then hang in the spaces, to protect the old paneling.  I hate to just pound nails and such into the walls, so this would be a nice way to use minimum nails and maximum surface to play with.  We can use the boards for project pictures, and just fun stuff and change it out often.  It can be used for quilting, so test out block patterns and such.  Going to at least try it in the sewing alcove right hand wall there.  I think by tying in the space with a uniform furniture color, that will help to make it a really fun an vibrant area to work in.  We’ll see!

I got this little box at a garage sale last summer and I wasn’t sure what to do with it, but for a buck, hey, it was going home.  And then I was thumbing through a magazine at the laundrymat and I saw the exact little box and it was filled with art supplies!  Neat!  So I did the same.  And I just adore it.  I added a little felt to the bottom to make it slide nice on the table and then started to fill it up.  I still have a little more space in it, but that’s the fun part… finding more things to add to it from our stash of craft supplies.  Seeing that there just makes me want to start drawing and fooling around!  And it’s nice to have a place for everything and everything in it’s place!

 

I think Maggie got the deal of the weekend!   A nearly new Delta scroll saw!  And for only $30!  It’s a much finer detail saw than her old Sears Craftsman model and a real deal.  She says she is going to set this one up with finer blades and use them both, one for bigger work and one for fine work.  Sounds cool to me.

The camera makes the room a little wonky in color, because it’s not that weirdly green…  but the living room is coming along nicely.  We actually hung up a few pictures this weekend with the help of brave Miss Julia!!!  (haha)  To be honest, it looked so nice in there after nearly a year of kinda creepy looking, that we have been a little afraid to start making holes and all.  Just wanted to make sure that we liked where and what we put up there.  Just being really picky I guess.  So we hung up our beloved old lithograph of Mary, leaving on Good Friday up the steps away from Calvary.  I love how the tan mat works with the nice sagey green.  We would like to put a fake fireplace mantel underneath that picture, on that wall.  But we’re still waiting to find the perfect one at the sweetest price on Craigslist!  You know us.

And that little wreath, it’s hard to see but there are these beautiful amber glass berries on it, and it’s just so delicate and pretty against our Craftsman style amber and black lights.  We also hung up a pair of black iron candle sconces with a pretty delicate leaf pattern on them, on the far side, but of course, I forgot to take a picture.  Maybe next time.  It’s starting to look more and more like a home.  That rocker we found on the curbside for free, it’s simply beautiful in style.  It needs a little good glueing and attention, but it’s not that bad.  You can sit in it and all.  Needs a cushion for the seat.  We will dress it up soon.  After we finish with Jessy’s desk, we will be working on this rocker.  In the meanwhile, the kitties like to snooze on it…  we just at a little throw on the seat for them.

I suppose it would nice to just have a big bucket of money to have the place all finished at once.  But I think we get a lot of satisfaction over spreading these little advancements out.  The house is very tolerable to live in at this point.  Are there still things we want to do?  Oh sure!  But then, even folks with finished homes feel the same way.  I just like when we get something major done, like the living room or the ceilings in the studio, it is just so wonderful.  We are so thankful to Jr. and Julia and their family for all their fine help!  We are pretty game to try a lot of things, but they are always ready to get right in there and guide us through some of the harder things that we’re not quite ready for!  I love that they are part of the new history of our wonderful home!!!

Got a really busy week ahead, so it might be a little sketchy in posts, but I will try and stay at it!  We are going to be playing at the Perrysburg French Quarters hotel at the Bluegrass in Super Class event on Friday!  Can’t wait… it’s an honor and a privilege to be the ONLY local band to be playing there with bluegrass superstars like Rhonda Vincent and others!  I just can’t wait!  So take care and enjoy this wonderful weather up this way!  I keep thinking that real spring is only a few months away…  2 months really!  60 days!!!   We can do it!

 

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WHAT a Day!

This was such a productive day, I can hardly believe it. And I didn’t take any pictures, it was such a busy day here at the homestead…

First off, Jr. and his crew came down to get started early on the drywall project for the weekend. Three more ceilings got finished off! The two alcoves in our “studio” (used to be the parlor but now it’s a creative studio space… and the ceiling in Jessy’s bedroom! I can’t believe the change.

Jessy’s ceiling was probably the worse, as we had a piece of plastic up, collecting the little dirt and bugs that came from the nasty ceiling above her bed! It was a good thing it was dark, because then you couldn’t see it all up there. I guess it was better than having it all fall on you, and the plastic did it’s job fine, but I’m still so glad it’s done! (And I think Jessy is much much happier!) It still needs to be either covered with some sort of ceiling tile or like tin tiles or mudded and painted. Going to wait and see what grabs her first.

And in the alcoves, oh my! So much nicer. And brighter! And whiter! And less dirty! Having raw exposed 100+ year ceilings is kind of yucky. You just can’t really keep the areas clean. Having drywall up there, it just makes the area look so much nicer. Still a bit of a work in progress, but we are definitely in stage 2 of the rehab process and it’s a HUGE step forward.

And then all the clean up and vacuuming and all, my gosh, it’s just amazing the transformation!!!

We had a 24 item to do list today. And I am happy to report that 22 of the items were accomplished in just one day!!!

Here’s what we accomplished!

Drywalled studio ceilings
Drywalled Jessy’s ceiling
Vacuumed the whole house!
Washed all the dishes
Sweep up the kitchen and dining room and mopped clean
Cleaned up the area where the corn stove was after the fire
Moved 4 big bags of pellets to the corn to return to TSC
Feed all the birds bread treats
Sorted out the freezers and set aside some meat to thaw
Hung pictures in the living room! (yeah! FInally!)
Moved straw bales to garden
Spread spent hay in the dog yard muddy spots
Toted a bale of hay to little coop
Toted a bale of hay to the big barn and spread
Toted a bale of hay to the pony barn
Made a hanging hay rack in the sheep shed out of an old hammock!
Toted a bale of hay out to the sheep
Hung Cody’s grain feeder in his barn
Put away the Holy Family
Went to the Dollar Store for a few items
Feed and Watered all the Livestock
Picked up all the house clutter
Cleaned the bathroom

Makes me tired thinking about it all! This week has been a hard week, the girls have been sick for it all, with Maggie finally feeling better and spending most of the day helping me out. Jessy is in the middle of it all, and still feeling a little puny… she helped most of the morning and finally crawled back in bed in the early afternoon and has been sleeping pretty much since then. Thank goodness, I still seem to be dodging their colds… I’ve been drinking a TON Of orange juice and just trying to keep up on my sleep and such, because I have a big big show next Friday with the band and I sure don’t want to be sick!!!

But, it’s been a hard week with all the stuff going on, and then me pretty much being the only ranch hand around the joint. Not that I’m complaining at all, in fact, I like the work for sure. But I do admit, I love working out there with Maggie, she’s my right hand farm gal buddy for sure! Jessy runs the house, she’s much more comfortable with the domestic chores inside and that’s great. She’s good at cooking and all, enjoys it. And she lends a hand outside, does good with her bunnies. But Maggie and I, we really do most of the outside chores. And I’ve missed her over the last week, outside, building and creating.

I thought out hay rack/net idea with the old hammock was just brilliant! I mean, what can you do with a weathered old hammock that one side is all ripped out of? I’m not sure why we saved it but we did. And now I know why! We cut off the broken strings, and reweaved a few back in and knotted it off good. And then we screwed it into the ceiling of the sheep shack. It’s high enough that they can comfortably wander below it, but just low enough on one end that they can reach up and nibble hay all night long. it’s holding a whole bale of hay up there, and we can easily take a flake or two off and stuff it in their little paddock hay manger that Maggie built each day when I let them loose in the morning. Pretty cool, if you ask me!

I get the biggest thrill out of fixing “systems” that are not working as well for us. Like the hay hammock. Before, we were toting hay out back every day from the garage, where we are storing it. Not a big deal, but still, on really cold mornings, it’s just hard work. I really would rather store the hay out in the big barn, but we don’t have a good system in place to keep it clean and ready. Ideally, it would be best to store hay in each animal area, like in the sheep shack or in the pony barn. But to do so, we need a safe way so that the animals don’t waste and soil it. So it felt great to get it solved in the sheep area, at the least.

In Cody’s barn, there is a old workbench, about 12 feet long or so, that runs along one wall in his huge stall. His area is 20 by 20 feet, and huge, so we left that bench as a sort of tool area, and a place to keep things from him! haha…. He’s too short to really reach up there.

We keep a bale of hay in there, pushed to the back of the bench, and then loose fluff hay near the front that he can reach and pull down to eat. It’s not super perfect, but it’s pretty good. I want to build a sort of tray, or shelf, in part of front of it, so that he can’t really reach the complete bale behind, but so that the loose hay will not just tumble down to the floor. In a perfect world, I think a piece of wire feild fence would be perfect! I’m thinking, we can attach it to a 2×4 and nail that low on his workbench legs. And then have the fence section come up and fasten to the ceiling with some wires or something, so that the loose hay just sort of lays in that wire net, so he can reach up and nibble through the holes. It would slow him down a bit, and keep from loosing so much hay on the ground. He’s pretty good at eating the hay he pulls off the bench, but still, he wastes a good portion as well.

Everytime we solve a problem and make things easier for us, that feels so cool! I love doing chores when it’s not a challenge. Everytime we start to curse something, whether it’s wasted hay or a door latch that is bad or something that just doesn’t seem to function properly, we try to let someone know and we brainstorm to fix it. I love that! I think sometimes we let drudgery into our lives by allowing little things to bug us day in and day out. The way that we do daily and repetative chores can affect our moods so easily! I want them to be simple and enjoyable.

So tomorrow’s list has two “fixes” on it… the latch on the little coop door is just not very good and is hard to fumble with and open. It’s going down!!! (gg) We’re going to make a new simple latch that will be safer and easier to work with.

And we need to make a longer feed trough for the sheep! I have this wonderful tuff rubber bucket but it’s too small for the seven sheepies! Especially now that the lambs are growing. When I feed them their sweet feed nightcap, there is way too much shoving and head butting going on. So I want to build something simple and longer so that there is more room at the table for everyone. I see the biggers girls are hogging all the groceries and that’s just not good. The younger ones need the warmth at night more and it’s just not something that I can separate them easily to insure everyone gets a fair shake. A longer trough will work perfectly! And I think I can make it with just a few boards from our pile of odd leftovers!

We’re also going to put up a new mailbox. We get a lot of little packages for the mail order business and we like to shop on Ebay. And I feel bad because our existing mailbox is really small. And rusty. Rather old and spent to be honest. And our mail lady has to get out of her jeep and come up to the house to deliver a lot of them. So we bought a nice big deep and tall mailbox!!! I told her and she was so sweet and thankful! Of course, she doesn’t mind delivering them but I thought, it’s not a good system for us… and might make her a little resentful when it’s super cold or raining or nasty out. And it slows her down. So, I’m about to go and paint our name on it, and our house number nice and big and tomorrow we will install it!!! I can’t wait. And we are going to take the old one and put it in the garden area to hold some hand tools! I love that idea.

We had a livestock death on Thursday… our black copper Marans rooster, Dammartin, died. He was doing a little poorly, just seemed weak and not too with it, the day before. I gave him some extra TLC, and a good check over, but I’m not sure what actually was his demise, however, I suspect that he had something stuck in his croup. I tried to feel it, and massage the area, consulted my books and all, but in the end, he passed away quietly in the morning. It’s part of farming… when you have livestock, you have deadstock. Part of the problem is that many of these animals will hide their illness from you until it’s pretty much too late. You just can’t give every single bird a complete checkup each and every day. You can assess their overall health when you feed and water and you do sort of get a sense of who is feeling good and who is not by watching their behaviors. I noticed he was looking a little disheveled, and he was normally a very tidy bird. And then the next day, he was weak, and I was able to just reach down and pick him up, which I knew was not normal. Usually I can catch all our birds, but it’s a little bit of a chicken rodeo event. There are only a few hens that you can just “pick up” and they are birds we raised from chicks and are comfy with that. Dammartin, he was from another farm and not that thrilled to be picked up. So when I could just reach down and catch him, I knew that he was not feeling up to his best.

I wondered too, if perhaps there were too many chickens in the little coop, especially now with the winter here and they are spending a lot of time inside. I know by “government” standards, they had four times as much space as required, but still, roosters are weird… they like to give their ladies first fill at the buffet and they have been cooped up a bit more than normal with the cold. COuld he have been going without some, so that his ladies could eat more? Well, I decided to remove 4 hens from the flock, so that there are only 12 birds in there now. I took out the non-Marans hens and they will join the free range flock. So now, we just have Silver, our home raised son of Bucka in there with the 10 hens and Turkey Girl. The four non-Marans went out to the big barn holding pen where they will live for a few days to acclimate them to their new home. I’ll probably let them out early next week. Putting them in there lets the other hens get used to them without fighting. And they learn where their new roost is for the night. I hope this will help to level out the flocks a little bit.

Well, I’ll take some photos tomorrow and maybe even a little winter video! I’ve been thinking that it would be fun to videotape Cody and the sheep…

The weather has been FANTASTIC… my gosh, we even turned off all the heaters today for nearly the whole day! The house was nice and warm. And apparently, we have another four or five days of nice sunshine and weather forecasted! I can hardly believe this is the middle of January. I hope to get my first straw bale raised bed started tomorrow. We got all the bales over to the garden area today, just have to play around and see how best they arrange. Start filling them with compost and organic matter! Can’t wait! Gardening in mid winter, who knew?

Well, I think it’s time to sign off and get a little shut eye before the next exciting day here. I just love when we have these great big productive weekends… it really makes our to do list shrink and the personal satisfaction of a job well done sink in good. It feels fantastic to have sore legs and a contentedly worked set of muscles! And it’s always awesome to have some great friends and two awesome daughters to join in and make the day fly by!!!

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