Around the Homestead

A warm weekend in November…

We are having unbelievable weather here in Kansas for November.  You wouldn’t even know Thanksgiving is right around the corner.  I love Thanksgiving and can’t wait to see my family and eat lots of good food.  My family doesn’t get together as often as it used to, so it’s nice to get to see my aunts, uncles, and cousins.

We spent Friday tearing down old fencing around the garden and in our lots.  Randy cut down three hideous cedar trees, wish I had pictures, it looks so much better.  The space is now used to house my tomato cages.  A much better use of space than cedar trees!  We also took our little kitten, Spooky, to the vet.  He got into our sheep’s protein tub a few days ago, got out with sticky feet, and to make a long storey short hasn’t been feeling well since.  So, the understanding was I would bring him in and leave him over night.  Well, when Randy and I got there to drop him off we were informed he would need to stay until Monday because our vet was going out of town over the weekend.  The vet also mentioned a few of the test he would be running on Spooky, two of which are expensive tests, not to mention the boarding fees for four days, and anything else they felt like tacking on.  So, we left Spooky not feeling very comfortable about the situation.  By the time I got home and started thinking about him being cooped up there all weekend I decided I wanted to go get him and Randy agreed.  I called them to let them know I would be coming to pick him up and was told he had not been examined yet, so that was fine.  By the time I got there (a 15 minute drive) they had managed to rack up nearly a $100 bill for the little guy.  Included in this bill was de-wormer which if they had checked their records they would have noticed Spooky had been wormed not even a week prior.  He’s 10 weeks old, so my guess is that’s not really good on his system, right?  Also included was a charge for a fecal test in which they couldn’t get a sample from him yet charged the fee anyway.  Nice, huh?   In the meantime I had already scheduled Spooky an appointment with our large animal (sheep) vet.  I was, of course, given the third degree by the vet’s wife (who works there) about how they would really like to keep Spooky, and he’s clearly sick and needs some medical attention.  Basically how I was making a bad decision, and they just wanted me to know it.  So, I took Spooky to our other vet (along with a fecal sample I had obtained myself)  feeling very comfortable I had made the right choice by not stressing his system more by making him stay in a strange place any longer than I felt necessary.  The other was able to run one test, declare it bacterial (probably from a gummed up intestinal tract due to the sheep protein), and prescribed Amoxicillin which we already had on hand.  Probably about 20 minutes and we were out of there with Spooky in tow.  We are doing back flips just yet, but we do feel like he is getting better and will hopefully make a full recovery.  I think if he could talk he would have agreed with our decision.  LOL     I just got the impression the first vet was more concerned about making a profit than making my animal comfortable and finding out what was wrong with him as quickly as possible.  We will still use this vet for our dogs for the fact that we feel he IS a wonderful vet and since animals are our life we want the local vets to be on our side so if there is an emergency they will help us out after hours if needed.

Spooky on the way to the vet.  His time in the carrier was short lived because he meowed the whole time.  So, as unsafe as it is to not have your pet in a crate while in the vehicle, I held him the majority of the ride.

Friday evening we had dinner with my parents (for their anniversary), brother, and grandma at a fun little restaurant in a teeny tiny town near where we live.  The food was amazing, and we had a great time hanging out together.

Saturday, we rented a skid steer and scraped our lots to prepare for winter.  I intended for all the manure to go on my garden, but there was a communication error I’m afraid.  I was down helping my dad load up sheep to take to the sale and then inside cooking, baking, and cleaning and by the time I made it outside I noticed all the manure had been piled up out in our pasture.  So sad, but we have another pile I’m hoping will get moved and spread across the garden in the next week or two so it will have time to decompose through the winter.  The problem with that is instead of a skid steer rolling across the garden compacting the soil there will now be a giant tractor and speed mover rolling back and forth across the garden compacting the soil.  So much for a no-till garden this year, at least it will be fertilized well hopefully.

Sunday, we just kind of took it easy.  There was still plenty to do, but we just weren’t really up for it.  We had a minor catastrophe unloading the skid steer when we got it on Saturday.  It nearly fell through the trailer, so we had to borrow the trailer from the lumber yard where we rented the skid steer.  So, after much running back and forth the skid steer was returned and all was well.

Monday is my day to cook and prepare food for the week.  I finally worked on my scrapbook and began organizing and cleaning my craft area.  Both are way overdue.

Hopefully there will be an “after” picture of a clean craft area.  I’m not there yet.  LOL

My days off are also my days to spend time with the animals and work on training.  Our Australian Cattledog is a far cry from perfect and needs lots of attention and discipline.  So, at 10:00 am and 3:00 pm we play Frisbee and throughout the day we work on her incessant barking and her need to herd me around the house.  Little by little she is getting better.  She is a five year old dog and finally starting to calm down.  We’ve tried her as a herding dog and that theory that it’s instinct and “bred into them” is not always the case.  At three years old, if she ever had those instincts, they were long gone.  Our mutt makes a better herding dog than our herding dog, but we love them both the same anyway.

 Here is Ash after a mean game of frisbee.  Notice all the toys?  We are going to attempt to train her to put them back in her toy box.  Wish us luck.  She’s so smart, I really think she’s capable with a little work.

I managed to make the NT Ketchup and Coconut Chicken soup.  We haven’t tried the ketchup yet, but the soup was really good.. Randy and I both like it a lot, and I will be making it again soon.  It was so easy.  I’ll post it tomorrow hopefully.

Tonight is Salmon Chowder.  The potatoes are already peeled and everything is ready to be thrown in a pot.  Quick and easy dinner tonight.  I also have some homemade bologna in the process.  I will post this too if it is edible.  Sweet potato pie and Green Tomato Pie recipes will be up soon as well.  

Have a wonderful day!

Animals, Around the Homestead

Lost entries & Chickens

Now I understand why I have read about people who type up their entries in Word before copying and pasting them into their blog.  Guess I had to completely lose one of the longest entries (a tutorial) I’ve ever done to learn my lesson.  I will now be typing up my entries in Word to prevent this from happening again.

I’m not sure I mentioned the fact that we bought chickens to raise and sell for some extra money.  They were the fast-growing Cornish Rock Broilers.  They are supposed to reach butchering weight in 7-8 weeks (and do).  However, it’s kind of sad as they grow so fast their legs have difficulty holding their fat little bodies up.  Also, they CANNOT be stressed because their hearts are already under so much pressure any stress to their systems can cause them to have heart attacks.  We lost one baby chick and five to what we are guessing were heart attacks.  We hope to eventually build chicken tractors and get some hardier birds who enjoy foraging for their food.  We ended up with 107 chickens when all was said in done.  It’s a rewarding experience and once you taste a farm-raised chicken you won’t ever want to go back.

We are left with 11 banties who provide my dh and I with plenty of eggs.  Sometimes we even have extra to give to my Grandma and Mom & Dad.  Our llama, Hank, who still hasn’t really warmed up to us a whole bunch, but we love him despite his reluctance.  And of course we have our 34 wooly little sheep that we love to pieces.  Oh, and two dogs and two cats, but those are more of a drain on the finances and don’t provide us with any food.  Some of you are probably thinking rodent/critter control, but other than a bird this has yet to be proven either.  However, they give us lots of enjoyment and laughs which mean the most.

Around the Homestead

Our Sunday…

We did a little sightseeing on Sunday.  Dh and I hopped on our three wheelers and headed to a little spot on some family land to hang out for awhile.  It was a beautiful day and a beautiful place to hang out for a little bit.  If it wasn’t so cold here now (and hunting season) we could pitch a tent some weekend and stay awhile.

Imagine the sunrise from this location.

Again…sunrise view!

And last but not least….hubby was having a bad hair day and avoided the camera :  )    

We also spent some time visiting with my parents and working around the house.  We try to rest on Sundays and not do too much work if we can help it. 

Have a great day!

Around the Homestead, In The Kitchen

…from the weekend

 

I had a really great weekend at home.  I spent Friday in the Kitchen working on some new recipes and some old favorites.

I whipped up: 

Salsa (NT p.103) we thought this was really good

Toothpaste This was a little salty for me, so I cut the salt a little bit.

Butter Spread (NT p. 150) We love to use this instead of the hard butter straight out of the fridge.

I tried and failed at making my Sourdough Starter (NT p. 489).  This is my second attempt/failure.  It always smells horrible after 2-3 days.  Ugh!

Soaked Oats (NT p. 455) Tried rolled oats, but they were a soggy mess.  I just bought steel cut oats to try instead.

Ricotta & Mozzarella Cheese  This is a great tutorial!

Hot Cocoa Mix  I didn’t make this much since there is just the two of us, but this is good on those cold and windy Kansas days.

Friday: Taco Soup with a Taco Seasoning from mommaofmany (this soup is so good) w/ cornbread

Taco Seasoning:

1/4 c Dried Onion Flakes, chopped fine (I just used Onion Powder)

4 t. Cornstarch (arrowroot)

4 T. Chili Powder

3 t. Ground Cumin

3 t. Garlic Salt

2 t. Red Pepper Flakes

2 t. beef bouillon (I crushed these with my coffee grinder)

1 1/2 t. Dried Oregano

Mix well and store in an airtight container.  To use:  add 1/4 cup spice to 1 1/2 lbs hamburger and 1/2 cup water or so.  Mix well and cook until most of the water has evaporated. 

On my days off I try to spend some time loving on my pets since they are by themselves throughout the week.  So, without further ado:

All rules have fled our home in the following (incriminating) pictures of our dogs.

They aren’t really supposed to be curled up on our leather furniture, but I just couldn’t kick them off.  Our blue heeler was a tad heavy at her vet appointment over the weekend, so we have started two-a-day frisbee playing mid-morning and mid-afternoon to try to get her slimmed down.  We have 6 months until the vet wants her weighed again, so she will be an exercising machine in the meantime.  LOL

Once again I have a nice sized “to-do” list for the weekend; however, I have to run errands in town on tomorrow.  My least favorite thing is going to town on my days off when I just want to be tucked away at home, but it has to be done.  Hope everyone has a wonderful weekend. 

Around the Homestead

Cold Weather has arrived…Chili time

It is definitely cooling off here.  Not sure how cool it got last night, but they were predicting 35 for our low.  Out came the Carharts, stocking hats, and gloves.

Friday, I spent the day cooking and cleaning.  I try to get my house cleaned on Fridays so it’s presentable and comfortable for the weekend.  I also made, canned, and froze some homemade tomato soup.  My camera was on it’s last leg in some of these, but on Sunday we purchased a new one so this first one is not-so-good.

All the other photos were terrible, so this is my tomato soup, haha!

Friday evening we were invited to dinner with some friends/neighbors of ours.  They cooked the most incredible meal for us.  Dh and I couldn’t believe how wonderful they both cook.  I even had a couple of bites of steak.  I haven’t liked steak since I was a child, but I must admit he prepared it so well. 

Dh and I have a difficult time finding people (our age) who we can relate to, talk to, and share common interests with.  This couple is probably as close as we have come in a very long time.  She enjoys cooking and does a lot of “from scratch” cooking.  They both tend to their garden and livestock and hope to grow a majority of their food themselves.  They have two adorable little boys to help them along the way.  He is also a great mechanic (as is my husband) so they have traded back and forth in helping each other with projects and mechanical problems.  We will hopefully be spending more time with them and learning from each other as we all strive to take a step backwards in the rat race.

Saturday, we spent the day cleaning out the floors of our chicken coop and one of our sheep sheds.  Yuck, is the only word to describe this task.  Sunday, we ran to get a camera and few other things in a nearby (30 minutes each way) town.  When we came home it was back to shoveling the shed out.  We are estimating it was about 20 years of sheep manure compacted one foot deep.  Some of it looked like we were ripping out OSB or particle boards from the floor of the shed.  The flowerbeds will be appreciative of the new fertilizer come spring.

We HAD to have a camera this weekend because we were supposed to send in a picture for an article being ran in the Texel Times.  A newsletter for Texel sheep breeders.  My mom was in charge of the photo taking.  She does not like to take pictures nor is she very good at it :  )     Everyone has talents and her’s is just not photography.  For example, it took her so long to take each picture the camera would automatically turn itself off (powersave or batterysave mode).  Then, she wouldn’t know how to get it back on so I would have to turn it on for her and run back to my spot.  Funny!  She was great to do it for us though.

This is Randy, one of our rams, Cash, and me.  Cash has a bit of a fence climbing issue we are trying to break, but it came in handy for a photo.

I have corn in my hand, so Miss Piggy is trying to steal a kernel or two.

This is the same ewe as the picture above.  She is so tame and lovable.  We have another ewe we call Ma (like from the movie Babe), but she must have been having a bad hair day or something because she wanted nothing to do with pictures.

Monday, I was up at 4:30 to get dh off to work.  While I was waiting for it to lighten up outside I spent some time organizing our front porch area and closet and also my husband’s closet.  I have morning chore duty on the days I don’t work, so once it was light out I headed out to do those.  After chores were done I had some errands to run in town which always starts my day off bad.  I didn’t get home until 10:30, so I had to hustle to get everything done I intended to have done. 

I like to use my Mondays to prepare food for the next three days since I will be working and like to have something quick and easy (and nutritious) for dinner on those days.  I ended up making a big crockpot full of chili.  Here is how I made my chili:

Chili:

Soak 4 cups of pinto beans and 2 T of whey 12-24 hours.

Rinse and drain well.

Cook in crockpot, covered with water, salt, and garlic (optional) until tender.

Add two jars of homemade ro-tel, chili powder, and cooked hamburger (and ground venison).

Let this cook another hour on low to blend the flavors.

I usually use red beans, but pinto beans are so easy to buy in bulk I thought I would give them a try in our chili.  We both thought they were great and so much easier than buying different beans for every meal.  We ate our chili with homemade Cornbread with homemade butter and honey or maple syrup.  We also had organic carrot, and cauliflower and cherry tomatoes from the garden dipped in homemade Ranch dressing.  I was followed up with Brownies (minus the chocolate chips on top) straight out of the oven.  Yum!  It was a cold and windy day and my dh wasn’t feeling well, so this was a nice wintery dinner.  Can you tell I like Crystal Miller’s recipes a little?  hee, hee! 

Tonight will be a pan of stuffed green peppers I put togther yesterday to throw in the oven as soon as I get home tonight.

When I make stuffed green peppers I try to use up what I have in the fridge.  These have homemade ketchup, rice, hamburger, venison, pinto beans, and mozzarella cheese.  Easy and healthy!

Wednesday:  Much to my disgust, we will be having Chili Cheese Dogs along with a salad fresh from the garden.  My dh loves hotdogs and since he has been so great about my “healthy” food choices and trying some new things with our diet, I do not ask him to give up the one food he really likes.  Unfortunately, they are hotdogs :  )

Thursday:  Taco Soup (for the most part I follow this recipe, but sometimes use collard green broth if I have any leftover to cook my beans in since alot of the nutrients from the collards cook out into the broth)

For the Taco Seasoning I’m going to give the recipe a whirl.  The one I use is okay, but I’m going to experiment a little.  Here is where the understanding husband comes into play, when I “experiment” with new recipes :  )

 Hope everyone is having a great week!

Around the Homestead

Our weekend…

 

I can’t even begin to describe how much I love being home for four days a week.  It is so nice to be part-time now.  I have time to do so many of the things I’ve wanted to do, but never found the time.

 

We FINALLY got a kitten to keep our lone cat, Cooter company on Friday.  At first the little guy was just a pest to Cooter, but now they curl up together to sleep and play together chasing each other around.  The boys have to stay in our (unfinished) pool house unless we are outside.  We’re just too afraid of something happening to one of them.  Plus, our nights are getting cold enough it’s just as well there are inside where it is warm.

 

 

 

Spooky was really sick when my husband got him.  So he took him straight to the vet.  Of course, he had an upper respiratory infection, ear mites, and fleas.  I’ve never had to deal with fleas on an animal before, so this kind of freaked me out.  He have treated both the cats and will be treating our dogs (even though they have no direct contact with the cats) just for good measure.  Hope they are gone soon.  He yelps and scratches like crazy when he gets bitten by them.  It’s so sad to see him so uncomfortable.

 

Saturday, we loaded up six of our ram lambs and 42 of Dad’s ram lambs to take to the sale.  Very sad, but I’m just trying not to think about it.  It makes me so sad to think of them in a sale barn, etc.  Moving on….

 

A friend of my husband’s son went deer hunting and got a deer.  His family doesn’t like venison, so he gave the deer to us.  We just had to pay to have it processed.  Our neighbor is licensed to process deer, so that is handy.  We got 42 lbs of burger and 31 steaks, so that’s pretty good I thought.

 

Sunday, it stormed and we lost our power for 2-3 hours.  I was in heaven, but Randy was on the verge of meltdown.  Football was coming on at noon, and he was panicking.  Thankfully (eh hem) the power came on and only a few minutes of football were missed.  Whew!

 

 

We had dinner Sunday night at mom and dad’s and grandma came over to.  It was nice and really good food.  The jokes were pretty much on me for making cooking from scratch; making cream cheese, butter, baking bread, etc.  They do it out of love, I keep telling myself.  I could have a worse hobby, so I take it all in good fun.

 

Monday, I got up with Randy, made coffee, packed his lunch, and made him sit down for a quick breakfast.  As he was walking out the door he said, “I wish you could stay home everyday.”  I honestly think him meant it too.  I did all the morning chores, so he didn’t have to and the evening chores were done and dinner was made by the time he walked through the door.

 

I made two batches of cookies, made kefir, baked bread, and put together a meatloaf for dinner tonight.  Our refrigerator has issues where it freezes things on the top shelf.  For some dumb reason I put my kefir grains up there and they froze.  Not sure they will work now, does anyone know if they will work after they have been frozen?  Anyone know?

 

I also spent the weekend dehydrating tomatoes.  Roma tomatoes work the best.  Just slice them, salt them with sea salt, and sprinkle them with a little basil and they are good to go.

 

 

I did the Cook Along from Katie’s blog and will post it shortly.  I didn’t love the Roman Lentil Soup, but it was fun to try. 

 

 

Also have some pictures from our California trip to post.  Hope everyone is having a good week.

Around the Homestead

Oh how plans change…

Okay, I’m really going to try to get my act together here and start posting more regularly, maybe not daily but at least regularly.

Our tractor never materialized as they couldn’t get the hydraulic oil leaks stopped.  They have since sold the tractor to someone who apparently didn’t care it was gushing oil everywhere.  However, we have yet to receive a refund for the tractor.  “Checks in the mail,” or so they say.  I love business!

We also didn’t get to adopt the two kittens from the Humane Society in my hometown.  The “foster” parents decided they wanted to keep them.  I could go on all day on this one, but the low points are; the humane society was paying for a newspaper ad to advertise these little kittens and paying for their food and medical needs and the couple didn’t feel guilty at all about taking the handouts, but the minute someone showed an interest they decided to keep them for themselves.  Ugh!  We tried to adopt a different cat a few weeks before these kittens and the same thing happened, different town and people, but same scenario.

We have really worked ourselves to death here lately.  We are ready for cool/cold weather so we have an excuse to snuggle up and take it easy.  I’ve tried to persuade my husband to move our tv to a different area of the house so we can hang a quilt and cut down our heating area.  Apparently it will involve running cable for the (stupid) dish and amount to a lot of work.  So, I may not get my way.  Propane is already high and supposed to go higher, so I was brainstorming ways to cut back this winter.  Back to the drawing board I guess :  )

Oh, I have gone part-time at work.  So I now have time to cook more from scratch, experiment with a few new ideas, and take better care of our homestead.  I made butter (yum), I’m in the process of rounding up ingredients to make bar soap, and have lots of what we like to call “puppy time” at our house. 

Have a great week!

Around the Homestead

I’m back…

A lot has happened since I posted last.  My husband and I took a driving trip to California for my cousin’s wedding.  We bought a tractor we have yet to acquire because the John Deere in our town is less than customer oriented.  We have had a baby lamb escape our less than mediocre fencing and get hit and killed by my cousin in his giant pickup.  We have decided to possibly adopt one or two kittens from our local humane society to keep our one and only cat, Cooter, company.  We have 113 baby chicks (Cornish Rocks).  Another hen drowned in the stock tank leaving us with 11 banties.  This weekend we hope to clean our lots (with our invisable tractor), build our new lots, and release our anxious rams out with our ewes.  A few will be held back to grow a bit before being bred.

Sorry I have been away so long.  I am going part-time at work, so my time here will be limited.  I will try to pop in from time-to-time.

Have a wonderful weekend!

Around the Homestead

Rain…Arthritis…

It rained!  Woo hoo!  1.4 inches to be exact.  Everything was dying, and I was feeling so discouraged.  Did I mention it has been over 100 degrees for the past three days?  I was in the garden picking tomatoes watching the storm heading towards us and making its usual turn north to go around us.  I wanted to cry.  I was tired and so burned out on sprinklers, and hoses, and watering cans, and buckets of water.  A little bit later I glanced at the sky again and noticed the storm was back building to the west of us.  Hmmm, maybe there was still a chance.  We went to bed and sure enough in the middle of the night it came pouring down.  Our old mama ewe who we named, Ma, (any Babe fans out there?) apparently spent the night outside in it cooling off.  Everyone was happy to have rain, even the sheep.  Our pastures will hopefully green up, our tomatoes will increase production (we were unable to fulfill an order for someone who wanted some so that was a bummer), and with any luck at all Dad will get another cutting out of his hay due to the rain.  He was very discouraged after his doctor’s appointment yesterday, so at least the rain helped.  Not often does rain brighten your day, but it did his. 

If any of you have suggestions for a natural way of treating arthritis I would love suggestions.  The doctor prescribed Celebrex for my dad and this scares me to death.  Anything he could do to avoid this dangerous drug, but not have the constant pain of arthritis would be a blessing.  Mom is going to make an attempt to change their diet.  They have a VERY poor diet and VERY poor eating habits.  I wish they would change their ways, but they tend to see me as a know-it-all or roll their eyes when I mention the dangers of soda or suggest they use olive oil regardless of cost.  Minor changes in their diet could prove to be very beneficial.  I guess children stress their parents out for the first half of their lives, then it’s the parent’s turn to stress out the child the second half.  I worry about them so much.  I would love to see them make some healthy changes in their lifestyle. 

It’s my Friday, so you know what that means.  I will visit you all again Monday.  Take care and have a wonderful weekend.  I appreciate you all on this blog more than you will ever know.

Around the Homestead

Dad went to the doctor…

 

…and didn’t get a good report.  His ankle is not healing well.  Arthritis and tendonitis have set in his ankle and there is nothing they can do for it, and he is possibly having an allergic reaction to the metal used for his two pins and plate.  So, they are going to try to reduce the pain in his ankle with medication and see if the appearance of an allergic reaction goes away.  He will possibly have another sugery to replace the two pins and plate used in the first surgery if it doesn’t go away. 

Hopefully he can schedule the second surgery after lambing season.  I don’t think Randy, Mom, and I have it in us to go through all of it again.  Not to mention Dad having to go through it all again and the financial strain of losing lambs because no one is there to assist them.

Please pray it isn’t an allergic reaction and his pain subsides soon.  We will continue to pitch in and help to prepare for him to be down again in hopes we can make the second time around go a little smoother than the first.