New Angora Goats!

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Last year, we sold off some of our fiber animals to make room for new ones.  Perhaps that sounds a little odd, but basically, we carefully evaluated the animals we had to consider the needs we had for fiber and lamb sales.  And by all accounts, we made some really good choices.  In fact, I plan to retain all but one of our lambs this year.  One of the ram lambs is going to a friend’s to be a stud boy!  Can’t be happier with that.  And the remaining lambs are all so beautiful and just the right types and colors of wool for our needs.

However, with just a pair of Angora goats, our supply of mohair fleece ran out so fast!  And it’s nearly triple the value of the Shetlands and other sheep.  So it made very good sense to consider adding more Angoras to our herd.  A good friend, Jess, she breeds and has a lovely herd of goats and through some trading and services and such, we struck a deal for a lovely pair of goats!  Colored Angoras!   A pale brown and a pale gray!

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Jess brought them over in her truck and we introduced them one at a time to the flock.  Surprisingly, the sheep were not interested.  They watched from afar, but it was like they knew those horned things were not their kind and they just were not going to get into the fray.  Now, Buttercup?  She knew right away that she had to act quickly and defend her crown as Queen of Windhaven.  And she got right to it!

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The first goat is a doe named officially Hersey.  However, her nickname is Lefty because her left horn is stunted and growing a little weirdly.  Left and Buttercup were right away into the breech, working out who was who.  We were waiting to see who might emerge as the herd queen because Lefty was a bit of a bully at the old homeplace!   But then she also was part of a pack of mean girls and now, being a single, things might be a little different.  And they were.  Buttercup is the diva queen supreme here and she bristled up her back hair and was relentless.  Just in her face and head butting, never giving her a moment to look around.  Rana and Refeka were just curious, they already know their place in the herd!

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As soon as Lefty gave in and lowered her head and her gaze, Buttercup walked away triumphantly and gave her some release to look around and meet the other inmates.  It was so cool to watch the interactions take place.  She has such beautiful fiber, I can’t wait to spin some in the fall!

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Now, this is Sam.  Uncle Sam.   He is a fixed boy and just as pretty as could be!  I love his handsome face!  He is one pretty boy.  He was not too thrilled about being in the truck or being away from his old home, and he was being a little stubborn!   But we managed to get him out and back to the paddock.  Poor Buttercup!  Another suitor?  Another goat to have to subdue and make her minion?  She went right to work!  DSC_0493 DSC_0496

Pretty quick, Sam figured out who was the head diva queen.  He tried a little head butting, but then Buttercup just reached over and bit his ear.  She does that all the time.   I think it’s a bit of long ear envy on her part.  Or perhaps she just knows that it’s a tender spot.  But pretty quickly she had him crying “uncle” and he lowered his head and gave in to her rank.

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I think this picture above is so funny!  Buttercup is walking away triumphantly, with her boy Rafeka at her side.  I can just hear him babbling about the newcomers and how they are evil and mean and not to trust them!  Just like a good snidely henchman should be!

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But then Rafeka had to go and make friends with Jess.  He loves her!  Haha…   he was just her best buddy and she knew all the good spots to make him just melt.   He is such a big love baby!

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Very quickly, Sam and Lefty were accepted into the flock and were out grazing and then sharing a bale of hay with the sheep people.  All is good in Windhaven.  They really did settle in nicely.  Jess did a great job of picking just the right temperament of goat to work with our needs!  She rocks!

Now, we’ve been asked a couple times already, do we plan to breed Angoras.  Well, right now, now.  We haven’t had the best of luck with breeding goats.  They just seem to be harder!  Problems with delivery, problems with baby rejection and such.  What is nice is leaving that to the breeders and just getting young adult animals without any difficulties!  Maybe someday, but right now, no, not on the schedule.  Besides, we don’t have an Angora buck!  Maybe someday!

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A photo op with Henrick, one of our Icelandic bottle lambs!  They are growing like weeds!  Doing very well, so happy!  They are so cute…

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Jess is a weaver and she sold me my first big rug loom and taught me how to get going again!  So she brought me some weaving goodies!  How exciting.  A box of funky colored fingerless glove scraps to cut into rug weft and then a whole big batch of thin yarns on spools for finer weaving!  Can’t wait to play with it all!

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Luna was hanging out, napping on the loom!  Bad kitty!   I try and discourage that because they leave little kitty butt imprints in the rugs!  She got shooed off right away!   Goof ball!

We hung out for a while, chatting and talking goat and weaving shop!  Isn’t it delightful when you have friends in the same things you like to do?  I think it’s lovely.  And she lives about an hour and a half from me, so we talk a lot online, but don’t always get a chance to get together, so this was a treat!   We went out for lunch and then hit a couple garage sales on the way back!  I got a neat chime clock for $7 and the best deal?  A brand new dehydrator for $2!!  Yes, two dollars!!!   I can’t wait to give that baby a spin!  It looks brand new.  The lady said she didn’t think it was every used.  Well, I can’t wait to give it a spin!  I love apple chips!  And veggies… and oh boy!

What a lovely day!  New goats, some weaving treats and lunch with a friend and garage saling!  Just about a perfect day, let me tell you!

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And I found some lovely hand wovens for just $3!!!   I think they are from that lady that wove in our area!  Some of the same looking patterns and such that she liked to do!  How exciting.  I wish I could learn more about her.  I’d love to know her name and such…  Maybe some day!

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Bugs, Bugs, Bugs!

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As you might have read or heard, we were overrun with rain and bugs this early summer.  The whole area was just wet, wet, wet.   And as a results we have weeds, bugs and more bugs.  It was awful!  Just walking outside meant that you were immediately bug bait for every mosquito for miles around!  It was awful.   This was the first time we EVER had to get bug spray and really coat ourselves!  I had to get spray for the horses and sheep and give them a little relief.  It was bad bad bad.

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We let all the hoofies into the dog yard to do a little clean up and I just thought they were so pretty out there.  I had to go and take some pictures.  Well, a zillion and one bug bites later, I did get some nice pictures, however, I think I itched all night long!

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All our spring lambs are growing up so nice and pretty.  Such beautiful fiber and such lovely lambs!   We are keeping all but one ram lamb who is going on to be a little stud ram!  I love that we are keeping this year’s babies.  They are all so beautiful.

That brown ram lamb is Basil, he is Emma’s son.  He is a beautiful little boy!   He’s going soon to get his boy parts ah, removed.  We really don’t need rams and he will make a lovely little whether. I hope that he retains his brown color!  I just love brown fleece for some reason.

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A strange looking sheep, eh?  This is Dammartin.  He’s a French Wheaten Marans rooster.  I just love my roosters and he is a lovely boy.  Very sweet tempered.  I love the Marans for this reason!

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Huldar and Henrick followed me out to take pictures, but really just because they thought they might get a bottle for their effort.   They are still not quite part of the flock, because they are still under observation and all, but I do take them out for little walks near the flock, just so they can see them and know that they will one day be part of that gang.

The minute I started to head for the screen porch, off they ran!  They know that the screen porch means food.  But when I stopped to watch the others, they come running back and got all puffy and indignant.

FOOD LADY, get your butt over here now!

They are not the sweet little cuddle buckets that our Shetlands are.   They are Norse sheep with attitudes.  They are not cuddly.  And they bellow loud enough to wake the dead!   It’s funny to learn and experience the difference in these chaps with other sheep.  They are so cute!

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Yes, hard to be tough Viking lads when you are still on the baby bottle.  They are five weeks old now!  Another three weeks on full bottle strength and then we will begin to taper them off a bit.  Usually over a few weeks.  We will probably go down to less ounces, three times a day and then eventually twice a day and so on.  Add a bit more water to their milk, things like that.  Most sheep are naturally weaned off their mothers around 8 to 10 weeks anyway, as we have seen.  They are doing good grazing and enjoying a little grain and sweet feed.   They are growing like weeds!

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Bonnie is rooing her fleece!  It’s so weird to see and she doesn’t want anyone fooling with it.  She is a weird lady.  We think she is some Suffolk and then possibly a bit of hair sheep?  She just has the weirdest fleece.   We didn’t shear her this year because she was heavy with twins and just so nervous about the whole situation.   We just felt it was best for her to wait till fall to be sheared with the goats.  But I guess she has second thoughts.

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This is Fennel.  He is so pretty.  He’s going to be a cream colored Shetland, but still, he’s got the prettiest little face and eyes and his fleece is tingued with baby brown.  He’s a sweetheart.  A perfect ramling if you ask me.   He’s not real pushy and I think he will be an excellent herd sire.  We shall see!

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This is Miss Laurel.  One of Bonnie’s sweet little daughters.   She is growing a very lovely soft little baby fleece.  I’m thankful that she is showing more of her Shetland daddy’s fiber than her mother’s odd stuff.  These twins are staying here and it would be nice if they can help out with the feed bill by growing some lovely fleece!  :-)

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My two little light Brahma hens…  well, they are pullets right now, still growing.  I think they are so pretty with their fluffy leg feathers!   The little Rhode Island Red is one of the six chicks we got in the spring.   I don’t think they are laying yet, but soon!  They all grew up nice and lovely.

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Emma says, take a picture of my boy!   He’s so handsome…  I want to put it on the fireplace mantle!   Stand up tall, Basil, my boy!

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Uncle Angus has the itchies.  They all like to rub on the slab wood fence.  I want to find a few old brooms and make a itchy station for everyone.   Been watching at garage sales and such…  Wouldn’t it be wonderful to find some old bristles from a car wash!!!   Oh my gosh, the ponies, everyone would be so happy and never stop itching and scratching on those!

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Say CHEESE!  Haha… Shadow shows off his pretty teeth.  He is a such a funny pony.  He is very sweet and a nice boy.

 

 

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Cody and Shadow having a little talk…

Probably discussing my lack of snacks for ponies today.

 

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The pigs are all doing fantastic!  We haven’t lost a single baby.  My two sow girls are such good moms!  Of course, in all that mud, it would be easy to misplace one, don’t you think?

They are so good at enjoying their mud wallow.  They all love to lay in it and then after it all dries hard on their skin, they go and rub all over the side of the building or just lay on the hard grown and itch and rub.  Feels good!

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Only a face a mother could love, eh?  Happy hogs!

Ebony’s litter is just about close to new home day…  another week!   She is ready for them to stop nursing, that is for sure.   She has taken to laying down on her teats…  sitting rather like a hog Spinx.  It’s her way of telling them to get lost.  No chow.  They try to nurse, pushing and shoving on her but eventually she will bite at them and make them squeal!  She doesn’t hurt them, she is just telling them to find something else to do!   I suspect they are growing sharp little teeth and she is done with the whole mom thing for now!   At least until late October!

Cheyenne is still happy to feed her crew as they are about two weeks after Ebony’s bunch.   She has done very well as a first time mom.  All seven babies are fit and trim, growing like weeds!  We have one of her babies spoken for, but I suspect when they get closer and we announce their availability, they will go quickly too!   So far, we haven’t been able to keep any of our babies, they are in big demand!   That is great!  We just love these American Guinea Hogs…  wonderful homestead hogs!

 

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The July Decluttering Challenge Wrap Up!

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If you’ve been following the blog, you know that in July, I took on the Freedom from Clutter Challenge…  and I need to report what happened!

I was super good in the beginning, like we all can be.  Every day, I found my four items and it was wonderful.  I took several loads over to the free store and the place was really lightening up!  At first it was EASY!  There were so many little things that I was kinda holding on to and yet really didn’t want…  knick knacks, books, etc.  Easy!

However, by the first ten days or so, and 40+ items gone… it got a little harder.  I found myself slipping a bit.  I would miss a day, but I would make it up, 8 items, 12 items…

It was a bit more of challenge.  Just was.  I have been working at decluttering my life for years now.  Honestly, easily over 8 years.  I have just been at it for ever it seems.  And I finally feel like I have reached a good stopping point!  I am so thrilled.  I made it up until the last week.  The last load went over and it was a wee bit shy of the total 124 items.  I made it to 115.

I think I could have perhaps found a few more things but I decided, that enough was enough.  When I look around the house, I see clean, clear, no clutter.   It feels fantastic.   Even the girls were amazed.   Of course, they have their own spaces and they can be a little ah, cluttered… but hopefully seeing the rest of the house, they will be inspired to finish up and get to a very happy point.

Now, this doesn’t mean that I don’t have anything around.  Or that my living space is spartan and empty.  Nope.  Still got the stuff that means something to me.   But the nice thing is that it ALL MEANS SOMETHING to me!  It does!  Sure there are a few things that I wouldn’t be going after in a fire.  But right now, I am enjoying them.   And I have really made some awesome strides in personal papers and memorabilia.  That was a huge area that really benefited from this challenge.  My box system seems to really be working.   I still have about a dozen boxes from the storage room to go through, but I want to take those easily, comfortably.  A trip down memory lane in a cool fall day with a cup of tea and a free afternoon.  I feel I can cut those in half, just sorting out the fluff and keeping to good stuff.

One of my goals for the coming winter is to get back into scrapbooking.  And genealogy.  They seem to go hand in hand…  I love both.  Once I get the rest of my dozen boxes sorted down, then I can start to see what I have and how best to store and display it.   I do know that I want to start scanning things…  documents and papers and such.  But I do want to research how to do it, that makes sense.  How it can be easily stored in a sort of accessible library.  I want a rhyme and reason to the files and folders once finished.  That will require a little bit of forethought and some ideas.

Well, in the end, I think it was a remarkable challenge and I’m very excited that I did it.   It was not that hard, really, 4 items a day is not too hard if you have the desire.   I liked that it was not some huge undertaking, a massive purge and such that messes up your house and is likely to make you a bit crazy.  Usually, it just took me a few minutes to go around and pick out the victims of the day!  My box would fill up pretty fast!  Towards the end, yes, it was getting tough.  However, that was mainly due to this challenge being the final end of my long journey!

Please give it a try!   Doesn’t have to be July…  it can be any month!  Just 4 a day.  Or 2 a day, whatever works for you.  It does feel good.  It does!

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