Monday, May 27, 2013

A Few Animals Is All It Takes To Start A Farm

Good Day my wonderful friends!

All of you know that I have not been a "farm wife" very long. We decided just a few years ago to start out farm. We started out slow with just a few chickens and a bottle baby goat. We added a few goats as we could. We saved and bought a good billy goat for $150. We added a few does as we could after waiting to find the right price on the right ones. We bought older ones that only have 5 or 6 more kidding's left. They were proven mothers but getting older so the man no longer wanted them. They two older does we bought were already bred and we got them for $100 each. In our eyes that meant we would have babies on the ground shortly. That worked for 1 of the does but the other doe lost her twins about a month before her due date. Luckily we didn't anticipate those babies being money makers but more to grow our heard. The doe who was able to complete her pregnancy gave us one billy and one female. The female was gorgeous in color and we named her Sunday she was born on a Sunday and was a miracle baby as she was born in the mud along with her brother and we didn't think either of them would live). The billy she gave us as a kid was traded for a black headed doe (that we named Jazzy because we traded her for Jasper the little billy that was the first goat ever born on our farm)  that would serve to raise the value of our goats in the traditional black head Boers once she is able to kid herself.  That was back in February. She still isn't old enough to breed yet but it has been wonderful to see her grow. The second doe that had babies, Daisy, had hers premature and we lost both of them. Both were bucks. 

Princess, a winning show goat that we bought from a lady that lived near us, was the next to have babies. She was bred when we bought her for $100. She had two billies. One we have decided to keep. Princess was not a very good mother. She would only feed one of the babies. Luckily, Sallie Mae, a doe we bought for $40 was pregnant and gave birth a week later to twin boys. She was able to take on Princess other baby. We did finally loose him due to the fact he had mites and we didn't realize how bad they were but we have sold both of Sallie's billy babies for $50 each. Her boys will be leaving today.

We traded some tires for another older female named Horns. She is now bred and should be having babies in a few months. Again she is an older goat and may produce only a few kids, if any for us. 

Right now the does that we have pregnant are:

 Rosie, a show winning goat we buckled and bought for $200. She is an all brown goat and adorable, lovely, and friendly. This will be her first kidding. We are sure she will produce beautiful goats with wonderful coloring. We do not know how she will be as a mother but she is a really loving goat and interacts well with the rest of the herd.

Georgia, a massive huge show goat we got for $75 because she kept getting out of the original owners pen. We are not sure if she has kidded before but she has gotten very loving during her pregnancy. She normally doesn't want to be handled or touched. She is a kicker and will get you if you come up behind her. I am interested in seeing how she does as a mother.

Hannah one of the original 4 goats we bought..she gave us Sunday and Jasper in January. She is a wonderful and protective mother that allows her kids to nurse a little too long. However, she has a wonderful personality and stays close to her kids.

Holly, Hannah's sister. She is the one that lost her babies in December. After giving her some time to heal we decided to try her again. We are not sure how she is as a mother yet but she gets really loving during pregnancy. Outside of pregnancy she is one of those you have to watch or she will horn you.

Sarah Beth, an all white show goat that we bought from a dear friend for $125. She has never been bred before so we aren't sure what kind of mother she will be. However, she is one of the most loving of all our goats and loves to be petted. Right now she has a swollen foot and is receiving antibiotics as we aren't sure for certain if we just waited to long to cut her hooves back or if she twisted it and got hurt.

Dorothy, a first place show goat that we bought from another friend for just $100. This will be her second kidding (Princess is her daughter). We have not had her during a kidding so not sure how she is as a mother. She tends to be one of our more unsociable goats, even though she was shown at the fair and won first place. She tends to like to here you talk to her but isn't fond of being touched.

Daisy,  who lost a set of babies in February due to prematurity. It was her first set of babies and she had twins. I believe she was horned by another goat that caused her to go into labor early. She was my second goat ever that I bought. She loves me and doesn't realize she is a goat. I think this came out when she gave birth. She doesn't really care for being a mother..she is more of a baby. Of course, she kidded prematurely and so that may have had a lot to do with why she didn't really care for the first babies. We are hoping a second kidding will kick her motherly instincts in. She does produce a good amount of milk and so we can always milk her and bottle feed if she proves to not be a good mother. 

Sallie, who had her first set of kids in December and took on a 3rd baby to nurse. As a first time mom she did wonderfully and produced enough milk for 3 babies to survive. She never once missed a beat when it came to her babies.

Princess, she had a first kidding this year and had twins. She didn't prove to be a very good mother and didn't have very much milk. This gives us a heads up to breed her when we are breeding others so we have extra milk for her babies.
Although most people have little maintenance of their goats in the summer we do choose to shear ours so they remain cooler and we are better able to control the flies, mites, and lice that they can get. They get nails clipped once a month. as well, which can be a little time consuming. I do know of people who have said that if you have rocks and such for the goats to climb on that their hooves won't need to be clipped. I have not found this to be accurate in my own herd, however. My particular herd just looks at the rocks as if they are merely an a neausance to walk around instead of over.




Friday, May 10, 2013

Praising The Father In An Emotional Battle...


Emotional Storms. Spiritual Warfare. Depression. Anger. Fear. Doubt.

This picture depicts every idea and feeling running through my head and heart tonight. 

A night of worry about my step-daughter, who chose to spread her wings today, and move out at a young tender age and into a situation that is far from good for her.

The only way I could battle the grief and the thought that Satan was winning in her life was to stay up and worry...which got me no where. It dawned on me..I was setting and worrying instead of praying and praising....so I turned on the praise music....posted some on Facebook....sang along...and prayed. 

With 18 minutes left until the alarm goes off to wake up I have a much calmer spirit and I know that God is working. It took a while to realize not to pray for strength without praying for bail money to go with it...so I prayed for peace....what an amazing God we serve! Peace came...not quickly....but it has come....and I am thankful that I was able to spend several hours, alone, with the Lord...my best friend, my father, my comforter, my healer, and the  ultimate promise keeper.

Jeremiah 29:11 says  "For I know the plans I have for you," says the Lord. "They are plans for good and not for disaster, to give you a future and a hope."


Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Blessings Abound

I was setting at the computer about an hour ago messing with the Facebook page and all of a sudden this crack of thunder jolted me out of the chair. It was one of those thunder sounds that wakes you up in the night with a loud crack and boom. Of course, half of the dogs were in the front yard and the other half were inside. None of them are fond of thunderstorms so I had to get them quieted down. 

Then the amazing sound of rain on the tin roof. The sound that brings water for the field, the raising of the ponds, cooler temperatures so the animals are more comfortable, less noise in the house because I can turn off the AC and enjoy the windows being cracked and getting fresh air, as well as the feelings of joy, peace, and being blessed.

Some people find rain to be an annoyance. Something that makes their hair frizz, their make up run, the trip into the grocery store more miserable. However, I find rain to be a blessing! I am thankful when it rains, but I didn't use to feel that way.

Before I lived in the "country" and on a "farm" I was seriously irritated by the rain. I ran a nationally franchised restaurant and rain tended to make sales go down, labor costs go up, food costs to go crazy, and a miserable day of extra cleaning for myself and my crew. I lived in a pretty good sized city and was irritated by having to "run" to my car between work and home. 

Since moving to the country and owning a farm I have found that the complete opposite is true. I pray for rain. I walk in the rain. I enjoy the smell of the rain. I enjoy watching the ducks play in the rain and rush in and out of the pond. I revel in watching the goats lay around lazily and rest in their "building" as they watch for clear skies so they can go eat more grass. I find the way the chickens run for the barn during the rain and leave to search for "goodies" when it is over such a joy.

I wonder, sometimes, if we realize what we miss when we live a life so quick and fast that things are an annoyance rather than a blessing. I know I didn't realize it until I was able to experience it for myself.

Life on the farm has a different kind of stress. The farm is much more labor intensive. It also requires a lot of preparation, planning, and desire to maintain it. Managing a restaurant was more mental stress. It required me to be mentally there even when I wasn't physically there. I had little time or energy to communicate with my family. Nights were spent going over every aspect of profit and loss statements, employee schedules, health department regulations, etc. 

The farm has a peacefulness. When something needs done you know it is probably going to amount to a good deal of elbow grease, 15 different attempts to get it to work, and then the satisfaction of seeing it do for you and your family what it was intended to do. The restaurant had an urgency. When something needed done there it took an act of congress to get corporate to come off the money, you never knew if someone would show up to fix it, and when they did you got to see it make the higher ups get a pat on the back and a raise while you watched your crew struggle on minimum wage. 

I make roughly $30,000 dollars less a year now than I did when I worked for a corporation. My house payment hasn't gone down any. I have repair bills, I have feed bills, I have all the bills that I had when I lived in the city. The funniest thing about it all is that I don't have the fancy car (or the payment), the cost of the insurance and tag for the fancy car, the drive to another city to work, the cost of going out to eat with my family all the time because no one was home to make dinner, the cost of fresh meat, eggs,  or vegetables because we have our own here on the farm, the cost of a baby sitter because I am home to enjoy my kids, the cost of the movie tickets every week because I am so stressed I wanted the kids out of my hair, the cost of the gas to commute to work and to take the kids running around all the time, the extra cost of washing and  drying my uniforms, and things of that nature. 

I live much more comfortably on the roughly $30,000 a year we make on the farm than I ever would have on the $62,000 I made at the restaurant. More than half of my income went to work related "issues", I stayed stressed out all the time, had high blood pressure, high blood sugar, headaches, and anxiety. My cure for anxiety now is to walk out my back door, watch the animals, breath in the fresh air, go to the garden and get me some fresh stuff for a salad and eat healthy. 

Oddly enough I prefer the lifestyle I have now. I am not sure I could ever return to the city and live. I enjoy going and having a shopping day there once in awhile but living there just isn't for me anymore.

I am blessed beyond measure to be a farmers wife!