Field #1 ready for animals, still not completed

Monday was spent fencing some more in field #1. A new fence around seven acres is no small feat. Not to mention the new section is curved like a C so it makes it painful to stretch. I really wanted to get the fence up so we could let the animals in to eat grass. The road side and wheat field side have an old fence that needs repaired. Unfortunately, sometimes the repair is more painful than just stringing up new wire.

The Apprentice and I got the last 500’ of fence up and even got it all clipped onto the T posts with a single strand of smooth wire on top. I used a four foot piece of pipe as a cheater bar to really crank down on the fence tighteners until the fence started to sing when I ratcheted up the tightener a notch. I opted to not install the wooden stays yet. I wanted to get all of the fence up and without the stays the fence will hold the livestock. Mr Rainman and the Apprentice can get all of the wooden stays on three sides of the field installed on Wednesday while I am at the paying job.

So we went to the far end and worked on the ditch crossing and did battle with the downed black walnut tree. It landed right where we needed to install a railroad tie and put the ditch crossing in place. We managed to get it installed and the paneling cut and in place. The last thing was to install the gate and we had it done enough. Which was a good thing as both of us needed a day off and no fencing. The Apprentice has collected an astounding amount of bruises and scratches in the last two weeks.

Annmarie is inspecting our hives and deciding whether we are going to get any honey this year. The bees split and they have not managed to make as much honey as last year so far. So I don’t know if we are going to get to harvest any.

The quail are everywhere! It is amazing to see how many we have this year. They are really calm and just run around everywhere.

We did have one of the brown alpaca just keel over dead Sunday night. The nephews found it on Monday. It was one of the old ones and was mighty skinny. I had been giving it the side eye every time I saw it when I was headed down the driveway. We now have 10 alpaca. It’s plenty and at least five of them will just come right over to the cars for a treat. If you open the trunk on the wife’s car they will just push up to the hatch opening and expect something. They are so insistent at that point that they will even let you touch on them until they get said treat.

Freezer room completed

It has been a very productive last couple of days. Mr Rainman has been out for two days and we have been working on getting things completed. I love the stages of a project where you can just keep checking things off and then moving onto the next thing and checking it off! Mr Rainman worked on getting the coal side of the old wood shed cleaned out. This ties into us completing the back bridge as that is the only way to get to the wood shed. We have managed to make quite a mess back there with lots of scrap wood and junk from the shed added onto the pile. We knew that a day of cleanup was coming but The Apprentice reached out last week and said she was coming home this weekend and wanted to know if there was work. We just kept making a mess as we knew the Apprentice was coming and it would cleaned up.

I worked on getting the rest of the freezer room wired. I always have to break out an electrical wiring book when I do three way and four way switches. I just don’t do it enough to be able to do it without writing it down. I am happy to report that the three way switch worked on the first try. I got the light wired and the rest of the outlets tested today. Mr Rainman and I moved the deep freezer and the very first small upright Annmarie and I ever purchased, it is 29 years old! We just jockeyed them back and forth and slid them into place. They both had to be leveled and then we spent the time to organize and clean out both of those freezers. This allowed us to empty a large portion of the big freezer. The little fridge got cleaned out and up and is now going to be our water and gatorade fridge. I will keep it stocked year round. Tomorrow we will unload the big freezer and defrost it with the wife’s hair dryer. Once that is moved we will pull out the ancient radial arm saw and see if someone wants it. This will let me move most of the tools out of my soon to be space in the old house.

The Apprentice started a wood burn pile and lit it on fire after the first hour. They just kept throwing scrap wood on it. She did take some plum tree rounds that were cut on a diagonal and looked like horse hooves to use for nailing practice at farrier school. She did lament that on top of grip strength she worked on this summer she needed to work on thigh strength, its hard to hold the horse hooves between her legs. I didn’t think of that when we were working. Once all of the burnables were picked up she started filling in the dirt on both ends of the wood shed bridge. Tomorrow that will be her primary job.

Mr Rainman and I worked on getting the coal side of the wood shed lined with wood and sealed up. The goal is to get the walls lined then take the 6 mil vinyl sheet, used to be a road sign, and mount it 360 degrees in the room. Once that is done and stickers hold it in place we will bring in pallets for the floor and then close up the door. The goal is to keep the dust and bugs down to almost zero. I need to get all of the bee stuff into one location and get the frames hung up.

We had some people come out to hunt coyotes and they killed zero, did not even see any. They did thin out the pigeons some.

Lavender and bees

Well, we missed the lavender harvest again! We really needed to harvest the food grade about ten days ago while we were on vacation. So now the lavender is feeding the honeybees and they seem to love it. Our oil lavender is just getting ready to bloom.

Annmarie and I went out this morning to refresh our lavender wreath. We have had a very nice wreath on the wall in the dining room for last 2-3 years and even dried out it was very nice but most of the smell had vanished. So we decided to try and redo it with our own lavender. I did the lavender harvesting and Annmarie did the wreath building. It took a lot longer than I anticipated to harvest the lavender. I was cutting it a single stalk at a time! The honeybees were everywhere and we just ignored each other. The hardest part of having bees is just learning to ignore them. If you ignore them they just tend to do their own thing and all is hunky dory. I had to reach out to the expert afterwards about how to harvest lavender efficiently. He said to use a hand sickle and sent me a little video on how to harvest it. This was very helpful and I have already ordered the hand harvesting tool! We persevered and harvested enough for the wreath. It is a little lopsided but we are going to keep it for a year and try again next year! We decided to mix colors in ours this time and I cut lavender from four different types of plants which I think affected the uniformity as I kept moving to different types of plants and Annmarie built the wreath as I was cutting flowers. If I had precut all of the flowers we could have mixed all of the types together initially and our uniformity issue would have been solved. It smells amazing. We have a vase of lavender in each bathroom now also.

Annmarie and I have been doing more research on farm camping hosting. We would like to do it up the creek next to the wheat field. It would be fairly primitive. Power would be 12V solar for lights only, some form of composting toilet setup (these vary dramatically so more research is needed), solar shower, canvas tent of some sort and all of it built on an elevated deck next to the rock outcropping. It would go in a place that we cannot use currently. So we would not be losing any land. This would require us to move some fencing so the animals will stay out. You would have to walk in to the site about 125 yards, no vehicle access. We would provide drinking water in 1/2 gallon glass jugs. There would be an outside kitchen with a single propane burner and propane grill. I want to put in a spot to hang two hammocks on the deck also. We are still doing a lot of planning before we do any real work. There are several projects on the farm that have to get done before we work on this.

660/900 mini round bales

Well we survived the international flight and made it home. I was ready to be done with vacation, we saw some amazing things but home is the best, even the brown desert of Eastern Oregon. As we pulled into the driveway at 1000 there was a “dead” black colored sheep out in the orchard. It was flat, neck stretched out and belly looked a little bloated so I added carcass disposal to my list of tasks to be completed immediately.

I had to check on chickens, baby chicks, upper sheep (feeders), upper cows, bull in Alcatraz, our new bull, lower sheep (momma, babies and ram), cats, dogs, horse and alpaca. I even drove out to the orchard with the tractor to pickup the “dead” sheep and discovered that it was gone, it had been merely sunning itself. The alpaca can look dead also if you don’t really look at them carefully when they are sunbathing. No one died while we were gone!

I went out to look at the grass hay that was still on the ground. It was pretty dry but it needed to be rowed again so I could bale it early Saturday. It was way too hot to bale any hay, there needs to be some moisture or else the grass is too slick and it won’t roll up into a round bale. Of course since we were still on vacation time change a nap was required!

Saturday I went out at 0530 and baled until about 0830 when it got too hot. Another nap was required and we went to a wedding and visited friends. I am truly going to take my actual vacation this time and try and rest. Sunday, I was up at 0430 and had the rest of the field baled and ready to go by 0745. Mr Flow came over and we picked up all of the hay in the field and got it into the barn. We stacked it up and got most of the bales that were still drying out moisture checked and into the barn. We had about 15 bales that had to be turned and six that need to be fed to the bull in Alcatraz, they are never going to dry out.

We did some work picking up stuff at my mother’s house then started digging the footings for the back bridge. This was not easy as we kept hitting scrap metal pieces and rocks. Once the footings are dug I will build them up with wood so we can pour some concrete. The back creek is almost dry again. It happens every year and even as dry as it is it still has a little water in it. I suspect it will be bone dry by the end of July. We need to get the bridge in so I can make an area in the wood shed to hang all of our bee frames and store all of our extra bee boxes. This will keep them all contained to one area and easy to find.

Honey bees are movers and shakers

The honeybees are amazing. They are taking more time than I had anticipated on a regular basis. When the hive split we managed to catch the swarm and put them over in the orchard. Annmarie had just given them a short box to allow them some more space after we added in the rest of the large frames to the brood box. We were talking about the bees yesterday and I suggested we go out and look at the orchard bees. We walked out and she popped the roof off and you could see bees and comb in the center lid portion. This meant they had probably filled the entire short box with honey already!

So she suited up and went out to inspect the hive. The hardest part of beekeeping is in figuring out how to keep the smoker lit with smoke and not flames! So after fussing with it for a while we managed to get it going. We lifted the hive boxes up onto the stand. This helps keep the insects away from the hive. I helped but I told Annmarie I had to be in the back of the hive as I did not have a bee suit on. We are getting pretty comfortable but I am not that comfortable that I want to be on the entrance side bending down to lift the hive boxes! Maybe eventually we can do all the bee care with no protective gear but I am not sure that will ever happen. Annmarie has been reading and now just uses nitrile gloves so she can have better dexterity when working the bees. So far this works great, she says she can feel the bees bouncing off the gloves but she has not been stung through them yet. I have not reached this level of comfort yet. She scrapped the lid clean but the lower boxes had been welded together by the bees. Once she got them loose the inside frames were still stuck. She is going to have to take the entire thing apart frame by frame to get everything cleaned up and correct. We think the entire upper box is already full of honey. So this weekend she will get two supers on the bottom and then one honey box on top so we can get more honey. We get about 3/4 pint from each frame. The one thing we have found out that we did not anticipate is how much beeswax is being produced. We don’t have a ton of it yet but we are close to having a pound of it already. That doesn’t sound like much but it way more than I anticipated. She peeked at the second hive but that one has the young queen and she is not as proliferate as the old queen. She needs to be a better leader!

Annmarie is looking at making wax impregnated cloth wraps for sandwiches and bowl tops. They work pretty dang good, I was pleasantly surprised and have been using them for my sandwiches. The sandwich bread is just as fresh as if I had used plastic wrap and its a whole lot easier to eat the sandwich from the cloth wraps. I think we are going to figure out how to get a store setup on our blog site for the cloth wraps and maybe even the honey if we can collect enough. If the wax keeps piling up we may even sell that but honestly if we mail it there could be issues with it melting in the mail system. We may only be able to mail beeswax in the fall/winter/spring time.