Bojangles – footwork in training..

Bojangles is very well broke but he has not had a lot of ground work done with him but he is o so willing to learn and figure out what I am asking for..

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I am still sick but I wanted to get out and do something in the fresh air.. the laundry is flapping on the line, its icy out there and just at the 0 mark.. not really melting but slippery..

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So we trudged our way out to a filled in tractor tire that I use in training the rest of the year and we did all kinds of foot work.. given the snow was up to our knee’s in spots, it was not easy going..  and then we did work on the tire itself..

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We did front feet, rear feet, three feet and then four.. we did walk offs, back offs and keeping front or back feet on, while moving the other feet around the tire..

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It was a very fun way to time with him.. and at the end, I had him free standing with no lead in use, while I walked around him in the stand with all four feet on the tire..

I am looking forward to working on his standing to be mounted and mounting blocks very soon..  We have flag work and so much more to do..

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True Potato Seed

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I had gone to bed very early last night, leaving a hot supper in the oven for my hubby and he said, there is a very thin padded package for you in the mail..  I said.. well, it’s either this or that.. but most likely seeds..

I was right.. my mixed True Potato Seed has arrived. I am quite excited about these because I have had great luck with some of my colored heritage potato’s producing seed balls but the truth is, I noted them but I didn’t collect them (I was always raised that you needed seed potato’s) so imagine my surprise when I started reading about people “breeding potato’s” and then I joined a group, then I ordered a breeding potato book..

What a new world that opened up in front of me on this area.. wow.. just wow..  so I ordered in my seed potato’s in 2015 and 2016 and I watched like a hawk.. and then I laughed and shook my head.. not a single seed ball to be seen among the hundreds of plants, I knew that I was pushing it because I growing kinds that were not as likely to be seed producers and that if they did,  it would be few, but I also know that few is fine as each seed ball will give you many seeds.

I have not given up on working towards getting my favorite kinds of potato’s to produce a seed ball or two but I have decided that I am not willing to do another grow out year in the hopes that I might get some to learn with..

So this year, I ordered in a nice colored mix of seeds (there are white, red, pink, purple and yellow in this mix, all wild breed, not hand breed) and I plan on starting approx. 50 seeds and seeing what that gets me in terms of plants, and then this fall, what those plants get me in terms of hold over wee spuds to go in the root cellar and into the ground in 2018 for the real test of what turned out and should be held and what will end up in the compost pile.

I will be planting the TPS plants as far away from the main potato planting area as possible, so that there should be limited to no crossover if the other plant decide to give me seed balls this year..

It’s a interesting project and will allow me to learn much more about the potato plant and working towards breeding a landrace potato for my zone and farm..2013-01-01 231 (600x450)

Have you ever grown True Seed Potato’s?  What kind of potato’s do you have that produce the most seed balls?

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Hay Costs Winter 2016-2017

For those that where reading my blog though-out 2016, you know that we had a major local drought.. not a little drought.. but a zone 3 bright red drought in my area with level 2 drought around us.. up and down the valley, creeks dried out, hydro dams were turned off, and farmers wells ran dry..

We were lucky enough to be loaned a 2000 gallon water cistern and a dear fellow farmer was kind enough to fill it x amount of times over the summer from their well and this allowed us with careful use to run the rest of the farm on the house well without needing to fill it.

The local hay fields took a beating.. over 50 plus percent of the plants died, in some cases even more..  the first cut was less then 50 to 70 percent the normal, and everyone with livestock scrambled talking to suppliers and held their breath..  the second cut was about 50 percent of normal and then the rains came late in the summer and for many.. the still living plants did a push and with a longer cooler fall, most of those local to us did get a third cut (or in many a second cut) of a decent amount but of poor quality.. the balance is off, the plants are off because they need the volume and were racing between rain and fall temps.

Straw is harder this year to come by as well, but no where near as hard as the hay..  we have seen the fall out of the hay shortage in so many ways.. more livestock butchered out, more livestock being sold, horses being moved or taken to sales at prices that are at a faction of what they are worth..

Within the last week alone..

“I am taking a few squares of hay over to a friend, she is out and has X and Y and is trying to find a supplier with costs she can afford”

” my supplier kept saying.. yup, yup and then said.. I only have 15 out of the 60 I normally have for you..  why didn’t the supplier just tell me that he needed to raise the prices from our normal to the average and save the hay for me”

” I only have enough hay till feb and then I am going to need to be trying to bring it in from Quebec”

Now I am very lucky, I do have hay banked.. not just banked for the winter, I have hay banked for the spring as well, (because I need to dry lot my critters while we work to re-do and re-seed the pasture) but trust me.. without deeper then normal pockets this would not be happening as easily for me either.

I am beyond grateful that I have the hay, but I am also well aware each time I pay my hay guy, that this winter is costing much more then normal..  As you can see below, both my boys are very well fleshed, my vet said, they are at good range but she also informed me that both could use 50 to 100 pounds less on their frames..

The expecting momma’s are at the point that they need a bit of daily fodder-sprouted or fermented grains to give them extra calories in smaller packages as they have less room for the hay in their tummies as their babies grow bigger.

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Which has lead me to doing a few different things.. Normally I get round bales in winter and I still do and will depending on what is going on.. but I have also been having large square’s dropped off, so that we can control the amount of hay going out, I have done math till my head spins, and then I use my eyes and my ears and my fingers 🙂

Math is the weight of the animals verse what they should be feed daily when figured out by 2 or sometimes being feed 3 times a day..  My eyes on what is leftover as waste by the next feeding, also if you walk up and the critters are all laying down content and chewing cud and don’t care that you popped by for a visit and there is extra to be eaten yet.. clean it up ladies.. (the horses are feed a bit extra in higher feeder) so the sheep can be out and the horses still have a bit to go yet.. very different tummies between these two critters.

My ears because they will let me know if they think feed needs to come a extra hour or two if they are hungry.. I will make sure they are telling the truth and not playing me LOL but its typically true..  and my fingers because you need to get your hands on them, feel their ribs, you want a light covering of flesh but when you run your hands down their sides you want to be able to feel their ribs..  its easier for the horses and goats as you can see it more so but with the sheep for sure, you want to feel their sides at least once a week or twice and make sure they are not hiding a thinning or a fattening under that wool coat of theirs.

dscn0916I have taken to hauling the hay out onto fresh clean snow on banks and dips and other area’s on the farm that need to be re-seeded but will very hard to get done properly when we re-seed in the spring.. this gives them clean eating area, allows them extra feeding space and does a frost seeding in that area for the hay itself. as well as giving that area a light dose of sheep poo..

Normally, I don’t mind if they use a bit of hay as their bedding but not at this years prices.. they are getting light straw bedding with a lot more cleaning then normal. Even the straw is hard to come by, I was lucky enough to get oats straw and this means that when I put out the straw the critters flock to it, and take their time to make sure they get all the bits of goodies left in it.. the chickens get as excited about their straw as they do for their bit of hay..

I feel for everyone with livestock this winter, I know that many are making the hard call on adding more to the freezer, many are cutting out even more basic’s from their own budgets to make this happen for their critters (example, I have a girlfriend that normally goes on a once a year winter trip to a warmer area and this year, no trip, as that money is going into keeping her critters fed, and trust me, she is a frugal person and saves all year long for this one trip)

Many people had to buy hay from out of the area, and then pay the hauling costs on top of that, I know of a number of folks that got their hay from Quebec as even with the hauling costs, they just could not find hay to buy in their own area.

So if you are local an see someone posting that they are selling this or that, in order to keep these ones feed this year, or to make sure that everyone is kept in good shape.. be kind to them.. while there are some that are just using it to their advantage, there are many more that are buying less, eating less and wearing more layers in order to keep their critters feed and looked after this winter. the average large round hay bale runs between 30 to 50 on a normal year.. this year, if you could get it in the fall it was between 80 to 100 and right now, they are between 100-140 with about 120 being the average.. Small squares that are normally 3 to 4 are 7 to 10 per bale.

May everyone looking find the hay they need and may they find it at reasonable prices..

Posted in frugal, Real Life | Tagged , , , , | 6 Comments

Colds.. and some of my homestead helpers..

Well, I was going to post a recipe today, then I started a post about how awesome my hubby is in the fact that he got up early and did all my morning chores so I could sleep in, and not need to go out and get chilled with my cold.. (such a great guy) he even brought me hot tea, oranges and breakfast in bed and then said.. get some more sleep dear.

but then it got long and went off topic so it got moved over to the Bucket List Blog.. which is fine but it didn’t give me a post for the farm blog 🙂

My hubby caught the cold at work, and tried his best to not give it to me and he is on the tale end of it, I am going straight into it..

  • washing my mouth out with salt-water rinses
  • Using my nette pot for my nose with the bought mix, I like the pre-done mixes
  • Elderberry tonic, 3x a day.
  • High Bush Cranberry Tea and or Lemon-Crown Royal Tea (both are either syrup or Jelly that is mixed with hot water or into regular tea’s for a boost.
  • Sprouts (I am up to eating six cups of fresh sprouts daily for a next while.. split into two or three times a day)
  • Nettles – O yes, dried nettles in so many ways.. as a green, steeped in tea and more..
  • Pepperment salve on my feet and warm socks
  • Pepperment and Lemongrass oil in my steamer for when I got to bed..

Lots of water, and lots of rest.. sleep is so important.. so far, I am doing pretty good and if I needed to, I could pull myself up by the boots and getter done.

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Instead, I am having a take care of me day, I am resting, I am drinking lots of hot things, I am napping, I am snuggling the hounds and the purrpots..  I have leftovers for supper, and I cooked a lovely sweet potato for lunch, mashed it well with a bit of herbs and butter and it was so yummy..   good for you, soothing and orange fleshed is always a good thing.

The perks of doing the work when you feel good is that with a little helping hand, you can take the day to heal if you need it.. today is day 3, typically the hardest hitting day..  if you need it, maybe you find the time to rest today..

 

 

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Moaning breeds Content

this post is worth the read.. read it slow.. its a thinker.. and today, like all days, I will grab it with teeth, worry it a bit, give it the eye and figure out how to get that stone into my pocket 🙂

Cecilia Mary Gunther's avatarThe Kitchen's Garden

When we don’t see the sun for weeks and it is cold and wet and the winter looks like lasting forEVER and we have moaned  our arses off about it in every available social media, we might realise we are actually craving Vitamin C as well as Vitamin D but we can actually do something about the Vitamin C. And the first thing we think of when we think of Vitamin C is bright yellow lemons.
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When we were children at the beach we had lemon trees and if we ever visited my grandmother who lived in Christchurch way down in the South Island of New Zealand we took lemons. They could not grow lemons down there so when we visited and we visited often, Mum always packed a few lemons into the folds of our clothes for Grandma. Lemons were gold.

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So when a friend sent me lemons saved from her mothers tree…

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Pan Fried Haddock

Haddock is a very popular food fish, sold fresh, smoked, frozen, dried, or to a small extent canned. Haddock, is one of the most popular fish used in British fish and chips.

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Fresh haddock has a clean, white flesh and can be cooked in the same ways as cod. Freshness of a haddock fillet can be determined by how well it holds together, as a fresh one will be firm; also, fillets should be translucent, while older fillets turn chalky (nearly opaque).

Honestly, you can make Pan Fried Fish can be so easy..  I just wanted a nice and easy breakfast, I took a fillet, mixed a tbsp. of herb and garlic spices with a tbsp of corn flour and dipped the fish into it and then into a med-hot pan with a bit of my home raised and processed pork fat heated up ahead in it..  Allow the fish to fry till it will slide easy and flip and for me, I like to flatten it at that point and let it crisp up on the other side..

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End Result, a perfectly cooked crispy bits, soft sweet and flavourful flesh to be used as is or in this case placed on a toasted English Muffin.  Always fully cook your fish.. please no under-cooked fish on your plate.

I love to make this and then coarsely chop it up and put it over leftover rice made with a veggie broth.

I picked up five kinds of fish and seafood to do a few recipes with, there will be some traditional, some very basic and some a bit more work, I have a friend who ice fishes so I am hoping to get to show local whole as well, but for sure once normal fishing season starts. I want to bring in a lot more fish recipes to the blog this year, hubby is going to be traveling up to the north and I am very hopeful a big old chest of frozen char will find its way back down to the farm and we will cure some, smoke some, and can a lot more for our use.

My mom eats a good amount of fish and I would ideally like to keep it local, and Canadian as much as possible. I also enjoy fish but as hubby does not, I tend to have it mainly at lunch time or breakfast 🙂

 

Posted in Fish Recipes | Tagged , , , , , | 2 Comments

Date Bran an Oatmeal Cake Recipe

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Date, Bran and Oatmeal Cake Recipe

  • Half a cup of butter (or your choice)
  • Half a cup of sugar
  • 1/4th cup of fancy molasses
  • Half a cup of Bran
  • Half a cup of Oats
  • One cup of very hot water, put over the bran and oats mixed together in a bowl and let sit for ten minutes.
  • 3/4th cup of chopped Dates.
  • 2 eggs
  • 2 cups of flour
  • 2 tbsp. of baking powder
  • half a tsp of salt
  • tsp of ginger
  • half a tsp of all spice

Boil water, add your bran and oats into a bowl, cover with a cup of very hot water and let it soak and cool for ten minutes.

Mix your fat with your sugars, cream together, then add your eggs and mix them in well, then add your cooled but still a touch warm oats, bran and chopped dates and mix it together..

Then add flour, salt, spices and baking powder mix it though and into a 9 by 11 pan for a short but moist cake or into muffin tins for breakfast muffins.

Bake at 350 till knife comes out clean

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Bus Fire

While not farm related, if you would like to read about my hubbies adventure this morning on his commute.. feel free to pop over and read about it on the bucket list..

Just another day on the farm's avatarFarmgal's Bucket List

There is nothing quite like waking up to a note from your husband that says, tire blew on my bus and started wheel fire..

Now, my sleepy head went.. our vehicle and then registered Bus.. ok then..

See this seemed small.. had to get off bus.. wait for new bus..

Then this came in..

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That would be the very poor photos taken by my hubby from a safe distance as his double decker bus, went very quickly from a wheel issue to a fully burning bus!

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottawa/oc-transpo-bus-fire-1.3938869

Now, you can imagine when this better photo came on the news (Credit CBC Ottawa) that as the wife of the man who along with all the people on his bus route that got off safely! might have had a moment of .. O MY! That is scary!

I think the thing gets me really, is that it happened so fast.. I mean they…

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Getting Ready for spring egg laying.

I know it seems like its right in the hard part of winter and I know from talking to my family and friends that they are either into hunker down mode or they are hitting the slopes, the trails and loving the cold and snow..

But for me here on the farm.. right now the days are getting longer and that means that for my geese and ducks and chicken hens that each day that that light triggers them..

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The ones feeling it the most are my lovely geese, the girls are getting all protective and spending far more time in their house, so I made a second house so that once fully bedded down it will give them a choice of a second nesting area.. I think there is room for two nests in the bigger winter house but I also want to make sure they get the choice of together or their own..

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The bigger Gander is the sweetest thing but he is giving me the eye (see above photo) and if his girls are in their house, he will even hiss at me.. he thinks he is tough.. LOL.. he is so not tough..

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Now these boys, they are tough.. they are the guard geese and they even make the horses back up.. nothing funnier then watching caleb yield his feet to the goose coming at him.. they are about double the size and weight of the breeding geese, they don’t use the barn much and they are out in the open pastures, where as the breeding geese are safely tucked into a pen..   Maybe this year I will get some new females from the breeding geese and give each of these boys a new goose to bond and mate with, I am sure they would make excellent fathers..  well I am sure Honk would.. I am not as sure of Pom, he is already over the top at times in spring.. I might have to put him and his lady up till babies come so that he does not feel the need to defend quite so much..

Pom was to be the mate  for honk.. and they are bonded but it turned out that Pom was not a girl after all, just a well breed male of his breed..

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I will be bringing out the incubator this week and give it a full clean up, as I will be setting my first batch of 4 planned hatches in the next two weeks or so and I want to give it a clean up and test run for at least 72 hours to a week to make sure nothing needs to be repaired or replaced.

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Speaking of babies.. still waiting for those baby bumps to keep growing on the ewes..  no bagging up yet but my records show that at least two girls could have lambs as early as the next two weeks..

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Hair sheep wool is so interesting to me in winter, its cute and thick but its still not at all like a wool sheeps is at all.. This is my most fluffy hair sheep coat.. and its a nice thick one, no snow is going to get though it and she will shed it out fully in the spring..

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but compare that to Dumpling.. who is going to be the last sheep to birth on the farm.. yes I do see the irony that my milking sheep to be will be the last sheep to lamb.. but Juno is due mid-feb so goats milk will be in for a few months before the sheep milk starts.

I tried to get a photo of my pouting duck hens but they are having none of it today, yesterday we caught them and I trimmed their wing feathers so they could not fly up and out of their pen (this was for their own safety) but today, I am the bad mom.. so give me a day or two to make it up to them and get them in a better mood LOL  They are also now well set up with their nesting box’s and in two weeks I will switch all the hens over to breeding rations, which will mean a increase in protein in their feeds and it will mean a increase to twice weekly for vit and mineral water given out.. as well as increased sprouted grains (barley). I should do a post on their breeding feeding programs at some point..

 

 

 

Posted in Chickens, Critters | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Home Butchering -Saving Money

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Let talk about butchering for moment shall we.. I normally say Freezer camp,  it my PC way for saying, killing, butchering and processing an animal raised for its flesh, hide, bones, feathers and blood.

Today in the most gentle way possible, I am going to take the gloves off for a bit..  I am not just using a pretty words of freezer camp, I want to talk about homestead, rising costs, and the general public..

Per the provincial and fed laws, its pretty simple, if you want to raise a livestock animal that will be used for any of sale, be it to be sent to the sale barn for joining into the wider commercial system (I have never sent a single baby born on my farm to the sale barn) it will then continue on into feedlots and then into large commercial butchers, perhaps even into the federal butcher plants, allowing that Canadian Lamb to go across Canada or the World.

If you want to do farm gate sales, you must send your lamb or other meat producing critters to a provincially approved Butcher, the one that I have used is close, small and local, they only do a single kill day per week and the rest of the week is about the butcher process. This meat is inspected and approved for sale within the province only!

Then there is home butchering.. this meat is only allowed to be used for the people who live on the land that birthed, raised and then processed them.  It has no legal re-sale allowed..

This is something that I have noticed, while we have seen an increase in raising of livestock, be it rabbits, ducks, chickens, goats or sheep.. there is a booming market and massive increase in folks wanting to have tiny-micro farms to produce their own eggs, milk and meat.. but these folks are still one very large step removed.

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They send their animals for slaughter and they come back in parts, pieces and bags all brown paper or into freezer packs..  It’s a missing step that for some will always be missing.. but for most, its something they could do and it would change so much..

When you send your chicken or lamb to the butcher, you miss so much of the end product if you garden or farm.. you miss the blood to replace buying blood meal for your gardens, you miss being able to make your bone broth, you miss being able to use Bone in your land, your gardens and making bone char in your fires, you miss being able to make bone jewelry, if you send your birds out, you miss being able to collect and save your own down feathers, you miss being able to collect and process your own feathers to use as potassium for you land..

If you send it out, you miss organs (often very hard to get back) you miss being able to use the non-human guts uses to create healthy protein sources to feed back to you and or feeding back into your land..  instead you have to buy from sources that come from the out and put it back in.. when if you where willing to home butcher, you would in fact be able to create a closed loop system, both you and your livestock need plants, we need gardens, and fruit, and veggies both above ground and root veggies.. after all meat is only a small part of our diet, most of our diet is plants.. we need to feed the soil and our plants to get bigger, healthier returns.. soil is a living thing and she has a great hunger.. feed your soil and she will return it to you a 100 times over..

but when you take your critters to the butcher, you take from your land, you take from your soil and you only give her bits back, you miss parts of the loop and both the soil, your plants suffer for it, and so you go to the store and buy the commercial things at extra cost to put back into your soil..

However lets move back to another reason why we want to home butcher.. the animal.. they are a living breathing thinking feeling member of your farm family.. if you think for one moment! that they don’t feel fear or panic at being loaded into a truck, hauled to a place that smells like death and blood.. They do.. bottom line they do..  I have taken my lambs to the butcher, and then sat in my truck and bawled like a baby because I truly felt I betrayed them on their last day..

It has bothered me so much that I have not eaten certain animals meat afterwards for weeks or even months.. but you know what does not bother me.. having an animal on the farm that is calm, steady and has no idea what its happen, it’s just hanging out and doing its thing, here one moment and gone the next..

Yes there is nerves going, there is movement, there is blood and there is death, but I also know that its been done right, that the animal did not know stress before. I know that it was respected right up to that moment and I know that the meat being process and that goes into my freezer, cook pot and canner is that animal.. something I will be honest that I felt didn’t happen all the time at the butcher, at times, I felt that I might not have gotten my meat back, I mean, how do you really know!

And now lets get to the third reason to start learning to do this, if the above two didn’t get you to the point that you are at least willing to consider it..  money..

Home butchering saves you money.. yes, you need to trade time for it, yes you need to learn new skills and yes you do need at least basic equipment.. but overall, it will save you at a min hundreds and if you run a small mixed farm like myself.. it will save you thousands.

I did a rough based on my girlfriends prices paid out this year for things, on what my butcher costs would have been if I had sent my own out, just for my own use back, same as what we did.. (NO re-sale at all) and EVEN after I take out preserving costs, I still saved us from needing to spend approx. 3800 in butcher costs this year..

I will track it closer this year for you.. but yes.. you read that right.. being able to do it myself, meant we did not need to spend almost 4,000 dollars this year to send our critters out..

and I would take a hard guess at another 500 to 1500 in savings by using all the extra’s that you would not get back or have access to in my closed loop homestead system..  I would need to do a lot of digging to try to find organic costs on blood meal, bone meal, feather meal and so much more.. cost of hides and so forth.

If you have never butchered before, start small..  start with fowl.. work your way up to rabbit, once you can do a rabbit, you can move that same system over to lamb or goat kid, from there you can move it over to full size sheep or goats, and from there you can move it over to pork or beef..

Get a good step by step book, order in a how to self-butcher a deer video (its perfect for sheep-goat) and if you are lucky enough to be blessed with it, having someone show you and work beside you, going step by step as you go.. learn how to check everything over..

You will be a better livestock owner if you self-butcher and you learn your meat and organs, it will give you the edge on if you need to improve this or that.. where they to fat, were they lean, did they have worms and so much more..  you will also have a huge leg up on if you need to do an autopsy for any reason.. you already know what a good one in all ways looks like.. you will be quick to see what didn’t look right!

Stay up to date on the laws, in 2016 I took a day course and one of the things we came home with was a great poster that shows what must be used in our province in terms of firearms, bullet caliber and much more in regards to how we put down our livestock both for humane life ending and for home butchering.

IF you raise a hundred chickens and normally send them.. send 95 this year and see if you can learn to do 5 on the farm..  its will be worth it!

 

Posted in Charcuterie, Critters | Tagged , , , , | 6 Comments