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Wednesday, June 03, 2009

Milk Protest in Iowa

Here is another interesting article on current milk prices. It is worth reading all the way to the end....some real food for thought about the cooperative system and how it is affecting farm prices today.

Wordless Wednesday

Monday, June 01, 2009

Cold with Calf

Just another photograph having nothing whatsoever to do with the text of the post....


Becky brought most of my houseplants back in last night as I was in the barn late attempting to calve Alan's old cow, Voldemar. Calf was upside down, contracted tendons, I couldn't get it. All I could feel was one upside down hoof, no head, no second foot anywhere I could reach. Not good. I gave the old girl a second bottle of sub cu calcium and waited for the experts to get home....seems a guy the other side of Albany paid Liz a hefty amount of money to drive over and breed a cow for him. Her dad went along to see to her general safety while driving through the edge of the city so late in the evening.

When they got home our resident college graduate righted the calf and got it out. A heifer. I have been nursing this poor old cow for months, trying to save her. She has not done too badly up until a couple days ago when she went down and couldn't quite get back on her feet. Liz says the hormone, relaxin, loosens the joints so badly on a close up cow, that if they have problems to begin with they get worse. I have despaired for the last week of getting the calf safely and I am grateful to Liz and the boss for getting it done so late last night.

I am also grateful to Alan, who wants to give me the calf because I have tried so hard for the old cow. Baby is still in pretty good shape this morning, although she probably needs a shot of selenium.



******Take a minute if you have one and visit a new blog in the blogroll, Dino Giacomazzi. He has some wonderful videos of California farm life, including the birth of a calf.

Saturday, May 30, 2009

Making up for my Rant


(Hopefully at least) by wishing one and all a happy weekend.


This wonderful rhubarb leaf bird bath
was crafted by one of my favorite sets of aunts and uncles. It is one of the joys of my life to watch a blue jay or the local song sparrow take a vigorous flutter bath, then wipe their faces dry on the herb pots. It is a comfort to toads and a nice drinking bowl for local critters too. Someday I would love to try my hand at making some of them.


Friday, May 29, 2009

Just How Bad it is in the Dairy Industry

Read about it here in the LA Times.
For California just fill in NY or any other dairy state. Even the big, efficient farms are hurting and hurting badly. Prices are projected to decline still more in June.
Dairy month....yeah right...death of the dairy month is more like it.

It is literally costing us and most other dairy farmers more money to make milk than we are being paid for it.

A LOT more money.

We are among those who have burned through savings and credit and are watching the lifetime investments of more than one generation of hard working people melt like snow on a hot muffler. With beef prices so low, you can't even sell your cows, pay down your debt and get out. You are a prisoner of the economy.

Excuse my whining, but it is so darned discouraging to even get up and go out in the morning, knowing that it is costing us at least six or eight dollars more for every hundred pounds of milk than we can possibly be paid for it. I can't believe the milk inspectors still stop and ask for a new door on the milk house, fresh paint here, new hoses there. Ours said, "You know they want the place to look nice from the road (never mind that you can't see it from the road.) I wonder where they think we will get the money for these things. My late and exceptionally wise mother-in-law always said, "You can tell when the farmers have money. The first thing they do is fix up the place."

Well, I figure you will be seeing a lot of pretty shabby places over the next few months.
And empty ones too.
Lots of them.
I was really pleased to see such an article in a big city paper like the Times.....

For Dad

Sorry this one is kind of blurry....
but you can get an idea of the size of this chunk of Brazilian Amethyst
Dad brought back from their southern gold mining travels.

It is sitting on their Fisher fireplace insert!




My mom is strong and bright and optimistic, and someone I admire more than you could imagine. She could use some serious prayers right now and we are doing our best to supply them...

However, this certainly gives one pause for thought. Maybe we should get a permit or something.


****Update! You should go see my Sis-in-law's blog today! She has pics of my handsome little brother working on a giant statue at the UN. So cool! (Click on 'em for a good look.)

Thursday, May 28, 2009

Rainy Days

We have joined the rest of the nation, or at least a lot of it, in being too soggy wet, too dark and dreary and just plumb too miserable, weather wise. According to a well known Town of Glen businessman there was hard frost there this weekend......Although rain is needed in some quantity, enough is enough. We are in the middle of spring planting and starting to hay and it can stop now, thank you.

However, being unable to garden, plant or mow left time for a little silliness yesterday.

Such as herding the one-footed rooster with Gael



Or looking for examples of optimism

Cat VS Cottontail




Buzzards VS Broadway



These things are so not happening guys......

Pearly Gates


I have some wonderful aunts....and really nice uncles too. One of my favorites in the aunt department sent me this.


A woman arrived at the Gates of Heaven.
While she was waiting for Saint Peter to greet her, she peeked through the gates. She saw a beautiful banquet table. Sitting all around were her parents and all the other people she had loved and who had died before her They saw her and began calling greetings to her. "Hello - How are you! We've been waiting for you! Good to see you."
When Saint Peter came by, the woman said to him, "This is such a wonderful place! How do I get in?" "You have to spell a word," Saint Peter told her.
"Which word?" the woman asked. "Love." The woman correctly spelled 'Love', and Saint Peter welcomed her into Heaven. About a year later, Saint Peter came to the woman and asked her to watch the Gates of Heaven for him that day. While the woman was guarding the Gates of Heaven, her husband arrived. "I'm surprised to see you," the woman said. "How have you been?" "Oh, I've been doing pretty well since you died," her husband told her. " "I married the beautiful young nurse who took care of you while you were ill. And then I won the multi-state lottery. I sold the little house you and I lived in and bought a huge mansion. And my wife and I traveled all around the world. We were on vacation in Cancun and I went water skiing today. I fell and hit my head, and here I am. What a bummer! How do I get in?" "You have to spell a word," the woman told him. "Which word?" her husband asked. " Czechoslovakia ."

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Upstate Shopping Trips



Can be a little different sometimes. What with detours and traffic and all.

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Cow Girl of the Northeastern World



Her Grandpa Delbert gave her her first cow when she was three. She could always pick her out of the herd even though she was just an ordinary black and white grade cow. She would pick her grass and dandelions and could lock up her stall from the time she could reach high enough to close the stanchion.

She and her sister and brother worked in the barn and fed the hens from the time they were four or five.

First show cow, Sonora, at six.

Milked her own string from 13 on.

4-H dairy judging, dairy quiz bowl, local and regional teams and several trips to state competition. They took her to state when somebody else couldn't make it just to fill out the team. She placed in the top ten. Dairy ambassador. Years and years of band and and select chorus.

Eighth in her high school class.
Dean's list every semester of college.
Valedictorian of the animal sciences division at SUNY Cobleskill when she got her bachelors in animal science.

Right hand. Left hand. Long since gone beyond helper to partner in the barn. We decide by committee and everybody has a voice. Calving administrator. Calf raiser. Ration planner. Hard working Farm Bureau board of directors member and newsletter co-editor.

Rodeo blogger.
The kid who takes me to rodeos and makes it all fun.....The one who stays home from camp so the rest of us can play....we love you kiddo.


Happy 23rd birthday Liz, thanks a lot for being you.





Monday, May 25, 2009

Memorial Day Salute


We heard this in the barn this morning just before the tape deck ate my tape....it seemed like a fitting song for this day of celebration and somber remembrance.

Friday, May 22, 2009

Bump on a Limb


I was weeding.

The oriole was singing.
Right over my head.
He flew away, but I looked up anyhow.
And there was this little thing, still as if it were a bump on the limb.
It never moved even the tiniest bit.
Until its folks came back.
Lotsa baby robins this week!

Thursday, May 21, 2009

Wow, Just Wow


One of the finest farm bloggers and a great columnist in a number of farm papers, Melissa Hart, of The Knolltop Farmwife, recently asked Liz to write something about her mother for a slightly belated Mother's Day column.

You can read it here.

And all I can say is wow.......
Oh, and thanks, Liz.

More Money Well Spent

I am glad that somebody is looking into the budget at the National Institutes of Health, because they are doing things with our tax dollars that are irresponsible bordering on criminal in my opinion.

NIH spends $178 thousand to study still more foreign prostitutes.





Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Dairy Check Off to be Applied to Imports

And about time too!
Read about it here.

In the past 10 years alone, the value of dairy imports sold in the U.S. has expanded from $800 million, to nearly $3 billion.

Dubya, Dubya


Wordless Wednesday that is.

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Growing Carrots Indoors


Long time readers will know that three years ago we started growing lettuce indoors. The first crop of the leafy stuff was grown in a cooler, but we have since discovered that you can grow an incredible crop in a medium sized flower pot. All that is needed is dirt and a good, sunny window.

Thus this winter in my burgeoning garden-deprivation-induced boredom, I decided to try growing carrots indoors. I took a large, five-dollar flower pot from Wally World, which I had purchased for a Norfolk Island pine (which STILL needs repotting) and set upon the carrot experiment. My preparations included nothing more than filling it with potting soil (since it was the middle of the winter and plain old dirt was unavailable), sprinkling carrot seed on top, watering and waiting.

Yesterday I pulled this baby, about a five inch rainbow carrot, from the crowded pot.
The verdict is in.
You CAN grow carrots indoors

Tasty ones too.

Monday, May 18, 2009

Rigth to Farm

Here is a story that ran in Michigan about a New York farm's nine-year struggle to stay in business.