Friday, October 18, 2013

More llamas.

When we first moved to this property I didn't have enough animals to "mow" down the field. I wanted to borrow my neighbor's llamas so they could graze over here but after chasing them around for two hours I decided to forget it. 

I searched Craigslist and found three llamas that had been rescued and couldn't live there anymore. They needed a good home and I needed animals to chew down the pasture. 

I paid $50 a piece for them. I was told at the time that the female was pregnant but I didn't know when she would birth. I didn't know much of anything about them actually. 

Mordecai is on the left, Freckles in the middle and Kuzco is on the right. Freckles gave birth on the 23rd of August. We were very surprised! She didn't look that big to me. Our new baby is Dolly. She is almost completely white with two little spots, one on her neck and one on her leg. 


Thursday, August 29, 2013

Wow, our girls are growing up. Today we got 4 eggs. One white but small, one very large pinkish brown, one dark brown and one light brown. We know we have at least 4 of the 15 hens laying but we may have more.
We can tell which ones are the layers because if you go to pick them up and they do what we call the Chicken Dance then you know that that bird is laying. The chicken dance is a submissive thing that hens do when they are receptive to a rooster but for some reason they do it for a human  too. When you walk up to them they squat down and lift their wings without spreading them, kindof like when a human shrugs. Sometimes they also run in place. It looks funny like a dance, hence the name we gave it.
I decided to eat scrambled eggs for dinner tonight and when cracked the two biggest ones they were both double yolked. So that would be three doubles so far since we had one a week ago too.

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Wow, I'm a blogger. I think. If this is the place where we talk about our own private Idaho then I am going to start. We were all raised on a hobby farm but back then we just referred to it as living in the country. Then years later someone started a magazine called Country Living when it became apparent to city dwellers everywhere that country living was something to be desired. My wife Pauline and I were both raised in the country and we decided early on that we wanted to have a house in the country. We almost made it with the first house we bought. We were only a few hundred yards from the edge of the city limits but on the wrong side. We had a small house on a sixth of an acre in a residential subdivision. We ended up stayiing there for 28 years. When we lost the house we had an opportunity to move to a 1 and a third acre on a county lot. This old house was built in 1940 or 41 and was the only farm house with a half mile or so at the time. We have been able to find a little history and we will add that stuff at a later time. That was almost 3 years ago and now we have added 6 fuit trees to the 3 that were already here and we also have 16 chickens and 14 turkeys not to mention the over 30 chickens in the freezer. Next year we want to add goats and maybe other small animals.
Below is a photo of the bare ground a few months after we moved in and started our garden in the space where there used to be a shed. You can see the old milk barn inthe back ground with the chicken coop and storage building on the left. This space is now full of fruit trees and we have started on building the grape trellis if we can actually get the grapes to grow.

A Dream Come True

My husband and I have wanted for at least 25 years to own a piece of land.  One in which we could grow what we wanted, hang a clothesline and spread out a bit. This blog will chronicle that journey.

Some members of my family have joined in this endeavor as well and so there will be posts and photos from our various lives journaling their progress as well.

I'll start with a bit of background about our hobby farm and how we have been blessed to call this place home.

My husband is a 23 year Army veteran and has recently been called to Shepherd a Lutheran Church in Pocatello, Idaho.  We found an almost 5 acre piece of property and we have been quickly settling in and filling it with animals.

We are boarding two horses that my kids get to ride.

 We added two pygmy goats named Bonnie and Clyde. This is Clyde.

 Then came 16 chickens, 13 of them were new babies and three roosters.


I bought three llamas off of Craigslist, one of them turned out to be pregnant and we now have four.



Lastly, we acquired a miniature horse named Acorn.


My garden has not done well this year, but this blog is about learning and growing.  Making changes and doing better.

Welcome! And thanks for reading!