I've been reading a terrific book. It's called Independence Days by Sharon Astyk. It is a guide - a very practical guide - to creating a food store from mostly local and home grown or home preserved foods. Sharon also writes a blog http://sharonastyk.com/ which I highly recommend.
Friday, October 30, 2009
Book Review "Independence Days" by Sharon Astyk
Posted by Aimee at 4:55 PM 2 comments
Thursday, October 29, 2009
Farewell Xanadu and Valentina
Sold! Xana and Valentina are both sold as bred does. I sold them cheaply, but not rediculously cheaply, considering I really don't want to keep them and feed them over the winter. I don't like either goat or want their genetics in my herd, and I don't want to eat them. Plus, goats are not worth spit on the market right now.
Posted by Aimee at 1:34 PM 1 comments
Monday, October 26, 2009
Hog (Fuel) Heaven
As I think I have mentioned, the rains have started. With a vengeance. I have no idea how much rain in inches we have received in the last couple of weeks, but I can tell you it's been enough to turn the barnyard into poo soup.
Posted by Aimee at 4:24 PM 12 comments
Sunday, October 25, 2009
#@%&*!! Chickens!!
Today I discovered another hen up in the hayloft on a nest of some dozen eggs.
Posted by Aimee at 6:26 PM 2 comments
Saturday, October 24, 2009
Shaggy Manes!
The recent hard rains have brought up my shaggy manes! Last year I discovered these mushrooms out on the hard-packed area of the pasture that used to have the old dairy barn on it. I brought some of them to the wild mushroom show and had them identified by an expert as the Shaggy Mane, classified and "edible and delectable" in mushroom guides.
Posted by Aimee at 11:04 AM 2 comments
Labels: fall, mushrooms, self-sufficiency
Friday, October 23, 2009
Fun With Sourdough
My sister, last time she came over, brought with her a gallon sized ziploc bag of sourdough starter. It was given to her by a friend, who told her the starter has been in her family for some 75 years. Whether or not that's true, it is certainly true that there are starters that old and even older which have lost none of their vigor and flavor.
Sourdough starter culture
This will take a few days, but is not at all difficult. It's quite amazing that with the repeated additions of only wheat and water, you will develop an active and living sourdough starter!
Day 1
Mix together 1 cup of whole wheat or rye flour with ¾ cup of water. Make sure that all the dough is wet into a ball. It will be stiff, but don't worry about it. Keep in a clean container covered with plastic wrap at room temperature.
Day 2
Mix together 1 cup bread flour with ½ cup of water. Add this mixture to the mixture from yesterday, and mix it all together. Yesterday's dough will likely be a little bit softer than it was, but there will not likely have occurred any rise. Cover with plastic wrap as before, and leave at room temperature.
Day 3
Mix together 1 cup of bread flour with ½ cup of water. Take the dough from the day before, and discard half of it. Mix the new and old dough's together. It will be getting wetter, and there will probably be some rise by now. Cover with plastic wrap, and leave at room temperature.
Day 4
Repeat the procedure exactly as from Day 3. A few hours after you have mixed the dough's together, your starter should have doubled in size. It is now ready for use.
Take 1 cup of your active sourdough starter, and, mix with 3 ½ cups of bread flour and 2 cups of water. Mix together well and cover with plastic wrap. After about 6 hours, the dough should have doubled in size, and become quite bubbly. It is now ready to use in a sourdough bread recipe!
You can use this starter right away, or it can be held in the fridge until you are ready to use it. I keep it in a clean large covered Tupperware container in the fridge, and take it as needed.
Posted by Aimee at 9:12 PM 2 comments
Labels: recipe, self-sufficiency
Armed Aimee?
Goat butchering season is right around the corner.
Posted by Aimee at 12:57 PM 13 comments
Tuesday, October 20, 2009
The Redneck Rubicon (WARNING - GRAPHIC)
Posted by Aimee at 10:04 PM 13 comments
Labels: butchery, husband, self-sufficiency
Look What the Cat Dragged In
When I spoke to my husband today, he said "wait till you get home. I have a surprise for you. I think you're going to like it."
Posted by Aimee at 5:53 PM 6 comments
Labels: butchery, fall, husband, self-sufficiency
Monday, October 19, 2009
Blog Party
Picked up from Farmer's Daughter:
1. What is your favorite thing to snack on while you’re blogging? Bourbon. What do you mean, that's not a snack?
2. What is one thing you wouldn’t want to live without? My family.
3. Beach, Mountains or Farm? I live on a farm within 10 miles of the beach and twenty of the mountains, so I'd say I've got all bases covered.
4. What’s your least favorite chore/household duty? Trimming goat hooves in the rain.
5. Who do people say you remind them of? I really haven't the foggiest. Has anyone ever said I remind them of anybody? Seems likely, but I can't remember.
6. Prefer parties and socializing or staying at home with the farm? I'd like to socialize on the farm.
7. What’s your all time favorite movie? Oh gosh this is impossible. The one that springs to mind is One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest with Jack Nicholson.
8. Do you sleep in your make up or remove it like a good girl every night? I haven't worn makeup since 1996.
9. Do you have a hidden talent or a deep desire to learn something that you’ve never had a chance to learn? What is it? To play an instrument, preferably piano though it would be kickin' to play the harp (harmonica, that is).
10. What’s one strange thing you’re really good at? I am good at so many things ;) A strange thing? Whistling...?
11. What first attracted you to your spouse? His amazing, light up a city smile.
12. What is something you love to smell? Right now, the fallen autumn leaves.
13. Tell something about you that you know irritates people. I am an insufferable know-it-all.
14. When you have extra money (HA!) what’s the first thing you think to do with it? Buy something we need for the homestead, like a centrifuge to clean waste veggie oil.
15. Are you a silent laugher or a loud laugher? What makes you laugh the hardest? I guffaw like a crazed donkey. Lots of things make me laugh, but I'm going to say my daughter Rowan makes me laugh most often.
16. Where is your favorite place to shop? A good grocery store.
17. What’s one thing you’d do more often if you had more time? Stay in bed with the husband.
18. Are you a big spender or frugal? Pretty frugal. Some might say cheapskate.
19. Who is your favorite character of all time (from a movie or book)? Atticus, from To Kill a Mockingbird.
20. Would you want to be famous? Hell no. I value my anonymity.
Posted by Aimee at 6:34 PM 6 comments
Sunday, October 18, 2009
Apples Kicked my Ass
After the girl scouts went home, a lovely older couple from Lynden showed up with a full barrel (or more) of Russet apples off their antique tree.
Posted by Aimee at 6:06 PM 7 comments
Community Service
Just got finished pressing cider with a troupe of girlscouts. I didn't even keep any of the cider: it was a purely altruistic endeavor. Here's hoping the scouts learned something worthwhile.
Posted by Aimee at 1:47 PM 0 comments
Saturday, October 17, 2009
Baking in the Rain
Last week, my sister brought me some sourdough starter that a friend had given her. The friend says it's an old family starter more than 75 years old. I can't vouch for that, but I can say it makes some wicked awesome bread.
Posted by Aimee at 7:45 PM 5 comments
Rainin' in Paradize
...Song on the tremendously awesome album Radiolina by Manu Chao. Also a descriptor of what is happening here.
Posted by Aimee at 1:03 PM 1 comments
Thursday, October 15, 2009
National Blog Action Day is Here!
Posted by Aimee at 3:56 PM 20 comments
Wednesday, October 14, 2009
Well, That Didn't Take Long
Note for my Goat Book: All my females were most likely bred today. My Rent-a-Buck, he of the infinitely aromatic testicles, has quickly forced most of my does into heat.
Finally, Unequivocal Good News
New York/Nairobi, 21 September 2009. The global public’s desire to see action on climate change was clearly spotlighted today with the announcement that the Billion Tree Campaign has reached 7 billion trees—one for every person on the planet. Over the past three years millions of people ranging from scouts to presidents and from schoolchildren to city dwellers and corporate heads have been rolling up their sleeves and getting their hands dirty for the environment through tree planting. Today’s milestone was reached with the news that the Government of China has planted 2.6 billion trees as part of this unique campaign, bringing the total to 7.3 billion trees planted in 167 countries worldwide. Achim Steiner, UN Under-Secretary General and Executive Director of the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), said: “Seven billion trees, seven billion commitments to action and seven billion reasons why governments should be inspired to Seal the Deal at the crucial UN climate change convention meeting in Copenhagen in less than 80 days’ time.” “When this campaign was launched in 2006, there were those who said it could not be done. But day after day and week after week, people have got out into their gardens, parks and cities and into the countryside and the rural areas to prove the doubters wrong,” he added. “Above all the Billion Tree Campaign shows that the simple act of planting a tree resonates and unites the child in the slums of Africa with a president in Mexico, or a corporate CEO in Paris with UN peacekeepers in Timor-Leste. It is the kind of solidarity that now needs to be expressed at the level of all governments and heads of state between now and December in order to move economies towards a low carbon, sustainable path,” said Mr Steiner. The Billion Tree Campaign was launched jointly with the World Agroforestry Centre during the UN climate convention meeting in November 2006 in Nairobi, Kenya, under the patronage of Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Professor Wangari Maathai and His Serene Highness Prince Albert II of Monaco. Its initial goal was to catalyze the pledging and the planting of one billion trees as a way of giving public expression to the challenges of climate change and also forest and ecosystem degradation. Since then the Billion Tree Campaign has more than surpassed its aims, evolving into a true ‘People’s Campaign’ – more than half (52 per cent) of all the participants are private individuals. Furthermore, tree planting has become both an inter-faith and an inter-generational activity, with the trees symbolizing connections between children and parents and bringing together people from different religious backgrounds. Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Wangari Maathai, the founder of the Kenyan Green Belt Movement and the campaign’s co-patron, said: “Let’s plant even more trees to celebrate this wonderful achievement, the fruit of collective action from people all over the planet. By making the Billion Tree Campaign such an incredible success, people from every continent are calling their governments to truly start caring for the planet and to find unity in the fight against climate change.” His Serene Highness Albert II, the Sovereign Prince of Monaco and the campaign's co-patron, said: “I have always had a strong belief in the symbolic strength of the Plant for the Planet: Billion Tree Campaign and I am delighted that it has exceeded our greatest expectations, far beyond the welfare linked to replanting trees, to benefit future generations.”Billion Tree Project
Surpasses Goal of 7
Billion
Trees!!!!
Posted by Aimee at 12:30 PM 1 comments
Tuesday, October 13, 2009
Rent-a-Buck
However, his mere presence and his overwhelmingly manly hormones will shortly force the does into heat - within a couple of days they will be flipping their tails all over the place and standing still for his attentions. Bet you men out there are a little bit jealous, aren't you? Oh come on admit it. All a woman has to do is smell your armpits or your unwashed socks and she suddenly just...can't.... help herself....
Posted by Aimee at 6:08 PM 2 comments
Good News is Hard to Find
When I decided to participate in the blogger's action day on Climate Change, I knew I was not going to post a litany of scary statistics. I've read all those things and it hasn't made me hopeful or optimistic. Instead, I wanted to ferret out and post some good news, news about how the world may be adapting and how people are coming up with good ideas.
Those depressed by the seemingly relentless combination of economic and environmental gloom in recent months have something to be cheerful about.
In the first major study of the effect of the recession on climate change, theInternational Energy Agency (IEA), which advises its 28 member countries on policy, is predicting a drop in carbon dioxide emissions of around 2.6 per cent in 2009 - the largest in 40 years.
The news comes as about 100 world leaders meet at United Nations headquarters in New York today for a one-day summit. The unprecedented gathering - the highest-level meeting on climate change ever held - is an effort to invigorate negotiations in the run-up to the UN climate conference in Copenhagen, Denmark, in December, when nations will be asked to agree on a new deal to tackle climate change.
So far, international negotiations have been slowed by national interests. Efforts to break the deadlock could be given added momentum by the IEA's estimate that a quarter of the emissions reduction expected to be achieved this year will be as a result of government action.
According to an excerpt of the IEA's annual World Energy Outlook, due to be published on 6 October, Europe's target of cutting emissions by 20 per cent by 2020, US car emission standards and China's energy-efficiency policies have had the greatest effect.
Speaking to Reuters, Fatih Birol, the agency's chief economist, said: "This fall in emissions and in investment in fossil fuels will only have meaning with agreement in Copenhagen which provides a low-carbon signal to investors."
Meanwhile The Guardian reported that the aviation industry will pledge to halve CO2 emissions by 2050 in an announcement to be unveiled to the world leaders meeting in New York today.
Posted by Aimee at 11:04 AM 8 comments
Sunday, October 11, 2009
Small Piece of Good News
This video GOOD News: Climate Change Changes Climate Change - Video is rather silly in appearance, but the news in it is not. This is a rare example of a negative feedback loop in climate change - melting ice releases minerals which increase photosynthesis in plankton, thus absorbing CO2.
Posted by Aimee at 6:20 PM 7 comments
Saturday, October 10, 2009
Mountains Beyond Mountains
Today was a cut-crystal day with a spectacular sunset. Visibility infinite. Temperature pleasant, in the high fifties. Breezy, but not windy. The kind of day that makes the animals kick up their heels.
Today's Hopeful Climate Change News
Tuesday, 22 September 2009 Researchers say they have found a way to 'green' the Sahara desert with swathes of trees - and put the brakes on climate change at the same time. Leonard Ornstein, a cell biologist from the Mount Sinai School of Medicine in the United States, and NASA climate modellers David Rind and Igor Aleinov, say that water from the desert's neighbouring oceans could be desalinated and transported inland with pumps and aqueducts. Heat-tolerant, fast-growing species such as eucalyptus could be planted, with drip irrigation - using plastic tubing to deliver water to roots - to minimise evaporation. Such forests could cool the Sahara by up to eight degrees Celsius and return rain to the region, they say. Clouds would also help to reflect the sun's rays. The fast-growing trees could absorb eight billion tonnes of carbon dioxide per year - the amount emitted from burning fossil fuels and forests today - and could do so for decades. The price tag of US$2 trillion a year is not low. But Ornstein and colleagues say that after several decades the forests would provide a sustainable source of firewood, making them carbon neutral. Drawbacks of the increased moisture are the possibility of more locust plagues and the prevention of iron-rich dust blowing into the Atlantic Ocean where it feeds sea life, the researchers say. Nevertheless, the idea "is incredibly important and definitely worth taking seriously," says atmospheric scientist Richard Anthes, president of the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research. SciDev.net
Posted by Aimee at 11:22 AM 5 comments
Friday, October 9, 2009
Blog Action Day Climate Change
Every year - for the last few, anyway - there has been a national day of action blogging on a specific subject. Everyone who blogs is invited to sound off on the chosen topic, no matter where they stand. This year's topic - chosen by e-vote - is climate change. A subject that those who know me know I care deeply about. I can't possibly imagine, in fact, why anyone wouldn't. Maybe a misanthropic hermit with no descendants. We all have a stake in this fight. The biggest stake imaginable - our children's survival and quality of life.
Posted by Aimee at 1:16 PM 2 comments
Labels: climate change
Thursday, October 8, 2009
Mid-Autumn Pastoral
The seasons have indubitably changed. All the pears have fallen off the pear tree. We mowed the lawn for the last time last week. The garden has been fully abandoned. Nobody is even coming by with apples to press anymore. But it is still early to mid fall, my favorite time. It's still bright and crisp, not yet soggy and freezing. There is still light in the sky when I awake and when I get home in the afternoons. The long dark season of pure endurance has yet to commence.
Posted by Aimee at 5:17 PM 3 comments
Wednesday, October 7, 2009
Disappearing Chickens
Oh No!!!! The lesbian hens are back together with their little clutch of three, but black mama (2) and her brood of five are missing! All of them!
Posted by Aimee at 9:56 AM 3 comments
Tuesday, October 6, 2009
Same-Sex Chicken Experiment
Well, my happy little lesbian hen family has not survived. Chick envy appears to have been the problem. The yellow and one of the black mamas had been happily sharing their little brood of three for nearly two weeks without problems, and it looked like all would be well.
Posted by Aimee at 7:45 AM 2 comments
Sunday, October 4, 2009
Sudden Abundance
Ever since the ladder broke, I haven't been able to check the hayloft for eggs. I had thought that perhaps without the ladder the hens couldn't get up there anymore, but they can.
Posted by Aimee at 7:08 PM 5 comments
Friday, October 2, 2009
Cajeta is Love
Cajeta, for those of you so deprived as to have never heard of it, is a delicious Mexican sweet. It's basically caramel, made with goat's milk, vanilla, and lots of sugar, all boiled together for a long, long time. That's simplifying, but only a little. A recipe is kind of redundant.
Posted by Aimee at 2:06 PM 2 comments
Labels: mexican food, milk, preserving
Thursday, October 1, 2009
I Never Thought I'd Live to Hate Tomatoes
Lord in heaven. How can it be that the amount of tomatoes I can pick in 45 minutes takes 3 days to process? I am heartily sick of tomatoes in all thier forms.
Posted by Aimee at 5:38 PM 5 comments
Labels: fall, preserving, self-sufficiency, summer