Tuesday, October 25, 2022
The Rains Are Here (Hallelujah)
Posted by Aimee at 7:56 AM 0 comments
Wednesday, October 19, 2022
Smoke and Drought
Posted by Aimee at 9:11 AM 0 comments
Friday, September 30, 2022
Everybody Gets a Share (Doggy Delight)
Mercy
Posted by Aimee at 8:15 PM 0 comments
Labels: dog, Meat, self-sufficiency
Monday, September 19, 2022
Meat Math, Bovine Edition (GRAPHIC)
After I found the cow’s head sticking three-quarters of the way out of the pot, I convinced Homero to remove it, and to cut it into pieces with his sawzall, removing the horns and the disgusting patches of hair that clung to the skull around them. He has a plan for the horns - they are a gift to his friend Clacoyo, who wants to mount them on his motorcycle helmet.
Posted by Aimee at 6:36 PM 0 comments
Labels: cow, death, food, frugal, husband, Meat, meat eating
Wednesday, September 14, 2022
Farm Stand Photos
Free cucumbers in the Kickerville stand.
The Kickerville stand from the outside. Looking fairly empty on this particular day.
Sweet corn somewhere in the vast, confusing Bermuda Triangle between Enterprise road and the Guide, south of Birch Bay-Lynden road. Forgot to note the address. There are lots of sweet corn stands at the moment, of course, and they tend to be single-produce operations, appearing in mid-august and shuttered by early September.
This stand is a real unique one. The owner is a beekeeper and he sells his honey, plain or compounded with herbs and spices and medicines. The lavender honey is especially nice. Overall the best, thickest honey I’ve found. He also sells gorgeous beeswax candles and copies of his self-published novels.
Friday, August 19, 2022
Farm Stand Fun
Friday, July 29, 2022
Balking a Buck (Apron Antics)
Posted by Aimee at 4:44 PM 0 comments
Tuesday, July 19, 2022
The Pantry Project (Ice Cream Edition)
Ran across an ice cream maker at Goodwill the other day, and it reminded me that ice cream is a wonderful way of preserving the products of the season - goat milk, eggs, and fresh fruit. Also it’s been pretty hot lately and that’s just the excuse I needed. I bought the ice cream maker.
Posted by Aimee at 10:39 PM 0 comments
Labels: cheesemaking, food, frugal, frugality, fruit
Thursday, July 14, 2022
They’re BAAAAAAACK (Prey Animal Strategy)
Right before bed, I decided to go out and check on the goats one more time, on the off-chance that mama Clio had found her babies. I was fairly certain coyotes had dragged them off, since two hours of me and Clio both searching for them this afternoon, Clio yelling her head off the whole time, had yielded nothing. But there they were, like nothing ever happened. Just two sassy little baby goats without a care in the world.
The End, I Think
I’m done. Lost TWO more baby goats today, presumably to coyotes. I came home from work and Clio’s twins are gone. They were born just a week ago, and Clio, a first freshener, was a great mama goat. She’s been yelling and yelling for them for the last hour, following me around as I walked the pasture.
Posted by Aimee at 7:07 PM 0 comments
Monday, June 20, 2022
Project Pantry (Meatballs and Morels)
Posted by Aimee at 6:01 PM 1 comments
Labels: food, frugal, recipe, self sufficiency
Sunday, June 19, 2022
Meet the Herd
Buck of many names. In keeping with our tradition of using weather or atmospheric or space related names for our bucks, we named him Jupiter. But the the girls started calling him Juniper instead. And then, just recently, I talked to one of his former owners and they said his name was Hunter. Homero likes that name and so now we all call him something different. He cares not a whit.
Christmas (pregnant) is my oldest goat at about 7 or 8. She’s also my biggest goat except for the buck and a great milker.
Sweetpea, Luna’s mom. Great little goat and very friendly because she was a bottle baby.
Posted by Aimee at 4:55 PM 0 comments
Friday, June 17, 2022
Cajeta (The Best Thing You Can Do With Goat’s Milk)
Posted by Aimee at 9:28 PM 0 comments
Labels: mexican food, milk, recipe
Monday, June 6, 2022
Project Pantry (Poor Man’s Soufflé)
Posted by Aimee at 9:06 PM 0 comments
Labels: farm, frugal, recipe, self sufficiency
Monday, May 30, 2022
Herb Harvest 2022
Spearmint is a lovely herbal addition to lots of dishes and we eat a fair amount of it fresh. I add it by the handful to tabouli, for example, and to fresh fruit salads, especially melons. I added some to the melange of herbs I chopped finely and added to my chevre. It even goes well into a pot of Mexican chicken soup, if you can believe that.
Then I went and cut five more big bunches of peppermint and hung them up to dry. Since they are in the chicken yard,
I gave them a good rinse first. This time I will try to remember to strip the leaves and jar them up before another year goes by. I should probably order some desiccant packs from the restaurant supply store, too. That will eliminate any chance of mold. And I’ll want them in a few months when it’s mushroom drying season.
Now, I should probably get to work and harvest the lemon balm! Lemon balm makes delicious lemony tea and it’s very calming and good for nerves and insomnia. And I have an absolutely ridiculous amount of it. It’s in the mint family as well, and it gets out of control fairly quickly.
Posted by Aimee at 7:28 PM 1 comments
Labels: farm, frugal, frugality, preserving, seasons, self sufficiency, self-sufficiency
Monday, May 16, 2022
Another One for the Coyotes (Attempts at Fence-Fixing)
Ever since the coyotes took Cosmos from the main barn during the night, we’ve been locking up the two remaining babies in the smaller, secure mama barn at night. We have to lock them up fairly late, unless we want to get up at the crack of dawn to milk the mamas. We go out after sundown but before full dark, which this time of year is about 8:30-8:45.
In this picture you can see how much acreage our neighbors to the west have. It’s about 300, give or take, and it has fields and forest and streams. It’s absolutely teeming with coyotes. When I complained about the problem on Facebook a few hunters contacted me and offered to help me out, so I may ask the neighbor’s permission to let a couple hunters try and pick off the boldest ones. It may discourage them for a while. Especially if, as has been suggested, we leave a carcass hanging to rot on the fence where they normally come in.
Posted by Aimee at 6:17 PM 0 comments
Wednesday, May 4, 2022
Coyote Blues (Adios Cosmos)
Posted by Aimee at 5:12 PM 1 comments
Labels: death, farm, goats, homesteading, predator
Friday, April 22, 2022
Pasture Puzzle (All Flesh is Grass)
Posted by Aimee at 6:08 PM 0 comments
Labels: cow, homestead, meat eating, pasture, self sufficiency
Wednesday, April 13, 2022
First Babies of 2022 (Bitsy Babies)
Posted by Aimee at 10:13 PM 0 comments
Sunday, April 3, 2022
Spring Chickens
We got some baby chicks. Now that we have a coop for chickens so close to the house - right inside the fenced backyard - and can be reasonably sure that coyotes aren’t going to get them, we thought we’d take the risk on a few more.
Posted by Aimee at 10:38 PM 0 comments
Sunday, March 27, 2022
Project Pantry Week One
Posted by Aimee at 5:16 PM 1 comments
Wednesday, March 23, 2022
Forest Foraging (Spring Greens)
Posted by Aimee at 11:08 PM 0 comments
Labels: cooking, food, harvest, self sufficiency, spring
Saturday, March 19, 2022
Food Finances (Project Pantry)
Posted by Aimee at 6:14 PM 0 comments
Labels: cooking, food, frugality, self-sufficiency
Tuesday, March 8, 2022
Attempting Chickens Again (Hammer and Crime)
Posted by Aimee at 9:54 PM 0 comments
Monday, February 21, 2022
The Fermentation Files (Ginger Beer/Not Beer)
Small batch fermenting is one of my favorite things to do. I love to make sauerkraut, kim chee, and kosher dill pickles. During milk season I make kefir and, of course, cheese. People don’t think of it that way, but cheese is in fact a fermented food. Someday I would love to try my hand at another non-intuitive fermented food - dry cured salami. Fermented foods have a ton of health benefits and they are a cheap, low stakes hobby that doesn’t require much in the way of equipment.
Posted by Aimee at 10:52 PM 0 comments
Labels: fermentation, fermenting, recipe
Wednesday, February 16, 2022
To Plant or Not to Plant
Posted by Aimee at 6:06 PM 0 comments
Thursday, February 10, 2022
Goat Totin’ Man Totin’ Goats
It recently came to my attention that there are still people out there reading my blog. Apparently, there’s a high school boy out there, a friend of Paloma’s, who thinks my blog is pretty cool and asked Paloma why I don’t write anymore.
With Cleo, 2022
With Bitsy and Bootsy, 2020
With a goat whose name I can’t remember, 2017 (?)
Posted by Aimee at 7:25 PM 0 comments