Posts Tagged ‘goats’

Last Minute Things.

Friday, October 29th, 2010

Well, I need to feed the bees one more time before it is too cold to do so.

I intend to add wintergreen and lemon grass essential oils to the sugar water, for colony health and to help ward off mite troubles.

Before I do that, I will have to run electric fence wire on top of the buck goat’s paddock. Went up to milk he goat and cow (with Nathan) last night, and the buck was in with the girls. Not a good thing. Looked like Whisper (the herd matriarc) was in heat, because that was the only one he paid any attention to.

After I get the hot wire on that, I need to scoop out the mess in the front-part of the cow paddock. We’ll move her to a different paddock first, then clean up the old one. I’ll let it dry out for a couple of days before putting her back in there. It has a shelter, so I’ll get that done before we have any bad weather. All the yuck we scoop out will go on the compost.

After that is done, I can get back to the porch. Once the house wrap and siding are done, I can insulate and put paneling on the inside. Then it’s on to the wood burning cook stove piping – need that to cook with over the winter.

Slowly moving toward independence from the utility company. Hoping to be off of the grid next year sometime…

Unfinished “suite”

Monday, December 22nd, 2008

Well, Saturday I made some progress on the barn addition (finally). it’s no penthouse suite, but the goats should love it when it is done – and it will be far more attractive than the original “hurry up before winter comes” original barn that the goats have been living in for 2 years now.

It was cold, and with all of the “ups and downs” of working on a ladder, it went pretty slow.
I in the 4 hours of actual work-time, managed get all of the roofing boards in place and started putting the metal on the roof. I took two 30-minute breaks to thaw out my hands.
Of the eight, 3 feet sections I had to attach, I completed 4 and had 1 “Tacked down” – the ends were screwed in place to keep it from blowing off.

Sunday proved to be bitter cold and very windy. After church, I did manage to get up on the roof and screw down the 5th section completely – it took me about 30 minutes. I wore 2 sets of gloves – leather over cloth, and when I came in, my hands were turning from red to blue-ish purple!

Today I won’t be working on the roof, since the high is slated for 19 degrees, with a wind chill of -13. Tomorrow may be raining all day and night – I may get back up there on Thursday –

Once I get off of the roof, the walls should go pretty fast, since I don’t have to climb up and down and move a ladder.

We’ll see…

Goats Games in the Barn

Thursday, December 4th, 2008

I thought that the “barn expansion” project was coming along well. I had the posts and crossbeams up for the roof, and had acquired, through a good friend, metal siding for the roof and the walls at fire sale pricing.

The project, when completed would add additional space for the goats, and much needed hay storage. I was adding  a 12 foot X 24 foot enclosed area, so I figured it would be great, considering the goats are currently in a 12 foot X 24 foot area. – Almost double the space.

The only thing I didn’t count on, was that the goats were going to try and use the area before it was finished!

The extension to the barn is going to attach to the wall of the current barn  that is outside their fenced paddock. That means, if they get out or through this wall of the existing barn, they could get out of the paddock and get into trouble (spelled o-r-c-h-a-r-d or b-l-u-e-b-e-r-r-i-e-s).

Well, being goats, that ‘s exactly what they did. It seems they were having head-butting contests and the losers were being slammed into this particular barn wall – and they knocked a protion of masonry paneling off – 2 feet wide by 8 feet high. So, when I went to move the hay that was stored there under a tarp, so I could work on the roof, it presented itself as a problem to be reckoned with… IMMEDIATELY!

Fortunately, I had an 8 foot wide piece of cattlepanel that I nailed up to the inside framing of the wall. That will contain them while I am working on the project, and the tarp should keep the rain out for now. But, with every step, I am now having to do additional work to contain them, and keep the elements out of the barn!

So, the project will slow down as I have to remove the tarp to do some roof framing, and then put the tarp back up until all of the framing is done. After that, I have to find a clear Saturday so I can take off tha tarp one last time and pout the metal roof on (after the metal is delivered).

Hopefully, I can get the roof done before the middle of December and then can frame the walls and put the metal siding on before January!

Maybe I should get more cattlepanels to keep them from running through the metal siding – or maybe I need to hire a referee for the nighttime goat olympics! Anyone interested in an exciting career move???

–Pat

What’s for Dinner?

Thursday, November 13th, 2008

As a family concerned with the foods we eat and the things we put on our skin, we grow a lot of our own food and make our own soaps, lotions, etc.,.

We now have a website dedicated to our product line, which we firmly believe is a better alternative to what big corporations offer – and our customers think so, too.
But that’s not what this blog is about…

Did you know that the milk from genetically altered goats will soon be in grocery stores?

And what about genetically modified pigs & salmon?

Here is an excerpt from an article posted on the Consumer advocacy group “Center for Food Safety” (you can check out their website – it’s in my blogrole):

“Genetically engineered animals may be heading to your local supermarket faster than you think. Though creating animals in a lab sounds like science fiction, it’s happening right now: Genetically engineered super salmon, which grow twice as fast as normal farmed salmon, goats engineered with spider genes to produce silk in their milk, and pigs engineered with mouse and bacterial DNA to improve digestion.”

WOW!!!

So, do you want to drink milk from a cross between a spider and a goat? How about pork from pigs crossed with mouse and bacterial DNA?

And did you know that the  USDA finds it unnecessary to LABEL the foods indicating that they are genetically altered???

Come back every now and then and look for more agri-news about the space-age technologies used to “improve” our foods, that will , in the long run, wind up causing illnesses yet unknown!

–Pat

Pass the Buck

Thursday, October 30th, 2008

We recently purchased a Nubian Buck goat.

For those of you that may be unfamiliar with the term “buck”, it is a male which is capable of breeding. If it was a “fixed” male, it would be called a “wether” – but, I digress.

This young buck has discovered a certain scent in the air – the young does that have come into heat.

Now, we have electric fence to keep the goats contained in their own paddocks. The boys have their own paddock, the girls have their own paddock, we have another paddock for them to “browse” or “graze” in, and they are all contained, safely, away from our fruit orchard, bee yard, etc.,. – You get the picture.

Anyway, since this young buck has discovered the young ladies in waiting, he has decided that to be close to them is worth the sacrificial shocking of his life.

I have found him, numerous times, in the girls’ paddock and have had to literally drag him out – back to the boys’ yard. I now have to re-fence the boys paddock to avoid this inefficient use of my time. Once that is accomplished, I should not have this issue.

In order for you to fully understand this young buck’s attitude and persistance, I must, however recall the day we brought this young buck home. He instantly ran through the electric fencing, so I put him in a 4 foot high dog kennel so I could better determine what to do with him.
I was given approximately 3 minutes time to make that determination, since he jumped over the 4 foot high fence. There he was – hanging by one foot – caught in the fencing. I had to run down, hold his foot with one hand ( to keep him from ripping his hoof off), while attempting to free his foot from the entanglement.  I yelled to Sam, my youngest, to get wire cutters off of my workbench as quickly as possible.

By the time Sam arrived with wire cutters in hand, I had freed the fleet-footed mad-deer and was holding him.

My next brainstorm was… let’s tie him to the tree! I took a 24 foot dog chain ( wire cable) and attached it to his collar and wrapped it around the tree.

“That ought to hold him” I said with a victorious shout. Within 15 minutes time, he had broken the collar off of his neck and I had to catch him – again – with nothing to grab onto!!!

By the way, at this point, I should describe what bucks are like during mating season – they are in, what is termed, “rut”. They will pee on their beards and front legs – to give them that distinguished, and irresistible scent that all the lady goats would die for ( or maybe from, considering the stench).

Anyway, here I was, holding this extremely smelly goat which – oh, yeah, by the way – did I tell you he is really lovable and friendly? Yes, this whole time, he is rubbing against me much like a cat – with that scent rubbing onto me and my clothing – and all the while, I’m trying to think what to do with him as dusk and nightfall were approaching. I had visions of standing, all night, holding onto this beast because I didn’t want him to escape, run down the hill and get killed in the street by a fast moving vehicle.

I wasn’t worried so much about the financial loss, as I was of having to tell our friends that sold him to us – their goats are a part of their family and I’d hate to have one of their close relatives get hurt and then have to explain that. They would never forgive me – let alone sell us another goat. And we had already planned to buy 2 nice Nubian females from her in the next week or two!

I yelled for Sam and Nathan (Nathan had just arrived home with his mother, after selling at a craft show all day) to find me another collar. I caught the buck, and wrapped the chain around his neck choker-chain style to hold him until they returned.

They did return – with a collar that would hold him. I found a dog tie-out stake (2 feet long to be driven in the ground), drove it into the ground inside the boys’ paddock, attached a big nylon rope to the ring of the stake and tied it to his collar.

After a night and day tied, just within reach of the electric fence that the boys’ paddock shared with the girls’ paddock, he had learned his ‘lesson’ (or so I thought) of the electric fence. He had stuck his nose into the fence a few times and did not want to go within 6 inches of it.

Of course, that was before the girls’ started calling to him and he smelled their wonderful perfume. He is a teenage boy goat through-and-through, and would gladly take the shock of his life for a closer look – and touch!

Fence posts, fence wire, here I come – and I will top it off with a strand of high-tensil electric fence wire – to shock him if he tries to climb over!!!

That ought to hold him!  My famous last words….