Well it has been a long week. Since the tractor cannot be started I have been feeding the cows by hand. After pitchforking 400# of hay into the back of the pickup and then out again for the cows and after working ten hours and getting up at 0345 to go out first thing in the morning to take care of the sheep and lambs; I gave up.
I had a space heater going under the tractor with a canvas tarp over it. I put hotshot in the fuel tank and in the fuel filter and still cannot get the tractor to stay running. I have been trying every day, sometimes twice a day with no success. I went out one dark cold evening late this week in an ice storm and opened the gate to the hay pile. I went out threw pallets out of the way and cut away the tarp covering the front of the pile. It was weighed down with so much snow I could not pull it away. I cut the strings on two large bales and just let the cows have free range on the hay. I do realize this is not the ideal answer but it is my answer. It means the cows get to eat in this bitter cold and deep snow without me killing myself to feed them. I also have time to do other things.
We have a lot of cold, ice, snow and general hard to get around or get anything delivered weather going on now. I got my car stuck in the snow near my mother’s house in Pilot Rock. One of our nephews came and pulled me up a slight incline that allowed me to basically run my car into the deep snow in her driveway until it got stuck. My mother was worried because I did not lock the car up. I told her there was no way they could steal the car, it was stuck in the snow and until I get new tires it was not going anywhere. Annmarie had told me to invest in some new tires a few months ago, I failed to listen and will now be driving the pickup. Except the pickup defroster is kinda wimpy so if its an ice storm I am just stuck at home. I have a brand new snow plow for the tractor that should be in use but since the tractor is down it is still just sitting there! I will definitely remember to treat the diesel in the fall so this never happens again.

The puppy is trying to wear me down. She punctured a hole in her ankle above her paw. We tried to get it healed on our own then had to take her to the vet. The course of antibiotics has helped drastically. The vet told us the cone of shame was needed at all times. Well when it is 2 F outside the puppy uses the cone to beat and thrash on any hard object within reach. I have resorted to duct taping the cone back together. So far I have almost a half a roll of duct tape used to keep it together. She has managed to split it in half twice already. I have 1.5 rolls of duct tape left, I will win.
The chickens don’t really like the cold. But more importantly the starlings really don’t like the snow. We have about 50 starlings in the chicken coop now. It’s a mess, they are eating and pooping everywhere. Now I have holes in the screens and one wall paneling is coming down and I believe there is one hole to the outside eave that is also letting them in and out. We have had subzero temperature for over a week so every night I have to shoulder open the door then chip the pile of frozen bird poop away from behind the door. If I do not do this every day I cannot get into the coop. It took me over 10 minutes one evening and I almost broke the door down. I am focusing on the mud room and the starlings are getting a pass for one more week.


Mr Rainman came out today and we worked on getting the mud room walls up and the pressure treated boards down. Unfortunately, none of the walls are square so each individual upright had to be cut a different length. Over a distance of seven feet the height changed by over an inch on both sides! We are building around the two steel upright pipes that hold the roof up. Those are not even welded straight, so it has caused some interesting adjustments to be made. I have no clue when the door will be in, they are supposed to contact me and said it could take 4-6 weeks and since no shipping company has hardly moved anything in the last week we can just add some more time to the arrival date. The hope is we can get the mud room sheeted and the window installed tomorrow. We will see if the weather cooperates. It was not horrible working in 20 F weather, not great but still doable.
I had to change the swing of the coop door so it swings out after a hen was frozen dead in front of the door. Of course next year I had to cut off the bottom after the ground heaved and ice built up .
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