Wednesday, July 8, 2015

Goat Shelters And Such


With all these baby goats, I've decided to keep a few instead of selling them all. I'll go from two dairy does to four and from 4 meat


does to 6. 

I'm building several of these small shacks for shelter from the rain and sun, and come fall I'll add some side panels and move the front to face south, to catch all the sun I can. They already seem to love the shade from these things.  
    
                                                                         

I've got some baby chicks too. They hatched out two days ago, and I've moved them and their mother to a small pen of their own.
They're a cross between a Rhode Island Red rooster and a Buff Brahma hen. I'm anxious to see the outcome once they're grown.


Everythings late this year, due to the hail and flooding, but the root crops are coming along pretty good, 
and I've been getting tomatoes
here and there, along with the hulless oats and now the sunflowers are starting to bloom. 


The oats and sunflower seeds make good, cheap feed for hens and goats, but there's a lot of labor in the harvesting of them.

Friday, July 3, 2015

Billy Goat Update

                                                        It looks like Rooster;'s going to be ok. I think he is, anyway.
                                                          Here's a short video of him up and around this morning

Thursday, July 2, 2015

Sick Little Billy Goat

 I've spent the last 3 weeks and 5 days doctoring a baby goat round the clock with electrolytes and thiamine injections every three hours, antibiotics and pro-biotic everyday and cleaning his feces off him every morning and evening. I brought him back from deaths door 4 times and I think by the looks of him this morning, the little son of a bitch is gonna make it. He's eating like a horse.


I call him Rooster, cause they ain't found no way to kill him yet. Only the really cool people will get that reference.

Friday, June 5, 2015

Bouncing Back...Sort Of





The rains stopped and things are bouncing back really good with all the sunshine, as I'd hoped, but I've had to replant a lot. It took a good five days but I got the weeds under control, to a certain degree. I know everything looks bad in the pictures, but trust me, it looks worse in person. The good news is, I should have tomatoes by June 20. The bad news is, all the melons and pumpkins will be terribly late this year, September at best.

Replanted half of the sunflowers. 

These are black oil sunflowers, for chicken and goat feed, and right next to them I had to replant an entire section on cowpeas. Another feed crop.


The only thing looking really good are the hulless oats, which 

thrive in wet weather.

There's a lot of good sized green tomatoes on the plants, but the problem is, with such a cloudy and wet spring, the plants really


haven't developed enough to support a lot of production.



Same issue with the summer squash, the plants are trying to produce, but they're just not ready.  
                             

Monday, May 18, 2015

Some Rain, Finally

We've been getting a lot of rain the last few days and the
weatherman says it's going to stick around for awhile. That's good news, it should give all the transplants and the seeded crop
a real shot in the arm. Squash and tomatoes are coming along great and should be early this year and the cabbage is finally starting to head up, after the hail pretty much destroyed it. 

Monday, May 11, 2015

A new Tiller

It was a rough week, with a lot of work involved, but everything is out and planted. There's even a few small tomatoes on the vines already.

I picked up a used tiller for a real good price, earlier in the week, and it's a real workhorse for it's age and size. After I plow and disk the ground with the tractor, I use a tiller to smooth out my rows to plant in. It makes the Earthway seed planter's job a lot easier

Monday, May 4, 2015

Feed Crops

My trusty tiller is giving me some problems this spring, but not to worry, I keep a lot of old time, hand powered planting tools on hand.



I planted my feed crops this week, which keeps the cost of feeding the goats and hens down, and hopefully, in the future will eliminate feed costs altogether. Corn, sunflowers, cowpeas and collard greens, along with the already planted oats, should make for a good feed