T O P I C R E V I E W |
kristin sherrill |
Posted - Jan 12 2011 : 08:31:04 AM This morning it took 1 1/2 hours from start to finish to do all the morning chores. And that's trudging through 8" of snow. Not easy. It makes it more like sand. Plus carrying 5 gallon buckets of water. I have paths to everywhere I have to go now. Pretty packed down. But this morning all the paths were a little icy. So that means I have to be more careful and go slower. So that takes more time. But I am getting lots of good workouts. Which then makes me so hungry. Then all I want to do is eat! Which I have been doing. But I am working it all off so that's ok.
I now have chickens in 5 different places. So that's 5 water runs. The heifers are the farthest away. I haul a 5 gallon bucket of hot water then get the rest at the little house. The hay is there too. Then the goats, pigs, turkeys and some more chickens are in the barn out back. SO that's 4 different waters and feeds. And those selfish pig goats think everytime I go out there it's something for them.
I have had these 2 little pigs since Sat. and they have already grown. They have their own stall. They are trying to dig their way out right now. I am trying to just feed them all twice a day. But only milk once a day. SO that's a little less time in the evenings.
Just wondering how y'all do your farm chores in the winter. How do you save time? Have you got a routine? Have you timed yourself?
I have learned in weather like this to go SLOW. I do not need to fall and break an arm or leg right now. Be careful. Be aware of what's going on. Just be careful.
Kris
Happiness is simple. |
25 L A T E S T R E P L I E S (Newest First) |
grace gerber |
Posted - Jan 24 2011 : 11:16:20 AM Hi Angie
I use apple cider vinegar to aid with worms but I put it in the water not on food. I found if the animals have access to minerals you will have them drinking exactly what they need. I do also add heated molasses water to anyone I think is not drinking enough or for my expecting ladies who will need to keep well hydrated. My animals however love to eat snow and so they keep themselves right where they need to be even when the water is frozen over.
Grace Gerber Larkspur Funny Farm and Fiber Art Studio
Where the spirits are high and the fiber is deep http://www.larkspurfunnyfarm.etsy.com http://larkspurfunnyfarm.blogspot.com http://larkspurfunnyfarm.artfire.com
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amomfly |
Posted - Jan 24 2011 : 07:18:54 AM Sherrye-How do you use the DE? I have used it as a dust. But how do you use it?
God Bless Angie-amomfly #1038 |
sherrye |
Posted - Jan 24 2011 : 07:03:09 AM i use acv raw a lot. not for thirst but for the good bacterias and ph issues. it will help keep algae down in plastic stock tanks. i use DE also everyday for belle. keeps her wormed and clean inside too.we moved the calves yesterday. it is so exciting to see my cows out in pasture close to home. the only cow left to move is hippo. she is due anyday. we aill wait till she calves. she is a naturally polled dexter/belted. sophie our little jersey has had 2 nights of sleepovers. she is staying with the calves across the pasture. this way she will learn some cow manners. holly that is so great you could milk her right off. i am hoping to milk one of these dexters while belle is dry in june. happy days sherrye
the learn as we go silk purse farm farm girl #1014
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amomfly |
Posted - Jan 24 2011 : 01:51:26 AM I use someting like the yak trac=ks, but they are getting all worn out, straps breaking and so on. I sure would love to look out my window and see the mountains, I am jealous! I lov eto hear all of your ideas. Anybody use apple cider vinegar over food, or salt on food to help them stay thirsty in the winter?
God Bless Angie-amomfly #1038 |
kristin sherrill |
Posted - Jan 23 2011 : 2:42:14 PM Holly, she sounds like a great cow. I hope to be milking Mazie when she has her calf.
Kris
Happiness is simple. |
Tall Holly |
Posted - Jan 23 2011 : 2:27:11 PM Our cow is a jersey holstein cross. Her coloring is Holstein. She is tall and leggy but not as wide in body as aHolstein. The farmer we bought her from cross breeds his first calf heifers he says they become pregnant more quickly. She has been great. She has let me milk her from the first day after birthing. Her bag was so big and the baby so small I had to get out some of that colostrum. She is a great mother.
Holly
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kristin sherrill |
Posted - Jan 23 2011 : 2:26:24 PM Alee, that is a good idea. My hubby has some I think. I guess I might need to look into them. It sure would help. We are supposed to be getting some snow and ice again in the next few days.
Kris
Happiness is simple. |
grace gerber |
Posted - Jan 23 2011 : 12:08:46 PM My son gave me the Yak Traks a while back and they do assist - the problem is they wont fit on my big snow boots but by the time I have ice I am back in my muck boots. I recommend them too and thanks for putting that out there.
Stay safe and no ice skating unless you are talented and put those skates on...
Grace Gerber Larkspur Funny Farm and Fiber Art Studio
Where the spirits are high and the fiber is deep http://www.larkspurfunnyfarm.etsy.com http://larkspurfunnyfarm.blogspot.com http://larkspurfunnyfarm.artfire.com
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rough start farmgirl |
Posted - Jan 23 2011 : 01:27:31 AM Yak Traks have saved my behind many times. The best price I have seen is on QVC for two sets, plus they are delivered. A plus during this weather! They fit just fine over my muck boots. Marianne |
sherrye |
Posted - Jan 22 2011 : 6:32:00 PM that is a clever idea alee, thanks sherrye
the learn as we go silk purse farm farm girl #1014
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Alee |
Posted - Jan 22 2011 : 08:30:25 AM Hey ladies- have you ever heard of Yak Traks? They are strap on "studs" for your boots to help you keep traction in icy situations. Sounds like it might be helpful, especially once the snow packs into ice!
Alee Farmgirl Sister #8 www.farmgirlalee.blogspot.com www.allergyjourneys.blogspot.com Put your pin on the farmgirl map! www.farmgirlmap.blogspot.com |
sherrye |
Posted - Jan 22 2011 : 08:12:16 AM i am soo enjoying our break in weather. i can just break the ice on the water tanks. papa made a water tank to haul water to the stock. it sits on the bucket to the tractor. it makes it easier for us. we haul water to 6 different feeding stations. it sure does get old fast. i bet you are sweating like crazy kris. i am happy i have help this yr. last year he was working in Wy. i know your hubby is gone a LOT. linda i am with you on the heated dog bowl. we do have 2 crock pots for the coop on really cold days. on regular cold the coop and chickens keep the water thawed. when are you going to butcher kris. i have a lot to do. some of the fryer/broilers i am going to gring and make chicken burger. mine are obviously chickens. i bet those turkeys are getting big now. gotta milk and do my chores. out my window i see 4 of the cascade mountains white in the blue clear sky today. i must plant something. happy days sherrye
the learn as we go silk purse farm farm girl #1014
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kristin sherrill |
Posted - Jan 22 2011 : 07:52:42 AM I sure wish I had heated water troughs and buckets. It would help alot. But I just haul hot water when I have to. That sure gets me hot too. I usually start out with my big heavy coat on and have to shed that before I'm done. This morning wasn't so bad. But now I have an extra chore. I had to move 2 tom turkeys and put them up front. They were beating up on the one I am keeping. Poor guy was all bloody. He's good now though. Just him and his 4 ladies. I need to butcher those 2 turkeys and 5 roosters now. I just need to get motivated and get some help out here. A friend made a contraption that goes on a drill to take the feathers off. Really handy thing to have. It cuts the work in half.
Kris
Happiness is simple. |
Miss Giddyup |
Posted - Jan 22 2011 : 06:50:08 AM Good Morning Farmgirls!!! Wanna know the best way to stay warm when doing our farm chores? Have your husband do them! Just kiddin.....I do MY share of them, too!!! I just thought I would mention what we have done to keep our bunnies water from freezing. We bought a heated dog bowl. It was the smallest we could find...and it is kinda big...but they figured it out and use it! Otherwise, those water bottles that hang on the cage freeze and you have to keep changing them. |
kristin sherrill |
Posted - Jan 18 2011 : 12:24:24 PM I think I will be wearing my muck boots for a long time. We are getting rain now. So it's a muddy mess out there with all that snow melting then the rain. And it's very slippery. So I have to go slower.
Angie, I hope you don't get too much ice. That's scary. And when are all your does due? Mine are wanting to dry up right now so I am just milking every other day now. I am going to miss that milk. But my friend's cow just calved so she has plenty. I just hate having to buy milk.
Kris
Happiness is simple. |
amomfly |
Posted - Jan 18 2011 : 12:08:51 PM Holly- your house sounds like a dream house! I am excited to start back to milking. This year it will be three does to milk! WOOHOO! Winter chores are nice to do once you get out there. But I agree, sometimes I just want to stay in! I cleaned up a little today, since we are having a little bit of a warmer day. It wont last we are suppose to have an ice storm and dropping temps for the next week. I am still excited for spring, after all the mud! Spring is so new, and fresh!
God Bless Angie-amomfly #1038 |
child in harmony |
Posted - Jan 16 2011 : 9:56:38 PM It's comforting to read about others who have winter chores in the cold and ice and snow. None of my friends have animals like we do ( horses, ducks, rabbits, hens) and really don't *get* the time and energy it takes. I must admit, I do love taking care of them and doing chores but not on the days that I have a deadline and have to hurry. I worry about falling too and I go so slow it looks ridiculous hahaha. My 12 yr old daughter and I are the *farmers* here :)
~marcia
www.harmonywoodsfarm.com www.childinharmony.com
"Enriching,nurturing and inspiring Life with nature,animals and the arts .. for the child and the child within" |
kristin sherrill |
Posted - Jan 15 2011 : 12:48:41 PM Holly, your house-barn sounds so neat. That would be ideal to have everything so close. Do you even have to go outside? I sure wish I had had some sons. They would really come in handy right about now. A friend of mine has a house in Italy that sounds like yours. Well, the whole thing was a barn and they converted it into a house. That's the way places are over there with the barns underneath the house.
Grace, that's a good idea about the seeds. I need to get some. If the chickens don't eat them all I might have some grass growing in bald spots.
I do enjoy milking my goats most of the time. Sometimes they act up. But mostly they are good. And I have 3 cats and the dogs that are right there waiting for that nice warm milk. Bubba drinks right from the stand. He watched my hands and I can see his eyes go from the udder to the pail. It's so funny. Then I'll squirt some onto the stanchion and he laps it up. The cats have their bowls and Sophie has hers on the floor. Then the chickens get the grain that falls on the floor if they are lucky.
I hope to be milking my heifer Mazie in March when she has her 1st calf. She's a red Angus but I have heard they have good milk. I'll only milk when I need it. I do have the 2 pigs that will love to have some I'm sure.
Kris
Happiness is simple. |
grace gerber |
Posted - Jan 15 2011 : 12:18:49 PM Holly that sounds like a magical house. I too had strong sons but now I do all the chores so enjoy them while you have them. My sons did not believe me when I told them their muscles would thank me later. I am with you about bucking hay over your head - I will be doing that Sunday morning after I eat my sourdough pancakes.
I too find it sometimes hard to get up but once where moving we are workhorses. What type of Cow do you have??? I am in always interested in ladies who milk - I think it is something that speak inside of them... Thanks for sharing - way interesting!
Grace Gerber Larkspur Funny Farm and Fiber Art Studio
Where the spirits are high and the fiber is deep http://www.larkspurfunnyfarm.etsy.com http://larkspurfunnyfarm.blogspot.com http://larkspurfunnyfarm.artfire.com
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Tall Holly |
Posted - Jan 15 2011 : 11:25:34 AM We are lucky. We live in a barn. The hay loft is converted into a two story house and the downstairs still has some box stalls. I have made some small rooms downstairs. One we can keep the bedding and 8 or a few more square bales for feeding the milk cow and small hamburg jersey bull calves. One of the selling points for this place was the running water int he barn. The water, gravity feeds to a holding tank and then electricity pumps it to the faucet. But, even if we have no electricity we could scoop the water out for household purposes or to feed the animals. We feed round bales to the beef cows. My daughter gives a round bale with the tractor every other day. We have a barn maybe a football feild or less from the house. It is a drive in barn for the hay storage. I got so tired of throwing bales over my head into a loft so now the over the head throwing is limited to when the square bale stack gets high. (It does help to have sons with strong friends). We keep the round bales there as well. Under the hay barn part is an open space for the beef cows.(pictue an L on its side. part of the stem of the L is filled with dirt underneath) They go in and out at will. In the winter only the west door is open. We live on a relatively wet piece of land. All around us is ledge with forest over it. So, when the ground water hits the fields it bubbles right up. In one corner of the beef cow area we had well tiles put in down 20 feet into the ground. Some of the water fills the tiles and we have a bucket on a rope that we drop into the 'well' and pull up to fill the water buckets for the cows. Our son is responsible for doing that each day. It is a wonderful chest and arm muscle builder exercise for a buff 16 yr old. It takes me about an hour to do my animal chores in the mornig because I hand milk our cow who just freshened at the end of December. I like to do chores. I have a hard time getting out of a warm bed into a cold room. But, I like doing chores. I sing and talk to the cows. They know alot that no one else knows.
Holly
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grace gerber |
Posted - Jan 15 2011 : 11:13:59 AM I agree ladies that on and off clothing is a real time waster. I sometimes feel like a little kid who gets all dressed and then has to make a visit to the bathroom. I too agree with the silk long johns.. I found some fleece lined mens pants this year at Walmart for only 20.00 they are so warm and I can move in them. Also they are the right length for this short gal. They also had a fleece lined flannel shirt that I can where with just a turtle neck and it has kept me more then warm - infact a bit too warm or it might have been a hot flash. With Kidding season starting - have three girls who bagged up Friday I then spent the day making kidding jugs, hanging heat lamps, moving staw and scrapping down the whole barn to get ready. I had to laugh because it was 50 degrees and I was working in just a sweat shirt but that is Colorado...
For you gals who milk - I take my hats off to you... We did that for a couple of years - 20 goats and then would take over other friends milking operation when they where gone - tons of work that most folks really do not understand or appreciate. SO you gal's are my hero's.
Alee I agree put something on the ice - I use barn cleanings around someplaces and for a couple of years in the late snow season I have thown down seeds, sometimes wild flowers, sometimes natural wild grasses. Great way to sow seeds and not slip - also feeds some of the birds and can not harm anyone here...
I am a strange bird LOVE SNOW and Really Cold Temps so I thrive in this weather but I admit I am getting a bit slower with each year but a bit smarter too. Kris this is a great resource - thanks for starting this...
Grace Gerber Larkspur Funny Farm and Fiber Art Studio
Where the spirits are high and the fiber is deep http://www.larkspurfunnyfarm.etsy.com http://larkspurfunnyfarm.blogspot.com http://larkspurfunnyfarm.artfire.com
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Alee |
Posted - Jan 15 2011 : 09:52:03 AM I strongly suggest silk thermal underwear. They are amazing.
And don't forget to sprinkle sand or manure or something on those icy paths so you won't slip so much. (Manure would have to have lots of bedding in it).
When I have my farm I am going to install a super insulated hot water heater or one of those instant ready ones with lots of insulation. That way everyone can get hot water in their buckets. Horses and goats really need to stay hydrated and both don't really like super cold water. I really don't like hauling water because I invariably always get soaked! LOL
Alee Farmgirl Sister #8 www.farmgirlalee.blogspot.com www.allergyjourneys.blogspot.com Put your pin on the farmgirl map! www.farmgirlmap.blogspot.com |
kristin sherrill |
Posted - Jan 15 2011 : 09:18:02 AM Sherrye, it looks like you have a good plan too. And I am with you on all the clothes. I have a down mens coat too. My SIL gave it to me. I love it. But it is so warm I end up shedding it when I am milking. I have long johns and wool socks and that big coat. I am not too far from the house so I really don't need too much. But the thing I like the most are my Much boots. They are great. In the snow, ice or mud. I have never slipped wearing them. They keep my feet very warm. I have worn them to town in weather ike this. I love them. Both boots have little cracks on the very top though. So when I don;t wear socks I have a little muddy spot on top of my feet. But that's ok. I guess in a few years I'll have to get another pair.
Teh time seems to be getting better now that I am used to all this snow still sticking around. I have my paths all over and I stay on them. I have my routine down. All the animals are patient. Well, yesterday, the pigs weren't. I was going out to do the evening feeding and had the pig's food ready to feed them. I looked out and there of course were the 2 goats and the chickens then I had to do a double take because there were 2 pigs walking behind the goats. Taht was strange. They were out and coming to me. So I fed the chickens to get them out of the way. And the goats. Then walked to the barn to get the pigs back in. They finally went in th=o the food. Patience is a must in dealing with loose pigs. Lots of waiting. Then I had to figure out how they had escaped. I found it. So I had to go get boards to patch it up. They were still in this morning so I guess I fixed it. So here goes already.
Kris
Happiness is simple. |
gypsy goat |
Posted - Jan 14 2011 : 08:21:24 AM i agree with sherry it takes me longer to get dressed to go outside to do chores than to actually do my chores! i have not found a way to shorten chore time but i usual sing while i do them and smile it makes me so happy and time seems to go by very quickly if i do that. my piggy goats also always think that everytime i go outside i have something for them-they are so very spoiled
farmgirl#1362 whatever you are be a good one-abe lincoln |
sherrye |
Posted - Jan 14 2011 : 07:11:53 AM this is a great post for sure. the part that is hard for me is getting dressed to go out there. geez my clothes weigh more than me. LOL i need a body suit that is down filled. out of all my clothes i wear, my favorite is my down jacket. its yellow and huge and WARM. a donation from a friend who knew i needed a coat. its a mans size and big. i can get all my OTHER clothes on under it and still walk. my chores start in the house for now. i get my milking equipt. loaded on my cart and jars ready. isabella is always first. so we pray on cold days the machine will work. as she milks i feed 4 of the feeding stations. back to belle she gets new scoop of alfalfa pellets. on to water. break the ice with a branding iron i have, fill AGAIN. LOL back to machine strip belle. she goes out then to calf barn. water for sophie and freckles. water is the hardest. the slip sliding away thing, well what can i say i have a sore bum a lot in winter. last few days have been a ballmy 48. washed the milk room out. cleaned belles legs and feet. its all about the cow here in winter. milk comes in then i jump on something and dogs and i go across road to feed calves and cows. its a up down rocky ride when frozen. i still just love all this. my animals are my friends. i have few people friends since i am mostly home bound. i am making friends with sadie right now. anyway when all is done i strain my milk. wash everything and have had 2 hours of healthy exercise, breathing in deep the cold brisk air and been loved by my animal family. some good prayer goes on out there too. appreciating all the beautiful things Jah has given us to enjoy. hard sometimes, scary sometimes, fulfilling every time. so happy days to winter. you east of us and calif. are going to get a nice rest. its been warm and wet here. nice break for us. so it is headed your way. i am going to get ready to plant. yipee happy days sherrye
the learn as we go silk purse farm farm girl #1014
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