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Movin’ To The Country….

…gonna feed the pigs lotsa peaches.

Our awesome friend Trina works for the big local orchard and today brought two big bushels of fallen peaches and apples for the pigs and chickens.

Brace yourselves for lots of pictures, because there’s nothing I like better than pictures of happy pigs!

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Churchill tried to nose into the box as soon as she set it down, but I wanted to keep track of how many peaches (and peach pits) they were eating.

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Even Bertie got in on some apple action.

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As did the chickens.

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Agnes (who we are now fairly certain is actually a male) partook of a few figs.

I just love seeing them all share in summer’s bounty!

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June Days

It’s nearly the Summer Solstice and we are finally settling into our slower summer rhythm.  With lambing done, the flock moved out to summer pasture, and the garden more or less planted, I’ve had a chance to breathe a bit and enjoy taking in the sights and sounds of June.  I’m getting excited for a wild raspberry harvest, and thrilled to have discovered wild rose bushes growing in a few spots.

The chickens are laying well (including our new blue egg layers – thanks, Lisa! I owe you dinner!), the beans and peas are flowering.  My bee balm has finally blossomed and I made a few recipes from Marisa McLellan’s Food In Jars. (Vanilla-Rhubarb Jam and White Wine Mustard).

We have one more quiet week before theater camp starts the 23rd and life gets a bit crazy temporarily. For now I am going to enjoy my slow summer evenings with the sheep and in the garden.

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Tag Day!

The new Vet came out today to take care of tagging the lambs’ ears and banding their tails and (for the boys) testicles. The boys weren’t overly pleased with the process, but the ewe lambs were vocally pissed.  They threw themselves on the ground, flailing about and yelling as though the world were ending.

In reality, they were fine.  A bit of initial discomfort, and then their tails (and testes) go numb.  The blood stops flowing to those extremities and they become dessicated and fall off. In fact, by the time we did evening chores they had gotten over it completely.

06.13.14a

Don’t they look spiffy with their new tags?

06.13.14b

Bennett with her boys, Keswick and Brunswick.

06.13.14c

Lamb pile on Wren!

06.13.14d

Wimbledon.

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06.13.14f

Miss Wembley, looking mighty pleased with herself after throwing an epic post-tagging tantrum.

The vet gave all these beasts (seriously, they’re HUGE) a clean bill of health and approved putting them out into the pasture this weekend.  We’ll be letting the goats out first to test the fences (juuuuust in case.  If there’s a weakness, goats will find and exploit it) overnight and if all goes well, the babies and mamas will be frolicking on fresh green tomorrow night!

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Lamb Update

At the last update we had 9 lambs.  At the conclusion, we have 15.  It’s quite a nice number; we could have wound up with so many more.  As it turns out, there were ewes that we thought were bred that were not, and not many twinned.

06.04.14b

Our last lamb to arrive, Esmont (ram)!  He is Margaret’s lamb.

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Knightsbridge.  See his “X”?  It kills me!  He and his twin Wimbledon are Lyra’s babies.

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Cant enough enough of him!

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Perivale, a ewe lamb born to Bootes.  Neve calls her “Bat Lamb” because of the coloring around her eyes.  She’s technically colored flock since her mama is a colored ewe and she’s not completely white.

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More “Bat Lamb”!

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Keswick.  He and his twin, Brunswick, are Bennett’s babies.

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Jubilee and her hilarious ears, with Brunswick peeking out from behind Esmont.

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Staunton and Chesapeake.

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Yeardley.

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More Jubilee.  Because I couldn’t help it.

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This was the best picture I could get of Wimbledon; he kept nursing off of Willoughby, who is decidedly NOT his mama.  She didn’t seem to mind.

As I’ve mentioned before, the best time to check in on lambcam is after 6 pm.  That’s when they have their “play time”.  It’s really not to be missed!

 

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Spring Slam

It’s that time of spring where it’s really crunchtime.  SO much work to be accomplished before the true heat of summer hits.

It also happens to be lambing season!

Even though I am completely exhausted (We check on our ewes and lambs every two to three hours around the clock), I’ve been managing to still get a fair amount of work done.

We took delivery of hay yesterday:

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It’s gorgeous.  This picture does not even do justice to how soft and green it is.  It smells heavenly, and I imagine it tastes it as well.

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The goslings and ducks have graduated out of the brooder and into the poultry tractor so they can roam around on fresh grass.  Pretty soon they will have a big pen out back with a giant water tub to swim in.

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Wild irises are growing up around the edges of the stream (I am crazy happy for these lovely volunteers!).

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My blueberry bush is fruiting!  If I can manage it soon I will be putting in a peach tree or two as well, to compliment the three apple trees we planted last year (yes, we have many years to wait before they fruit, but it will be worth it when they do!).  I also managed to put in two basil plants, and if all goes well later this week I will add two more plus some lavender and rosemary bushes.

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Neve and I put down straw in the front garden along all of the pathways to discourage weeds, and I managed to get all of my bean poles staked and roped for the beans and peas that have sprouted.

I leveled out a spot next to the beehive for our second hive, which is going in on Tuesday (eventually I have to level out the first one as well!).  The first hive is crazy productive and I  had to add a third hive box on top since they’ve already used up the first two!

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I cannot wait for our first honey harvest!  Speaking of which, one of my new favorite things is to watch the bees returning to the hive laden with pollen:

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They are very docile bees.  I have their hive situated in my garden, and I have been spending a lot of time quite close by them weeding and working with spring plants, and they haven’t bothered with me one bit.

I haven’t gotten to the back garden yet, but that will be squash and tomatoes, and the growing season for them is longer than for the spring crops out front, so I still have a little bit of wiggle room.  When I am not quite so cranky and tired I will get out there and get that started (hopefully within in the next 4 or 5 days).

In the meantime, the best part of our days (and nights) is cooing over (and snuggling) all the little cuties we’ve been blessed with so far.

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I can’t think of a cuter reason to be so tired!  Six lambs, roughly 9 pregnant ewes left.  Let’s get this done!

 

 

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Surprise Lamb

I’m going to steal Susan’s blog post again – it’s sooooo much easier than running back in the house, cleaning myself off and writing one myself!

A lamb made its way into the world while we were at Tractor Supply.  And I thought for sure my two sheep would lamb before any of Susan’s sheep did, but nooooooooo.

 

by Susan on May 15, 2014

Amy came home from the feed store and found this little surprise awaiting her.

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photo 5Another ram lamb, born to Georgia this afternoon. We’re calling this one Stauton, because Austin Val asked.

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Of Birds and Bees

First of all, happy May!!!  And happy first day without rain in way too long!!!

To celebrate this first day of a (hopefully) warmer and (hopefully) drier month, I was able to get out and take pictures to share with all of you.

First up is the tiny bird’s nest I discovered in the small garden cabinet I keep on the front porch.  I went out to fetch some lambing supplies and the mama bird swooped out of the nest, nearly hitting my face.  I know there are eggs in there, and I occasionally see her leaving and returning.

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Fortunately she put her nest on the top shelf of the cabinet, which itself is in a fairly out-of-the-way place.  Since our baby bunnies hopped from their nest and out into the world (on Easter, no less!), it will be nice to see tiny baby birds soon.

In other, rather more exciting news……we have honeybees!

My friend Amy raises honeybees, and she contacted me on Monday to let me know she had a swarm, if I’d like to collect it. It was in a rather nice cluster on a branch of her peach tree.  I grabbed one box of my empty hive and dashed over.

Of course, I totally forgot I had my friend Erin’s beesuit here, so I went with a bee veil and gloves, along with a thick flannel shirt.

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I stood under the swarm with my hive box while Amy shook the tree branch downward (normally you could cut the branch and lower it onto your box, but this was a big, main branch of the tree).

I was instantly covered with what felt like thousands and thousands of bees, and they were heavy altogether.  And I only got stung once, through my shirt, which as it turns out, was not thick enough.  Lesson learned.

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I carefully lowered the box and we watched the bees form a steady line into it, meaning we had caught the queen with the initial shake.  At dusk the bees were all in and the box was covered and taped up for the ride home!

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Welcome home, bees!

I had a hard time finding/making a level spot in the front garden for them, and at some point I will have to make some adjustments to get it a bit more level, but for now they seem pretty happy.  And BUSY!

05.01.14b

There was very little activity outside the hive the last three days because of the pouring rain, but today when I went out to open the hive and check, they were extremely active.  More bees than I could count were returning into the hive, their back ends heavy with orange pollen.  Inside, there was an astounding amount of comb built, and it looked like they were starting to fill some of the comb cells.

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Sorry for the less-than-stellar pictures.  It’s hard working a camera through a bee suit, while holding a frame in one hand.

I fed them quite a bit of sugar syrup while the weather was bad, since they weren’t leaving the hive, but it seems they are finding their way now.

Next week we are waiting on delivery of a second hive and my friend Louise will drive down from Northern Virginia to deliver a second colony.

I am crazy excited for all of the pollinators we will have for the gardens this summer!

 

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Udder Checks

We’re just a few short weeks away from our lambing window, but I’m already keeping an eye on the ewes’ udders and hoo-has.  There shouldn’t be anyone lambing earlier than May 4, but I feel most comfortable when I can get a really good feel for how everyone looks and how they are acting leading up to the event. This helps better notice subtle changes that occur so I know when I should be out every two hours and when I can get some sleep.

Of course, Susan and I have been plenty surprised by sheep and goats alike that show zero sign of impending labor and then are nursing their babes next time we check them!

Right now udders and teats are easy to see since the ladies have been sheared, and though there’s no significant “bagging up” of their udders, they are becoming just the slightest big bigger every day.

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They are getting wider and wider every day, too!

Occasionally just after feeding time I can sit with Piper and rest my head or hands on her belly and feel a little kicking in there.

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Wren’s udder hasn’t enlarged very much, but her teats have been getting fatter and more pronounced.

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This lady has been looking wide, but there’s not much udder or teat development.  This could mean that either she was bred a lot later than some of the others, or it could just be that she won’t bag up at all until she lambs.  Sometimes they do that.

04.25.14d

Just like any other mammal, no two sheep are alike, no two pregnancies are alike, no two lambings are alike.  Some get all dramatic, some are quiet and reserved. Some bag up huge way ahead of time, others never bag up at all.

There is one way they are all alike, however.

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They don’t like me checking out their backsides.  They are very suspicious of this activity, and will quickly turn and sniff at my face (or camera).

It’s going to be an interesting mix of lambs this year: our ram was a white Border Leicester.  Some of the ewes are colored Border Leicester.  Some of the ewes are white Cormo.  And yet other ewes are a mix of Cormo and Southdown. I can’t wait to see how the babies turn out!

As for lambcam (which I know everyone is waiting for!) we are waiting on some new equipment, but it will absolutely be working before the lambs come. We’ll let y’all know when it’s back up.

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Red Lady Skater

This weekend I was very excited to finally try out the Lady Skater Pattern from Kitschy Coo.

I had bought some red organic cotton from fabric.com specifically for it and couldn’t wait to cut into it.  I mean, seriously – a dress that’s made to be flattering out of easy-to-care-for and comfortable tee shirt fabric?

WIN!

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I am super happy with it.  I did have to take it down a few sizes from where I thought I should be.  Even after measuring it was too big the first go around.  I honestly could probably even take another inch out of the waist area, but right now I am just enjoying the swing of the skirt and the softness of the fabric.

04.03.14b

I haven’t hemmed the bottom yet; with knits like this it’s best to wear them a few times to let the fabric settle out where it’s going to fall before adding a hem.  Also, it was a pretty clean cut so I may not need to hem at all, if I don’t want it to be super “finished”.  It’s got a tiny bit of a natural “roll” right now that I am kind of digging.

04.03.14c

I really want to make one in every color now.  I think this one is going to look fantastic with my Shepherd sweater once it’s done, in all its creamy oatmeal-brownness!

04.03.14d

And shut up about my hair.  I know it’s waaay overdue and my roots like terrible.

I’ll get to it.

Eventually.