
Prada to Carhart
Several years ago on my journey to find a farm I'd set my eyes on a place in the hills of North Carolina. A picturesque 20 acre farm situated on a hillside. Previously, an alpaca farm. The owners built a very specific structure with human living space above and alpaca living quarters below. Warm summer days plus piles of alpaca poop adds up to ripe aromas. Didn't they know that architectural design went back centuries and had been dispensed with probably because the residents couldn't withstand the rising perfumes?
They built the place to incorporate elaborate fans and exhaust plans so they would only be consumed with alpaca cuteness...nothing else. It really was a glorious place. At the time I really had my sites set on it. Am I glad today it didn't work out? You betcha. A switch to farming was a shock to my financial reality as it was without saddling myself with more debt and less land to farm. Never the less, it was an education and an adventure that entertained me until I could fine MY farm.
At the time this was all going down a friend of mine said, "oh, your going to farm where the farmers wear lace". I spent my first adult life very conscious of fashion. I loved clothes and all the adornments. For some reason at that moment I defended the honor of all female farmers before me and those yet to find their way.
My head spun toward him and I said, "...and why not?"
Why just because we farm would folks assume "lace" was out of the question? Maybe it was a path I would soon discover.
Maybe it was a bra about to be burned?
Now, several years later as I speak from the tractor seat I have a much better understanding of the roots of such perceptions. No, lace isn't a farm worthy fabric this is true. There are certain realities in farming that become the "fabric" of your day. Utility takes precedent over frills. You wear things that are tear resistant, wash hardy (they get washed ALOT), weather protective and last but not least you look for quality in what you wear more then ever before...your clothes have to stand up to hard wear and tear. Your adornments are chosen by need not complimentary color or bling. Your gloves are where you can most easily access them, your cell phone is where it won't fall out as your bending over or hurling bales of hay and your boot socks are usually chosen by what's not currently covered in mud!
So, again back to why I'm writing this today...my female (and male) farming friends have found their own individual way to express their fashionable side. Our designers are different and we probably pick up our farm seed at the same place we choose some of our clothing.
Regardless, the farmer fashionista does exist. As I've said before, don't ever underestimate what's under those Carharts!
Puttin Up the Fence
I have learned (he says not) that I should just listen and do as I'm told. hee-hee That will be the day!
Posts into the horizon.... |
Corner posts, braces, angles, pushing and pulling...every added component requires thoughtful analysis. Of course so much of what he knows he learned as a young boy with his father. His fathers knowledge also came from a familiar source, and added experience of course.
I am not going to write today about the dynamics of fencing because I think that might get a little boring. I wanted to share how complex the project really is. I wanted to share also as I look at the process the magnitude of the task ahead and the accomplishment when done.
We bought this farm with little to no fencing standing. The fencing that was here was so old, rusted barb wire, and quite frankly dangerous. We couldn't begin to use it for our sheep. So, not only did we have the arduous task of "puttin up a fence" we had to dismantle what was here. You've also heard me say the fence is our first line of defense in protecting our sheep so fortress like it must stand!
There is so much to tell and share. There is the equipment we attach to the tractor, specific to fencing and the ingenious tools John has created to make the task easier. For example, each post is positioned 13-15' from the other. Rather then measure each time he puts in a new post he has created a "gauge stick". Dah! He has one for height and one for distance. The more I write the more I realize this blog might only interest the girls out there? Maybe guys know this stuff already. Maybe this information is as common to guys as the shortcuts we gals take in the kitchen?
John (oops, I haven't introduced him yet...he's my husband...the master fence builder) also says the fence is such a task he doesn't want to have to repeat it. Not in his lifetime! How do we accomplish that? As with anything you want to last, you want to invest in quality materials. We could go to the store and buy posts or we could take the advice of the old timers. There is no written evidence but there is physical evidence in all the posts still standing after 40+ years.
This barn, here on the farm, has cedar beams and pillars and has been standing for 50 years. The pillars are 12-14" in diameter. |
The "red" is considered the heart |
Cedar all over...see it in the foreground? |
Who knows whether they used it because it grows like weeds here or because it lasts. If we assume either argument we can't argue with the wisdom. Regardless of why we must still be careful to use only the red heart cedar. The red heart resist rot and bugs. The "old timers" say you'll find the red heart cedars growing in the wooded areas. We are so blessed on this farm to have "posts" growing everywhere.
Now, let's talk bracing. Good bracing according to John, is the key to fence longevity. You have all the vertical posts in the ground and the wire gets pulled tight to the post so you have to "brace" your corners and bends so the posts don't pull out of alignment. I am not even going to begin trying to explain the placement of the braces. That's advanced fencing! So, here we have a few pictures showing the braces, usually always on a long stretch or a corner, or where the wire would begin or end like at a gate.
Poor John. Some employees are just too much distraction! |
As John has proclaimed time and time again, "I'll probably be fencing for the rest of my life" so, rest assured, there will be more to come on the topic....
Lovely Cup of Chai
Alright, my blog topics are all over the place. One theme I recognize through out my posts is reference to those little surprises in life that represent, EASY when you thought surely, HARD. Take Chai for example. Have you tried it? Chai means tea in many cultures. In this country we've come to know it as a spicy tea drink usually mixed with milk. A combination of cardamon, ginger,cinnamon, and black pepper...how could it be wrong? It produces a warming, soothing effect. I don't know if it's the spices themselves or the whole experience. I do know it gives me a sense of well being. I can't really explain it. I also know it's difficult to resist a second cup. Once I discovered it I craved it. As is often the case with new love you seek it out. You go back and back to it's origins. Then as if magic, it appears in more and more places. You can grab a cup at most coffee shops, Starbucks included. Warm or cold whatever you fancy. I then began to find it at various stores in those cardboard cartons they're packaging so much in now. Take it home, add milk....ahhhhh!
I believe it was after the second carton that I realized what a rip off it was but I continued my addiction. Let's see...the carton had about 4 servings (mugs) and cost almost $5 and you had to add your milk of choice too. If you bought 4 tea bags you wouldn't be close. Now mind you I'm not trying to be critical. I know products take a lot of care to make but as is often the case you can do it a lot more economically on your own. On top of the economics if you buy quality ingredients you'll often have a better outcome. I know, it's only a rip off if you buy it but I was! You can buy the spiced tea bags but somehow I still wasn't getting the same result. Truth is, I went without my occasional fix for sometime. Then, the other day I came across the recipe. So, here it is....that easy, simple fast surprise recipe for Chai tea and I'm telling you it's the best I've ever had.
When your facing THIS...a warm cup of comfy is ALL RIGHT! |
Looking for Llama's
Lucy, our guard llama |
See the tree line to the right? Way over there is where the new fence will be! Our house is off to the left |
Our farm is shaped like a rectangle. We occupy and have fenced one half of the length of the rectangle. We have a whole other half to go! My husband jokes he'll be fencing the rest of his life. He does build a pretty fence though.
What makes me nervous you might ask? As sheep farmers, our big concern is predators. The number one predator of sheep is the domestic dog. Sad, right? My husbands father's sheep business was wiped out by roaming dogs in the '60's. Some say it is the very reason sheep farms have declined. Besides that, coyotes are said to be everywhere. We haven't seen or heard them yet but others swear they have. The call of a coyote is said to be so shrill and specific. I've spent many an evening outside listening for them and haven't heard anything. Mind you I'm not a coyote expert, in fact I can't say that I've ever heard one. They say there is no howl like it so you will know when you hear it. Whether our threat is real or perceived the risk is such that guard animals become necessary.
Guard animals are widely discussed in any predator prone livestock farming. Not so much with cattle folks cause cattle are large enough they don't have many predators. For us raising sheep we have to consider our farm perimeter as our number one defense. That 'purdy' fence turns in to an impenetrable fortress, we hope. We spend a lot of money getting the right fence and feed husband well so we get the fence right! After all the fencing, predators can still be a worry so guard animals act as our second line of defense. Folks use dogs, donkeys, and llamas. We've chosen llamas for our pastures. Our dogs watch over the exterior fence lines but on their own schedules, rarely after the sun goes down.
Our Woven wire fence. 3" spacing from the bottom, graduated to 5" spacing |
I'm posting today to share one of my many "irresistible" moments on the farm. Opening more pastures creates a need for more llamas. Hence,we went llama shopping!
Your right to ask, where do you shop for llamas? Llama farmers are not in the business to support those of us looking for guard llamas. Llamas can be quite beautiful and therefore demand a lot of money. Our needs do not require decedents of llama royalty. We have met many a lady and lord llama along our journey. No, we'll happily take an outcast or a family disappointment. All we ask is they watch over our flock and scare off any unwanted trouble makers.
Winter Garden
Garlic in the Snow |
Winter gardening, it's kind of an oxymoron isn't it? Planting and harvesting fresh green vegi's in the winter months, really? Now I'm convinced everyone should try it! If I didn't have my prepared garden beds I'd have pots and beds on my patio and small containers of started seeds all over my kitchen window sill awaiting their place outside. As much as my hubby and I eat lettuce and the like, I plant seeds a few at a time so I have an extended harvest, or in plain English....lettuce all the time!
Have you noticed the price of fresh foods lately? It's crazy! If you really pay attention to the quality of those fresh foods it's even crazier! In our house we eat a lot of fresh vegetables so anything I grow rather then buy really makes a difference to our bottom line. Heck, just keeping me out of the store is worthwhile. Farm life keeps me a bit secluded some weeks and the grocery store becomes an outing I look forward to (sad but true) and that is not the formula for walking out with only 1-2 items! So, when I don't have to make that quick trip to the store for the perishable things we seem to always need most, it saves money and time. Let's not forget the increased health benefits from the garden freshness too. The vitamins are at their peak when picked. For me, knowing exactly how the food is grown and handled adds that much more satisfaction!
Arugula at 3 weeks |
Tango Lettuce at 4 weeks |
Onion that doubles as chive like herb |
The winter garden is also stress free. Less yield for me gives me more flexibility for the when and how the food gets from the garden to our plates. In the prime growing months when the bounty is brimming I sometimes find getting out there to pick before things get over ripe haunts me. Preparing that bounty before it goes to waste...I sometimes get stressed about that too. Don't get me wrong, I love making preserves, canning tomatoes or just preparing that fabulous freshness from our garden. Let's face it, when those vines are spilling over and the branches weep from weight I often have plenty else to do. So, winter gardening reminds me how manageable it can be and when it is, I am more inclined to enjoy it. It kind of re-exposes me to the 'root' of it all and I look forward to the bounty ahead.
I hope you will all find some seeds, whether you flip the pages of a catalogue or grab a pack as your standing in the check out of your favorite home improvement store, choose a vessel, and give it a try! I promise it will brighten even the gloomiest of winter days.
Breeding season on the farm: Sheep Thrills and A farmers imagination
Each year in the fall the rams (boy sheep) get moved in with ewes (girls)...it's breeding time! Since my background isn't in livestock or farming I am inclined to blush at the sites and thoughts of all the goings on around here. I have an even greater imagination when it comes to the romancing I'm convinced takes place.
We have different pastures with different rams in each pasture. We decide which ram goes with which ewes based on blood lines. We just want to be sure there's no inbreeding. Not too long ago I had someone jokingly say, "picking their beau's are you?" Believe me, I did not laugh that off. For a day or so I had to wrestle with the possibility that I might be involved in arranged marriages of sorts. Making the final decision for these girls, really!
My justification rested in the fact that every ram on this farm is handsome and therefore these gals wouldn't mind. I mean they don't have to rely on them for anything other then pretty babies and I hope a romantic evening, of sorts.
So, the day approaches sometime in October each year. We watch the calender. For the sheep, the rams especially, they know. This year Mi Sueno, our #1 ram, stood in the corner of his pasture for some 30 days before it was time. Longingly staring at the ewes in the adjoining pastures. They say the moon, stars and earths influences tell them it's that time of year again.
The other rams didn't show much interest but they haven't been around the block as many times as Mi Sueno so they're not quite as tuned in. With very specific direction we send each ram strategically to they're perspective harem. It is such a change in dynamics on the farm I stick around and feed my imagination. I know when she bats those eyelashes...I saw it! As I describe to anyone who wants to listen, each of our rams has a very different style. Mi Sueno, magnificent as he is, has one thing on his mind. It is a job. It's not work he'd trade for anything but that's all it is, his job. He joins the gals one day, does his job, and regardless of the number of days past on the calender, he tells us when he is ready to get leave the mixed company! Each year we know, when Mi Sueno starts getting rough with girls, he's had enough of whatever they were offering...he has forgotten again for another 12 months.
White Lightening is a handsome young ram with great promise just not enough years to build a reputation. I know he is just discovering who he is but I still contend they each have their own style. He hasn't shown a single sign that he bred or was interested in such. We won't really know until it's lambing time but I've seen his type before, he's just the private type. He nibbles on their ears and asks them if they'd like to dance. I've actually heard cooing before.
Yesterday we moved the rams back to their pasture. As we open the gate for them to join their fellow rams, they look back toward the ewes, as if to say, "am I sure about this" then forward they move to the other rams calling, "come and get us".
Each ram being different in character, one looks back at the ewes again and then at me saying please can I stay with the girls while another doesn't give it a second thought, off he goes ramming rams! Once together they butt heads jump on each other and bully about. They are boys, happy to be back together.
So you see some might say they're just animals and that I have too vivid an imagination but I say, nope, not too far from our own stories of romance...sans the music and candlelight!
Pickles!
I don't know about you but I love pickles. Sweet, sour, spicy, chips, spears and those almost embarrassing whole ones...hey, I'm referring to the mere size...some so big we might wonder if one person could finish them.. Actually, I love anything "pickled" but today I am writing about the cucumber sort. I have a recipe to share with you! Pickles, pickled by the jar! Yep, that's right...8-10 cucumbers, depending on the size and you can have yourself a jar of fabulous pickles waiting in your larder for the day your taste buds water for the garlicky, salt and vinegar cure of that firm crisp pickle! You know the kind? The kind addictions are made of. Once the the vinegar begins to manipulate the sides of your mouth there is no turning back. Just one, are you kidding?
On our farm the garden is mostly about our own personal consumption and I'm learning how to deal with the various phases of the bounty. Pickles are the reason I plant cucumbers. The smaller (under 5" long) cuc's are good for dill pickles. As long as the cucumbers aren't bitter (not enough constant water) and not too large (over 2" in diameter) they're always good for B&B's (bread & butters for those not familiar with pickle vernacular). In my humble opinion FRESH picked is always key when it comes to pickles! I don't believe I have ever met a pickle aficionado that wouldn't stick their nose up at soft pickles!
Now, listen up, a few successful canning's and an expert I am, NOT! One of the reasons I am sharing this recipe; it is so darn easy. I promise, if you try this recipe two things will happen. 1) You won't believe how easy it is. 2) You too will feel like an expert
I am the type with BIG ideas and not always enough time, or these days, energy to get er done. So, this recipe really appealed to me. At the end of a long day working , destroying the kitchen with canning equipment spread from one end to the other doesn't appeal to me. Another reason I like this recipe is the ease of dealing with your daily harvest. In most home gardens the yield is a few a day. So, collecting the quantity of pickles needed for most other recipes can be a pain. Since the freshness of the pick contributes to the "
crisp
" of the bite, if you collect over time you'll have older cucumbers too. I believe the older ones have the potential to risk the crispness factor. Now I know some of you are wondering about those pickles resting on the grocery shelf. Don't think about! I wouldn't even try it. Just buy elsewhere. There are plenty farmers and farmers markets around these days that freshness shouldn't be an issue. When the seasons not right, don't pickle. By the way, have you seen
? Cucumbers are some kind of easy to grow.
When I found this recipe I was stoked. This is my third year using this recipe and I think I've finally perfected it. I adapted it from a recipe I found in
Magazine.
First, you want to wash your cucumbers well and snip the vine end, just a snip. I'm told if left on the cucumber it can create a bacteria in the jar that would ruin the whole batch. I'm not going to guide you through the basics of preparing the canning jars cause it is pretty basic stuff. You want to sterilize each jar and the lids. Any questions check out
site.
Using pint or quart size jars ( better for gifting) :
Place in the bottom of the jar
1 clove of garlic
1 healthy sprig of dill
1 dried hot pepper or a shake or 2 of hot pepper flakes (optional)
Next stuff each jar with as many cucumbers as possible. I sometimes use a wooden spoon end to manuever the cuc's to make room. They somehow snuggle up in the space. Leave 1/2" headroom from the top of the jar. If you'd prefer not to leave them whole the spears also work great in this recipe.
Add:
1-1.5 Tablespoon of non-iodized salt
1/2 cup white vinegar
Fill the rest of the jar w/ boiling water, again making sure to leave the 1/2" headroom.
Last but far from least place a fresh grape leaf on top of the jar before you seal it. I know most of you won't have access to such a thing. The old timers say it is the final step to assuring crispness. Maybe a neighbor has some grapes? If they have grape vines, they have leaves a plenty. Maybe it's the very thing needed to bring neighbor to neighbor?
Process in a water bath for 20 minutes.
Make sure the jars seal.
In 6-8 weeks your pickles will be ready for the tasting. Don't dilute the experience with crackers or anything else for that matter. You will not stop at eating one and you'll be running about the house bragging on your yummy treat. No, me, I didn't do that.....
What comes at the end of a Blog? Unresolved photo placement!
Morning Gifts
Then I move on to the BIG girls, and they are BIG! They all have lambs by their side and they are pushy! I cannot out smart them and they do not listen to reason. Believe me, I try! Guess they have alot on their mind raising the youngsters. They know breakfast noshing is in the very near future. Although they recognize my arrival is the first sign of breakfast they clearly think being on top of me will guarantee more, better....I don't know? They each have their own personalities. I have a time naming all the sheep...I cannot just give them a name, it has been very important to me to watch for their personalities, so, these gals really do live up to their names! Don't tell my mother though who just happens to have a ewe with her name! I won't go into too much detail here. Naming deserves a whole post!
The main reason I am blogging today is a sighting here on the farm...we have a 2 acre pond that we've been told is one of the healthier ponds around.
We don't manicure the perimeter of the pond and from what we're told that is one of the reasons it is so healthy. Many ponds are experiencing algae growth out of control brought in by the increasing Canadian geese population. We have been told fowl will avoid areas when their safety is challenged by over growth; they can't see an approaching predator. It seemed a little contradictory to me that wildlife preferred manicured areas. Maybe those geese have been populating too many golf courses and roadsides? Maybe those geese have gotten a bit too citified and have forgotten the ways of nature?
So yes, I am very glad we have a healthy pond but I am often disappointed that we don't have more birds. Well, this morning, much to my surprise... a female Mallard left the side brush to paddle to safety...away from me and off to the middle of the pond and I caught this....
Finding the Words
Alas, I have a growing business that requires outreach.
The sad reality is I really love to write.
I'm sharing all this because a few posts back I felt the Blog calling me. I felt remiss in my frequency of blogging. I felt like I MUST write. You know what you get when you try too hard? Not your best work. The topic was authentic but the content was forced.
I am sharing this because I hope I now can recognize the difference. You can't force creativity. Well, I guess you can but it's the difference between art and stuff, right?
This city girl turned farmer has had some incredible experiences on this farm that I know I should share. Many have asked me to. I just have to give them words....
The girls and a few token boys!
We are going on 5 years and just now officially adding the rooster:chicken:egg dimension to our farm plan. A few years ago we added about 12 chickens and one MEAN rooster. They graced our farm with their hen like cuteness for about 8 months and something came in one eve and left nothing but feathers for us to find the next morning. We then decided then we couldn't have chickens until our fences were up and we could keep them secure. We couldn't have them running round in the yard like "sitting ducks(chickens) for raccoons, weasels, neighbor dogs, and foxes just to name a few. The locals all had different suspicions about the crime scene, all different. We never arrested anyone! I guess the whole occurrence made us a little gun shy, not sure we wanted to feel the heartbreak again. So, wait we did.
We decided to bring chickens back to our farm operation primarily because it is the most efficient and healthiest method of fertilization being used today. And, you heard it from me...a rooster completes the farm!
As many of you have heard, our new chicken DIG's arrived. The chicken house is now home to 45 hens and 3(maybe 4) roosters. . We chose hearty varieties of chickens that are good layers and we also wanted to stay true to our belief in heritage breeds.
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March 2025
- Mar 31, 2025 Skirting Wool: The Essential First Step to Beautiful Fiber Mar 31, 2025
- Mar 17, 2025 Do Sheep Need a Barn? The Answer is in Their Wool! Mar 17, 2025
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February 2025
- Feb 23, 2025 Cherishing Culinary Heirlooms: My favorite Kitchen Utensil Feb 23, 2025
- Feb 11, 2025 Wool Pellets Feb 11, 2025
- Feb 6, 2025 Fresh from the dirt: Horseradish Sauce Feb 6, 2025
- Feb 3, 2025 Lamb Fagioli Feb 3, 2025
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January 2025
- Jan 15, 2025 Woven Together: How wool changed my life Jan 15, 2025
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December 2024
- Dec 5, 2024 Seventeen Years of Sheep, Sweat, and Manchego: A Love Story Dec 5, 2024
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September 2024
- Sep 10, 2024 Back to basics with sheep healthcare Sep 10, 2024
- Sep 10, 2024 Mac and Cheese Bites Sep 10, 2024
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August 2024
- Aug 12, 2024 Tales of a female farmer Aug 12, 2024
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July 2024
- Jul 12, 2024 Caring for sheep hides Jul 12, 2024
- Jul 11, 2024 Cucumber Lemonade Jul 11, 2024
- Jul 1, 2024 Cucumber Gazpacho Jul 1, 2024
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May 2024
- May 23, 2024 Almonds, Sweet and Spicy May 23, 2024
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January 2024
- Jan 17, 2024 Sheep Fencing Gone Wrong: A Comedy of Errors Jan 17, 2024
- Jan 17, 2024 In the beginning :Tales from the shepherd Jan 17, 2024
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April 2023
- Apr 3, 2023 The journey to vegetarian, or not? Apr 3, 2023
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March 2023
- Mar 20, 2023 Making sense of scents, or not... Mar 20, 2023
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February 2023
- Feb 26, 2023 Lamb Sliders Feb 26, 2023
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March 2022
- Mar 15, 2022 HOW TO BE THE BEST SHEPHERD: Lessons from a sheep Mar 15, 2022
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January 2022
- Jan 17, 2022 Lamb Bone Broth /Stock Jan 17, 2022
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April 2021
- Apr 26, 2021 Farming through Covid Apr 26, 2021
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June 2020
- Jun 19, 2020 Turning 60 Jun 19, 2020
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January 2020
- Jan 12, 2020 wool dryer ball transparency Jan 12, 2020
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September 2019
- Sep 10, 2019 The Shepherd's Lesson: Sometimes, the Sheep Know Best Sep 10, 2019
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June 2019
- Jun 21, 2019 Weaning: A Shepherd's Reflection on Loss Jun 21, 2019
- Jun 17, 2019 Strawberry Balsamic Basil Pops Jun 17, 2019
- Jun 10, 2019 Collard Salad Jun 10, 2019
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February 2019
- Feb 28, 2019 Not a Washout After All: Shearing Day Success Feb 28, 2019
- Feb 5, 2019 The life of a sheep! Feb 5, 2019
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January 2019
- Jan 25, 2019 Lamb Liver Paté Jan 25, 2019
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August 2018
- Aug 23, 2018 Pokeweed, Friend or Foe? Aug 23, 2018
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July 2018
- Jul 20, 2018 Cucumbers Galore Jul 20, 2018
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September 2016
- Sep 5, 2016 Mother Nature's Lessons Sep 5, 2016
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August 2016
- Aug 23, 2016 Walking the Walk Aug 23, 2016
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July 2015
- Jul 2, 2015 To Wean or not to Wean Jul 2, 2015
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February 2015
- Feb 1, 2015 Sustainability & Our Precious Soil Feb 1, 2015
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July 2014
- Jul 24, 2014 Squash Lasagna Jul 24, 2014
- Jul 24, 2014 Squash Squares Jul 24, 2014
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June 2014
- Jun 2, 2014 Sustainability...What's it all about! Jun 2, 2014
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May 2014
- May 29, 2014 What I know now.... May 29, 2014
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April 2014
- Apr 4, 2014 Is the boss the farmer or the sheep? Apr 4, 2014
- Apr 3, 2014 Felted Chicks Apr 3, 2014
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January 2014
- Jan 28, 2014 Lamb Ribs Jan 28, 2014
- Jan 26, 2014 DIY Wool Dryer Balls Jan 26, 2014
- Jan 15, 2014 Let the New Year Begin Jan 15, 2014
- Jan 13, 2014 DIY Heat Jan 13, 2014
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October 2013
- Oct 30, 2013 WHOLEsome Food: EGGS Oct 30, 2013
- Oct 7, 2013 Cinnamon Pickles Oct 7, 2013
- Oct 7, 2013 Dog Biscuits Oct 7, 2013
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September 2013
- Sep 18, 2013 Peaches, Peaches everywhere Sep 18, 2013
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August 2013
- Aug 14, 2013 The Spider and the Butterfly Aug 14, 2013
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July 2013
- Jul 30, 2013 They don't wear galoshes Jul 30, 2013
- Jul 21, 2013 Blackberry Lime Jam Jul 21, 2013
- Jul 11, 2013 Lamb Sliders Jul 11, 2013
- Jul 9, 2013 Our Little Orchard Jul 9, 2013
- Jul 2, 2013 The Hay Bale Fiasco Jul 2, 2013
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May 2013
- May 17, 2013 My Secret Place May 17, 2013
- May 2, 2013 April. Did I miss it? May 2, 2013
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March 2013
- Mar 28, 2013 Prada to Carhart Mar 28, 2013
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February 2013
- Feb 21, 2013 Puttin Up the Fence Feb 21, 2013
- Feb 7, 2013 Lovely Cup of Chai Feb 7, 2013
- Feb 5, 2013 Looking for Llama's Feb 5, 2013
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January 2013
- Jan 29, 2013 Winter Garden Jan 29, 2013
- Jan 24, 2013 Breeding season on the farm: Sheep Thrills and A farmers imagination Jan 24, 2013
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September 2012
- Sep 7, 2012 Pickles! Sep 7, 2012
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June 2012
- Jun 13, 2012 Morning Gifts Jun 13, 2012
- Jun 5, 2012 Finding the Words Jun 5, 2012
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April 2012
- Apr 13, 2012 The girls and a few token boys! Apr 13, 2012
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March 2012
- Mar 30, 2012 Flavor! Mar 30, 2012
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October 2011
- Oct 9, 2011 Hay. A little three letter word that packs a PUNCH! Oct 9, 2011
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July 2011
- Jul 22, 2011 The Glorious Tomato Jul 22, 2011
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February 2011
- Feb 10, 2011 Shearing Day 2011 Feb 10, 2011
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November 2010
- Nov 30, 2010 This farm gives me Goose Bumps Nov 30, 2010
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July 2010
- Jul 23, 2010 Another aHaa Moment in Farming Jul 23, 2010
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February 2010
- Feb 24, 2010 Farmers Wearing Lace? Feb 24, 2010
- Feb 16, 2010 Girls with no Coats Feb 16, 2010
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January 2010
- Jan 4, 2010 Midnite on the farm Jan 4, 2010
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April 2009
- Apr 22, 2009 Hard Day on the Farm Apr 22, 2009
- Apr 15, 2009 Lamb Meatballs Apr 15, 2009
- Apr 14, 2009 Spring Apr 14, 2009
- Apr 14, 2009 Roasted Coffee Marinated Leg of Lamb Apr 14, 2009
- Apr 13, 2009 In the Beginning Apr 13, 2009