The Circle Z

Monday, September 4, 2006 - Great News!

It didn't take as long as I thought it might to find our miniature jersey cow. We bought one and just got "Ruby" home Saturday evening. She is 7 months old, and is a little bit larger than we had anticipated. We think that she will be more of a "mid-sized miniature" than a true miniature. This is our first cow ever, and we are excited to have her. The trip to pick up Ruby will definitely go down in the annals of family history (200 miles each way in a 37-year-old truck). I won't go into details here, but I'll just say that we are glad to be home. This picture was taken by Ruby's original owner just a few days after she was born. Aren't newborn jerseys the most beautiful animals? Check out these eyelashes.

 

School starts tomorrow, and oh boy am I not ready. Time to sort out books and clear off the big desk and the tables!

Blessings!
Amey
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Wednesday, June 28, 2006 - Our Muscovys Are Here

Our hatchery informed us last month that due to a problem with their incubators, they would not be able to sell us any muscovy ducklings as we had hoped. This was very disappointing news because muscovy ducks eat mosquitos. Or so we have been told.

Today my husband picked up our recently "processed" meat chickens from an Amish family in the community (yay! I sure am tired of beef! We had run out of chicken). Their boys had a sign out front: Ducks For Sale. Not only were they muscovy ducklings (about 6 weeks old), but we got them for a good price. All 13 of them. They are out in our back yard now along with our Pekins and a few guineas.

I'm dreaming of a tick-free (thank you, guineas) and mosquito-free (thank you, muscovys) back yard. Will my dream become reality? I'll keep you updated...

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Thursday, April 27, 2006 - Small Farmer Legal Defense Association?

I found a great link on Sharra's blog (Country Living) yesterday to an interview with Sally Fallon in Acres USA about raw milk. In the article, Sally (dare I be so familiar as to use her first name?) puts forth this brilliant idea - that people interested in preserving small farms, their products, and freedom for growing your own food, should join together to form a defense association much like HSLDA that we homeschoolers have for our defense. She said that freedom for homeschoolers is now something that is not encroached upon by the government (relatively speaking, anyway) because now homeschoolers have a great HSLDA lawyer on their side immediately if a legal issue ever comes up. Now that freedom for small farmers is becoming such an issue, wouldn't there be enough people to pay 100 bucks a year for legal protection? Wouldn't this be a great way to advance the cause of freedom to grow/raise your own food? We just need a talented young farm-raised lawyer to get things started for us!
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Friday, March 31, 2006 - We're Taking the Plunge

My husband and I have decided to splurge on a livestock trailer. We found a good used one this week, and we'll be picking it up tomorrow. The question is: will that almost 40-year-old beat-up  truck of my husband's be able to pull it? And if it can, will it stop when the brakes are applied? Details, details...

We've also been talking about buying a just-weaned lamb this spring to frolic around with the kids. The goal of this lamb being lamb chops for next fall/winter. How in the world will we be able to look that cute little lamb in the eyes, all the while knowing its final destination?!? It's easy with chickens. But a lamb? Will it break my heart?

In other animal news, I now have a fully functioning goat-milking stand. It is so very handy, and my knees are grateful that I do not have to squat down anymore. I've been using it now for almost a week, and I don't know how I ever milked without it.

Did you see the new Meatrix yet? Disgusting, yet amusing. Just gross. I bet the people that made that little cartoon had fun doing it.


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Saturday, March 25, 2006 - Welcome Spring!



My photographer brother took this picture in our backyard last May. Isn't it gorgeous?

Blessings!
Amey
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Wednesday, March 1, 2006 - Howdy, Strangers!

Whew! I made it! Every time I come here to update my blog, it seems like I get distracted by the other blogs. I read through a bunch of them, and by the time I'm done, I don't have time to blog myself! But today...here I am! It's a miracle! This morning I found Jenette at Tender Mercies. She recently got a hand grain mill. I always wondered how much work it was to grind by hand. Now I know! Sounds like a lot! 

I've also been spending my usual blog time by looking for airline tickets and rental cars for our family to visit my in-laws out west. We haven't visited since our older son was nine months old (he'll be 7 in May). We're all excited to be going, but it will be a lot of work to get ready. We think we have found a goat baby-sitter for while we are gone - an Amish farmer who can milk our Daisy. We still have to find someone to feed the rest of our animals, but that shouldn't be as hard to do. That is the thing about homesteading. It can be tricky to find the right time to travel when you have animals. Hopefully this will turn out to be a good time - right before the baby chicks, and also right before starting our (admittedly small) garden.

Speaking of chicks, we are finally starting to get a few eggs from our laying hens! Yee-haw! What an egg-less winter this was! Right now we only have four hens that are of laying age, and three more that should start laying sometime this spring. I'm going to try talking my husband into getting a dozen pullet chicks this spring. I think he'll go for it. He loves the eggs as much as I do. Too bad it's such a long wait from chicks to eggs.

One more thing. Can I just say: H U R R A Y  F O R  M A R C H!
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Thursday, January 19, 2006 - Well, She's Here!

Our goat arrived this morning around 8:00! She's lovely...and large! I wish I had a picture of her to post! Maybe soon...We're all just getting used to each other right now, and we think that maybe when she feels a little more settled and familiar with the new digs, she'll have those babies. She doesn't have any  "papers", but she has a reputation as a good milker. I think we have the supplies we'll need when the babies come, but from what we've read, we probably won't need much. I'm really really excited about this, and so glad to be able to share my excitement here where you people understand what I am feeling. Most people seem to think it's just plain weird. 

Amey

p.s. when I say "you people", that is a term of endearment. haha. Thanks for "listening"!
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Friday, January 13, 2006 - Goats 'R Us?

My husband is asking around our rural community to see who around us has dairy goats. He  found an Amish family just around the corner from us that milks goats, so he is going to ask them if they might know how we might possibly maybe (hopefully) please oh please acquire a dairy goat.

Dalyn suggested that I research cow's vs. goat's milk, and so my husband and I have done that. We found out that goat's milk is better than cow's milk in many ways. This web site was very helpful. From what we have read, cow's milk is higher in a few vitamins and minerals, but goat's milk is higher than cow's milk in other vitamins and minerals and is also better in other ways (digestability, fatty acids, immune system support, etc.).

Our biggest concern about getting into caring for dairy animals is how to care for them when we're away. It would be a big change in our lifestyle if we needed to be home to milk our animal(s) every 12 hours.

Another issue is what to do with the babies. Obviously, if we want our goat(s) to give milk, they will have to have babies. What do we do with them? I don't think there's a market in our area for goat meat. Is the meat any good? I read a little about it in the Encyclopedia of Country Living, but that's all.

Feel free to give me any advice you may have as the Spirit leads.

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Thursday, January 5, 2006 - We Will Be Getting Fresh Milk

Hello, friends! My husband and I have started scheming as to which milk animal we want to start out with. Over the period of the last year it has become not a question of 'if' we will ever keep an animal for milk, but 'when' and 'what kind'. The 'when' depends on the availability of our chosen  animal, and the ability of my husband to at least oversee the fencing and shelter arrangements. Over the last few days we have been discussing what kind of animal to get. I have been wanting a miniature jersey milk cow for a while now, but my husband seems to think that we could acquire a milk goat earlier than we could get a cow. We also read in Carla Emery's Encyclopedia of Country Living, that you can milk a sheep. It's trickier, but sheep's milk is supposed to be very good!

I never realized the value of fresh milk until just the last few months. I knew that I didn't want my children drinking the store stuff with hormones and antibiotics in it, but now I can understand why pasteurization and (un-natural) homogenization can be a problem as well (goat and sheep milk is naturally homogenized, according to Carla Emery).

Here are the two books I have read that have convinced me about the value of fresh milk:






Nourishing Traditions
was written by Sally Fallon, and The Untold Story of Milk was written by Ron Schmid.

This is probably not new to most of you homestead people, but the more I read about nutrition, the more I realize the need for real milk. Not the messed up stuff from the factory farms. Unfortunately, it is illegal for farmers to sell the real thing here in my state.

Amey
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About Me

I'm a midwestern gal, living my dream life on 7 acres in the country. I love Jesus, my husband, three children, Daisy the Wonder Goat, and our chickens. I'd still love to someday have a miniature jersey milk cow.

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