Monday, September 1, 2014

A Very Hard Loss on the Farm....

It is with a very heavy heart that we have to announce our sweet "Tater" has crossed over the Rainbow Bridge this past week.

Our little buddy had grown into a handsome young roo, but his crooked, twisted legs couldn't hold him any longer.We tried some suggestions that our great veterinarian Dr. Bagshaw suggested, but ultimately, Tater's legs were just too deformed for him to get around anymore.

It was a very tough decision, but we knew what we had to do.  Dr. Bagshaw and his staff were so wonderful helping us through this difficult time.  Tater was relaxed and comfortable while I held him and rubbed his ears.  He was so relaxed he laid his head down on my arm and closed his eyes. I held him while Dr. Bagshaw did what was needed to relieve our sweet Tater from any further suffering.

It is still very hard to walk past his specially built pen on the porch and see it empty.  I will never think of 'naners (aka bananas) and oatmeal again without thinking of our sweet Tater.  We have great memories of Tater sitting on my lap while we sat on the couch in the evenings.  He would sit and watch Scott play Warcraft on his computer!  Often "helping" Scott on the keyboard or alarming when something happened on the screen.

Tater was a special feathered friend on The Old Five Notch Farm and a special little guy in my heart.  We will treasure our time with him. I have to think that he ran across that Rainbow Bridge with healthy good legs!

Here's a look back at our little buddy. RIP Tater....

This is the day we rescued our Little Tater <3
Our sweet little Tater!

Tater settling in

Tater....such a little snuggle bug!
Tater with his "mommy feathers" <3

Tater...snuggled in with his Lamby under his Momma feathers

Tater spending some couch time with Scott while they play Warcraft

Tater....the "gamer" chicken
Our little Tater is growing up!

Tater is growing up, but never too old or big for his momma feathers
Tater with his redneck air conditioner....a frozen water bottle and a fan!


Tater trying out some new foods!  He LOVES bananas...trying out strawberries, apples and greens too.

Tater...not too sure about that green stuff!

Oatmeal is yummy...still not sure about that green stuff!

Tater...in his favorite spot.  His house all snug with his Lamby, mirror and Mommy Feathers
 
Tater in his beautiful new house my sweet farmer man built just for him

Tater chillin' on an ice pack under his Mommy feathers <3



Sunday, July 13, 2014

Hatching babies, battling bugs, harvesting and preserving food, and a "Tater" update!

Wow! The past two weeks have flown by!  We have been quite busy here on and off the farm.

Last week we started our last planned hatch of the season. We had set 42 eggs, and 37 were viable, fertile eggs. Out of those 37 we hatched 17 little keets! Not a great hatch, but everyone of them are already spoken for. We were thrilled to have two little buffs in this hatch. Unfortunately, one of the little buffs didn't make it so we are down to 16.  They are so cute, but crazy little birds!

I'm not sure we are completely done with this years hatches, but I cleaned and sanitized the incubators and turners and tucked them away...for now.  If I can collect enough guinea eggs we might, just might have one more hatch.  I have a new friend who is looking to add a few more Royal Purple guineas to her flock....hmmm....might just have to do one more hatch!

Just got word the hatch it on!  Pulled out the incubators and have eggs ready to set. Twenty eight days from now we will be hatching once again!

The garden is doing well....for the most part. We are harvesting yellow squash, zucchini squash, spaghetti squash, Roma tomatoes, Kellogg's Breakfast tomatoes, green beans, wax beans, a few carrots, peaches, and plums. Two little Cinderella pumpkins were harvested due to the vines being damaged.

One of the issues we are battling in the garden are bad insects. We have been battling the squash bug and the vine borer. Both have taken their toll on our pumpkin and squash plants.  We have been hand picking them and well...squashing them!  Apparently, we didn't get them all and didn't get them quick enough.  We are still finding adults, nymphs and eggs and will continue to be diligent in removing them, but they have done some damage.
Squash Bug Eggs
Adult Squash Bug

Damage from Vine Borers
 On The Old Five Notch Farm we use natural controls to manage pests.  We have two bee hives and do not use pesticides to protect our bees.  Here are two links to organic/natural means to help manage and control these two pests.

Mother Earth News -Organic Vine Borer Controls

Mother Earth News - Organic Squash Bug Controls

We will continue to battle these pesky bugs, but we are fortunate that our plants are strong and can withstand the attacks so far. Despite the attacks from the bad bugs we are harvesting quite a bit of produce!  Here are some of the veggies being preserved for later use.
Roma tomatoes

More Roma tomatoes!

I am so very happy with our new gas cook top!  The caner is full of tomatoes and the other pot is full of tomatoes to help remove their skins....notice MORE tomatoes still on the counter!

Tomatoes!  That will make Four batches of Scott's famous spaghetti sauce.

Summer Squash - Zucchini and Yellow Straight Neck - future casseroles.

All of the critters on the farm are tolerating the hot temperatures fairly well.  We continue to keep plenty of water available not only to drink, but to stand their feet in and misters spraying in the air to help keep everyone comfortable.  We free range as much as possible as long as someone is home to keep an eye out for predators.  Everyone was out and about all day yesterday and today.
My newest little buddy. A little Golden Laced Wyandotte Roo. He and his sixteen siblings will be five weeks old Tuesday. He is a mess!  He follows me all around and if I don't pay attention to him, he flies up my leg trying to get to my arm for a perch. Such a great, friendly breed!

"Mama Broodie" she is all done with raising the guinea keets and back with the rest of the adults...much to the dismay of the keets.  They still follow her around and try to hid under her only to get pecked by mom!

"Tommy"...My handsome, but hot turkey boy! It doesn't help any that he struts ALL the time.

"Rudy" He is the BEST rooster.  He is great with all the babies both keets and chicks. He does a great job of protecting his ladies and taking care of business with his girls too. He comes running anytime I go out to see about them and drops a wing and courts me...I'm one of his girls too apparently!

Front: "Baby Girl" Middle: "Diva" and in the Back...the big man himself: "Tommy" <3

Our little buff keet....aka "Buffy" She is starting to get some of her color AND she is getting spots!  I believe she is a Buff Dundotte!  A rare color!
We were blessed yesterday with a visit from my son and his sweet girlfriend.  They came over to have Scott help Matt make a corn hole game for a friend of Matt's birthday.  It does this moms heart good to see the two men I love working side by side, chatting away.
Scott and Matt putting the corn hole boards together.

Of course, they needed supervision!  "Diva" was glad to help out.
We had some other visitors to the farm yesterday too. My nephew Gideon and his girlfriend Amber came over to visit.  They took a trip to Like Fork Lake to check out the sites and then came back for supper.  Nothing like having family all around for a meal!  We were so blessed to have each one of them visit and then share a meal together.  Time with family is so precious.

All of the critters at The Old Five Notch Farm are well taken care of and spoiled rotten.  Our special needs chicken is no exception. "Tater" is now three months old and has adjusted well to her/his new house and pen.  My sweet Farmer Man added a table for Tater's house and pen to sit up on so she could see outside and have better airflow.
I thought it was only fitting to include a picture of my sweetie sporting his Izzie's Pond T-shirt while working on a rescued chickens pen! Sorry it's a little blurry...I had to make him stop working for a minute just to snap the photo!

Measure Twice...Cut Once!

"Tater" enjoying her new high rise house!  She had a ceiling fan on the porch for air circulation, and screens all around.
"Tater" also has her very own redneck a/c......a fan and a frozen bottle of water!

I'd like to leave you with a few more of our rescued friends here at The Old Five Notch Farm.  I would encourage you to consider checking out Izzie's Pond or any other rescue for animals for your farm.  We are so blessed to be a release site for wild ducks and geese.  This momma duck and her twelve, yes 12! babies were released on our site awhile back.  They have made themselves at home and have become part of the wild duck family that call our place home.  We enjoy watching them and hearing them on our pond and the small expense of their feed is worth all the beauty and enjoyment we receive having them here.
Eleven of the twelve babies...making themselves right at home <3

Momma Duck and one more baby...getting really hard to tell Momma from the babies!

Happy little duckies...yes, that is a trap, not for the ducks, but for predators. We do all we can do keep everyone safe!

Thank you for taking the time to check in with us at our little farm.  I hope you have enjoyed your visit and maybe even learned a little something.  God bless and keep looking for updates!

Sunday, June 29, 2014

Harvesting, Foraging, Preserving, New Equipment!, Critters Breakfast Time, Trying to Keep Cool, and a "Tater" Home makeover

This has been another busy week on the farm.  We had our first canning event!  You know how it goes....always an adventure!


My farmer man and I had been picking green beans and wax beans during the week hoping to get enough for 7 quarts...a canner full.  We were thrilled to have enough to start our canning season here on the farm and planned to can our first batch Wednesday afternoon. 



I assembled all the jars, lids, rings, canning salt and the canner in preparation for the maiden canning voyage of 2014. Only problem was I could not locate the pressure regulator for the top of the canner! No biggie. I had my sister's larger canner out in the loft of the barn. I'll just go get that pressure regulator. A trip to the barn proved unfruitful. Not only could I not find my pressure regulator, but now I can't find my sisters!  Thankfully we have some wonderful friends who were willing to let us borrow their canner so we could get started.

My sweet farmer man helped in snapping the beans and in the processing too. We ended up with 7 quarts on our first canning day!  Five quarts of green beans, one quart of wax beans and one mixed quart. Pretty happy with the results.


Today we canned some dill pickles.  We didn't have quite enough cucumbers so our dear friends, Steve and Eydie, graciously allowed us to come an pick some of theirs.  My Farmer Man and I had a good time working together in the kitchen and we managed not to get in each others way too much.  We finished up with nine pints and one quart of homemade dill pickles.

Here his is! Working away at slicing cucumbers for dill pickle spears.
Our pickles...cooling off and sealing.  That "ping" is a happy sound!

This jar looks especially nice....maybe holding on to this one to enter in the fair!
We have been watching the wild blackberries around the area and are hoping to have much needed rain to help the crop.  We took a ride this week and found that some of the berries are starting to ripen!  We picked half a basket of smaller berries, but hope that we get some rain this next week as there are TONS of red berries all over the bushes.


Not bad for the first picking!
Today we also added a much needed piece of equipment to the farm.  We had been debating on whether to purchase a grooming mower that would be pulled behind the tractor or a zero-turn mower. In the next few years we hope to add alpacas, goats, a donkey and maybe other grazers to the farm, but until then we have a lot of field to keep mowed.

We finally made a decision!  Tractor Supply had a WONDERFUL deal on a Cub Cadet 54" zero turn mower and 18 months same as cash!  I'm all for using their money when you can.  We took a trip this afternoon to Aiken and purchased our new mower.  This will make mowing the grass MUCH easier around the farm.
Loading it up!

My Farmer Man checking out the new toy...um...equipment.

An he's off!

This thing can really mow!
As we are building the farm we are realizing that sometimes making an investment that will save your time is very important.  We have so many things we are working on here on the farm and this new lawn mower will cut our mowing time and weed eating time drastically allowing us to work on other projects.

Our critters are keeping us quite busy!  I fix "breakfast" for the little ones in the brooder and for "Tater" each morning.  They have their chick starter feed, but since they are confined I like to provide them with some fresh fruits and veggies.  Here's a peak at breakfast time...
"Tater's" bowl is the blue one.  One of the others goes to the keets and one to the chicks. This morning there is strawberries, bananas, swiss chard, kale, spinach, and cucumbers.

The little chicks checking out their breakfast

One of the guinea keets with a piece of green!


"Tater" will come running out of her house in the morning for breakfast.  She LOVES bananas!
Another job during this warmer weather is trying to keep everyone cool...especially our big guy "Tommy". I fill large plant saucers with cool water every morning, check to be sure everyone has clear, cool water and plenty of shade, turn on a mister for added comfort and we have fans both in the chicken coop and in the turkeys shelter.  "Tommy" takes full advantage of his "air conditioner"!  I place frozen water bottles in front of the fan each afternoon so help everyone stay cooler. You can find "Tommy" right in front of the fan, many times with his huge chest resting on the frozen milk jugs!  Love this big guy!
My handsome boy!  Just before I brought the frozen milk jugs down to help keep him cool.
We have a momma chicken, "Broodie" who is continuing to raise some guinea keets she hatched out. Most hens are through raising the babies around four to five weeks....not "Broodie"!  Her babies are now almost 6 weeks old and I dare anyone of our other feathered flock members to TRY and get to her babies! She is still very protective and has bitten me recently for trying to help get one keets inside the coop for the night. I'm just grateful chickens don't have teeth!
"Broodie" and our very first buff colored keet..."Buffy"

Mommas is having to keep up with her babies now.  They are very curious and can fly fairly well already.

"Buffy" and her siblings checking out the Big Coop

As you can see, Momma is never far away.  Another week or so and the babies will be out in the coop and the run with all the others.
"Tater" is doing well in her new home.  She has more room to move around and she is getting plenty of fresh air.  We had to figure out someway to pad the run area for her though.  You could hear her "running" across the floor of her pen when it was only covered with two bath towels so I was worried about her having issues with her poor little elbows. As she HATES dirt, grass and pine shavings we had to come up with something that was soft, but easy to keep clean.

Here's what we put together for the "Tater":
Three layers of foam mattress padding...

Crib sized, waterproof mattress pads....

And old towels! Now I will still have to wash a load of "Tater towels", but this way it is much softer for her.

Two of the three essentials for the "Tater"...her lamby and her mirror.

"Tater" checking out the new run area. Much softer and much quieter too.

Taters favorite spot....in her house with her lamby, mirror and her mommy feathers.  She still tries to hid under her mommy feathers although she doesn't quite fit.
This week we have started off with the new clutch of guinea keets hatching!  I have one little one who decided to make his/her appearance on Friday!  She/He was really fussy so we snuggled up on the couch this morning while I was drinking coffee.  There are many more eggs pipped as of now and I hope we have many healthy guineas hatching out through the next day or two.  These are all spoken for already!

So, I'll end this farm update with the cuteness of a newly hatched guinea keet enjoying some snuggle time.


 Hope you all enjoyed this weekly farm update!  Thanks for stopping by.