Read about it here. And, no, the article is not about us. We have fewer than a tenth that many cows. However, ethanol production and subsidies here in the US of A have raised our grain prices about double what they were just a few years ago. Believe me, it hurts to pay using milk prices that didn't rise comparably.
Monday, January 17, 2011
Ethanol and Northview Farm
Read about it here. And, no, the article is not about us. We have fewer than a tenth that many cows. However, ethanol production and subsidies here in the US of A have raised our grain prices about double what they were just a few years ago. Believe me, it hurts to pay using milk prices that didn't rise comparably.
Sunday, January 16, 2011
Sunday Stills...Macro Shots
Saturday, January 15, 2011
Cold
It is just plain cold.
Cold like a shell
Cold like a mountain.
Cold all day and cold all night.
Oh, the stars sparkle, and the sun puts a glitter on the snow like a kid gone crazy but the cold drives you inside
Where it is less cold, but still cold.
Blankets on all the chairs, long johns, sweats over your jeans over your long johns and still you are cold.
Four shirts
A vest
An over
shirt
Still cold.
Wool socks, yeah, real wool
Still cold.
The wind was pushing the smoke from the stove north last night when we came in.
Does this mean south air and a warm up?
I hope so.
Whine over
We return you to your normal programming, thank you.....
Friday, January 14, 2011
Fox Hunting
All the excitement of riding to the hounds, minus the foxes. Guess all the fun of fox hunting wasn't about being blood thirsty and evil after all....the accompanying video is great fun and well worth the watching....almost like being there only you don't have to personally get wet.
Labels:
hunting
Red Neck Tractor Pull
I don't post too many videos because I know they are hard to load with slower connections. However, this one, of the famous pulling tractor, the Supernatural, was simply irresistible! Do watch...all the way to the end. It is just too cool.
Thursday, January 13, 2011
Ladies Who Lay
Can't Complain much about the weather...cold and blustery here, but we are warmer and have lots less snow than many of our friends to the west and north. Thus we will keep our whining confined to the kitchen when we are layering on the wool socks and vests and over shirts, because compared to Alberta and SoDak we have nothing to whine about....but it is still miserable to get dressed for the weather we do have.
Once you actually get out in it, it isn't all that bad. Kinda nice this morning really, after the sun came up. I caught the idiot rooster WD yesterday and put him in the coop. The head guy immediately started pounding on him, but I think he will be okay.
Found the first egg of the year when I went out to feed yesterday. Delighted that the ladies decided to start to lay. We only have four hens, but eggs are most welcome.
The lonesome and amazingly tame white-crowned sparrow is still showing up at the feeders. Today he brought three friends. One of them is quite inventive and figured out how to get its great big self balanced on the tube feeder while snatching a seed. Pretty funny to watch.
Once again I am having computer difficulties, so posts might be late or absent, and comments answered more sporadically than I like...please bear with me, I am trying to get things straightened out.
Labels:
Winter
Wednesday, January 12, 2011
Tuesday, January 11, 2011
Jury Duty
Well, my number didn't pop out of the selection thingie, so I only got to spend three hours warm, comfy, and fascinated by watching the jury selection process before I came back home to our cozy little iceberg on the hill (it was fifty-two indoors here yesterday). I was very well impressed with the way the whole affair was run, by the kindness and clarity of the court officials in caring for potential jurors and explaining what would happen, and by how very interesting it all was. If I was retired I would go watch the whole trial.
Labels:
Hmmmm
Monday, January 10, 2011
Thieves
Broke into one of my favorite blog folks' Jeep the other day and did some nasty damage.
Some other creeps came across our posted property line RIGHT IN FRONT OF OUR LIVING ROOM WINDOWS, cut down Alan's tree stand and stole it. It had been there for years...the first one we let him put up. I wanted to be able to keep half an eye on him when he was first out hunting alone, so it has been there at least 6 years. They had to come right up almost to the house to get it and spend a goodly amount of time getting it out of the brush around the tree. Must have done it while we were milking because otherwise I would almost certainly have seen them. I must look out those big windows a thousand times a day.
And the dogs would have barked.
Guess that is what you get when they put up a housing development right next to you.
Sunday, January 09, 2011
Saturday, January 08, 2011
Well, Duh
So what did he do? Try and try and try to get out until finally one day he evaded my hand and made it. Now he sleeps in a box elder tree with Mr. Fluff and wanders around in the snow all day. I feed them both next to the coop and he steals cat food but...... Sooner or later I will catch him, if the fox doesn't get there first, but I am calling him WD. (And not 40.)
Grace had her baby, a lively heifer. It was running around the barn when we got there yesterday (after all those barn checks). It would be nice to think we could make fewer extra trips to the barn, but now we have to start watching Zobaba, Booth and Magic, who are all due to calve in the next week or so. Then in February and March, watch out; sleep is probably going to be kinda scarce.
Have a nice, warm day!
Friday, January 07, 2011
New NY Commissioner of Agriculture
Looks like it. I hate to see Patrick Hooker go, and hope he finds another great position in ag leadership. He has done a great job as commissioner.
That being said, if he has to leave, Darrel Aubertine is a great choice as a successor. A sixth-generation farmer, he has been a tremendous pro-agriculture force during his tenure as a state senator and assemblyman.
Harbingers of What?
"This is a good time of year to be snug in the barn," Rose Magnolia
Yesterday we put the heifers up the hill so they wouldn't repeat Tuesday's adventure when the milk tanker picked up. (Someone insisted...might have been me.) While I was standing in the snowy sunshine being a fence, I bird watched....one of the best perks of this job is being able to bird watch while working....chickadees in the calf yard, starlings down in the barn eaves, tree sparrows and dark-eyed juncos working through the bushes. A gold finch sitting boldly in the tip of a box elder branch, soaking up the sun much like I was. I glanced up at a flock of what I thought were starlings, winging west in a hurry.
Wait a minute! White britches, russet breasts, chocolate brown bodies hurtling by...a whole double decade of winter robins right over my head. I thought I heard one in the honey locust last week, but I dismissed it as a downy woodpecker. I know quite a number of them winter over up here in chilly northern climes, but I am always delighted to see them.
Wednesday, January 05, 2011
Chasing, Not Amy, Nor Rainbows
The week in review...so far anyhow..it is only Thursday. Cold but mostly clear. A few lake effect flurries mornings, soon gone when the sun comes up. Coyotes howling right nearby most nights or so it sounds. The dog hustles to get back in the house then I can tell you.
Liz passed her milk inspector test...good job kiddo.
The white-crowned sparrow is still here and waits in the lilacs for me to put down seed on an old platform feeder, then hurries right out to eat. Geese and ducks still filling the open water, although I heard very few yesterday. I hope they aren't leaving...they are good company. They sing my lullaby each night and I will miss them when the river locks down for the winter
Some big dairies selling out on the west coast. Milk are prices high world wide, with supplies tight, except here in the USA or so they are telling us. I think maybe two people in the world actually understand what is going on with milk pricing, but I am pretty sure we are being cheated by players a lot bigger than we are...
Chased heifers with the car Tuesday. The men took the stock trailer through the gate and left it open for the milk truck. Five springers there, but they stay up the hill at a feeder and never bother....until Tuesday.
I could see they were feeling riley and wild so, since it was noon and I had not had time to get breakfast, I hurried over to the house for a piece of corn bread, glass of milk, and my book (the new Kathy Reichs, which has a mistake in it...just ask Becky, our McDonald's guru) planning on taking all back to the barn and watching the gate until the milk truck came.
We don't like our driver to have to get out of the truck to open and close the gate.
Well, I just about got back to the fence when Monday, dang her midnight-spotted hide, threw up her head and raced down the hill through the gate. I set my breakfast in the driveway, grabbed my keys and ran for the car to go down the house drive and up the barn one to head her off.
I got there in time mostly because the little snake went up the old pasture lane instead of down the road. All the others followed her and one of the black ones was down on the ice and had trouble getting up.
I won't bore you with the details of how I got in front of them to get them past the car, while making them think I was behind them too, so they would go back up the hill, but I got it done.
They went up and lay down among their feed tires, happy as clams. I watched the barn cats from afar while they ate my breakfast, and listened to my stomach singing four part harmony as if I was a cow, until almost two. That was when the tanker left and I could close the gate.
Just about then the men came back and apologized for leaving me in that fix.
I was nice about it even though I had been planning on writing the Farm Side while the house was quiet. There was still some cornbread left and since it felt more like lunch time anyhow I had it with homemade vegetable beef soup. I am sure the reason it tasted so good had something to do with how late it was.
However, the word is out. On tanker day those five heifers either go in the barn or up in the hill pasture.
Period.
Mamas Don't Let Your Babies
Stay up all night texting girls from mid-western states (and west coast states....and New York State....and all over heck......)
Labels:
Sons
Tuesday, January 04, 2011
Slow Dog Crossing
Monday, January 03, 2011
Belated
Here is a Christmas song, sent to me a little while ago by a friend, which you should really check out. Computer problems kept me from playing it until now....be patient when listening..these are so much more than they seem at first.
Oh, boy, here is another fantastic one....I am going to see if I can buy this for my iPod.
****Thanks Jean!
Labels:
Music
It was Embarrassing
Corn bread and chuck roast from the steer
To watch Elvis the cat attack Nick, my good dog, and thoroughly school him, until he left his breakfast (which did not consist of the stuff pictured above) and ran and hid in his crate.....
First stalking him with glowing yellow beacon eyes.
Running at him like a puma.
Then buffeting him with giant paws, tipped with freshly-sharpened claws.
Cuff, cuff, cuff, until cowed and thoroughly policed, the poor guy ran for cover.
Danged devil cat. I should have named him Fluffy...then maybe he wouldn't have been so full of himself.
Poor gentleman dog, who knows the cats are off limits to him. I was THIS temped to say the magic words.
Get the kitty.
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