The end of July, and already it's been a long hot summer. I think the heat may have peaked yesterday (at 101 degrees!!!) but it's not really going to cool down to what we might call normal temperatures anytime soon. And as far as I know, there's no rain in the forecast at all. In fact, I remember hearing that the long-term forecast was for "drier than normal" conditions right through september.
Thursday, July 30, 2009
Thistle Situation
The end of July, and already it's been a long hot summer. I think the heat may have peaked yesterday (at 101 degrees!!!) but it's not really going to cool down to what we might call normal temperatures anytime soon. And as far as I know, there's no rain in the forecast at all. In fact, I remember hearing that the long-term forecast was for "drier than normal" conditions right through september.
Wednesday, July 29, 2009
Trade Network Week Eight
Today the kale fairy gave me:
Posted by Aimee at 5:46 PM 2 comments
Labels: self-sufficiency, trade
Flopsy Update #3
Hooray! Finally, this morning, I got all the milk out of Flopsy's right side (not left, as previously, erroneously written). Along with the milk came several incredibly icky clots of hardened milk. I would milk for a while, then a clot would plug up the orifice and I'd have to work at getting it out while the poor goat hollered and kicked. I am still being very gentle, but I'm sure it hurts.
Posted by Aimee at 8:44 AM 1 comments
Tuesday, July 28, 2009
Flopsy Update #2
I can't milk her! This morning, milk came out. Tonight, nothing! Just a drop or two. The teat is plugged solid. The bag is tight. Aack! Poor goat!
Posted by Aimee at 7:07 PM 2 comments
Flopsy Update
The vet says Flopsy has an injury in the teat. Maybe somebody stepped on it, or maybe I injured it myself trying to squeeze out the infected coagulated milk. Either way, now it's full of scar tissue and inflammation as well as infection.
Posted by Aimee at 9:21 AM 0 comments
Monday, July 27, 2009
Mastitis
Flopsy has mastitis in her left teat. I'm taking her to the vet today. So far she's had two doses of IM penicillin and two doses of aspirin for a high fever. Can't milk out the teat. I think they're going to have to irrigate it (yuck.).
Posted by Aimee at 10:57 AM 1 comments
Sunday, July 26, 2009
A Very Good Dog
At about 8 o'clock this morning, the goats got away from me. I left the gate open for just ONE second while I slipped out to grab the hose, and they stampeded out. Usually, they stick together pretty tightly, but they must have made themselves a plan, because this time they scattered to the four winds.
Posted by Aimee at 5:32 PM 4 comments
Saturday, July 25, 2009
Saturday Farmer's Market Trade
I love the saturday farmer's market.
Posted by Aimee at 6:50 PM 1 comments
Labels: trade
Be Prepared
Due to all the reading I've been doing on the internet since I started this blog, I've begun a slow, inexorable descent into paranoia and fear about the future (Thanks, fellow bloggers!). Actually, it is by no means just internet information that has me terrified, it's the news in general. I'm not going into deep specifics, but between climate change, peak oil, vanishing pollinators, and the economy, you can pick your poison. There are so many horsemen on the horizon, it looks like the Hunnish army.
Posted by Aimee at 8:49 AM 3 comments
Labels: self-sufficiency
Thursday, July 23, 2009
Trade Network Week Seven and Delicious Chicken
I don't know what week it is. But today the Kale Fairy gave me two heads of red leaf lettuce, a gallon sized ziploc bag of mixed salad greens, one of chard, and two of kale (one cavolo nero and one curly purple). Also, about seven turnips, two small heads of fennel, a big bunch of red carrots, and the most gargantuan bunch of italian flat leaf parsley I've ever seen.
Posted by Aimee at 6:27 PM 4 comments
Labels: chicken, recipe, self-sufficiency, trade
Chick Attrition
I know there are plenty of people who raise chickens out there. Do your chicks suffer the terrible infant mortality rate that mine do? The first hen who tried to raise chicks this year lost all five of hers over a period of a month or so. It was so sad, they each met a different grisly end, or just disappeared one by one until finally there were none. The poor mama hen ran around looking for them for a few days.... thankfully, the brain of a chicken is probably not up to the task of long term memory, nor is she likely capable of anything we might call grief.
Posted by Aimee at 5:00 PM 5 comments
Monday, July 20, 2009
Chick Update
Homero is opening eggs which he says are peeping. He is doing it on camera for his relatives in Oaxaca. Thank the Lord I haven't the technical savvy to do what he asked and set up this computer so we could watch, too. It's a thoroughly disgusting procedure.
If the peeping eggs yield up living chicks, there will be at least five.
Posted by Aimee at 9:02 PM 3 comments
Remote Post - Heat and Chicks
I'm frying down here in Tucson. Daytime temperatures have not dipped below 104 or so since I got here. Nightime temperatures hover in the high 80's. The water in dad's pool is warmer than blood. I hate it. I told dad he better not ever have any kind of crisis in the summertime; I won't come. It's christmas, thanksgiving, or nothing doing from now on.
I know I've crossed the line between reporting and just plain whining, but I can't help it. The van I'm driving down here has air conditioning, sort of, at least it blows air at the people in the front seat that is marginally less hot than the air outside. But I find that even if I park as close to the doors of the store/restaurant/mall as possible, the walk across the blacktop parking lot makes me feel like fainting. You never see anybody on the sidewalks. People live entirely indoors just as if it were January in Minnesota. I realize I'm rather a wimp when it comes to heat, but personally I can't figure out why anybody ever decided this part of the world was fit for human habitation.
I can't help but wonder if it used to be normal to have two solid months of above hundred degree heat every year without respite. I can't help but wonder what it will be like in ten or twenty years. It's scary to contemplate. We have a friend who lives in Mexicali, Mexico - not so very far from here - who told us that for a few days earlier in the summer, the temperature was in the mid 120's. Don't proteins start to denature at about that temperature? Don't people actually start to literally cook in their own skins?
Okay, okay. I'm done for now. In other news - Homero found more baby chicks. He told me on the phone last night that when he went out to the barn for the evening feeding, he saw three tiny newly hatched chicks on the floor. There was no mother hen in sight. Careful inspection of the hayloft revealed a black hen on a nest with several more eggs in it, one of them in mid-hatch. My silly husband put the baby chicks back up in the hayloft with their mom. No, no, I said, you have to bring the mother hen down, eggs and all, and make her a nest on the ground in the mama barn where they'll be safe. If you put the babies back up, they'll just fall off the edge again and freeze during the night. The mother hen won't leave her nest for a couple of days yet. He said he'd do that.
Homero seems to be taking care of everything just fine, at least according to his telephone reports. He says he's not bothering to separate the baby bucklings anymore because they've learned to nurse through the fence. We'll have to see what we can do about that. He's got far too much milk even so, and says he doesn't know what to do with it all now that I'm not making cheese with it. He's eating cereal with milk for breakfast lunch and dinner, along with fried eggs and frozen pizzas. Ah, freedom.
I'm ready to get home.
Monday, July 13, 2009
Posted by Aimee at 11:47 AM 4 comments
Labels: farm, g, goat cheese, husband, summer
Saturday, July 11, 2009
High Summer Trade in High Gear
Today I brought six dozen eggs to the farmer's market and came home with three pounds of pickling cukes, three bunches of chiogga beets, two regular cucumbers, five enormous zucchinis, four pounds of string beans, a bunch of epazote and a giant bunch of parsley. It made a pretty big pile on the kitchen table. Now I need to use it all up or preserve it.
Posted by Aimee at 12:36 PM 0 comments
Labels: husband, self-sufficiency, summer, trade
Sunday, July 5, 2009
Goat in the House
This is going to be a little hard to explain on the computer, but I'll try.
Posted by Aimee at 9:03 PM 3 comments
Labels: goats
Thursday, July 2, 2009
A Handy Man is Good to Find...?
This post is about my dear husband. My husband, Homero, has many fine qualities. Why, just from the above picture you can see two of them for yourself. He's a fabulous, loving father and a damn handsome man. There are plenty of other fine qualities. I could probably list them all day: he's a hardworking provider, an honest-to-God family man, and he's even a good dancer.
Posted by Aimee at 5:57 PM 1 comments
Labels: homesteading, husband, self-sufficiency