Friday, April 29, 2016

Cupid's Kids!

And so lambing and kidding season comes to an end, finally! Cupid was the final animal we were waiting on and lord, did we wait!

According to the kidding calculator I use, Cupid was expected to have her kids on April 19th. Instead she had them a full 10 days later. Last time we breed her she had her kids just about as early as possible. Apparently Randy and Cupid took their time this time, but at last we have a couple cute kids to show for it.

And this time we didn't sleep through it!

Last night Keith woke me up at about 12:30am with news that Cupid was kidding. He got out to the barn before I did, there he saw one kid already born and another on the way out. Clearly Cupid doesn't really need us there. I got out there with all our kidding supplies and started cleaning off the first kid while Cupid was tending to the second one that had just been born.

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If you had asked me to put money on what Cupid was going to have this year, I would have said one giant boy. We really wanted her to have a girl to add to the De Young Dairy, but Cupid is a mean, spiteful bitch (that I love) I just knew she wouldn't have a girl because I wanted one so badly. Thankfully, I was wrong (as I always seem to be!).

Cupid did have a giant boy, but she also had a little girl!

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And I mean giant! Picking them up, he clearly weighs almost double what she weighs and is so much taller than her. But she is still the star of the show.

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I'm thinking I will name her Gilda. Last night I was leaning towards Bonnie, since she's such a pretty little thing, but seeing her again in the morning, with the little bit of gold around her eyes and hamming it up for the camera at less than 12 hours old, Gilda seems right.

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Who knows how her coloring will change in a few months. I would have never thought Ruby would go from brown and black to reddish or that all white Snowy would end up half black after just a few months. I'm just so excited and relieved that she actually had a girl!

And yes, the boy is very cute, with his little black and white waddles and his sweet little face, but no, I haven't named him and I'm not sure that I will. I'll be looking for a new home for him as soon as we can wean him, so in about 8 weeks. Better not to get to attached.

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Finally milking will start in 2 weeks and I can't wait. Milking Margo and Cupid once a day, I expect to get about gallon to a gallon and half a day. When we switch to twice a day, I think it will be more like 2 gallons, but only time will tell!

Time to go back to the barn and snuggle some babies!

Sunday, April 24, 2016

A Day of Many Margos

Yesterday our flock of sheep grew by 4 and they are essentially Margo's. What the hell do I mean by that!

We had been looking to double our dairy sheep flock, going from one Margo to two. That is easier said that done. No one that I know of around here has dairy sheep, so I settle in, combing through Craigslist ads to find what we're looking for.

Our options were very limited. We could either drive 5 hours one way north or 5 hours west to get exactly what we were looking for (just one dairy sheep) or we could drive 3 hours east for something that's not exactly perfect. Yesterday we went east and came home with 2 more Margos.

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These ladies are both a year and half old, have never been breed, which means they've never been milked and that they are kind of a risky investment. But they're young and while they are a little skittish, don't seem to really mind me that much. They've also been through a lot, surviving a wild fire last summer together, which is why their owner did not want them separated.

Right now they are in a pen together, away from the rest of the animals. I've been going in their pen today trying to hand feed them chow (they are NOT into eating that!) and petting them. They like to be scratched on the face and top of the head, just like Margo does, so hopefully I'll win this pair over soon.

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So how did we end up with even more sheep yesterday? Margo had her lambs without us!

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Margo had been acting like she might go into labor on Friday night, but Saturday morning there were no babies and we had told the leader of the hippy commune we were buying the sheep from that we'd be there by 2. We had to go.

Pretty much none of our friends know enough about animals for me to feel like I could ask them to check on my sheep that might be in labor, so I just hoped for the best and prepared for the worst. When we got home Margo and her twins were healthy and happy in the pasture. Last year, before we got Margo, she had a still born lamb and I was very nervous about her delivery this year, but she didn't need us at all!

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I'm guessing she had them between noon and 3. When we got home at 6 the lambs were cleaned off, dry, feeding, and walking around-just like they should be! She had a boy and girl, bringing our count to 6 boys and 2 girls.

These two are the cutest lambs we've ever had. They're a weird mix of Margo who is wooly and their dad, who is a hair sheep. The girl is a tall and skinny clone of Margo and the most snuggly lamb ever.

We only have Cupid left to have her kid(s), then the real work of daily milking starts.

Tuesday, April 19, 2016

Spring: bees and lambs!

This is our third year lambing and just like the past years, nothing went as expected.

Ginger, Coco, Lulu. That was the order I thought the girls would go and I only got the first one right. Ginger had her babies on the exact day we expected them-right on time! She needed a little help with her first lamb, but she took care of the second one on her own. And what cute twins!

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Then we had to wait a solid seven days for the next lamb. It wasn't giant Coco, but little Lulu. Keith was home for this one and we helped little Lulu deliver her one big boy lamb. Lu dotes on her one cutie.

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8 long days passed while we waited for Coco to finally lamb. A friend who raises sheep stopped by and was certain that Coco was carrying triplets, but with Coco being so huge, how could you tell?! Well she was right and we slept right through it. At least I have an excuse called a terrible cold combined with codeine cough syrup. I'm guessing she lambed around 3am and just popped out 3 little black and white lambs. You are amazing, Coco!

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This brings our lamb total to 6, with 5 boys and 1 girl, which is weird. Of course this is the year we hoped to keep a girl from Lulu, but only Coco had a girl. We are also hoping to keep a girl from Cupid, but who knows what is going to happen. We still have Margo and Cupid left to have babies and that should be this weekend, so we should find out soon.

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And while we're doing all of our normal lambing/kidding stuff, it is also time to add bees! Keith surprised me with a Flow Hive this Christmas. A friend and I are taking a class through Oregon State University Extension office, where we are getting hands on bee experience along with nucs to set up our own hives. We got our nucs on Sunday night and I set them up in our hive on Monday.

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Like any other animal, you have to feed and water the bees. The green box on top of the brood box is full of sugar water to feed the bees until spring finally kicks into gear here. Just about everyone in our class told us not to expect honey this year, and really I have no idea why. My plan is to feed and water the bees, but the Flow super on in a few weeks and hope for the best. I guess only time will tell!

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Saturday, February 20, 2016

Exploring the Baja, one margarita at a time!

I know Keith and I were excited to go to Mexico, but neither of us really knew what to expect. Yes, we'd read the books and chatted with friends, but you still never really know. I just wanted to get as much sun as possible in hopes that it would keep me warn until summer.

Back in August we bid on and won a 10 day stay in a casita in Los Barriles, a small town on the Sea of Cortez on the Baja peninsula. It was donated by Chris and Christina Geyer, former Wallowa county residents and their casita has become a home away from home for a number of Wallowa county residents. They were fantastic hosts, with loads of advice and cerveza and they put up with us disappearing for days at a time. And there were so many places to go!

We started off by catching the last day of Carnaval in La Paz, about an hour and half from where we were staying. The last parade night was Tuesday night and we were lucky to catch it. Fat Tuesday was a very literal description of the night, with booths serving piles of savory tacos, delicious gorditas and the most beautiful candy displays you've ever seen and so much more. Not surprisingly, we ate as much as possible!

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The floats in the parade were amazing. Carnaval meets Roman gods seemed to be the theme. I won't bore you with all the floats, just the best ones!

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We stayed in La Paz the next day for a kayak/snorkel trip that we caught last minute. While the kayaking was for an incredibly short amount of time, we did get to see dolphins and whales, swim with some sea lions.

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From there we used Los Barriles as home base, seeing as much of the Baja peninsula as we could. We made it to Cabo Pulmo, a beautiful national park with great snorkeling, mostly empty beaches, and a restaurant that served amazing squid and shrimp tacos. We made it here 2 days and I know we could (and hopefully will) spend more time there in the future! Keith even saw a sea turtle while snorkeling!

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We made it to two hot springs in one day. El Chorro was a bit of a surprise. It was crowded when we got there, so Keith went for a short hike and I hung out and read. By the time he got back, the place had cleared out and we got in the little rock pool that was warmer and then I freaking lost it! As soon as we got in there I felt this weird tickling on my back. I was being eaten by fishes! While Keith was totally fine this, I could not handle it for the life of me! I was laughing so hard at how ticklish this was I just about fell out of the pool.

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There was also a side trip to Todos Santos, a cute place with a bunch of at galleries, delicious margaritas and where we got to see a few not even a day old baby turtles that were going to released into the sea later that day. And a day or so lounging on the quiet beaches of Punta Pescadero.

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There was so much more than this and still so much more to do. I really hope we go back, actually I'm sure that we will! Next time, hopefully we'll have more time and our own sea kayaks!

Thursday, January 28, 2016

Fresh out of milk

Today is such a weird day. Today is the last day I have to milk until May.

Since Cupid was in milk in July of 2014, the longest I've gone without milking was when we were in Thailand for 3 weeks. I milked Cupid right up until I started milking Frannie this season, then for a while was milking both Frannie and Margo. Now Margo is long dry and looking super pregnant and Frannie has been producing less and less, so I have been drying her off for the past few weeks. How do you dry up a goat in milk? For a week or so I milked her every other day, then every third day, then every fourth day, today was 5 days since I last milked her and this is how much milk I got:

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She's not exactly the super producing beast that Cupid is, but she's been a good milker this season. Next time I milk her, I will hopefully be milking both Frannie and her little doe Ruby, who will of course be full grown by next fall. She's still kinda small, but true to her name, Ruby's coat is turning a little red!

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As long as she has enough food, she is a super easy milker. This morning she may have gotten a little extra, since it was her last time and all...but still there is never enough!

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And then there's all the prego or hopefully pregnant ladies. For me, the most important ones are Cupid and Margo...and Snowy. It's always hard to tell if the ladies have been successfully breed and Margo's wool coat doesn't make it any easier, but she is looking larger than usual. I really hope she's got a couple of goofy, big eared lambs in there! Cupid on the other hand doesn't look pregnant at all, but she hasn't gone back into heat for a long time, so I'm guessing she is. She is also always trying to beg for more food or sneak into the milk stall for chow, so with all the extra snacks I'm giving her, she better be breed! With Margo and Cupid in milk this season, I will hopefully be getting about 2 gallons a day! Think of all the cheese! Snowy is our wild card, I'll keep my eye on her, but I'm not expecting kids from her.

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give me peanuts!

Then there's the rest of the sheep. They are looking huge! The earliest they could lamb is the end of March/beginning of April, so we've still got a few months, but good lord, they are wide. It seems like no amount of food is enough and they've even been kicking the goats out of the barn to eat all their hay. Every morning I go out to the barn, the sheep try so hard to convince me that Keith has not feed them earlier that morning. The big eyes, the sad bleeting...these ladies are just a bunch of con artists!

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Life is going to be pretty quiet here until March or so. It's nice to have a bit of a break, but I can't wait until we have loads of kids and lambs running around the pasture again and a fridge full of fresh milk!

Tuesday, December 1, 2015

The Words of House Turkey: Thanksgiving IS coming

**Be aware that there are some turkey slaughter pictures in this post, please proceed with caution!**

Also, I'm both reading and watching Game of Thrones...can you tell?

The turkeys have come and gone. They started out cute, got really annoying, then thankfully got too big to escape, and finally were delicious!

I'm not sure if raising them is something we will do again. Actually, all summer I've been saying 'Never again!' but now that they are gone, it really wasn't that bad...was it? At least we would know what we were getting into (maybe?). I have to remember that I did not have a corn harvest this year because the turkeys and a couple rouge chickens escaped to eat three rounds of corn sprouts...we would have to me much better prepared next year, so I don't spend a summer yelling 'Off with their heads!'

I would much rather raise a couple pigs-they take about the same amount of time to raise and space, albeit with a lot more food, but in the end you get bacon. Figuring out the space to raise both pigs and turkeys would take some doing, but maybe it'll be something we can figure out....we'll see what I get talked into next year

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We originally planned to raise the turkeys in the pasture, as with everything, that was easier said than done. They would escape and eat all my corn sprouts, roost all over the place, it would take forever to get them back in their pen at night, and while they were out exploring, the sheep would eat all their food. Ok, so plan B.

We ended up using about twice as much netting as I thought we would need to keep those wily beasts locked in. Every time I would think I had them on lock, one would escape out of a tiny gap (that is now a giant hole) and greet me on the wrong side of the fence. Using even more netting, they were on permanent lock down and they just kept getting bigger!

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Finally turkey dead day was upon us. Seven of the eight turkey chicks we raised made it all the way to the end, but were they big enough?! Yes, the toms, with their feathers all puffed out looked huge. And yes, I usually referred to them as the velociraptors instead of turkeys, but still we haven't done this before and I was weirdly anxious about this! We had all these people ready to help, paying a lot of money for turkeys-did I do part part of the job good enough?

Turkeys last morning

Yes, I did! They weighted between 20-40 pounds. The three hens ranged from 20-25 pounds, while the toms ranged 34-40 pounds-YAY!

Turkeys!
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In general, we had a great crew all working together on Dead Day. The amount of people willing to help slaughter turkeys on a cold November morning blew me away.

For me this was the best dead day ever, mostly because I didn't really have to do anything but organize, delegate, and help folks find our bathroom-not hard work! With so many people there to help, we decided it was the perfect day to get rid of some ducks too. You may remember my post about all the ducklings-it turned out that most of them were male and they had to go. They were so tiny after dealing with turkeys! It turned into a buy a turkey, get a duck free morning! I'm so happy we won't be feeding those little beasts all winter!

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But let's get to the good stuff! Thanksgiving!! We got our 40 pounder in the brine as soon as everyone left, but not before we reenacted last years picture!

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Our thanksgiving dinner just kept getting bigger and bigger, it felt a little like the whole county was coming and we just kept saying yes when folks asked if we still had room. With 19 people coming, it was a bring your own chair kinda party. The turkey took a little more time than I hoped, but was still delicious!

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Keith is fairly certain that we could have a few more people next year, I guess we'll see! But does that mean we have to raise turkeys again, to make sure we have one big enough?

Hope you all had a happy Thanksgiving!

Wednesday, October 14, 2015

More advances in Milking and Barn management

Sometimes there are just so many things going on here, it's hard to pick just one thing to focus a blog post on. We've got harvesting going on right now and everything that goes with is, breeding sheep and goats very soon, slaughtering lambs even before that, plus the same old everyday chores like milking and keeping all the animals fed and watered.

And, I'm always looking ahead to the next season. As a prisoner of the moment, it's easy to say that fall feels like the busiest season, but really it's spring. Lambing, kidding, preping and and planting the garden and greenhouse, milking potentially more animals than the year before and things I'm probably forgetting because I don't want to think of them right now. I'm always trying to think of a way to make that part of life run a little smoother.

Since we will be breeding 4 ewes-1 more than last year and 2 goats-the same a last year (more on that later), I wanted to reconfigure our barn into more separate pens to accommodate all the moms and lambs/kids. Our barn was set up for 2 horses to each have a big stall, not a bunch of small livestock having a bunch of offspring each year, but now it is!

Before Keith's dad got here, I demolished the wall between the 2 stalls to get the job going, I just didn't see it going as far as it did!

This is the new outside of the barn. We enclosed the space where the white boards are to give me more space, and of course the new fence was also being completed during all of this so there is a sturdy new gate to lock the chickens in (most of the time)!

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So, let go in the barn, shall we!

There are now 4 separate stalls in the barn that will be used for any number of things depending on what time of year it is. Right now I'm using 3 of them, one for each goat to have to herself at night, but that will change in April/May when Margo, Cupid and (probably not) Snowy will have kids/lambs and be in milk.

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I was just hoping that while Keith's dad was here we could get the new smaller stalls built, but somehow that didn't take as long as I thought it would, so more projects were added!

A new milking room! A new milk stand! At the moment, this is the biggest change for me and I love it everyday!

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This used to be the outside of the barn, now it's my double milk stall. The morning after it was built, I popped Frannie and Margo up there and milked them both at the same time! It took a few more mornings to work all the kinks out, but now all three of us are used to it! I can't wait until next year! Cupid will be putting out her usual gallon or 1 1/2 gallon of milk a day, then Margo should give more that this seasons 2 quarts because it will be her second time in milk. But didn't you say you're going to breed Snowy too-what about her? you ask...

oh Snowy. I had a talk to the vet about her. He said that since we exposed her last year and she didn't have kids, there's a good chance she can't have kids. Either they can do some expensive tests to find out or we can just put her back out with Randy again this year. So, we'll try to breed her again, expecting her not to actually reproduce. After that it's figuring out what to do with a milk goat that will never be in milk-I'm thinking of training her to be a pack goat, but we'll see.

And did you notice the kittens in the background? Those are sisters Blue and Brie. Hopefully they will be good mousers, but for now that are good milkers, helping lap up any milk that ends on the milk stall in the morning. Blue is patiently waiting on Margo's side of the stall for a taste!

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And while Blue is waiting for milk, Brie is getting all the snuggles from Bear and BJ!

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And I mentioned the fence! Our fence it finished! Since it's goat proof, I've got to imagine it's zombie proof too! I love how open it feels now, I can so easily see into the garden or the animal pens.

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I love that Keith's buck antlers got remounted to our classy new gate! I'm trying to think of a name for what feels like my new garden...so far all I can think of are prison references-any other suggestions?

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