(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({ google_ad_client: "ca-pub-1163816206856645", enable_page_level_ads: true }); Northview Diary

Friday, August 08, 2008

Hyssop







We added hyssop to the herb garden for the first time last summer. It wintered over well and in the contained area by the honey locust it doesn't seem invasive. It has produced a few seedlings though, which I will pot up when I get a chance.....it is too nice not to share. We don't really use it for anything, but it is attractive and we love the scent.
A crushed leaf smells just like licorice.
We give each other leaves sometimes.






When is a peeper not a peeper?


....when it's a sneaky green frog

Thursday, August 07, 2008

Monsanto trying to sell Posilac

No, not the drug. They already sell that. They are attempting to divest themselves of the division of their company that produces it.

Even though there is no way to chemically differentiate milk produced from cows who are or are not treated with it, I guess the writing is on the wall. Processors don't want it. Consumers have been convinced rightly or wrongly that they don't want it. If Monsanto is trying to ditch it, it is probably on the way out.

For the record we don't use it for a number of reasons, none of them having anything to do with the quality of the milk resulting. I think it wasn't the best thing in the world for the dairy industry, spurring production in excess of demand. Now a large percentage of milk is again produced without it and there still seems to be some excess production, so either people are still using it (after all it is undetectable) or more likely, other management methods have caught up and are increasing production.

I was interested to read this article though. On one hand I am not going to miss it if it falls by the wayside because we don't use it anyhow. On the other hand this seems to open the door to removing other technology on the dairy, some of which we might use.

Just another day



Knot O' Snake
(He was all tied up...)
(He did this to himself and was soon undone before Becky let him go)

Wednesday, August 06, 2008

Old Cars, Rednecks and Stone Henge

This farmer fielded some new neighbors' complaints by being outstanding in his field...or rather by having some old cars outstanding in his field for him.
There is simply nothing wrong with having a sense of humor.


Folks who move next to farms have to understand that farmers...well, they farm. This can sometimes result in odors, dust, noise and things non-farmers would rather not see, hear or smell, but they are part of the job. I am grateful that NY has right to farm laws and Ag districts to protect farmers' ability to do what they do. Thus we probably won't need to build our own Stone Henge out of old demolition derby cars.

I also like the reasonable way farmer Rhett Davis spoke about his actions.

"I respect that they're here and spent a lot on their homes, but on the other hand, give me a little bit, too," Davis said. "I've been here since I was 7 years old."

He said he doesn't intend to keep the cars up permanently.

"These can come out just as easy as they went in," he said.

Tuesday, August 05, 2008

Mountain lions

Are not something I even want to contemplate.
This story of one taking a dog right out of a house, right out of someone's bedroom, flat makes me shudder. Even if the door was open. (HT to A Coyote at the Dog Show)

Right now, even though we haven't seen one, we suspect we have a black bear hanging around the place. Little things have tipped us off to the possibility of something unusual going on around us, such as the behavior of the cattle. Last night the men left us women to milk alone. No biggie; we do it all the time. However, this time it turned out to be simply a nightmare. Cows knocked milkers off. Cows crowded and thumped on us. Cows that NEVER kick, such as little Camry, who seems to appreciate Alan's efforts in saving her life this spring, kicked and kicked and kicked.

Then, when we turned them up the hill, as we always do while we finish up the last few cows, they bolted back down to the barn and all came right back inside. It is is not unusual for one or two to wander back in to look for spilled grain or just to pester us, but my whole south line ran back in at once, jumped into their stalls, then the heifers, which stay outside and don't even HAVE stalls, came in and crowded up between the cows.

It was nuts. We didn't get dinner until almost ten.
They were fine this morning.
If it was a bear, I hope it has moved along. We thought we had one last summer, because of some similar weird goings on, but we never actually saw it. After a while the strange things just stopped happening and the cows calmed back down to normal. As far as mountain lions go, I hope I never, ever see one....especially not in my bedroom. Especially not eating my dog.

And I don't want to see one in my garden either.

New meaning


To the concept of layering

Monday, August 04, 2008

Hay weather (not)

Here it comes

Yep, that's rain

And there it goes again


I am hoping real hard for a couple weeks of precipitation-free weather. For three weeks now, I don't think we have gone two days without a shower, many of them very heavy. In one two or three day period the man we buy straw from said we had nine inches. There is simply no place for that much water to go. You also cannot bale decent hay in this kind of season and we need to get some. The guys are chopping, but even that is hindered as we have acres and acres of new seeding and barley that need to go in the bag, but they don't want to rut the wet fields all up. This could be a rough year if the weather doesn't change.

Anyhow, yesterday, my delicious, wonderful, restful, peaceful, nasty-old-lady-calming morning and mid day off, I needed to pick some squash for dinner....get some laundry off the line...knock down more brush so I can see the long lawn from the big windows (the better to laugh and wonder at the grey foxes). I knew full well and consciously that I needed to do these things. Instead I parked in my Sunday chair with a couple of good books and drank lemon ginger tea. Silly me, I should have gone out and gotten my chores done.

Instead this gully washer arrived. It sloshed the squash, lashed the laundry and beat the brush until all were soaked beyond redemption (or at least beyond redeeming them yesterday). I couldn't believe that the sun was shining brightly half a mile away in town, while we were getting dumped on. Yeah, those are rain drops rolling off the sitting porch roof. (Notice that I will jump out of my chair, dump the book and run for the camera even when I won't do chores.)

It needs to dry up for a while here, but the hurricanes hitting the gulf coast will probably be here in a couple of days. Gah!!


This short video shows just how hard it was raining. We got perhaps an hour of rain this hard in a a series of several storms. Dang! I wish it would go rain like this on the many farmers and ranchers on this continent that need it!


Hay Weather (or not)

Sunday, August 03, 2008

Milking video and Elvis

(With apologies to dial up folks.) The first video is of Rebecca using the very latest thing in ultra modern, high tech milking techniques. *Note the strategic product placement. Fight Bac is our teat dip of choice, simply the best we have ever used and well worth the price and the mild hassle of getting it sent to us (and no, they didn't pay me to say that). Sorry about it being so dark and the mud on old Beausoleil. She chose a rather muddy location for her lying in. She is a dear old thing just the same. Even Beck likes her and she is not the world's biggest cow fan.

Modern milking technique




The second is our house cat (OMG a house cat at Northview....watch out for the sky falling, UFOs and other inexplicable phenomena) killing Mike's Bouda toy. As you can see he is quite ferocious and eager and then in typical cat fashion he forgets all about it.


Kill the Bouda..or not

Saturday, August 02, 2008

Gardening instead of blogging

More Sunflowers


Stuff is growing, getting ripe and needing to be picked or dug or weeded and cooked at an amazing and gratifying pace. The cupboards, however, are sadly in need of an infusion of store groceries.Somebody has got to go shopping soon!

Therefore, last night I browned up some maple bacon, sprinkled it over fresh-dug potatoes, whole, just-picked green beans, a bunch of skinny little new greyzinis and regular zucchinis, with a couple of small white onions thrown in for flavor. Then I seasoned the whole affair with Italian seasoning and garlic....no photo however. It was eaten up in somewhat less than a trice.
I was apologizing for serving such a meager concoction, but I guess they liked it.
Or perhaps appetite is the best sauce.
We got done late last night due to a new calf, the tire guy changing all four tires on the Case 4490 and assorted other interesting and character building events. (Don't ask...the rule of a crisis a day whether we need one or not is holding true as ever)


Indian corn, just starting to tassel.

The laundry oasis


***Update: It's not my birthday (it is Nita's..she is 8 in dogs years as am I)
However, I got a present today just the same and a mighty fancy one. My favorite, bestest, dearest cow, Beausoleil, (mother of last year's
Bama Breeze) gave me a heifer calf by Straight Pine Elevation Pete this morning. Liz just found it! I will be open to names that go with the letter and theme if you have any ideas.....FC, you came up with Bama's name? Any suggestions?


Friday, August 01, 2008

SeeThroughNY

For those of you living here in NYS, here is a handy dandy database of the salaries and expenditures of all sorts of government employees and entities. It is running a little slowly today due to heavy traffic, but this looks like it may be an extraordinary concept.

The corn is high as an elephant's eye

(Or at least we wish it was)


And the giant sunflowers are taller than the moon.


Maqua-kil Blitz Neon Moon that is.
LIz's summer yearling for this year.

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Afternoon at the garden pond 2008



It amazes me how every summer the garden pond looks totally different from the summer before.... even though I don't plan it that way. Some summers, entirely serendipitously, purple and pink will be the theme colors (I plant a lot of mixes and never know what to expect). Other years orange or red will prevail. This season summery yellow, brown, and orange seems to have taken pride of place. The giant brown-eyed Susan sort of things grew from a wildflower mix I planted last year. They just sort of took over, but I like them.
Still I am going to dig some up and put them out in the wilder part of the lawn so they don't take over.
A friend gave me the tiger lilies a couple years ago and they really came into their own this year.


In the pond, besides gold fish, guppies and pseudo koi (which seem to be oddly marked goldfish) and the sunfish, there is an odd assortment of wild minnows that we caught at various locations. One of them is a sucker mouth minnow Alan got in the Schoharie two years ago. At the time it was a tiny thread, perhaps 1/4 inch long and barely even visible. Now it is the size of a cigar and the water fairly boils when it surges up after fish pellets.



A guppy, surviving outdoors despite the big sun fish

that we can't catch to get him out of the pond...



Gold fish begging and slurping up fish pellets.


A very welcome visitor.


View from the south.




Tuesday, July 29, 2008

More Fun with Foxes



Went out on the sitting porch at daybreak to take yet another sunrise photo. I know they all look alike, but I can't resist. It is my favorite time of day and we have a straight shot east to the horizon through the big windows....too pretty to pass up.

Anyhow, I was standing there, camera in hand, when a faint movement caught my eye half way down the driveway.

A grey fox. We have been seeing one regularly, although not getting many photos. It jumped into the bushes and I was lamenting the missed opportunity when another one trotted up the hill. then both of them began to dart in and out of the shrubbery, pouncing and bouncing, like dogs when they get into that "cracker dog" frenzy (that's what we have always called it) racing in circles, mouths open, tongues lolling, tails J-hooked behind them. They seemed spring loaded and light as dandelion fluff. I simply was not quick enough in the low light to get any shots of all that fun, especially since I was laughing so hard. I think these were a pair of half grown pups from the video fox, as they were slimmer and less fluffy than she was (not to mention considerably less dignified).




Suddenly they vanished.
Just that quickly.
Up the driveway lolloped a cottontail rabbit, bobbling merrily along, ears waggling lazily. I set the camera on video and waited to see what might happen. It hesitated, ears up, peering alertly around.
Came a little closer.
Paused again.
Then it whirled and fled willy nilly, scut flashing bright behind it. I didn't see the foxes again...simply couldn't wait for more to happen as it was milking time, but it was a neat bit of early morning drama.
I actually hope the little vulpines catch some of the darned bunnies. It seems like a fair trade to have them to protect my garden for me since they ate all our black caps so we couldn't make jam.




Monday, July 28, 2008

The heifer

A couple or three days ago one of the cows had a calf out on the hill. The boss was the one to find it and reported a beautiful heifer. He left it out there as it was too new to stand. The next morning the mama came down without it, but he saw it was okay so he still left it out there. He is the one who gets the cows most milkings and he didn't want to mess with it so it stayed out there under its mama's eye until tonight.


Every milking and sometimes in between we debated...what to do with this calf, what to do, what to do. You see its mama, Kid, AKA #152 is a total miserable witch of a cow. Her whole family is kind of on the nasty side, but she is the queen of mean. We milk her because she is also an excellent producer, but she isn't at the top of anyone's popularity list. We have more heifers than we need, so selling the calf would be an excellent option. However, we never seem to get market value for our heifers at the sale barn. We suspect that someone who is affiliated with the place buys them for themselves. It is frustrating. When heifer calves are bringing 600 bucks we will get two or three hundred or even less. We thought about trying to sell her to another farmer...or maybe saving up until we have several and hauling them to a sale out in the western part of the state. Finally we figured we would just keep her and see how she turns out. No one was real happy about it though. We have heifers all over the place and no more housing anywhere.


Tonight when the boss went up to hook up the feeder wagon the calf was sleeping under it, right next to the gate to the barn. When it saw him it jumped into the wagon and stood there swaying, legs spread wide. He wished for a camera and wondered if he could just hook up the wagon and bring it on down. However it soon jumped back out.


It was a good traveler by then though and when Liz and I were "being fence" while the cows came down to be milked it trotted right by with its dam. Beautiful calf. Then came the other debate. The cow was bred twice 19 days apart (the normal heat cycle is 21 days) She calved almost exactly half way between her two potential due dates....so was she bred to our own bull O-C-E-C Lindy Fred or Duregal Astre Starbuck? The calf was white and quite sharp around the head so we were leaning toward Astre. Fred throws them strong and black. If it was Astre then this calf is the first one put in there by LIz who studied AI in college and bred the cows while the boss was laid up last year.


Then Liz went out to catch the calf and pull it into the barn. She came back in muttering under her breath.
The muttering got louder.
And louder.
We soon understood why.
After all that discussion, all that fretting, all that deep concern over what we were going to do with that questionable heifer calf, she took a closer look at its plumbing.


And it is a bull!
So rather than deciding what to do with the calf we have to decide what to do with the man.

Sunday, July 27, 2008

Mockery from the mockingbird



Spent some time this morning trying to get a photo of this mockingbird flaring his white wing patches to scare insects.




Close, but no cigar. I have been wanting to get some guinea hens to keep the tick population down. However, there is concern over how long birds as bereft of brainpower as guineas would survive with so many foxes and coyotes around. They are pretty expensive to buy just to put them on the menu for the local wildlife. With the mockers on duty maybe I won't have to get any.



And a foggy sunrise, which is about all we have been seeing lately. Word is that it may be going to dry out though. I am ready!



Guess who!

Saturday, July 26, 2008

Road trip with tacky treasures

Tires have created the crisis de jour way too often the past couple of weeks here at Northview. Flat ones that is. Yesterday it was the stock trailer that showed up with one. We need to ship a cow next week, so Alan and I were elected to run up to Fort Plain for a new one, as well as to get some lug nuts and an impact socket for the repair job. Always inclined to combine tasks we stopped off to see my brother and his family for a few minutes as they live just down the road from the tire place. He is going to be working out of state for a while so we needed to check in.
Got to see their new garden pond, which is super nice. Couldn't stay long because we had so many stops to make.

Soon we passed a little garage sale. It was right next to a handsome old cemetery, so we grabbed a picture before we checked out the merchandise.
The nicest part about this particular sale is that everything was free!




We wouldn't have even stopped but I saw these from the road, just sitting on the table calling my name.



I love cow figurines, but these are the ugliest I have acquired yet..... in such an appealing way
. They are so tacky yet cute (of course I aspire to a pair of pink flamingos for the lawn too).

Then there was the dog. We were driving along one back road when a handsome golden retriever cross ran right out in the road in front of us, rendering movement impossible without hitting it. "Ruby!" Alan proclaimed, sure it was one of our friends' dogs, miles from her home. (I had never seen Ruby so I couldn't argue.) He checked her collar....just a rabies tag. No help there. I wasn't about to let him put a strange dog in the truck, Ruby or no Ruby, so we drove on down to our last stop (once she let us move the truck) and phoned home for our friend's phone number (hooray for cell phones). Of course when we got it no one answered at their farm.

Soooooo, on the way home we stopped there too to report the alleged Ruby sighting. Of course, Ruby was right there in the yard, waiting to bark us up the driveway. I have to admit, I could see why Alan thought the other dog was her though. The resemblance was remarkable. I wonder if they were litter mates. I am sure glad we didn't put dog A in the truck and drive her "home" though. That would have required some heavy duty explanations.






Upon arriving at our own home we found this guy lounging in the driveway.
Talk about solid comfort!
He didn't want to move until we were almost on top of him.

Much as I hate to leave the place and as much work as didn't get done in the garden because I wasn't home to do it, we had a great time. Adventure and excitement every step of the way

Friday, July 25, 2008

Homegrown Dinner


This is last night's supper just before it went into the oven before milking. It was done when we came in and, alas, eaten before I thought to take the "after" photo.

Everything involved was homegrown except the celery, vinegar, some garlic powder (didn't plant any last fall) and a dash of Italian seasoning. It was so much fun to assemble that I can scarcely call it work. The first potatoes of the year, two plants worth, were dug fresh from the bed behind the house and the big sheep pen garden the guys made me this year. One plant was started from some leftover sprouting potatoes that we bought to eat from the supermarket. The other was from seed potatoes we bought to plant. Oddly enough the supermarket hill yielded perfect orbs of potato goodness. The ones from certified seed potatoes were covered with potato scab.
Go figure. Didn't matter anyhow; they were all delicious, but I will dig the scabby ones first before they get too nasty.
Digging potatoes is kind of like treasure hunting to me. You never know what will come out of each hill and the anticipation is worth the sweat.

The carrots are rainbow carrots from Pinetree Garden Seeds. They are simply the best variety we have ever tried and I don't bother with anything else now. I grow them in half 15-gallon acid barrels from the milk house, in a mixture of sand, plain old dirt and compost. They thrive. I love the wet paint scent of a carrot fresh out of the ground....kind of fond of the taste too and not all the ones I pulled made it into the dinner. We are speculating about bringing a clean half barrel indoors this winter and trying to grow some like we do the indoor lettuce. Seems like we can never get enough of them.

The stew beef (I bake stew beef this way when I run out of chuck roast...turns out real tasty and tender) is from that Calbret HH Champion bull I bought the boss for Father's Day a couple of years ago....the one who didn't pass his blood test from the Holstein Association because somebody goofed on his dam's sire. Hated to eat such a well bred animal, but we couldn't use him as intended because the maternal grandsire was Ocean View Extra Special, a bull we used very heavily ourselves. (Right now in my first ten cows there are five by him, Bariole, Bubbles, Camry, Junie and Lemonade.) When we draw a bull of our own to use AI, it needs to be at least somewhat unrelated to most of the animals in the herd. This was just too close bred for comfort.

Anyhow, homegrown is kind of a favorite brand around here and the leftovers were pretty sparse. Now I can't wait for an excuse to dig more potatoes.

Thursday, July 24, 2008

Slugs love relentless rain

Farmers don't so much. We had a terrible flood here in 2006. It did much harm to the small villages that line the Mohawk River Valley, not to mention making it nearly impossible to grow or harvest crops. I believe it was one of the worst years we have ever experienced, although I am still proud of the reaction of valley folks. People pulled together and stories of courage and sacrifice abounded. Friendships were made that still endure today with the foundation of shared hardship keeping them strong. It feels pretty good to live in a place where folks rise above such a natural disaster and pull their friends and neighbors right up with them.

However, I don't ever want to go through anything like that again. The farm barely survived. We couldn't get enough feed in for the cows and milk prices were at an all time low when it came. We lost a lot of businesses that folks in the valley relied on and roads were closed for weeks.
Now we are getting rain. Serious, relentless, heavy, long-term rain.
And more rain,
And more rain. It is falling on already saturated ground.

Some predictions call for more than seven inches in a single storm expected this afternoon. The last time it flooded our Agway was under about 8 feet of water. There was no power. We had barely enough diesel to run the generator to milk and authorities wouldn't let us off the farm to buy more. I don't want to see it again. As far as direct damage we were comparatively well off. We live on a near mountain. The driveways washed out but the boss is good at fixing them. We lost some trees and farm roads and some corn was ruined. Our town and our neighbors weren't so lucky.

However the slugs are having a regular slug fest out in the yard. I must have picked fifty off two pots of marigolds last night. I put the pots up on a table to protect them from the voracious little buggers, but I think I am going to have to bring some house plants back indoors. That is usually an October chore.
Anyhow, I sure am hoping for some dry weather. Folks need to make hay. I am so sorry for my brother, a part time farmer, who took this week off to bale up his hay. It has rained every single day. We don't even have any green chop left for the cows and may have to open a just finished ag bag to feed them. Pretty counter-productive in terms of winter feed storage.

I am hoping the authorities are paying attention to the dams and spillways, especially Gilboa and the dams at the river locks. There was some pretty harsh criticism of how the canal was handled last time. I wonder if we should buy in a load of diesel even though prices are dropping and it might pay to wait......

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Liz got a surprise last night too

This is the third daughter of her show cow, Mandolin Rain. Mandy was messing around looking like calving last night when we were milking, so Liz stayed up pretty much all night with her.

This baby is by the Canadian bull, Silky Cousteau. She is our first Cousteau daughter and we are pretty excited about her. Please hold good thoughts for Mandy and her baby. This is such a fragile time and although Mandy is a sweetheart, she is not the hardiest cow we have ever owned.



I wish you could have seen her last night. Cows are simply not normally affectionate creatures and they like neither an audience nor assistance while calving. Mandy did not want Liz out of her pen. When she left after cleaning the pen several hours before the calf was born the cow followed her to the gate mooing and carrying on. When she was back inside she put her head in the window and begged her to come back. I couldn't believe it! I am sure part of it was just oxytocin overload because the baby was coming, but Mandy and her oldest daughter Blitz really like to be around Liz. (I suppose it is silly to be surprised. I do too.)

***Oops, I forgot to give Liz credit for the video. She will be putting more up on BuckinJunction as soon as I get done writing the Farm Side so she can have this computer.

The nicest part of the season








And a few flowers that are blooming now.







And...what do you suppose Liz has been doing?
(Clue, it has nothing to do with the calf above)

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Good surprise


Yesterday I had that impending milk inspector feeling....so I did just a little extra on the everyday tidying and cleaning that that the milk house gets. I even mentioned to Alan that I expected to see the inspector soon. (I have learned to always act on that niggling sense of doom.) Then in a flurry of paying bills and freezing zucchini and making our favorite rice, sausage and fresh vegetable bake for dinner I forgot all about it.

Imagine my surprise when Liz brought that thing up there over to the house. Sure enough the milk inspector had been here, but not to inspect. (Due to personnel issues nobody made it to the cooperative annual meeting so we didn't even know we were nominated for this.)

Not that we haven't won Super Milk before, because when we were in Canajoharie Coop we won several years and have another big sign like this and a number of the smaller signs with the year on them. However since we have been in Producers Coop we haven't won one.
So we didn't expect it.
And a lot of other things have been going very, very wrong.
So this was nice to find instead of the usual note about all the stuff we need to clean up or fix.

*****You can read about Super Milk here.
And see the list of winners from our county here.

Monday, July 21, 2008

I hope you are not bored yet


Common Merganser




Canada goose (begging, although we didn't feed them)


Common loon (not common enough though)



Foggy morning



Better this time than ever