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Sunday, August 10, 2014

Good Morning from Northview






Where things are humming. Must be the young entry is off the nest and in the air. Although the one in flight looks like a female, the faintly barred throat leads me to believe that it is a young male. It certainly is inquisitive, as it gave me a good looking over and was noodling around in a geranium about six inches from my ear.

Friday, August 08, 2014

Russia and the Price of Bacon



No doubt my view of international trade from here at the kitchen table is more than slightly simplistic. 

However, I was just reading a Meatingplace article about how the Russian ban on food imports from the EU (and just about everywhere else on earth...wonder what that will do for food prices for folks living under the sign of the bear???) is going to increase competition with the USA for Asian pork markets. 

Lately our pork has been a hot commodity in places like China where they don't do quite as good a job of raising it as we do.

Now, what with porcine viral diarrhea decimating piglets on our hog farms, and pork being a kind of dicey business to be in in the first place, I wish our farmers well, and hope this doesn't hurt them too badly. Having been in the dairy business almost all my life, I am familiar with how over-supply, even manufactured oversupply, fomented by counting the same milk twice and all, can cripple an industry.

However, maybe, the price of bacon will drop a dime or two.

And yes it rained again yesterday, despite it being sunny and nice nearly all day. Six times at my last count, although it could have been seven. Friends to the west of us said that it has rained every day for ten days... and they said that a couple of days ago. Makes putting in baled hay utterly impossible.  Worst of it is, twenty miles from here they haven't had a drop and are putting up hay like it was summer or something.





And BTW, if you see our man Jade Schultz, wish him a Happy Birthday!

Thursday, August 07, 2014

Heat Index


If I have heard the term at all this summer, it has only been a couple of times. There may have been two or three days when we whined about being too warm, but it has been the coolest summer in my memory.

We never even took the cover off the little air conditioner. There have been other summers when we sweltered along without it, trying to save on electricity, but never have we just not wanted it.


Many evenings are so cool that I come down in the morning to find all the inside doors closed....virtually unheard of in this big house, designed so well for natural air cooling (which is no fun in the winter!!!)

This morning, I realized, that calendar be darned, it's pretty much fall. Last night as I walked to the barn there were pockets of cool, crisp, clear air in every shady area. Crickets and cicadas are screaming. Little brown warblers are showing up in the hedgerows.

The grass on the hill behind the house has turned pinky-gold; I just heard a chickadee, cardinals and other cold time birds are beginning to hang around too. The sun comes up, all lazy and slow, as far south as the big cherry tree in the hedgerow between us and town.


On one hand I am so not ready. We really need to get some hay made or it is going to be a real tough year when tax time comes around. On the other hand it is really nice out.

Oh, and thank you so much to Jan of the Poodle and Dog blog for this lovely post about farming. She gets it!

Cattle Rustlers right here in New York


We figured when we heard about these calves being stolen  earlier this week that they were taken right down to the sale in Central Bridge and were long gone.

However, the nefarious, nasty, mean, dirty, rotten sons of guns that rustled them at least took milk replacer to feed them too.

So maybe they can be found, although probably not. 

If you hear, or see, or know anything about this lousy crime, please contact the authorities.

Things are getting pretty bad when somebody cuts a gate to steal little baby calves from a farmer.

Wednesday, August 06, 2014

Work Interrupted. Post Interrupted too.

These two look like mother and baby, but instead they are full siblings, sired by Checkerboard Magnums Promise, out of Frieland LF Bama Breeze

This was meant to be published yesterday.

Rain again. The last load of hay didn't get unloaded into the barn.

I dragged the barrels over to plant some new lettuce, but that isn't happening. And forget picking beans or squash.

Liz is trying to clean the horse and pony barn for tomorrow, when the veterinarian will come to do the health work, Coggins, rabies vaccination, etc. on Diamond and Jack who look to be going this year.

It will be the first ever show for Jack, a teenager now, which should be downright interesting.

However, storm after pop up storm just keeps pouring down. And when it rains, it rains HARD.

So Liz is getting wet, and I am watching a soundly sleeping Peggy, which is a pretty good thing to be doing on such a wet day....and making spaghetti sauce for supper. That too.

Monkey Cage

See the Flower?

Sometimes this place feels just like one....and not at a well-run zoo either.

 From visiting Walmart to pick up Liz's new glasses, only to find that the non-English speaking clerk who called gave us the wrong info, so it was a wasted trip, to Alan going missing....his phone was just dead and he had to work late, but he was in Manhattan....so there were several people pretty worried about him.

And Daisy, who came to us last year at this time, unneutered, and has remained that way because her health is so poor, coming in season and turning into a raving lunatic, not fit company for Martian monkeys.

And deadline.

See the Birdie? (There is one btw)



And the boss needing my computer to watch the Fasig-Tipton sale, so I couldn't restore what little sanity I maintain, with my silly little games.....

See the Bug? Can you tell I have been spending a lot of time talking to Peggy?

Well, yesterday was a day best forgotten.

Hopefully it will be a little calmer today.

Tuesday, August 05, 2014

Speaking of Muck



It is never a good idea to bite the hand that feeds you. Or to donate a couple of thou to an organization dedicated to doing away with your best customers.

In this case, Muck Boots employees held a fund raiser for HSUS, then the company bragged about it on their page.

You are probably aware that, despite all the cute puppies and kittens they use in their ads, that organization dedicates most of their funds to pensions for staff, fund raising, and destroying animal agriculture. 

They are busy right now in Missouri fighting against a right to farm law.

And who wears their boots?

Farmers. 

Epic fail it would seem to me.

Anyhow, I suspect that the uproar resulting from this is going to leave the Yellowtail Fail in the dust. Lots of people drink wine. Wear barn boots? Not so much.

Dairy Carrie covered it well

Monday, August 04, 2014

Brand New Tractor

New turkey tractor that is. All natural lawn mower anyone?


Bopping to Scotland the Brave, played on the pipes.
Uncle Alan is teaching her right.

Mushroom Madness




Yeah, they were growing on the valuable organic fertilizer, produced daily by our obliging horses.


Saturday, August 02, 2014

You May be a Farm Girl if

BTW, this is Liz's arm

You run over to the milk house windowsill at the barn to get a roll of Vetrap to doctor on your arm, upon which you have poison ivy, or wild parsley poisoning, or some other natural, outdoor, chemical, nasty burn.

You are certainly a farm girl if it doesn't bother you that it is calf scours yellow.


And, yes, Virginia, there are beans. Beans for dinner last night. Another big bowl in the fridge waiting to be put up today. One half row almost ready, the picked over rows putting out a few already, and at least three more rows in the upper garden not in bloom yet and needing weeding, but growing. 

I am seeing beans in my sleep.



Friday, August 01, 2014

Busted

Got rain? Why, yes, or at least yesterday we did

They caught the people who...allegedly....shot up our neighbor's tractor.

Now if they can just find our other neighbor's baler.

First Day on the New Feet

Over the Mountain

And Through the Woods

Past the Feeder Wagon

Hey, I'm Getting Good

Ma-a-a-a, Hey, Ma-a-a-a-a

I'm Right Here, Shut Your Pie Hole

Thursday, July 31, 2014

Picking Wet Beans

Baby turkeys

Is frowned upon because of the potential to spread disease to the plants. However, there was no choice yesterday. There were so many ripe and no promise of any dry weather to come. At least most of them were more or less dry and there sure were a lot of beans. I filled my two biggest bowls, and there is another big piece of row to go.

I just ran out of steam. Today we will process and freeze them.


Hoping strongly that the curled leaves on the tomatoes in the upper garden are not caused by late blight. If they are, kiss that crop goodbye. Seems we only get good tomatoes maybe one year in three, even if I plant them in new, clean ground.

Ida Red

Oh, well, I put in some more lettuce yesterday as the first crop is almost gone. You can grow a lot of lettuce in a small barrel or flower pot and it gets a lot less buggy that way. I should probably think about starting a couple of pots indoors too. I always wait too late and we are without lettuce for a while in the fall.

Not much else going on. Haying is very slow because of the relentless rain. C'mon now, it does not have to rain four days a week on my account. Or even two. Although the whole green-as-Ireland thing is very beautiful this summer, there are a lot of farmers desperately trying to get their crops in.

It could let up for a bit....just sayin'
  

Vitis Riparia

Wednesday, July 30, 2014

See What I Mean?





I know, I know, these are not beans, but believe me, there are beans out there.....