Comfrey- Livestock Feed

This was taken at the end of April of the comfrey coming up, there are a number of smaller plants that will be dug up and moved into rows for production but my bigger older plants like the one above will be harvested three to four times though the season

Some will be allowed in turn to bloom for the bees and then cut back as others come on-line to help draw and feed them, some will be used for compost to feed the garden and some will be used in salve making for our own use but right now in spring because of the way the things are going, its main use will be for milking moms and weaned lambs

The chickens get 3 oz per bird per day, the piglet get a pound per day, the weaned lambs get half a pound per head working up to a pound per day, the milking rabbit does get a leaf a day and the milking sheep a goat can get up to two pounds per day.

My rates are far under what is used in other livestock programs due to the fact that I am still increasing my growing program on this while watching health and livers in my animals.

Please note that in Canada,  human internal use of comfrey is not allowed legally and that you can not buy salves, lotions and so forth with comfrey for external use, you can still own and grow comfrey for permaculture uses, garden uses and if you choose for your own personal use livestock fodder.  As you will figure out quickly, you can no longer find Comfrey for sale in Canada in the herb or garden centers..

However it is found often at local free plant events, church plant sales and local plant swaps most often as a bee plant.

Do your own research on this outstanding plant, look to the many! animal feed studies down on it in Europe an if nothing else grow it for the garden an the compost pile as well as for the bees 🙂

Posted in Life moves on daily | 22 Comments

Lets talk Berms

I will admit that my mood is not good this morning, I have had this page open for writing todays post for hours now and I have struggled.. I want it be a more positive post but the truth is that does not match my waterlogged cranky I am butchering today mood.

So I have decided to meet this half way.. lets talks about pig wallows, swells and Berms. The farm is on river loam with clay if you dig far enough and let me tell you, you need to dig for it, not far from the farm, we have the Bourget Desert, you have heard me talk about hiking, and riding in the local forest..  That forest is Canada’s largest man-made forest and it was created for a purpose.

This article originally appeared in Trail & Landscape 2004; 38(1):3-19.

The Prescott-Russell sand plains underlie much of the Larose Forest and the area is drained by both the Ottawa and the South Nation Rivers and tributaries. Elevation is 61–84 m above sea level, thus the terrain is generally flat with only a few small ravines or gullies (OMNR, n.d.). When the vast Champlain Sea receded about 9,000 years ago, it left widespread deposits of Leda clay in its wake along with scattered islands of sand, remnants of the broad river deltas formed when water from the Great Lakes swept into this inland sea. In time forests grew and spread across the land. No doubt the primary forests of this area were composed initially of spruce, poplar and tamarack species, with later additions of pines, particularly red pine on the sandy soils. The trees would have been of impressive size in this pre-logging era. Fires, windfalls, and browsing by animals, were the principal agents of change, along with clearings created by small populations of native peoples. Even the incursions of fur-traders would have had little overall impact on the forests. It wasn’t until the late 18th century that real change began.

The sound of the lumberman’s axe was the death-knell for the great trees, downed to feed the insatiable demand by the Royal Navy and others for timber. By the middle of the 1800s most of the best and biggest trees had vanished, and it wasn’t long before lumber mills began processing the smaller trees left behind when the choice timber was cut. About this time, mid-19th century, settlers began clearing land for farming. It was reasonable to assume that land which supported such a rich tree-cover would provide fertile soil for agriculture. But this was not the case. The sandy soils were no good for crops and the removal of tree cover along with man-made fires to ready the land for planting, created instead a bare landscape with conditions ripe for erosion. The problems arising from this were manifold and certainly unforeseen. Year round streams dried up or became intermittent at best (Reid 1979), and the land around present day Limoges and Bourget became known as the Bourget Desert.

And just across the river within hiking distance from the farm across the farmer’s field is the ghost town of Lemieux. The town was moved between 1989 and 1991 after soil testing revealed that the town was built on unstable Leda Clay, a subsoil that can liquefy under stress.

This proved to be a good choice as a landslide on a farm very close (I will take photos this summer for you) as that is one of the places we go pick apples and other fruit from the tree’s left behind.

There are pins in the farmers fields that are tracked by satellite to see if our land is moving and how much each year. So its safe to say that everyone who lives here know we are in a flood zone, having said that to date while the fields and pastures flood, the Big Barn and the house have not done so in over a hundred years. Without the sump pump, the cellar would certainly be an issue but everything has been built with flood in mind, everything power related is four feet off the floor, everything in the cellar has been built and or raised up at least a full 12 to 16 inches.

Hundreds of acres of farmers fields are flooded out and over the local roads

But the biggest thing that to take that has worked for five out of 13 flooded springs has been a mix of land grade and the berm, I have put the pigs to work and created wallow ponds to help fill and slow down the water movement in the valley that crosses over corner pasture and the big pasture, moving out into the little pasture.

The two high spots on the farm are the Big Barn and the house.. both are graded up compared to the rest of the farm’s land.. but it would not be enough without the berms.. I  wish I had a photo of the Berm to show you what I mean but in the small pasture, someone? who owned this land created a two and half foot Berm that the water has to cross over but its on a natural slope that pushes it down the wall an that leads to a both a ditch that runs to the road ditches (or in really good floods, it is where we go canoe as it closes the road and is just a lake at the edges of our property,) When its not 150 plus acres of flood like that, it connects and drains into the setup at the end of that pasture that is tiled helping pull the extra water away, while my wallows and swells, help hold water the rest of the time on lean times.

I am thinking that I might want to talk to hubby and consider adding height to some of the ones that are already in place and I am wondering if I should be considering adding one along the big pasture side but If I do decide to that, I will have to hire someone to take a good hard look at it and make sure its built to specs and that it does not reduce water to my well..

And people wonder why I put up extra when I have good years 🙂

 

 

Posted in farm | 9 Comments

One foot in front of the other..

We had as much rain in 24 hours as we normally get in a month and across the Ottawa river on the Quebec side they have called in the army to help.  The rain has come down softly at times, filtered with sunlight, the rain has come down steady with grey sky’s and its come down in sheets so thick, that you can’t see what is in front of you.

We have dripping gear and coats hung up to dry, we have mud everywhere.. thick clinging mud, pulling and sucking at our strength in so many ways, reminding us that we must look down if you want to have a chance at your footing, and the slog to do chores is real and taking 3 to 5 times longer do to the fact that everything takes longer to move, haul and shift.

To say that I am grateful that my new roof is on would be a very fair statement, yes I know that there is still the ridge cap needed after this photo but that was done etc. I just didn’t get a photo of it.. so we got the tin on the porch and the work all done on the roof and a very good thing it was finished before this storm system arrived.

On my drive yesterday, I was so surprised to see so many places that had landslides in the farmers fields, anywhere that there is hilly, there are numbers of places where tree’s and whole sections of land just let go due to the amount of water moving under it.

One less yearling ewes in our flock as of today, I plan to butcher out five more over the next two weeks..

That’s what I got today folks.. one foot in front of the other.. one moment to the next.. tomorrow is new day!

 

Posted in Life moves on daily | 14 Comments

Rain, so much Rain..

My Pastures are reflecting silver and the ground is a sopping mess, its green, but the cooler temps me that its growing slower, the only critters on the pasture is Caleb and Bojangles and they are into spring graze mode.  They are still on hay but they are eating less and less and grazing more and more, We feed them in the lean too side of the barn so they are out of the rain and standing on dry cement as I am trying to give a hard dry standing area for at least a few hours a day.

Our creek is behaving, its full and its overflowed its banks at touch but nothing like earlier this spring, and so far our river (South Nation) is right at the edge, it is over spilling. . this 100 plus acres was dried out and then our second floods came..   Our farm is doing just fine, the sump pump is running regular and our ditches are full but the pastures around us are wet but not flooded.

But the Ottawa river.. wow.. the Ottawa is overflowing and within 30 min of the farm, there is some real damage going on.

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottawa/flooding-in-the-ottawa-region-1.2604214

http://ottawa.ctvnews.ca/widespread-flooding-forcing-evacuations-in-maniwaki-1.3393373

Now this has lead to something I wish it was not.. its pushing the hay shortage. As Regular readers will remember we have a crazy hay shortage last year.. the drought took our hay costs right though the roof and I was lucky enough to get my hay for the winter, but I was given orders to not add anything new to the farm, unless I could find a second source for hay as he had just enough for my regular.  I made sure to tell him that a second horse would be coming in and to hold it for me.

So my hay was booked till end of may at which time we should have our first hay cut.. but we are not going to get it.. the rain and wet means no cutting, drying etc.. and the cold temps mean everything is slow to grow.

My hay guy informed me that I am out of my Large Sqaure Bales and that we will be switching to Large rounds, which is ok.. not quite as easy to work with but certainly just fine in and of itself.. but far more worrying is the amount of hay that is left.

So we will be butchering Bullwinkle early, I can feed 8 ewe’s with lambs on side daily for the same amount of hay that Bullwinkle takes Daily.. its a numbers game.  I had plans to keep him over the spring-summer and butcher in the fall.

Nope! not going to happen..  So we keep my two biggest hay burners (that are going NO WHERE) the horses on the pasture and take the damage and work to repair it when the time comes..

And we slow down the amount of hay being used on the farm to stretch those round bales till we can get a first haying in and or till the pasture has more growth and can handle more grazing pressure.

Sometimes you just need to make the hard calls..

 

 

Posted in At the kitchen table | 4 Comments

12 Ways to Use Rhubarb with Recipes

Lets look at some of Farmgal’s Rhubarb Recipes over the years posted on the blog.

Strawberry Rhubarb Pie (something you can find locally in spring at all the stores)

This is a very much a standard spring pie across Canada.

One more recipe for you to check out.. Rhubarb on a Cloud Pie

Rhubarb and Saskatoon Pie

However in Western Canada and from own family, you were much more likely to be served a Rhubarb and Saskatoon Pie

Rhubarb Crisp

A much loved treat by all.. This one is a Oatmeal Crisp Topping.

Rhubarb Apple Mint and Spruce Tip Crisp

This may seem like a different mix of things but trust me on this, the flavour blend is delightful, if you can not get spruce tips, just try a rhubarb and Apple-Mint pie

Rhubarb and Dumplings

This is a great afternoon meal snack, its quite filling on its own and can even be served as a breakfast in spring.

Rhubarb Nettle Iced Tea Recipe

Some people like to add more rhubarb and less Nettle, some like it sweeter or less sweet, some like the slight thickness to the drink that the rhubarb juice adds to it. It a wonderful fresh drink on a hot spring day in the garden’s

Rhubarb Relish

Pretty in Pink Rhubarb Jam

Pretty in Pink Rhubarb Jam

8 cups of peeled, cored Diced Zucchini (a way to use up those big Zucchini)

4 cups of washed, diced Rhubarb

1 cup of finely chopped Fresh Apple Mint

2 cups of unsweetened Apple Juice

4 cups of Sugar (could go down to 3 cups if you wanted)

In a steel pan, med heat, bring to a simmer and cook till the Zucchini is soft and clear about 30-40 min or so use a blender to make it smooth, back into your steel pot, bring back into a simmer Don’t forget to skim it, add one package of pectin(follow directions), then place into hot clean jars and water bath process for 10 min. Makes 4 pints

Orange Rhubarb Chutney Relish

This recipe works really well as a BBQ sauce for all kinds of meats but Chicken and Rabbits its delightful!

Rhubarb Ginger Cake

A lovely lightly spiced cake with tart bites of spring rhubarb.

Carrot Ginger Rhubarb Flower Soup Recipe

A great way to introduce the rhubarb flower to your family

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Spring Rabbit Update

Well, its kind of quiet on the quarterly rabbit report for 2017.. the three new does are now out of quarantine as is the new buck.

So the three new girls have all just been breed, so we should have a major boom in baby rabbit kits end of may, first week of June

My oldest and biggest girl had the winter off and I was concerned that she was not breeding again.. I had breed her three times and nothing! I figured I would sadly need to replace her with one of the younger girls.. but as she is a totally awesome mom, I decided to try her with a new buck

She made a nest big enough to hold her normal 8 to 12 kits.. I coo’d to her and carefully opened the nest up and smiled at the fat bellied babies..

all 2 of them LOL  She was re-bred right back and hopefully she will have a proper sized litter for her age on the next one.. none the less she showed me something important. I was going to cull the other older doe as well because she was not breeding (she is huge an I am waiting for hair pulling and kits) but if she does not go this week, I am going to put her with the new buck as well and give her one more kick at the can as they say.

The old buck though, he is going to freezer camp, because it would appear that despite him being in a good health and a very active breeder, I think he is the reason for no new kits.

Which means that my prime breeder buck this year is a  Champion (bred for meat) Solid Black Purebred Black New Zealand imported from Florida by a friend of mine. She changed her mind on what she wanted to do for crossing for her meat rabbits and offered him to me.

He is smaller then my wonderful Grimaud Frère / Hypharm in France bred does from the local Lapin Rabbity so I expect what I would ideally like to do is find my best growing buck from the cross and hold him back for a future breeder as he would be totally unrelated to all my new girls

I will be building a few new rabbit grow out pens this spring, most likely two more of my 16 square foot hutches, but split them into two sides at 8 square feet floor space. We will see..

 

 

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Fresh Nettle Pasta – Made with Duck Eggs

2 cups flour, 1 tsp salt, 1/4 cup of dried Crumbled Nettle, 1 and half tbsp water, 3 duck eggs, kneed it all together and then let it rest at least 30 min with a damp tea towel over it, Split it into four balls, covering the one’s not in use and flour and roll out each one to your desired thickness.

If you want proper pasta thinness, roll it thin or use the pasta machine, I have one and I can make it nice and thin but I promised hubby that I would do the thicker hand rolled kind.. For this roller if you roll the dough till its thin enough that it will cut it to the bottom, you will have pretty standard type noodles

I used half the pasta dough for noodles and half to make Butternut Squash Ravioli.. The Noodles is going in a Alfredo sauce and the Butternut Nettle Ravioli will be done in a browned butter with Green onions.

 

 

Posted in Food Production and Recipes | Tagged , | 7 Comments

Rhubarb Cake Recipe – Spring Rhubarb and Ginger

                                                               Happy May Day!

It was fitting that in the cold bitter spring rain, I headed out with a knife in one hand and poking though my 30 rhubarb plants, I took the biggest stalk off 8 of them (worth noting they were all Canada Ruby Reds, being much further along then the German Pie or the “unknown farmstead” or Farmgal’s trial rhubarb #1 though #5)

My Fingers were numb by the time I had gathered fresh mint and Nettles for a tea, rhubarb and Cut a head of Dandelion and a small bunch of green onions, and the wet was working its way past my collar and dripping down my neck despite the hat.

SO! Worth it! 2 cups of Fresh Spring Ontario Rhubarb was coarsely diced up.

Rhubarb Cake Recipe #2

  • Half a cup of Butter or Lard
  • 3/4th cup of sugar
  • 2 duck eggs or 3 large chicken eggs
  • 1 cup of sheep milk or whole milk
  • 2 cups diced rhubarb
  • 2 cups flour
  • 1 tbsp. of Baking Soda
  • 1 tbsp. of dried ginger
  • 1/2 tsp of All spice
  • 1/2 tsp of salt

This is a smaller cake, it made a thinner cake in a 9 by 12 cake pan and would have made a thicker one in a square 8 by 8.. Baked at 350 for 40 min, till knife came out clean.

If you want to put a little buttercream icing on it.. it will be just a bit of extra treat to go with it! I cut it while till warm and I just iced only that piece, the cake itself is not very sweet and with the bits of tart rhubarb with a gentle after taste of the spices.. its just right on its own, but if you want a bit more sweetness.. the icing gets you there 🙂

Posted in Baking, Garden | Tagged , , , , , | 5 Comments

April Farm Overview- Tracking Year Stats

Ok, I am wanting to track this down for this coming year..  April has been nicely wet, cooler weather for the first two weeks of the month, more common weather on the third week and even a hot day on the last week..

April has seen growth in the gardens, and some wild forage which is wonderful, its been a working month in many ways on the farm..

Costs for April 2017
Hay-$400.00
Feed- $126
Straw- 16

Farm Output- Personal use only but local costs to replace if bought off the farm

  • Eggs: 7 dozen  at 5 per dozen as eating eggs- $35 dollars
  • Duck Eggs 9Dozen- 72 dollars
  • Sheep Milk- 32 liter -(Moving the milk price to the same as the lady down the road that sells it at 8 dollars per liter)-256
    Manure: Finished composting down.. at least 50 dollars worth of compost produced this month.- $50
    2 new lambs (current market value per lamb 100 as bottle babies Price dropped down since last month. -200
  • Lambs info (* for later in the year, I Will adjust the price to reflect the butcher, the return and sale price sale, but for this month, lets stay with if I sold them as a bottle baby this month)
  • 17 chicks – While I am now seeing 5 dollar mix breed chicks locally (as within an hour of me) I am staying with the returns that I said in my chick overview – 269

Farm loss’s in Feb

  • 1 chick -15

Farm extra’s Costs

  • Roof- ( I am not sure on this one, its house repair work) the house is both part of and not part of the farm..  for now, I am leaving it blank on this.

Farm extra’s..
hardware – 100 (wood costs for the shelving for the greenhouse area)
Ferrier – 150 (trims and Caleb shoes)
Vet- 0

Garden Overview April

Total Garden Costs -$ 41.60
Total Garden Return – $203.90

Total Out cost for Jan on for the farm -$ 792 output cash costs

Farm impute Value – 1070.90

Total output of the farm in returns

  • Jan – In the hole –1,029
  • Feb – In the Hole –1,429
  • March-On the good side -$ 1,038
  • April -On the good side -$279

Yearly total Minus- 1,141

Goals- No selling of anything off the farm is planned, the saving costs are what we would have to pay if we bought in the local free market to replace what the farm produces that improves our lives.

Its a tracking year..

and also I have had and seen a number of comments many times of folks saying, my 5 acres and under homestead needs to pay for itself.. well, I like to think mine does, I like to think that a well-run homestead can do just that! So lets see if I am right or not?

Posted in Life moves on daily | Tagged , , , , | 4 Comments

April Garden Overview -2017 Tracking Year Data

Hello Folks, I am going to do my best heading into 2017 to have a big old tracking year, I need to do this and I have the book, the paperwork and the plan..  I will make it happen..

So this is the first month of scales, daily writing of what is coming in.. O the fun.. (not) lol.. but if I can get into a daily habit, it will prove to be much easier.  I think that I will need to get my own little second book for this, its proving at times to take to much room in my current recording book.

April  Costs- 41.60

Output Costs: 41.60

An so it starts..  While I do have a soaping scale, I am going to round things into pounds or fractions of pounds just like I took everything into pints, regardless of the jar size itself..  so it can be a quarter of a pound, half a pound, a pound an so forth.  Yes, I know I am Canadian but I was raised with gallons and pounds, I am the crossover gen and it never stuck any more then it needed to.. give me feet, pounds and inches!

Started in April  A ton of garden seedlings and flowers, I am so rounding this one out for the sake of my fingers and typing.. Needless to say.. I have planted out

  • -7 trays at 72 cells -504 seeds started
  • 3 trays with 24 cells -72 seeds started
  • 2 trays with 12 cells -24 seeds started
  • 5 elderberry cut starts branches
  • 5 High Bush cranberry Starts
  • 6 yellow raspberry cane starts

The real question is how? do I figure out returns on this and I have decided that until its planted in my garden or harvested and eaten.. its just sitting there and growing.. but not cost counted.

Outside, in April, we planted two 15 foot rows of sugar snap peas (that are already up) and 30 feet of regular early harvest short season pea’s (also up) 30 feet of broad Beans (they are also up), I have a 4 by 4 foot patch of self-seeded lettuce up, I have a 2 by 3 foot patch of self-seeded docks coming and I have about a 2 by 8 foot of self-seeded radish’s that are coming up.

Harvested in April (all dried herbs and such will go with Mountain Rose Herb costs per their site)

3 pounds of Coltsfoot for the years supply for dried- 11.50 (2 dollars per oz dried) I will harvest the greens and cut it together at a later point and adjust as needed.

6 pounds of Burdock root –  (really people) 5 dollars a pound for fresh eating and 15 per pound for cubed and dried.. Ok then..  -30 dollars

26 pounds worth of Dandelion heads at 2.50 each (and I am low but they started out smaller and now are much bigger heads)  -86

3 bunches of green onions (this one is tricky, I have both green onions up and coming in but I also have a lot of just the greens of walking onions coming in) 2.99 per bunch -9

8 0z of dried creeping Charlie – 16 (2 per oz)

8 oz of Dried Spring Nettles – 2.25 per oz -18

3 pounds of fresh eating Nettles – 5 dollars per pound (it take a lot of nettles to fill a jar with dried, compared to fresh eating them) -15

I am down to one tray of sprouts for the first half of the month and now am totally eating from the yard and gardens for greens -60

Started in March

  • Sweet and Hot Peppers
  • Tomato’s
  • Kale
  • Pots of Pea’s
  • Put a number of cane and soft fruit seeds into cold damp status
  • True Potato Seed
  • Potted up Sweet Potato Slips
  • Mixed early greens
  • Bloody Dock seeds
  • Cabbage
  • Broccoli
  • Started a full tub of self-rooting storage beets with tops started that will be transplanted and grown for bi-annual seed collecting for 2017
  • Sprouting potato that will potted up in the same way that will be used for very early summer small fresh eating spuds, rather then waste them at this point.

March imputes: Sprouts -2 trays per day.. organic mixed sprouts each tray is slightly bigger then the tray at the store at 3.99 each.. so that’s 8 dollars per day in sprouts

Total produced : $245.50

  • Jan $161. 40
  • Feb $248
  • March $248
  • April 245.50

March $245.50

Minus – 41.60

March total to the good –203.90

Garden Output to date : In the good $861.30

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