Farm update, spring is coming

The progeny badgered me this week to get back in the groove and update the blog. It has been crazy around here and during Lent, Annmarie is super busy so I pick up farm work. We have both gotten sick. Luckily, we are super careful to keep quarantine protocols in place so if one of us starts getting sick we make sure to not be sick at the same time. I did get a bunch of little things knocked out. I had purchased a carved wooden chest several years ago and I took five hours to scrub at it with Murphy wood soap, blue non scratch pad, two different stiff small brushes, sponge and lots of towels. I just drenched sections of the carving in soapy water and started scrubbing away at it to get the dirt and grime off. I probably need another five hours to really get it clean but the time I spent got all of the obvious stuff and brought out a lot of details. I also soaked it in lemon oil. I had so much oil on it that I had to go back in an hour and dry it off again. It is fairly painstaking work but it did turn out nice.

Annmarie has the alpaca literally eating out of her hand now. She keeps treats in her trunk and feeds the alpaca randomly when she comes home. They all know not to bug her when she goes out to her car as they never get fed then. Since it’s random she is able to call them and they come running for treats! She has the three young siblings tamed down the most. The little brown one just lets her pet it all over. I can pet it’s neck and cheeks only. The plan is to shear the alpaca sooner than later. Which reminds me, I need to send off the blades to be sharpened! I will do that this week.

I started looking at Craigslist again. I had a friend who used to watch it all the time for me and let me know when something popped up that I may want. He is no more and I have not done much with it since. It’s a good way to see what people are asking for their livestock and to see if there are any deals that I may be interested in. I happened to spot someone selling Tamarack 50” wooden fence stays and was able to go out the next day and pick up 300. Between the great used fence and these stays I managed to pick up this winter I am almost set for fence building. I have seen an add for used metal T posts but I cannot use my tractor to drive in the used posts. They bend about 50% of the time so I have to waste too much to make it worth it. I simply do not want to drive 500 T posts into the ground by hand. I am too old for that. Plus, I don’t want to spend a week driving posts in the ground, as if my body would tolerate that!

I had purchased these plastic stackable bins for Annmarie’s office to hold her laser wooden sheets but they turned out to be too narrow to hold very much wood. Annmarie had talked to me about building something or else using a bunch of table tops and short legs from IKEA to make it. I didn’t do either one but after time I realized she was right. I also realized that I was stacking up extra plywood as the mud room build continued. So Mr Rainman and I spent a few hours and made her a shelf that was specific to her needs and could store boards flat. It is fairly heavy as it is made out of plywood and real wood. I don’t think it would have been fun to move if we had added another 4-5 shelves. Luckily, she needs a spot for the printer and laminator.

The sheep are making us crazy. We have three more ewes that need to give birth. We have one set of twins in a jug now that are only three days old. The damn chickens are laying eggs in the barn in random spots. I have two raccoons that are making rounds through the barn at night. I had a late Wednesday and didn’t go out to the barn until after 2000. I spotted two huge raccoons and instantly turned around to get a pistol, by the time I got back there was only one and it was fast! They are sneaking in and eating the cat food. The weather should be warming up soon and I can cut back on feeding all of the animals as the grass will start growing. It rained 3/100 today and 1/100 yesterday. My hope is we can get warmer temperatures and some constant rainfall in low doses. I don’t like it when we get more than 1/4” at a time. It doesn’t all get absorbed into the ground. The puppy is finally out of the cone of shame. We had to go through three cones and 3/4 roll of duct tape to keep them on her. Her foot finally healed once she quit licking it all of the time.

We will be sorting cows and sheep next week and fertilizing fields. Spring is soon to be here.

It’s kinda warm

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.

Predators 16/Farm5

Well Winter has decided to sit in the wings and wait to pounce, this has been nice. The entire farm has greened up and we have gotten to hold off on feeding the animals. Mr Rainman came out on Friday and cleaned up the old house. There was quite the pile of dirt under the freezers. We had not ever moved them. I want to get a little more stuff moved out of that room then I can move the three other large items from my “room”. This will let me start wiring and ripping into the wall to reframe a doorway. I have all the wires pulled but I cannot get to the outlet boxes with all of the “stuff” in the way. I would like to be able to work on it intermittently through the winter. It’s inside so it won’t matter what the weather is like. Especially, if I can get that inside door installed, a small electric heater will keep the room at a temperature that is comfortably workable, pretty much anything over 45F. Mr Rainman also went into Alcatraz and burned out the sticker bushes (thistles). Our new bull was raised by a young man as a 4H animal and is very curious. You can scratch his head but he will toss it in annoyance that you are touching him. He won’t leave though. One of our rams is very tame also and it is disturbing when a 180# sheep sneaks up on you and you turn around and he is one foot from you and wants a scratch. He will then proceed to follow you around wherever you go. It’s unnerving. I keep thinking he is going to decide that I need a head butt and I have seen how him and the other ram go at it and frankly I don’t want to end up on the ground. So far he has been a total gentleman. Which is good cause otherwise he will make it into the freezer.

I was fairly flighty yesterday. I went into the freezer room and added a second window to the inside so I can have a “double panel” window setup! It’s really just two windows in the same hole but the second window can have foam stripping applied so there is no airflow into the room. This will help the room stay warmer in the winter so when I am in the man cave I won’t have to heat that room as much. It will also help with the insects. I had to dig around and find the right hinges and short screws so I could screw over the plywood covering the first pocket window opening. I knew I had something that would work, I just had to find it. The window frame wood is so hard I had to predrill the holes to get wood screws inserted. I still need to insert the weatherstripping. I don’t use it so there is none laying around.

I need to start putting out mouse bait or setup traps to clean out the mice. I found a mouse accidentally yesterday, it had fallen into an empty five gallon bucket I had up on a shelf. I don’t want them to get into the wife’s office and chew anything up.

I am pretty tired of the predators. There have been no raccoon tracks outside the chicken coop after I dispatched the raccoon last week. Someone reached out to me this week about needing to offload some chickens so hopefully I can replace the ones lost this summer. The three stooges came out this week and only saw two coyotes but they saw them in the CRP and its too tall to get a clean shot. So they will be concentrating on the lower portion where visibility is better and wait for them to come out of the CRP. The neighbor told me his has a friend with a thermal scope coming out to his place also. He also stated that a nearby neighbor lost a calf to the coyotes and since the deer population is fairly low the coyote meal train is leaning towards domestic tastes. Mr Rainman found a fresh carcass that was nearly stripped on Friday just across the creek in field 5. All dead animals are now going to the bone pile. It’s going to cause the coyotes to have to come out on the back hillside or cross the wheat field where I can see them. I was given an infrared scope that amplifies light I just need a new rifle now! There is some discussion around this at the house but it seems my motivation to get out of bed at night is being weighed in on the purchase. I do know that I will not be getting a thermal scope any time soon. Honestly, this is a stupid problem, but I am unwilling to spend $2k/year to fix it with a guard dog yet.

The sheep got out and in and around the vehicles. A gate got left open but since it is only pregnant ewes they are pretty easy to direct. It only took about five minutes to get them back into the correct space. Despite all of this we are very fortunate to live here. There are times I just walk out and realize that not everyone has the luxury of living in beauty and dealing with the natural process. It’s the best place in the world to live.

Freezers moved, winterizing begins

This has been a very productive last couple of days. Mr Rainman and the Apprentice came out on Sunday. The Apprentice is coming down with something and slugged through the weekend but it wasn’t easy. She managed to get the dirt shoveled mostly into one end of the new bridge. We think that there was a blacksmith shop right outside the old house next to the creek. There would have been water in the creek then and we are finding layers of coal scraps and a whole lot of iron scraps and horseshoes. They were storing coal in the old woodshed on the right hand side. The space is about 11×4 feet and has a side door on one end so you could really toss in the coal. There is a high hole cut into the wall at the far end to allow you to unload coal into the storage area.

We emptied the big freezer into coolers, unplugged it and hooked up a heater to blow into it while we went out and worked on the coal side of the wood shed. I had “borrowed” the wife’s really good (expensive) hair dryer in case I needed to get the ice out of the freezer, but the heater was the bomb and had it all melted out in a few hours. We kept wringing out towels, finally used a plastic tray to catch the melting ice.

I sprayed foam insulation into the cracks of the walls in the woodshed. Unfortunately, the can top was leaking and spraying foam all over my hands. I refused to quit using it and ended coating both hands with foam. I have only ever done this one other time and it was years ago. Thirty minutes later I realized why I had only ever done it once, its miserable. The only way to get the stuff off your hands once its dry is to peel the skin off your hands. This does not work out well until day 2-3.

We unwrapped the old billboard vinyl sign I purchased and attempted to get it on the walls and floor of the space. We got it about 80% installed before we needed to go get the freezer moved and filled again. The vinyl is 6 mil and was not very expensive, a 14×44’ sign was only $125. The idea is to line the entire inside of the room with vinyl and with the new metal screen over the window opening I think we can get to a fairly bug free storage area for all of the bee hive extras. We are going to use the metal hanging shelve holders as a way to put our frames up on the wall and hanging free. I think Mr Rainman and I can finish the room in one more day and then we can fill it up with all of the supplies.

We were amazed at how easy it was to move the large freezer! It’s the only one we actually emptied prior to moving. We got to the freezer room entrance and could not get the handle portion of the front door through the opening. Nope, we could not just take off the door handle. We had to move it back out and take the entire door off the freezer and then put it back on once the freezer was through the doorway. Hamburger is in the small chest freezer, fruit and vegetables have a couple of shelves in the small upright along with lamb and the tall freezer has beef and a little pork. We have another pig coming soon. One can never have too much bacon as evidenced that there is no bacon left in the freezer.

Mr Rainman and I got the stock trailer hooked up to the pickup and backed right up to the corral. In the morning we needed to sort sheep and load them up so I could drop them off. Afterwards, I spent about an hour shoveling dirt into the low spot by the gate in front of the bridge. It won’t get filled in by itself.

Monday started at 0600 by attempting to chase the sheep into the barn. They were down in the barn lot area and went to the back of the barn easily, but we could not get them to go into the barn. Mr Rainman and I were not effective. I went and got the puppy, Chance , put her on a lead rope and she had them in the barn in about three minutes. She is doing great! Stays when I want, lays down on command. She broke once but went back down within three feet of the original spot. I really think that by next spring we will have the “off” command (down) drilled in well enough that we can stop her even when she cannot stop herself. She is almost there. Mouse pouted as he had to stay in the yard. Mr Rainman took one of the best pictures of a sunrise we have seen on the farm.

It was still dark outside so we did a light check in the barn, our first one when it was actually dark! The lights are amazing and are going to make things very easy this winter. We tried to just push all the sheep to one end of the barn then I wade in and snag all of the boys. I did this four times and we could not find the fifth boy. The stupid rams kept trying to mount the pregnant ewes so we decided to pull them off, it was time anyways. We have two rams and 40 pregnant ewes and four whethers, not five. The coyotes ate our lamb, we had the other four sold. I dropped off the lambs without any difficulties and Mr Rainman spent the day winterizing the watering system and trimmed the lavender.

Predators 9/Farm 1

It has been one of those weeks, The Apprentice wanted to keep working all week. The fence building did not deter her. We have two leaky frost free faucets that need to be replaced. Unfortunately, to do that they have to be dug out. This is due to the reducers that had to be added to match the 2” pipe that is original to the farm. I placed some tools on the ground to outline a space and asked her to dig. She knocked out the first hole on day 1. Her only real obstacles were the dogs kept dropping the throw balls onto her head when the hole started to get deep. I imagine she threw the ball all day for both dogs. I am sure they loved it. I saw her on her way out and told her there was another faucet in the back yard that needed dug out but it was near a tree stump and would probably not be as easy. This did not seem to deter her and The Apprentice stated she would be back the next day.

Thursday morning, she texted me around 0930, a late start for sure. I am sure that first hole was causing some physical discomfort. I had messaged her first thing to check on a sheep carcass in the orchard. My mother-in-law had called me at work stating she thought there was a dead sheep in the orchard. The Apprentice confirmed there was indeed a dead ewe, #325, in the orchard with no intestines. I told her to just leave it. She tore into the back faucet with less enthusiasm and more problems. There were tree roots everywhere and she had to keep cutting through them. I knew this was going to be a problem. She had to leave around 1330 and said there was more to dig.

When Annmarie came home she called me at work to tell me there was a dead sheep in the orchard. I had forgotten to tell her. She had spotted it because there was a Golden Eagle feasting on the carcass! I asked if she had gotten a picture of the eagle, nope. We discussed my failure to keep her informed and that the sheep had to now be brought into the barn lot. This means running them through the front yard every night and letting them back out every morning. I opted to leave the carcass in the orchard as I was going to be around the farm all weekend and wanted a crack at the coyote doing this.

Friday morning when Mr Rainman and I went out to fix the gate into the tree orchard area, he hit it with the tractor earlier in the summer. We noticed that the carcass only had the head intact and three legs. One leg was missing and one was off in the pasture about 40 feet from the carcass. It had been stripped down. We found a dig out spot under the fence. This is where the predators have been crawling under the fence to get to the sheep. It was a fresh crawl spot and the dirt was still moist. We ended up planting a wooden post in the field and mounting the electronic eyes on all four sides of the post. They are solar powered with a battery that lasts all night. So they charge all day and then light up and flash at night. It is supposed to look like light reflecting off of eyes. This is supposed to scare the predators off. We got everything mounted but did not turn them on. I went back up to the machine shed and created a snare to place over the hole. We are going to leave the carcass in the orchard for one more night to see if something returns tonight. This meant that the four vultures that showed up today got to fill their bellies all day long. They were pretty satiated. I will move the carcass tomorrow if we don’t catch anything. If we do I will try the snare a second night. Who knows what will happen.

We carried a rifle all day while working on the fence and faucets and did not see a single coyote. It is so painful to have the thing on you most of the day. We finally just put it in the pickup so it was out of the way. We did get the frost free faucets changed out and they work and do not leak. The Apprentice can fill in the holes at a later date. We went up and pounded T posts in on two sides of field #1. The stupid flood buried the woven wire alongside the road in two different places. We will have to cut the wire and splice in new to sit above the dirt. Their is a large drop off so we had to pound the T-posts in by hand alongside the road.

We measured the fence line distance alongside the creek. Each roll of woven wire is 330’. So I decided that instead of trying to wire all the woven wire into one long contiguous piece of wire I would just install them in 312-320’ increments. We marked out a H brace every 312-320 feet. We can install one entire section of fence, tighten it up and then attach the new one and do it again. Their needs to be some H braces interspersed along a long fence anyways and this made perfect sense to me. We marked out all of the H braces and drilled the first holes with the 6” auger. The rain we had earlier in the week and the storm we had today made drilling into the soil very easy. We got 5/100” of rain today. I missed out on measuring the earlier rain storm due to a dead battery in our rain gauge, I fixed it on Wednesday.

I did try and call the animal auction yard today but no one answered and their voicemail was full. I will try an email this weekend. We have 55 lambs that need a new home with only five sold at this time.