Category: What’s up Wednesday

  • What’s up Wednesday 1/5

    We had wonderful mild weather this past weekend. It’s amazing what a slightly warm, sunny day can do to your mood! Although the last couple of days haven’t been as nice as the weather we experienced over the weekend, it looks like the weather is going to hold up, meaning no snow, so we are able to attend the My Courthouse Market inside the Goochland Courthouse YMCA this evening. We will be there from 3-7. We will have our coffee goat milk soap with us!!

    We got quite a bit done in the last week. We ordered our newest chicken coop and it was shipped on Tuesday. It’s going to be nice to just assemble a coop this time rather than spending months building one from scratch. We are also putting together a huge lumber order for all of our other projects that will be happening over the next few months including a buck barn, buck pasture, building a few new mangers to accommodate the new animals, expanding our garden by adding 6 new beds, building a garden for Breckin, and fencing off a new pasture for the girls and llamas. We are also hoping to have the solar put up in the barn before too long as well. So much to do, so little time!

     

  • What’s up Wednesday – 1/29

    More snow… Can winter be over yet? We have really gotten good at managing the fire in our stove and have had a few days where I was able to keep the house at 70 degrees, even with it in the teens outside. I’m a person who loves heat, so the hotter the better!

    The animals are wishing for spring as well. The goats and llamas are spending most of their time in the barn, making the daily clean up fun, and the chickens only leave their coop for a few minutes during free range time.  On Monday we had a little warm spell and the animals ran and leapt through the pasture, acting crazy and having so much fun. I guess cabin fever is getting to all of us.

    Last night we ordered new chickens. They are scheduled to be shipped on March 10th! We are down to 5 laying hens and they are not enough to supply us with all of the eggs we need for our family of four. Our girls are getting up there in age and will start laying less and less, so we have decided to purchase a second coop (instead of building another one from scratch), put it in the pasture with the goats and llamas, and retire our current girls there so they can free range all day and live out the rest of their days happy and unrestricted… except my the pasture fence. We are hoping they will also keep the bug population down in the pasture. With this order we got two breeds of chickens; Easter Eggers and Black Copper Marans. We ordered 3 female and 1 male Easter Eggers, and 7 female and 1 male Black Copper Marans. The plan is to put the Easter Eggers in with the “retired” chickens. The Black Copper Marans will go together in the old coop that Kevin built. This will keep the roosters separate and allow us to have pure bred fertilized Easter Egger and Maran eggs if we want to expand our flock or sell the eggs.

    We also got 3 male Buff Orpingtons to meet the minimum shipment requirement for this time of year. We plan to use these guys as meat chickens since My Pet Chicken doesn’t offer actual meat chickens. We had to go through MPC because they offer the lowest shipping requirement (we do not have space for 25 chickens at the moment) and had the breeds we wanted. This will be our first experience with butchering and we are very nervous about the whole situation, but we have friends who have promised to help us. If all goes well we will do a full batch of actual meat chickens later in the spring. This is a subject I have struggled with quite a bit. It’s sad that I am so detached from our meat source that it is painful to think about butchering an animal to feed my family, but I have no qualms with purchasing meat from the store. I know I can offer our own meat chickens a much better life. I have been told that I have built it up in my head too much and that I will be fine after the first butchering. I know it will feel good feeding my children healthy meat that was humanely raise (spoiled, really).

    On another note, we are SO excited to announce that we have been accepted to the My Manakin Market Saturday market for this spring and summer. We have also been extended at the Wednesday My Courthouse Market in Goochland through the rest of the year. We have loved being apart of the market group!

  • What’s Happening Wednesday – 1/22

    This week we took a big step towards our self-sustaining dreams… We purchased a new (well used, but new to us) wood stove to heat our home. When we moved in the house had a large wood stove in the den. We used it a few times our first winter, but we never had the stove and chimney inspected so I was too nervous to really use it. That same winter I became pregnant with Breckin and I really feared that small children and wood stoves did not mix. There never seemed to be a good time to really put the stove to use. This year Breckin (the child who climbs on anything and everything) is finally old enough to know to stay away from the stove and Bryce, even at her young age, is good about listening to instruction, so we decided it was time to finally get our old stove and chimney inspected and cleaned. Long story short, the chimney needed a better/smaller liner, our old stove would not do the job we needed it to do, and the chimney company knew of a used Blaze King that we could purchase. The stove was finally put in this past Friday and it has been burning full force ever since. It’s wonderful not having to use the crazy expensive electric heat. It’s also a great comfort to know that we wont have to immediately use the generator when the power goes out  in order to keep our children from freezing. I have even enjoyed collecting and splitting wood (we will see how long that lasts). It’s one more step towards independence.

  • What’s up Wednesday – 1/15

    It’s been a rainy week on The Freckled Farm. The farm is one big muddy mess. It’s been like this for weeks. The ground never has a chance to dry out before another drenching rain comes along and makes the whole situation worse. The pasture is in horrible shape and I worry that it won’t recover this spring. It’s causing problems all over the place. I don’t remember it ever being this bad. I practically have to swim through our backyard!

    Yesterday it rained most of the day. Doing farm chores in the rain is miserable. The kids are usually stuck in the shed the whole hour and I have to just tough it out and get soaked! Luckily, yesterday it stopped raining and the skies cleared up moments before we went outside. We were only outside a few minutes before a thick fog started to roll in. It was so beautiful.

    As soon as I finished farm chores (because the goats weren’t going to wait) I ran inside to get my camera to capture the fog. I have included some of the pictures that I took below… I know, I know, some are duplicated. I just could not pick between the color and black and white on some of them… I mean, could you?

    Barn in the fog - The Freckled Farm Soap Company

    January Fog - The Freckled Farm Soap Company

    January Fog - The Freckled Farm Soap Company

    January Fog - The Freckled Farm Soap Company

    January Fog - The Freckled Farm Soap Company

    January Fog - The Freckled Farm Soap Company

    January Fog - The Freckled Farm Soap Company

    January Fog - The Freckled Farm Soap Company

     

  • What’s up Wednesday – 1/8

    It was a cold day on The Freckled Farm yesterday… as it was for most of the country. Monday and Tuesday night we closed the animals up in the barn and coop. Normally we leave the doors open to the pasture and run, but we wanted to prevent any wind from getting to the animals and to allow the deep bedding to do it’s job. The animals faired well through the cold weather, although there were points when I was working in the pasture that I could see the goats shivering. They ended up spending the entire day in the barn, only coming out when I was doing farm chores. We have one chicken though who decided that she wanted to molt late in the season and still hasn’t gotten all of her feathers back. I have worried about her quite a bit, but she seems to be doing fine.

    On Tuesday Kevin went out to feed the animals around 5:30am and the temperatures were in the negatives with the wind chill. He closed everyone back up after they were done eating and I went and let everyone out once the sun came up. I had to go out several times during the day to remove the ice from the water buckets. This is my least favorite winter chore. We thought about getting heated buckets, but the breeder of Tina and Hillary told us to avoid them because they lower the goat’s resistance to cold, and if the bucket should break or the electricity go out the cold water could end up hurting the goats. So I trek out the barn and coop every couple of hours to remove the layer of ice that has formed on the water and add warm water. Last year there were only a few days that we really had to fight ice in the water buckets. If we lived in an area that is as cold as what we are dealing with right now all the time I might have consider investing in something else to combat the problem!

    In other news, today is our first day at My Courthouse Market in Goochland, VA. This is an INDOOR farmers market located inside the YMCA in Goochland Courthouse. The market runs from 3pm-7pm. Come and visit us!