Around the Homestead

Labor Day Weekend-Sunday

Sunday morning we were up bright and early.  The girls (sheep) were anxious to get out to pasture and the dogs were ready to go outside.  I headed out to tend to the chickens and feed them the pork broth leftover from the roast I cooked.  They gobbled it up as fast as it hit the pan.

Breakfast:

Bacon (locally grown)

Eggs (homegrown)

Tomatoes (homegrown)

Homemade Bread

After breakfast I picked another 8-10 gallons of tomatoes.  After the tomatoes were picked we headed down to our neighbors to get some cucumbers, jalapenos, and some starts off their passionflower to transplant under a fuel tank (not in use) by the garden.  I didn’t realize the passionflower I got from them last year had actually started to grow.  I thought it had died, so now I just have extra planted just incase.

When we got home Randy worked on our pickup, and I headed inside to do a few things.  I ended up making fresh-squeezed lemonade and dehydrated the peel.  I took a glass outside for him and I so he could take a break in the shade.  Mom was taking advantage of our pool, so we sat on the deck and chatted with her for awhile.

In the evening we go cleaned up and headed to a nearby pond for a cookout with friends.  We had a great time and the weather was beautiful.  We had to leave before dark to do our evening chores, but everyone else was equipped with tents and were in it for the long haul.

Around the Homestead

Labor Day Weekend-Saturday

Time to bake bread.  I cheat a little and use a bread maker to mix and for the first rise.  Then I slap it in a stoneware bread pan for the second rise before baking.  We never by store bought bread.  Every once in a great while we will buy hotdog buns, but this is a treat (more for my husband than myself, it’s the small things in life that make us happy).  I also put a pork roast in the crockpot for pulled pork sandwiches for later. 

Mid-morning it was time to catch up 6 of our roosters (yes, six roosters is ridiculous when you only have 15 hens).  Three bantie roosters met their maker and three Rhode Island Reds were escorted to our neighbors where the were butchered.  They kept two for their help, and we left with one bird and six chicken’s feet to put in a pot.  I put the chicken and feet in a freshly disinfected sink full of ice water and ran to mom and dad’s for yet another crockpot to cook the chicken in.  Once the chicken was done I put the feet in and let that simmer overnight for an incredible broth.

That afternoon when it was too hot to continue working outside I headed inside to heat up the house canning tomatoes, seven quarts to be exact.

I also made up some Nettles Hair Rinse.  It’s really easy and wonderful for your hair and new hair growth (which I need desperately).  Just place one ounce of dried nettles in a quart jar and cover with apple cider vinegar (I recommend Bragg’s).  Put a lid on the jar and let set overnight.  In the morning strain out the nettles and place the liquid in a container ready to use in the shower.  I just squirt a little bit on my scalp after cleaning, let set a few minutes, and rinse.

We indulged in an afternoon swim before doing chores.  What a great way to cool off and relax.  It felt great!

Dinner:

Pulled BBQ Pork Sandwiches (local pork from a 4-Her, homemade BBQ sauce, homegrown and canned sweet green tomatoes, and homemade bread)

Fried Potatoes in Coconut Oil

I promise to post recipes eventually.  I’m just playing catch up right now and don’t have the time.

 

Around the Homestead

Labor Day Weekend-Friday

I am off on Fridays which allows for lots of cleaning and kitchen time.  Today was no different.  In the morning while it was still cool and after morning chores were done I headed to our apple and crabapple trees to pick apples.  I have been dehydrating apples for use this winter (since we don’t have a cellar for storing them).  I’ve also made apple crisp twice and it is delicious.  It uses a lot of butter, however, so this may become an issue with our new project.

Once the apples were picked I vacuumed and steam cleaned our living room carpets using Sol.U.Mel from Melaleuca.  It looks wonderful!  It’s a concentrate, so I mixed it according to the directions, sprayed it on the carpet, let it set 15-20 minutes, and steamed cleaned away.  We have three dogs in and out of our house, so it gets pretty disgusting in this high traffic area.

While the carpet was drying I did two loads of laundry, down from the 4-5 I usually have to do, and this included our bedding.  I have been stressing the need to wear our work pants/jeans more than once if they are not visibly dirty or smelly.  Whew, what a difference one small change can make and there is only two of us.  I have also been using laundry detergent from Melaleuca.  I usually make my own detergent, but my mom wanted me to try this and bought me a bottle.  I may continue to use this on my towels and washclothes to keep them fresh smelling, but will probably continue to make my own detergent for cost purposes.  It is wonderful detergent though.

I made up a few batches of pesto from the basil in my herb garden and froze it to use up in the next couple months.  I don’t think it’s something that should be stored long term even in the freezer.

I also managed to take inventory of our food supply in order to know the next time around where we came up short and where we could have reduce our supply.  Someday I may not be able to run to the store on my lunchbreak and would like to know we could go a few months without grocery shopping since the nearest store is 50 miles away.

Just a quick tidbit on where we do our shopping while we are on the subject:

Walmart as LITTLE as humanly possible!!!

Local Farmer’s Markets

Locally owned and operated bulk food store and fresh produce market.

A small, local grocery store.

For odds and ends we try to shop our hometown first, next we go to smaller businesses in surrounding towns/cities, usually close to where we work.

Dinner

Stuffed Green Peppers (Farmer’s Market peppers, homemade ketchup from homegrown tomatoes, and local humanely-raised beef)

Coconut Chicken Soup (Nourshing Traditions recipe)

Refrigerator Pickles (cucumbers from the neighbors, peppers and onions from the Farmer’s Market)

Around the Homestead

Welcome…

Welcome to my “new” blog.  I have been blogging for a year or two now, but wanted to move my blog so I would have more freedom to post about all the things in my life.  As soon as I have time and figure out how to move everything over I will have all my archives here also. 

Here is a tiny window into our lives on a small farm on the prairie.  We aren’t your typical farmers or your typical 30-year-olds.  Our latest adventure is a test to see how long we can go without buying groceries.  I have stocked up the pantry, the freezer, and every other nook and cranny I could find.  So, join us while we experiment and trial and error in an attempt to live a more simplistic life and get off the financial treadmill.

Around the Homestead

August in Pictures…

I’m going to play catchup with some pictures now that my camera is reading my memory card again.

Here is a Hoosier cabinet passed along for my cousin.  It was my great grandma’s, and I’m excited to be the one to acquire it.

My latest library books!

What’s living under our house.  I call him our “Army Pig.”

One of the many moths that flutter around our four o’clocks.

More herbs for winter use.

A fun little home in Michigan on our way home from a wedding.

Me (left) and a friend, Sarah in Lawrence, Kansas.

Last night I was home alone while Randy was visiting the chiropractor for a back injury.  So, the critters and I decide (well, I decided they really had no choice) to do a photo shoot.  Here is what we came up with.

Ash playing ball.

Koal just being entirely too cute!

Thai, “on you mark, get set…..”

Rooster on the run!

 

One of our ewe lambs, Minnie, keeping cool by the stock tank.  We don’t name all our sheep, but this little girl was a bottle baby.

That pretty much sums up August for us.  The garden hasn’t been all that impressive.  Luckily, there is a farmer’s market right across the street from where I work (I’m headed there today).  So, I can stock up on fresh produce from other peoples good fortune.

Oh, and the fall weather came and went here.  We are back into the mid-upper nineties for the rest of the week.  It was good while it lasted.

Have a wonderful day!

Around the Homestead, Social

August in pictures…

I’m going to play catchup with some pictures now that my camera is reading my memory card again.

Here is a Hoosier cabinet passed along for my cousin.  It was my great grandma’s, and I’m excited to be the one to acquire it.

My latest library books!

What’s living under our house.  I call him our “Army Pig.”

One of the many moths that flutter around our four o’clocks.

More herbs for winter use.

A fun little home in Michigan on our way home from a wedding.

Me (left) and a friend, Sarah in Lawrence, Kansas.

Last night I was home alone while Randy was visiting the chiropractor for a back injury.  So, the critters and I decide (well, I decided they really had no choice) to do a photo shoot.  Here is what we came up with.

Ash playing ball.

Koal just being entirely too cute!

Thai, “on you mark, get set…..”

Rooster on the run!

 

One of our ewe lambs, Minnie, keeping cool by the stock tank.  We don’t name all our sheep, but this little girl was a bottle baby.

That pretty much sums up August for us.  The garden hasn’t been all that impressive.  Luckily, there is a farmer’s market right across the street from where I work (I’m headed there today).  So, I can stock up on fresh produce from other peoples good fortune.

Oh, and the fall weather came and went here.  We are back into the mid-upper nineties for the rest of the week.  It was good while it lasted.

Have a wonderful day!

 

Around the Homestead

Eggs, weekly menu, and fall…

We are on a mission to try to add eggs to our breakfast routine at least 3-4 mornings a week.  All I do is put some butter in a stainless steel skillet, crack open a couple of homegrown eggs, put the lid on the skillet, and cook on high for 1-2 minutes.  The whites should be done, but the yolks runny.  There is nothing in this world better than a free-range chicken egg.  Delicious!

I am also trying to get back into the habit of making out weekly menus.  Summer is a time when we kind of fall out of our routines, but fall is just around the corner.  Time for soups, stews, and baked goods in the oven.

Tomorrow is the farmer’s market (which will be coming to an end all too soon).  Randy and I discussed the need to stock up on some items to keep us going through the winter.  We are hoping to also buy some dried goods in bulk and see how long we can go without purchasing groceries again (other than our now bi-weekly instead of weekly trips to the dairy).  Our freezer is packed, but the pantry could still use a little work.  We hope to make it four months (would love to go six).  This is our first real attempt at doing this, so I think four months is sufficient.  I will try to post some pictures of food storage as I come up with some more places to stash food.  I’m patiently awaiting winter squash and pumpkins at the market to help us through the cold months.

I absolutely love fall.  It is my favorite time of year, and I can’t wait for it to get here.  Our days here in Kansas have been unseasonably cool, but so nice and refreshing. 

The sheep have all recovered from the drastic changes in weather and are now enjoying the cool temperatures as well.

Here is our menu for this week.  Hope we are able to stick to it!

Weekly Menu:  
Monday: Pork-sliced shoulder-grill
Stuffed patty pan squash-grill
Collard greens
Apple Crisp (apples fresh off our tree!)
Tuesday: Buckwheat noodles w/Pesto
and sauted shrimp
Garlic bread
Apple Crisp
Wednesday: Stuffed bell peppers (NT)
Baked Beans 
Fried okra
Thursday: Spaghetti w/Yellow squash
Garlic bread
Fresh mozzarella
Friday: Smothered pork chops
Fried squash
Apple Crisp
Around the Homestead

Sorry, we’ve been busy…

We have been busy, busy on our little farm.  Our garden is doing just okay, and I opted out of much of a fall garden due to the weather.  It has been so cool and dreary here the past week or two.  Usually this time of year we are fighting triple digits and wind, but it’s only in the 80s for a high and 60s at night.  We love the weather, but being unseasonable it has its disadvantages.  Our garden isn’t producing very well and our sheep are getting sick due to the damp, cool weather.  I just had to run one of rams to the vet this morning and got a late start at work.  Hopefully we got him doctored early enough, but with sheep you just never know.  They’re a little tricky! 

I did make Kombucha tea and get my hummingbird feeder filled last night along with doctoring and injured ram lamb and giving our sick ram a shot of vitamin B complex.  Tonight we will start all three rams on alfalfa, a protein block, and vitamin c powder on their feed.  They need a boost before breeding season rolls around, and it will be here before we know it.

Our Rhode Island Reds are slowly but surely starting to lay eggs.  We have 16 remaining after a skunk got into our coop and killed 9 of them.  Randy buried tin 2 feet deep all the way around the outside, and we haven’t had a problem since.  We allowed the chickens out on the garden Sunday afternoon, but they put a nice dent in our tomato harvest and won’t be allowed out again.  The banties are great for just letting run loose on the garden.  They do minimal damage, are good foragers for grubs, and take care of all the bugs.  The Rhode Islands are bigger and apparently less careful around the vegetation because they demolish everything in their path to eat bugs.

We will just keep enjoying the cool weather while it lasts.

Animals, Around the Homestead

To Be Humane…

We have made some decisions on our farm for the years to come.  Saturday, Randy and I had to take 9 ram lambs to the sale barn to sell.  It was hard for us to drop them off at the sale barn having some idea of what their future has in-store.  By Sunday we had made the decision to buy a grain cart to store bulk grain in, buy more alfalfa than the previous year, and feed our lambs to butcher weight before taking them to the sale barn.  In doing this we will eliminate the need for them to go to a feedlot and undergo the stress and cruelty these facilities tend to generate.  We also backed out of taking our cull ewes (ewes that have bad udders on one or both sides or are sickly, in our case they just have bad udders and aren’t actually sick) to the sale barn and decided we would keep them indefinitely, buy 1-2 dairy goats in the spring and either graft baby lambs onto the goats to allow them to milk directly from the goat or milk the goats and feed their milk to the lambs via bottles to supplement our milk replacer and hopefully cut costs.  We don’t want to be like the conventional farmers all around us.  We want to raise our animals in the humanist way we financially can. 

We hope to own more pasture land one day so we can subdivide and rotational graze to an even larger extent than we do now.  In time we will hopefully be able to provide our own hay and grain or at least supplement our needs.

For now we will strive to make the changes we can to ensure our animals are healthy, happy, and with us as long as possible.

Although the irrigation systems are sucking us dry, chemical fertilizers are seeping through every piece of soil, and hunters are overrunning us, we hope to maintain a tiny piece of the earth where life is simple and kind and as pure as possible.

Hope everyone has a wonderful week!

Around the Homestead, Gardening, Green Living, In The Kitchen

Fresh produce…

I ran to the Farmer’s Market the other day and picked up these.

I love new potatoes, and my potatoes have apparently all gone to the plant and not the seed.  We had a feeling our ground was too rich.  This is our third failed attempt at potatoes.  Good thing there is a Farmer’s Market across the street from where I work.  I try to by local or grow food myself as much as I can.  Good for them, good for us, good for the earth!

We woke up Saturday morning very early to the roar of wind (75 mph), pounding rain, and hail.  Gotta love the Midwest!  The storm lasted about an hour and the rain lasted until noon.  We layed around inside all morning.  Something we NEVER get to do.  I read and got a little nap in, Randy napped, and the dogs snuggled with us and napped on and off. 

Once everything had cleared (especially the lightning) we went out to assess the damage, tree limbs, a filthy pool, and my garden had some serious damage. 

We repaired fence that afternoon and still have a little left to do before the sheep can be moved over to new pasture, but we are closer.

Grandma was back in the hospital, so I was on boysenberry duty.  I picked five more quarts for her freezer and two quarts for fresh eating at our house.

We have vowed to take it easy on Sunday afternoons.  We just need to start forcing ourselves to set things aside and relax a bit.  Our pool was too chilly to swim since the storms had blown the solar cover off on a 60 degree night, plus all the rain water.  So, we just hung out and did some mowing and gardening.

Monday I had to take my parent’s dog to the vet for them so I didn’t get home until noon.  However, I got busy and got the house dusted, cleaned the skylights, kitchen, and vacuumed.  Then I tackled my herbs and some cooking.

Chives, dehydrated in dehydrator overnight.

Cucumber Salad:

2-3 Cucumbers

1/4 c Real Mayo (no Miracle Whip)

1/4 c White Vinegar

2 T. Sugar

1/4 t. Dill (used fresh and just eyeballed it, is there such a thing as too much dill?)

Mix all together and chill before serving. 

We love this!  Is it summer without cucumber salad?  It might be for us since our chickens destroyed most of my cucumber plants yesterday.  The Banties (my good children) have never messed up anything while free-ranging in the garden.  The Rhode Island Reds, however, demolished the plants and ate all the cucumbers.  Did I mention they haven’t started laying eggs yet, so they aren’t technically a productive aspect to our farm and better tread lightly :  )

I also got two cabbages out of the garden over the weekend and made sauerkraut (Nourishing Traditions).

And Pickles.

Fortunately, my echinacea survived the storm and still looks nice.  It was really windy, so the pictures are a bit blurry but you get the idea. 

Hope everyone has a wonderful Tuesday!