Training plans and budget for 2016

As some might remember I took my basic first aid Equine First aid training in early 2015.

www.equi-healthcanada.com

Equine Health and Emergency First Aid Course

Join us for a one day course covering what your vet needs to know, vital signs, lacerations, punctures, colic, choke, collapse, puncture wounds, hoof issues, pain source identification, saddle fit for spinal health, injury prevention and more!  All attendees receive a certificate of completion, first aid manual and more!

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I am looking forward to expanding that knowledge and training this coming year in 2016, with one or two more advanced courses.

NEW COURSE from Equi-Health Canada!!!

During this 1-Day Course participants will learn about putting together a safe and efficient evacuation plan that will ensure they are prepared for any localized or wider spread emergency that requires evacuation. You will also learn about barn fires: their risks; how they start and spread; barn safety procedures; barn evacuation procedures; most common injuries to horses involved and the first aid associated.

Other topics covered during the course include extreme weather emergencies, such as: flooding; grass & forest fires; extreme wind, tornado’s & hurricans; ice & snow storms; earthquakes & much more!

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This course was designed for the rider who hits the trails and is more than 3 hours away from help or the person who lives remotely and may be waiting for the vet. However, the reality is we can all be waiting more than 3 hours for a vet depending on the day and what they are already busy with.

I have used some of the techniques taught on this course myself over the years and have normally had 30 minute wait for the vet on a good day – but sometimes knowing what to do to help promote the recovery and alleviate your horses suffering while you wait for the vet in these more advanced/dangerous injuries could mean the difference between life and death for your horse.

Topics include: planning, preparing & packing for day or multiple day trail rides; poisonous plants to your horse (signs, symptoms & treatment); predator attacks; weather conditions; what to do if you get lost; emergency field stitching; slings to pull out of mud/water/sinkholes; splinting potential breaks; trail euthanasia & much more

I will continue to seek out local training events, one of my regulars is of course, eco farm days events

Eco Farm Day 2016

Canadian Organic Growers Ottawa-St Lawrence-Outaouais Chapter presents the 32nd Eco Farm Day.

http://cog.ca/ottawa/eco-farm-day/eco-farm-day-2015-presentations/

A winter day full of food, friendship and inspiration – it’s Eco Farm Day 2016 and it’s a highlight of the season for organic (and organic-curious) farmers and gardeners in eastern Ontario and western Quebec.

<!– You’ll start the day at the keynote presentation, Healthy Land, Healthy People, Healthy Profits: Holistic Management for Sustainable Agriculture, delivered by Tony McQuail and continue with interactive workshops, break for a feast of local foods, and have plenty of opportunity to visit with old friends and new, as well as investigate the products and services of the exhibitors and sponsors at our trade show. –>

The day is organized by volunteers of the Ottawa-St Lawrence-Outouais chapter of Canadian Organic Growers (COG). The focus is on practical techniques and management skills that work in our area. Workshop topics include beekeeping, pork production – adding breed stock, open pollinated field corn, small-scale organic certification, root cellars, and more – all with an emphasis on sustainable organic stewardship of land, food and fibre.

One of my favorite seminars I attended over the years was the auther of the dehydrator bible, I am including my notes again here because it was so very interesting, great speaker Don Mercer, go if you get the chance, outstanding speaker.

“Food drying is something everyone tries at least once but rarely do it well.”

The main goal regardless of what you are drying is working to that magical sweet spot of getting your foods down to 10 percent of their wet weight, but as most folks are not going to do the math, the experts have taken that to explain we are looking for a leathery feel with some flexiblity.

According to him, if you are wanting to bring juice out of berries to then added and use in your leathers, freeze them first before simmering them, that you will get a better, higher yield in regards to the juice vs the fiber, this is interesting, and the other would be the case for drying.  If you want to make a berry paste, freezing will therefore remove more juice, and allow you to dry your fruit leathers faster.

He says the hardest thing to dry is the Tomato as it’s typically 95% water, roma’s are typically 92% water, where apples are 84%.

Always be flexible, while it’s worth writing down what worked last year, it won’t be the same this year, according to him, each season is different, as everything you are working with will have different weights, thicker or thinner skins due to the changes in growing season to growing season, so something that worked last year at seven hour, might take six or eight this year.

If you are in a market for a dryer, he recommends that you look for one that will blow the heated air ACROSS in the airflow, not the Top or Bottom Airflows.

Higher temp are not better, as once you cross over that 50 to 55c line (which many dryers will do) you are looking at Nutritional degradation. Also the higher the temp, the more likely you are to be baking them, rather then drying them, the higher temps used in drying in a regular oven or in a improperly made solar oven is the fact that you don’t get enough air movement, and create a stagnant boundry layer.  Getting solar fans to make sure you are having the correct air movement in your solar dryer is critical.

If you have improper high heat or a stagnant boundry layer, then you are looking at Case Hardening, which in a nut shell, means that by either of the ones listed above, you have created a hard outer shell that prevents or restricts moisture from leaving.

Solar dryers:  We are in a good area in regards to the amount of daylight, however most commonly built solar dryers take good air movment, and have a hard time with temp control, highly recommends you have one or two built in solar fans in your homemade solar dryers.

If possible use stainless steel baking racks from old ovens as the main racks, then get 1/4 inches plastic mesh, if you are drying in larger amount for critter feed, then you can move over to steel window mesh for reasonable prices and large space. For indoor dryers, he says that plastic needle point canvas cut to fit, works very well.

Herbs should never been done higher then 45c, and if you walk in and it fills your whole house with lovely smells, it’s too high, reduce your heat.  Example given was mint, if you dry your mint too high, the house will smell wonderful but the tea won’t taste much like mint because you have released most of the oils in the drying process instead of saving them.

Ideally you should have no more smell in the dryer than if you hanged to dry the herbs by air if at all possible.

Over and over, this was the key message:  Longer times and slower temps will give you the best result!

I would like to find and attend a few more, I will see what becomes available over the year, I am sure there will be other course related to farm, critters, land or plants or ???

What about you? Do you give yourself the time and funds to get to one, two or more training sessions or speaking seminars each year? For me, its a welcome and much needed event, I like getting out and meeting people, I like having folks talk and speak in a way that is outside my box, making me think and grow, I like hands on training and I like having my knowledge grow..

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Food Prices in the news

There was a most excellent post about local food done by bill about farming and food..

https://practicingresurrection.wordpress.com/2015/12/17/the-future-2/

We’re friends with a nearby farm family trying to make it as full-time farmers. It’s a large family and the children pull their weight and more, as I did at their age. They work very hard and they’ve done a great job of developing a loyal customer base. I don’t know how they’re doing financially, but I know it’s challenging. They want their children to be able to earn their living as farmers. They want them to be able to go out into the world someday and have their own farm, their own house, the ability to send their children to college if they like. But those kinds of basic things, which most Americans take for granted these days, are only available to a tiny minority of the farmers in our movement–the ones who write books and inspire the rest of us. They’re not the norm.

My friend, the father in that large family, once told me something about this business that has stuck with me. If farmers price their products at below the cost of production, he said, then they are paying people to eat their food. Worse, when farmers choose to operate at a loss, by setting their prices too low, they hurt families like his, which is trying to make ends meet with the money they earn from farming. I took that to heart and we’ve tried to set our prices fairly. But the truth is we’re constrained by a system flooded with cheap industrial food. Our prices should be triple what they are, which would put them in line with what people paid for food a generation ago. Small family farms could survive with those prices. But very few people would pay them these days. So it doesn’t seem a realistic option to me.

both the whole post and the comments were very grounded and a solid glimpse across the states and canada

and just this week locally, there was great news..

http://www.cfo-fco.ca/new-leaf-community-challenge/

The Community Foundation of Ottawa presented a cheque for $125,000 to the West Carleton Healthy Food Coalition, EnviroCentre’s Sustain West Carleton initiative, and the Ottawa Good Food Box to improve food security in West Carleton, Ottawa’s largest municipal ward with limited access to fresh, affordable, healthy food. It was one of the three top proposals presented to a jury of community leaders and food experts at the Community Foundation of Ottawa’s second annual New Leaf Community Challenge on Thursday at the Lansdowne Park Horticulture Building.

“All of the projects presented at today’s Challenge were highly creative, compelling and, most importantly, designed to make a measurable difference in our community over the long-term,” said Marco Pagani, President & CEO of the Community Foundation of Ottawa. “While I know it was a difficult decision, I am confident that the Transforming the Food System in West Carleton project will contribute to systemic, sustainable progress on food security in the Ottawa region.”

This second year of funding in support of a more food-secure Ottawa reflects the Community Foundation’s commitment to fostering systems-level progress on key issues affecting the city’s quality of life. The West Carleton food system proposal is a prime example of the type of innovative community collaboration the Foundation is pleased to support as it will focus on creating the needed infrastructure to improve food systems and food security in West Carleton by: establishing a new community root cellar that will enable area farmers to store their produce longer; creating a West Carleton Food Centre where local farmers can drop off their produce for redistribution; expanding the market share of local food through the Good Food Box (GFB) and local retailers; and expanding/strengthening the GFB program in the region.

When it comes to food, we need to see the bigger picture, we need local food grown and ways to hold it and share it, we need the small farms, we will have the big guys, that is not going to go away..  Finding a balance will to me be key, I am lucky on my homestead, I grow my veggies, fruit, I have eggs an milk and meat.. but I also buy a green box to help support the program, and I try and buy local for the same reason, and I try an show an teach by the blog, that you can change the way you do things, having lived in the artic, food costs are a very real concern to me.. I expect they are to most folks, or will be!!

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottawa/insane-cauliflower-prices-twitter-facebook-1.3371481

Cauliflower lovers will have to spend extra to get the cruciferous vegetable on the table this Christmas as the drought in California is causing a spike in the price.

John McLean, the general manager of wholesale produce retailer Orleans Fresh Fruit, said he’s paying about $70 per case for California cauliflower when a case usually retails for about $20 per case this time of year.

The weak Canadian dollar is also factoring into the price, he said.

The bottom line at the checkout is that a head of cauliflower is going for about $8 — and McLean said the price could still go up as stores look to make a profit from the sale.

“It’s going to land in to me at $70 [per case], say. There’s 12 heads in a frigging case. Do your math,” he said.

Leafy greens such as spinach, Romaine lettuce and parsley are also in shortage due to smaller crops caused by the drought, McLean said.

Splurge or save?

Cauliflower is part of almost all vegetable dishes at Chinatown’s Phuket Royal — dishes like pad thai, curry, and stir-fried noodles — but it’s now being replaced with other vegetables like broccoli or peppers, said the restaurant’s Kung Lim.

“We have no choice. The cost is too high,” she said. “It used to [be] $2 something, right, now it’s $8 — four times more. That’s crazy.”

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/nova-scotia/butter-shortage-maritime-noon-1.3331040

Shoppers may soon see the effects of a nationwide butter shortage as they start their holiday cooking and baking despite efforts by the Canadian dairy industry to ramp up production.

Brian Cameron, the general manager of Dairy Farmers of Nova Scotia, said in the last two years consumer demand has increased two to three per cent year over year. Fluid cream has increased by three-and-a-half per cent.

“For butter and a dairy product, that’s a large increase,” Cameron told CBC’s Maritime Noon. 

Brian Cameron says dairy boards across Canada are trying to avoid a serious shortage over the holiday season. (CBC)

“There’s a move in the health sector — and I’m not a nutritionist — away from trans fats and more towards sources of fat.”

http://www.cbc.ca/news/business/food-prices-2016-1.3358980

Charlebois says the average Canadian household will spend $8,631 on food in 2016, an increase of about $345. That figure includes $2,416 spent at restaurants.

“Canada is the only industrialized country where you find the food inflation rate to be above 2.5 per cent. That’s significant. Right now we are sitting at 4.1 per cent,” Charlebois told CBC News.

“Europe food inflation’s barely at one per cent. There’s too much food in the market. The U.S. inflation rate is much lower than ours. The currency clearly is not helping families that are in need of affordable foods.”

He said Canada has become more vulnerable to currency swings and inflation, because it has allowed food processing in the country to be moved offshore. That’s one reason we are paying more for pasta and bread, even though Canada produces the wheat.

Charlebois said the high prices are hardest on low-income Canadians and people in remote communities, who often have difficulty affording fresh food.

“We need to figure out a way to offer affordable foods to northern communities,” he said.

Climate change and El Nino

Another factor that could affect food prices is climate change, according to the Food Institute study.

The drought in California has pushed up fruit and vegetable prices in 2015, but in 2016 a big El Nino should mean a lot of rain that will restore crops in the U.S. southwest and could help keep prices down. El Nino is a Pacific current that affects weather pattern.

Charlebois is watching several consumer trends that could have an effect on food production in the coming year, among them the trend to local food and a concern about animal welfare and more emphasis on protein alternatives.

Meat prices rose so rapidly over the past two years that consumers have shifted to alternatives, including pulses such as lentils and chickpeas.

“People are looking for local products …,” he said. They’re concerned about the ethical treatment of animals, the ingredients, the naturalization of food.”

Charlebois pointed to decisions by companies such as Kraft and General Mills to put more natural ingredients in food and be more transparent about how ingredients are sourced.

“Throw  in a lot of different things that may drive prices — like McDonald’s this year to go cage-free cured chicken without antibiotics — all these things will only drive prices higher,” he said.

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Ewes are all bred now..

After marking the calendar starting in mid sept, I have been watching and seeing who is in heat and who was in heat, bred an who caught an who breed again.

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Mocha has been seen to be bred each cycle but just keeps coming in, she is coming ten this year, I hoping its not a age related thing but this week, she was the very last ewe to come in and be bred again, I saw her bred by whiskey an by my backup ram, Horns, so I will either get late lambs with her or she will be a miss this year

P1050055The rest of the girls however have all appeared to have caught, no active breed in Nov-Dec, so at five months I should have first lambs feb-march. However having said that I often have one female that gives me Christmas or first week of jan lambs, and a few ewe did cycle an bred late aug and while its possible they were bred again in sept, they have not been seen to bred again.

I need to see this again and then….

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Fresh milk in the house again!! YES

Juno the goat however is hanging out with her boyfriend happy as can be but no signs of a heat since he came, he is as relaxed as they come, a very good boy but I would love to see them get busy.

How is your flock breeding going, do you run your ram year round or do you plan your lambing? I have been loving a friends kids photos, he had late fall kids so cute.

 

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Rendering Lard-Grinding it followup

As I had a bit of comments both here and on facebook about the grinding of the fat, I wanted to just do a quick photo blog of the difference..

So here it what I used to get

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and then I would cut it up and render it down

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You see the huge difference in getting it ground right out of the package

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the first difference is that it takes  you a lot less time, and my butcher costs is the same, I pay per pound, be it in chunky raw hunks or ground and wrapped, second it takes less time to process by around four hours for the same crock pot full, while crock pots are energy saving, four hours less is still four hours less.

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Here is the main things I use to work it, I strain it with pasta strainer, getting as much of the bits out(which my birds eat like candy) as possible, this was five packages worth of ground which were to be right around a pound per (but my butcher plays pretty loose with that, he can be a bit under or a over.. anywhere between 3 oz on either side, this would drive some sellers crazy but because its for my own home use, I am good

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Then I use this lovely metal with a screen, it was got at Princess Auto in the camping section (it came as a xmas gift about three years back) and its to make fresh grounds free coffee, but I use it for so many straining things.. I love that its stainless steel, I can take out or leave in the metal screen depending on my needs.

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I got 4 an half pints of fat, this is my large black girls fat, if you did not know that it was lard, you would think it was the nicest looking honey 🙂 in those jars.. Tallow and lamb or sheeps fat comes out more white for me.

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Readers that have turned into friends

I spent a awesome 3 hours chatting this morning with one of my online friends and who comments on the blog,  she is an amazing women, we connected online, moved it to a facebook friendship and now when we can find time we have a chat voice to voice,  Her’s is full of life, its got a accent that makes me smile, and her wisdom is great but its her laugh that catches me each time..  its truly a beautiful laugh..

I have been blogging now for five years and when I started I went with farmgal and dear hubby and I never used photos that showed our faces and I was careful on what I wrote about where we lived and so forth..

5 years later, farmgal is a nickname that is so known that folks will come up to me at events and introduce themselves to me that way.. When I gave talks in the summer of 2015, my write up intro included that I was Farmgal, I think its going to stick around.

I remember being at a party and a now friend came in and when intro’s where being made and it got to me, she laughed and said, “that is Farmgal, love your blog” and I smiled and said, hi and its Val..

Over the years, I have driven hours to meet someone in the middle, lunch and have a plant swap, that friendship has bloomed, we chat on the phone, and we try and see each other once or twice a year, we do double dates out with our hubbies.

I have meet a few folks over the years that I did not click with in person the same way I did online (as an example, there was a gentleman who was a regular way at the beginning but when it got to the point that he was talking about coming and parking his bus at the farm) I knew that it was time to nip idea’s like that.

I have meet folks at events and they have turned into coffee visits and facebook friends, I have though the net meet the ladies that I now do my monthly ladies lunch..

So today, I lift my glass to my readers!

All of them, be it the new ones that are just getting to know me and the farm, be it those that have been with me from the very first few months(you know who you are, old timers) to those that I have only meet once or twice over the years but feel all more close to for having meet you in person, and to those that now see regular.

Thank you all for being here, life is full of blessings an challenges. The folks that have come into my life from my blog fall firmly into the blessings!

 

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Turning Fallowed Land back into production

We have a piece of land that has been a huge challenge to garden that is right in the middle of our main garden space..

Lets talk about its challenges..

  1.  For our flat level farm land, It has a wicked Slope.. I mean it drops by 18 to 20 inches from the front to the back, I have been working on that for ten years..  by no means is that is the same as a hill slope but it certainly does have a great effect on rain fall an so forth.

2)   When it comes to water, its feast or famine.. in the spring, dig down inches to a foot and you will drown out the seeds and rot them in place, my most successful gardens in there to date are in straw plantings.. but once the land drains, and summer hits, it can dry out and if we miss even a few weeks of summer rain, it shows in the plants.

3) Half of it is a half-shade garden for the day, with only the bottom half being a proper full sun garden, effecting what and how its planted..

4) Its a area that got overrun with that bad boy wild parsnip and an so two years ago when I broke my foot, it was a garden area that I said to hubby.. let it go.. we need to focus on what can really produce.. and this year.. well this year.. It was so full of parsnip that it needed a skull and cross bones on it.. I swear if I used chemicals, I would have just taken it to ground Zero..

 

We pulled the parsnip from the edges and we cover cropped it with tons of mustard seeds and let it fallow for 2015.. DSCN5726

However 2016 is coming.. and I want that land back in production this year.. o yes, I have plans for that area.. its good size piece of land., not including edges, walkways or the hedgerow, its a solid 20 feet wide by 60 feet long, so that is 1200 square feet of garden that is not being used at the moment..

But what to do.. how to get it back into production.. well, here is my plan, Fence it out, then I am going to put a small hut on one corner and run my spring pigs in this area..

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I will go in and feed in squares to get them digging and turning, and they will eat those parsnip roots and all the rest of the goodies, they will munch on those fresh baby mustard greens and I will run the chickens in there as well, (which I will keep a eye on, to make sure the small pigs do not dine on the chickens, if needed I will put a mobile chicken tractor in the fence and keep them apart, the pigs are to root, the chickens are the fine tiller.. the mustard from last year will have helped clean the ground, but this will mean that the area will get a later start to the year, it will be a fodder growing area, which means in most cases, it will be a one or two crop max garden.

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It will be planted into fodder raddish (ground breaker), Yellow and red Mangels (fodder Beets) and fodder turnips (winter not summer) interplanted with white and red clover and alfalfa.  The plan is to plant it crazy thick and then thin all season long till by fall, I will have used dried the clover flowers, dried and chopped the Alfalfa as both a feed and made meal for the garden use. I will pull and cure and store the roots for critter feed and finish, then I will put the pigs back in for a long fall clean up, and ease of access for me to give them extras to compost turn for me.

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Then we will get one wheel barrel of 1st year compost per ten square feet added and spread and turned..  Left over the winter and in the spring, the pigs will have one more go and then in 2017, it will need to be planted one more year in chicken and pig raw friendly plants..

So no rhubarb babies, no tomato’s, no potatoes, it needs to be something that is safe for them to fully eat from stem to leaf to root.. mostly like it will be done into a corn, squash and bean for year two.

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Year three should see us back to being able to use it for whatever garden plantings I want to do, but I might like the above enough to just keep doing it over an over, we will see..

So have you ever needed to retake back a area that you let go fallow, did you have a real problem plant in it? If so, what did you battle, how did you deal with it?  Did you also find that you needed a multi-year plan.. anyone else use their pigs as plows and their chickens as tillers?

posted on green thumb Thursday homestead bloggers

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Rendering Lard

Well, we are bit behind on the butchering but we are finally getting some really good temps for it and it will be happening over the next couple weeks, and so we need to make a lot more room in the freezers, this will be done in a combo of ways, canning more meat up, planning on curing and drying a good amount of the new meat, that will hang saving me freezer space but it also means that I really need to process along of lard and tallow..

The Tallow is easy, its going to be done into blocks and will be used for both household use and for soap making but the lard, well its a bit much.. I mean really, I have over 100 plus pounds of it , and that does not include what will be coming with the new pigs.. its more then I can use in terms of house and its more then I want to use for soap making..

lard

I was smart this time and I paid to have my lard ground up, I have got the big rolls and cut them up and processed them, but why make extra work for myself when I can get it trimmed and ground for ease of making it at home.

But It can NOT go to waste.. so it will be thawed, rendered, canned up and then it will be used to create my own bird feeder blocks for my chickens and other fowl.

This is not going to be a fussy recipe at all, and I will play around with it but in a nut shell,  I plan on mixing

My wonderful locally grown, harvested and freshly ground chicken feed, with black oil sunflower seeds, some whole grains, with a bit of dried greens and nettles mixed with the lard and pressed into blocks that will be served up to the birds, and also made into balls to be haul in the trees for the wild birds as well.. must not forget my wild feathered friends. While its still all good right now, when its very cold, I always give them a helping hand.

I will do a post on making these very soon in detail, but I plan on rendering tallow and lard all this coming week till that space is free again. What is your favorite way to use your free range grass fed Tallow and your home raised lard?

Do you have a favorite recipe that you just love to make your own bird balls or blocks?

linked on simple Saturday blog hop

 

 

 

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Aging with Grace -Bella

I will get to the funny story in a bit, but I need to give a little background, Bella aka Monkey, Bell-Bell will be coming 16 in a just a few short months, she is really starting to slow down now.. she sleeps many hours away, she has a lot of trouble with dog food, so we have moved her over to softer fully cooked warm meals only (which she is doing great on) and she has needed to wear a winter jacket for both last winter and this winter, she has a little half step up and down for both her favorite sleeping chair in the living room and to help get on and off the bed now.

10891699_634229583370424_5764959765592090012_nHere she was a sweet young pup.. She is a mixed breed Shelter adoption, we had a idea of what her mother looked like as she was turned in expecting but no idea at all on who her daddy was.. She was such a itty bitty pup when we got her and she certainly grew to be bigger then expected.

Monkey has quirks, she is a lovely dog, truly but she has quirks, she will not be crated, as in broke her teeth as a younger dog fighting the crate.. just do not go there unless she is given a bit of help from the vet to keep her calm for air flight.

But it goes beyond that, she must be left out when left alone, DO not think you can put her in a room, o my NO, my mom did that once while puppy sitting and she eat though the bedroom door..  I left her sleeping one time in bed and closed the bedroom door, hundreds of dollars of damage later, I was greeted with one pissed off girl..

and do not think doors are the only thing she will go for.. floors can be dug and so forth.. If you follow the rules and leave her in the main room, she is gold.. not a thing moved, housebroke for a solid 8 to 10 hours as adult,  (even now, she is good for four to five hours) and as happy as they get..

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So you can imagine my O NO, when we came home and I realized that I had locked her in my newly done kitchen..  I shook my head and though.. What did she eat this time.. and did she grumble at me.. with her wee trash talking puppy grumbles, she went to her favorite chair and gave me the “look” and so I looked and laughed.. someone is aging with grace..

My kitchen was intact, the only thing that felt her ill humor was the little Christmas tree on the table, she had taken it out, and the little xmas balls where toast.. it was for her a mere token effect.. Happy to see her little spirit is still strong.

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I am going to do a photo shoot at xmas, she has been a part of our world for over 15 years now, I am hoping to get just a bit more time with her yet.. but I have learned you never know, so I do my best to have a special us time daily..

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Bella does not agree with dressing up, not like my wee Munchkin did ( its been three years and I still miss her)  but we will see. We will see!

 

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Investing in the future.

Now I have read all the doom and gloom, I keep up with the news, I can see the unrest, the problems of the day, week and year, I have a firm understanding of the job losses that are happening everywhere, that 38 dollars a barrel is very bad, that our dollar is at a huge low, that the cost of power, the cost of food, the cost of almost everything is going up, other then wages, or interested paid out.

However I am the glass is half full type, and while I am proactive on causes I believe in, I focus on what I can do, and this coming year, we have decided to put more money, thought, and time into the homestead in ways to create even more of a buffer zone between steady as she goes and a much rougher road..

Of course we will continue to pay off the farm as fast as possible, but this is about something different, then what I read currently on a number of blogs, its not about saving money, cutting back, finding ways to go without, I know how to do that, we have done it for years here, its in huge part the very reason we have a bit extra to invest into these extras, its about spending money to increase the daily future of our homestead, and our lives.

I will continue to find ways to help my family, friends, community and so forth, its important to share a helping hand, to share knowledge, to share seeds, to blog, blogging is a huge part of me sharing to a much wider world.. but

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So in keeping with that, there will be one to four posts (plus possible followup) per month on this subject over 2016.

The ideal is simple, as simple does often work better then anything else.

  1. one bigger ticket item that will reduce the farm work load, in some cases this means allowing myself to move over to power or gas tools, but only with non-power off grid backups in place as well. This ideally in most but not all cases should be something we have worked around for years and know we want.
  2. One smaller item, project or repair per month, ideally this is to be something takes current knowledge and skills and fills in gaps
  3. One new indepth book on a subject per month to the homestead library
  4. One new plant- be it ordered, planted, grown or harvested added to the farm, it must have very solid reasons given and at the end of the year a report done on it, this is to be a mix of things.
  5. 20 dollars at the dollar store per month to flesh out current kits and to maybe do a new one or two.

I hope that at least one of the things being done will be worth it to my readers, many folks that blog about homesteading are quite new at it yet,  it can be good to see what folks at the ten year plus mark are looking at, even if you are homesteading in your city or town backyard, the garden, seeds info should be helpful and if you live in a apartment on the 10th floor, the kits are still a great idea, and knowing  how to put them together is a worth it, and they will work for a number of things by the time I am done

So while I have a pretty good list already, if you have thought on what you might like to see, please drop me a note in the comments

 

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First of the seed orders done

  • soy bean- Envy
  • bush bean- Orca
  • Bean-Tongue of Fire
  • Pole Bean-northeaster
  • Winter Sqaush -Lady Godiva
  • -Black Futsu
  • -Delicata .
  • -Nutter Butter
  • -Waltham Butternut
  • Fortin’s Family Bean
  • Canada Crookneck Squash
  • Canadian Wonder Bean
  • Speckled Cranberry Pole Bean
  • Thibodeau du Comte Beauce Bean
  • Blue Jay Bean
  • Vegetable Spaghetti
  • Arikara Yellow Bean
  • Rattlesnake Snap Bean
  • Waltham Butternut Winter Squash
  • Musquee de Provence Winter Squash
  • Galeux d’Eysines Pumpkin
  • Oka Melon (Oka (Bizard Island Strain)

Some of these are new but many are not, about a quarter are very old Canadian based seeds tracking their roots to the local native tribes, the other quarter are very short season, expanding my home seed collections both for those times of shorter summers and also for rotational planting

The other half mostly are to match saved seeds I already have but in to small of a gene pool, in some cases, I have ordered upwards of the same thing three times over from different growers across Canada, east coast, middle and west coast and I will interplant and work on a “same seed” mini landrace program..

There are a few in there that are more for critter and fodder, then us but its all for the farm..

I am not done ordering yet.. have you started yet?

 

 

Posted in Life moves on daily | Tagged , , | 2 Comments