Monday, December 14, 2009
Tuesday, May 26, 2009
Late Spring = Busy!
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Outside is where the big things have been going on. Ryan has been working hard to get our fence built, so we can get our grown turkeys and laying hens out on pasture, and hopefully get a couple of calves for beef by next spring.
Right now he has all of the steel t-posts in the ground, and only has 7 more wooden corner posts to get in before he can start stretching the woven wire fencing. This past Saturday, Ryan and his brother worked to get the beginnings of our new poultry shed going, so hopefully we'll have a much larger place to house our 2 adult turkeys, 5 laying hens, 1 rooster, 4 turkey poults, and 25 meat chicks.
As you can tell from my listing above, we are practically overrun with poultry right now. We acquired 4 turkey poults the 2nd of May, in case the eggs Esmerelda was sitting on didn't hatch. That turned out to be a good thing, evidentally first time turkey mothers aren't always successful. She ended up breaking most of her eggs, and is now sitting on 9 chicken eggs, none of which are broken. She seems to have gotten the hang of brooding now, we just wish it were turkey eggs instead. 
The 25 chicks, well we just decided that since we were growing so much of our vegetables, we try growing some of our everyday meat too. We ordered the chicks through a hatchery, a deal called picturesquely the "Frypan Special", 25 assorted heavy (read old-fashioned)breed chicks, straight run (both male and female) for $17.00. These breeds take a little bit longer to fatten up, but unlike the more modern Cornish-cross meat birds, they tend to be sturdier and better foragers. And if a few turn out to be breeds we like, we can keep them into adulthood, without worrying that at 10 weeks of age they will get too fat to walk or do much of anything besides eat. And we will be watching the young roosters closely in hopes observing a future flock leader.
Our current rooster, which we were so excited to get after losing our last one to the neighbor's dog, has turned out to be mean and a pathetic flock leader. What makes a good rooster? A pleasant crow, docility in relation to humans, gentleness with hens, unselfishness, i.e. he will hurriedly check out any food thrown into the pen, and then dole it out to all of his ladies instead of gobbling it up himself. But I digress . . .
Other things going on . . . we have almost everything planted in the garden. Early crops are growing strong: potatoes, onions, spinach, peas, and radishes are green and leafy.
We have just put tomatoes and peppers out in the last two weeks. They are recovering from transplant shock well, and are actually starting to grow. Everything else we depend on to sprout from seed, and when it doesn't, we plant it again.
Sunday, April 26, 2009
Spring is here!
Yesterday, Ryan and Sarah's Dad installed the laminate floor in the living room. It went pretty smoothly except for the starting point and ending points which required some
shimming, and cutting to make sure things fit perfect. The end product looks fabulous, and has really brightened up the room. We will be calling the furniture store tomorrow to let them know that we are ready for them to deliver our sofa and loveseat. Hopefully they will be able to do that this week, as they called a couple of weeks ago to let us know that our order had arrived. We are excited to have everything all put together, and being able to relax a little bit.
Another highlight of our weekend: our Sunday evening meal. We ate asparagus fresh from the garden, fixed in our favorite way: steamed with lots of salt. Then we fried the 3 morel mushrooms we found in Mom and Dad's woods yesterday, and finished off with tortilla chips and salsa made from last year's tomatoes and peppers. Saturday morning, Sarah made rhubarb muffins for breakfast with rhubarb that had been picked that morning.
Friday, April 10, 2009
Spring: the season of hope
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Other things we're planting hope in: turkey eggs. Our turkey hen, Esmerelda, has been dutifully laying eggs every other day for a couple of weeks now, and when the mood hits her, she will sit on them for a little while.
We've saved some of her eggs back, replacing them with camoflauge plastic easter eggs, so that not all of them will have been possibly exposed to freezing temps. She's not to picky about what eggs in her nest look like as long as there are the right amount of them there.
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Otherwise, we're trying to get our living room finished. Ryan has been working hard this week to finish applying brick veneer to our plaster covered chimney, and priming stairway trim. All we have left to do is get the floor installed and finish the woodwork and stair bannister. The furniture store called this week, and said that our couch and loveseat are in, we just have to schedule a time to have them delivered. We are looking forward to getting all of this done in time to spend most of our summer outdoors.
Even though its cold and wet today, our garden and animals are not the only things reminding us of spring. The bizillion irises that prior owners planted on this ground, and lilacs bushes that are finally developing buds after being deer eaten for years are abounding. We think it helps to have a watchdog tom turkey that makes a commotion when he hears any kind of movement or sound in his territory. Sunday, March 8, 2009
Spring is Coming!
Collecting the sap is the easy part, waiting on it to boil down is the hard part. Using an outdoor propane burner, and our 5 1/2 gallon pressure canner pot, we have boiled the 20 gallons down to 2 gallons over about 16 hours. Now we have poured the 2 gallons into our stock pot, and are finishing it on the stove, as we don't have enough good light outside right now that we need to observe temperatures and consistency for syrup finishing.
When all is said and done we hope to end up with about 1/2 gallon of syrup from this batch. And we hope to get more sap later in the week, after a weather system comes through that is supposed to bring temps back down below freezing, and then send them back up again. That is the best weather for sap runs. We are really glad to have purchased our propane burner; it cooks the sap much quicker and more efficiently than our electric stove, and we don't steam up our house doing it. We eventually hope to get a small wood stove to set-up outdoors for sugaring, then our fuel will be free and renewable, instead of paying to fill our propane tank with fossil fuel.
Besides maple sugaring, Ryan and Sarah's Dad have been working hard to get the living room finished before outdoor spring work, and our new furniture arrive. Thursday evening, Friday afternoon, and Saturday, they worked on installing new trim.
On the walls that we painted "apple" green, the trim will be painted white, so Dad picked out some nice #2 pine for the trim. We decided to do wider trim with some beadwork, to go with the age and style of our home.
On the exposed oak wall, Dad made us some trim about of really old poplar that he had savalged from a project a long time ago. After planing and sanding it, it's a nice green color that accents our green paint and the richness of the oak wall.
Plus, we love that it's old too!
As you can see there's alot going on in our neck of the woods right now. Besides boiling sap today, which doesn't demand a lot of attention until the very end of the process, we planted pepper seeds in our indoor growing system. It is hard to believe it's time for that already! We are looking forward to a nice spring and summer, and lots of time spent outdoors.
Saturday, February 14, 2009
Happy Valentine's Day!
Wow! I just realized it's been almost 2 months since we've updated our blog! You can definitely tell we are amateurs at this, plus we've been really busy :)
We had a very blessed holiday season, and were able to spend a lot of time with our families. As we moved into January, we worked some more on our living room (but we're still not done), and started to make plans for the 2009 farming/gardening seasons. We inventoried all of our seeds, and put orders in for 2 blueberry bushes and 50 strawberry plants. We are looking forward to growing more of our fruit over the next few years. Sarah has told Ryan if he can't find her in June, to go check and see if she's lying in the strawberry patch, gorging on fresh strawberries (her favorite food!).
In February, we've been moving closer towards making decorating decisions related to our living room. We've already had the laminate flooring picked out for several months, but colors and furniture have been up in the air. We've decided to paint our walls a pale green, and use white trim on the painted walls. On our oak wall we are just going to polyurethane it, and then use antique poplar for the trim. Early in the month we spent a Saturday furniture browsing, and have tentatively decided to go with a dark burgundy Broyhill sofa and loveseat set. We hope to get everything at least ordered by the end of the month, so we don't carry this project into our outdoor work season.
Even though we woke up to snow this morning, the inhabitants of our land are starting to think about spring. Yesterday we spent the morning outside cleaning out the chicken and turkey houses. To make things easier, we let the turkeys and chickens out to roam the yard. We were pleasantly surprised that they flocked together despite their species differences, and were throughly content to stay close to the buildings. Having the extra space seemed to inspire our turkeys to be amorous, and we got to witness the complicated process that is turkey courtship.
Afterwards, Thomas, our tom turkey, seemed to be quite proud of himself because he spent the rest of the day displaying, as you can see in this picture.
Yesterday afternoon, we went to pick up a rooster and hen from Grandpa O'Hara. We introduced them to the flock when we got home. The rooster seems to be blending with the flock a little better than the new hen, but we know that it will just take a few days for them to get a new pecking order established. When we got them we had no idea what breed they were, other than Grandpa said they were rosecombs. We did some researching on the Internet, and have come to the conclusion that they are Silver-Penciled Rosecomb Wyandottes, a breed established in the Northeast United States because their small rosecombs made them better able to withstand cold winters. We are very excited to have a rooster back in our flock, and are looking forward to waking up to crowing again. Plus they are truly beautiful birds, and we enjoy the loveliness of our multicolored flock. If we get chicks to hatch this spring, it will be interesting to see what they look like. 
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