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

Saturday, April 25, 2009

Men at Work

And other farmer folk and friends



Some of us are sillier than others.


The Barn Blackboard.

It has been quite a while since I posted a photo of barn art so here are some peanut butter and jellyfish (click for brand names).....mostly by Becky with editorializing by assorted other denizens of the dairy. (Note the countdown to the rodeo in the lower left corner....very important.)


Etrain wondering what I had with me in the stall
when I was supposed to be getting ready to milk her.



The girls were not thrilled to see mom
floating around the barn with the camera yesterday morning.


Friday, April 24, 2009

Beef Prices


Have been so low all winter that there has been little value in shipping cull cows and almost none in calves. For example, two weeks ago we sent a pair of bulls to the sale, 114 and 108 pounds. They were healthy, lively and real nice calves. We got $30 a piece for them. In a normal year the check would have been more like $250 for a pair of calves that nice. Despite this dairy cows have been culled in record numbers as farmers struggle to survive on milk prices that are many dollars below the cost of production.

Tuesday we sent a cow that has been dry all winter. She has been running out with the bred heifers and we didn't sell her sooner because of assorted logistical problems involving the truck not being available and the actual challenge of getting her in and loaded (which did turn out to be quite a job). Yesterday we got the check and it was the most we have gotten for a cow since prices started their precipitous slide. It is probably just a fluke, but I hope not. Sadly I think if either beef or milk prices climb much you are going to see a lot of farmers going out of business in a big hurry. Right now I think a lot of guys are holding on because if they sell their cows when prices are so bad they won't get even a fraction of their investment back.

Thursday, April 23, 2009

LJ Hand Farm Store

Got some much deserved recognition in the paper today. People in the area take Lynwood Hand's store for granted, but believe me, if you don't live around here and you visit for the first time, stunned amazement is a normal reaction,

Hand's has everything that exists that can be used on a farm and if he doesn't have it he will find it. When I first joined the farming world visiting the store was a like a trip to Disney Land, with a wish list a mile long and everything needed to fulfill it right there on the shelves. The boss remembers a man from out of state that he talked to at an auction who was looking for certain tractor tires. The boss sent him to Hand's and he darned near bought out the store. He had never seen so many supplies and things in one place and priced right as well.

I am glad the paper took note of our favorite farm store and I wish them many more years of successful business. They are having a customer recognition open house this Saturday from 7:30 AM to 5:30 PM, with discounts and vendor displays for folks who attend. I hope you get a chance to stop by and tell them how much having them here means to the community. You will have a great time if you can! (And you can stock up on barbed wire and baling twine. Ear tags and neck chains. Tire chains and tires and tubes and tools and oil and teat dip. And snaps and buckets. And medicines and brushes. And anything else you can think of from bearings to hydraulic lines.)


Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Update on the Craigs List Killer

They caught him. And he was from around here! Came from Syracuse, met his wife to be at SUNY Albany. Wow....

Greening up

Fence guru

Tools of the Trade

Rain today, perhaps necessary, but not at all welcome as we need to ship a cow that is going to make us run around in it, and we finally just saw the end of most of the mud. Oh, well, you can't change the weather....although there are others who could use this more than we can.

It is greening up around here at the proper time of year, (although Alan was up to the top of his chest-high waders in a vernal pool at school yesterday and it snowed!) rather than leaving us with bare fields at the end of May as was the case the past couple of years. As soon as the fence guru (above) and his staff finish a few little details (such as a new gate) we will be able to turn some dry cows and bred heifers out in this pasture. I am ready!

And the tip of the day for first time electric fence builders...always make your gate dead! That is put it on the side of the fence where when you open it the circuit is broken and there is no electricity in the gate wire. Easy to do and awfully painful when not done and you brush that gate wire by accident.





Monday, April 20, 2009

Craigs List

As I listen to reports of the robber and murderer who seems to be using this resource, it is kind of disconcerting. We use it all the time for find things that we want or just to see what livestock and machinery folks have for sale. It is a handy clearinghouse for unwanted stuff that may be valuable in other hands. So far we have found a source of lovely gold fish for the garden pond and a real treasure just this week.

Last week besides dealing with the milk mafia and all sorts of other interesting problems, our barn refrigerator croaked. I have no idea how many calves Liz is feeding but it is a lot. Normally we save waste milk for them in the fridge and she heats bottles and buckets and feeds them all while the boss and I milk the last line and hospital cows.

With the fridge dead, she had to wait until we milked the "bucket cows" to feed calves. It meant hours and hours of extra time in the barn for her. Finances being what they are, a trip to Wally World for a new one, even a dorm sized one, was not a prospect we cared to contemplate.

Therefore I checked Craigs List. The very first day that I looked, right across the river in Fonda, there was a listing for a large dorm sized fridge for fifteen dollars! Exactly what we needed....It took a few days to actually make contact and for the men to get over and check it out, but it now resides in the milk house and Liz is back to getting done about the same time the rest of us do. Nice for her, and much, much better for my personal guilt quotient.

However, I got the men to go across the river to check it out, rather than us women doing it. And I got them to take a phone along.
Just in case.

Saturday, April 18, 2009

Guess who

Got accepted at SUNY Potsdam?

To study archeology?

This Girl!

(We are just normal, average type parents....so we are so darned proud!!!!)

Dedicated to Florida Cracker





If only upstate NY and Pure Florida were not so far apart you could bring that JEEP right over and we could fill all your landscaping needs!



I wish the skid steer was just a little meaner so the boss could bring some of these down for me.

Friday, April 17, 2009

Company



One is never alone these days even when working in the yard.

The blue jays have gone silent and secretive with the nesting season getting under way. Still it is easy to spot them as they pounce down upon some succulent thing, fluffing their blue bloomers behind them and acting all important and proud. They have been coming closer the past few days than they ever do in winter, and it is nice to get such a good look at them.



My morning walk downstairs feature a serenade from the white-throated sparrow and a distant cardinal. Soon the white crowned sparrows will stop by for a while. For some reason they love the box elder trees and for a few weeks almost every one of them will sport a showy sparrow or two.

And the wait for the hummingbirds has begun.

Thursday, April 16, 2009

In The Back of the Bottom Drawer

Click for a close up
This just epitomizes Liz
Determined to get it done herself
and the devil take the consequences!


I lost my last good hair clip while wandering around the college the other day.
Therefore I was digging through all the rarely opened drawers looking for a stray....to no avail I might add. (I have to find somewhere to get some! Cows like to eat long hair and it catches in everything and snarls something terrible out in the wind.)

However, I found this 1993 copy of the Recorder, with Liz and her first show calf, Sonora, on the front page. (Since I didn't start writing for the paper until 98, it was just serendipitous that the reporter and photographer happened to pick Liz for her article. Maybe it was the determined look on her face.)

I don't remember how Sonora fared at the fair. Probably not all that well, as her only claim to fame and ticket to the show ring was that she was gentle. Liz was only seven and not so very large either. However, that first long ago fair was the start of a show ring career for her that continues today.

Over the years she has held up both ends of the line, with old Dixie being grand champion Holstein once and reserve a couple of times and Mandy junior champion twice. Showing cows doesn't pay beans unless you are one of the big guys, but waiting and hoping for that next great one takes the edge off the drudgery aspect of the job. Last year the cows didn't do all that well, but who knows what will happen this summer. You just never know when a good one will show up!

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Conficker Eye Chart

I am supposed to be writing the Farm Side right now and it is wordless Wednesday and all, but this is just too cool not to pass along to you.

Here is a site where you can quickly check your computer for the Conficker Worm thing.
It is so simple.
If you can see the graphics on the site, you are all good.
Otherwise.........

Wordless Wednesday






Monday, April 13, 2009

Music to MY ears

(And no, the picture has nothing at all to do with the post.
Just a left over male harrier from last week)


Music Monday at BuckinJunction.

You gotta go listen....really....you will be glad you did!

Sunday, April 12, 2009

More Eagle Cam

If you haven't visited the Sutton Center Eagle cam lately take a second. The chick is getting huge and you can often watch the parents feeding it. It is fun to watch it mimicking the parents as they move sticks around the nest as well, sort of a monkey see monkey do kind of thing.

Sunday Stills...the Color Red

About four years ago Alan and I pollinated some Amaryllises. Then we planted the seeds.
This year they have really come into their own.
This is only a few of them.



Maple flowers

For more Sunday Stills

Saturday, April 11, 2009

Cheer Up


Cheer up cheerily, fee bee bee,
Old Sam Peabody, Peabody, Peabody
Three grackles say Chack!
Taking the dog out to the run is suddenly a fine and better thing than it was just three days ago.
All winter it was hard to go out.
Now it is hard to stay in.

Friday, April 10, 2009

Campus Visit






More on the View at Northview.

An interesting story about the huge springing lion mount (top) in the college mammal room. One day when Alan was first in fisheries and wildlife he was looking for the room where his next class would be held. He walked into what he thought was the correct room. It was in total darkness, all blinds tightly drawn. Since he was the first kid there he reached over and turned on the light. ....and there was that guy right in front of him.

Oops wrong room! (The thing is mounted so it is right in front of the door!)

Thursday, April 09, 2009

Pocket Door Key


Ed was very close with his guess of a skate key. This particular key goes to the double door to the parlor.