Shortly after they arrived in May |
The pig condo, complete with door. |
Early November at their favorite place! |
The gals were with us 6 months and they were good folk to have on the farm. We enjoyed their antics and their sweet selves, and yes we fell in love with them but always kept in mind that they were our future food. We were concerned about getting them loaded for transport to the butcher, but a little coaching from a neighbor did the trick. The roughest aspect to the whole adventure was backing the gals up to the holding area and hearing the butcher say "We don't take colored pigs, they have to be white." I (Cheryl) stared at him, incredulous, at first wondering if he was joking. When he went on grumbling about how much more work (hair scraping) colored pigs are and wanted to know "where'd you find colored pigs?!" like we'd surely scoured the countryside to turn up a couple colored pigs to torment him with, comprehension dawned that this guy might actually refuse our gals and send us home with our curly tails between our legs to tend to 600+ lbs of pig all winter. I wasn't going down without a fight so I fixed him with my you're-not-dealing-with-a-pushover look and pointed out that when I made our reservation no one asked me if they were white nor told me of such a policy. Then I kept quiet and stood my ground. He "educated" us a bit and made his disgust apparent then relented and said he'd do them this ONE time!
Kirk laying block on a hot, humid July day - what fun! |
The southern side. We will be adding much more fill to keep things cool. |
Since we needed retaining walls to complete the cellar we took our building partner, Eric's, suggestion and put in several planting beds associated with the walls. It's a dandy spot for growing, southern exposure, and our plan is to plant various edible perennials here such as lingonberry, strawberries, & goumi (sweet scarlet) which also produces fruit. The plantings will also help keep the root cellar cool.
Speaking of Eric, we'd like to tip our hat to him and note here what a fabulous mutually beneficial relationship we have with him. Eric is an experienced carpenter and multi-skilled lifelong Mainer. We hired him and his partner to build our barn in spring 2011. That partnership fell apart but Eric has stayed with us building or helping to build every structure on the place except the house. He partner's with us offering ideas and looking into things for us and works for a lower rate than we could otherwise find. In return he gets steady work with the flexible schedule he needs having a baby at home and a great working environment. We're all thrilled with each other!
Eric in early days grinding stumps |
The other major project this year was a new chicken house. It has lovingly come to be known as the "Chicken Palace". Our original flock was housed in a small coop we purchased online. Although it did the job, it offered no expansion for our soon-to-increase flock. More importantly we learned chickens need light and constant fresh air to thrive. Cheryl came across coop designs from the early 1900's that nicely satisfied these needs--a fresh-air poultry house. The structure measures 10 ft. wide x 16ft. deep. To many, this coop seems quite radical because the southern side is open to the outside all year round. It is screened of course to protect the birds from predators but otherwise not covered. We have deep roof overhang to keep the rain and snow out.
One sweet chicken hangout |
Bob Marley, the proud |
Come on in, where life thrives |
8ft. Plow mounted on the bucket - a great snow handler |
With two pins, the plow can readily be put on and off the tractor. What a difference the plow makes! A nice feature of having the plow mounted on the bucket loader is I can lift the plow straight up. This allows me to keep the plow a few inches above the gravel when plowing the first few snows. I don't want to put that expensive driveway stone into the ditch and this arrangement does the job well.
We are continuing on our quest to learn new skills toward becoming more resilient. In a couple weeks Cheryl will be taking a workshop on hog butchery and dry curing. Thanksgiving weekend Cheryl and Kirk took part in a workshop for learning to process ducks from live birds to ready for the freezer. In the photo Cheryl is eviscerating a duck. She found the day full of useful learning and the experience of sitting with dying ducks to be profound.
In March we'll be welcoming a breeding trio of Muscovy ducks to our farm. Muscovies are the only duck that is not a descendent of the Mallard. Interestingly they do not quack and in good permaculture fashion they will be multi-functional as part of our farm. They are extremely hardy, love to eat slugs (yay! garden saviors), are fantastic moms, make some extra eggs in the spring & summer, of course gift us with lots of great poop, and will provide us a good ongoing meat source. As bird lovers this is going to be hard for us, but we feel that since we eat meat we ought to step up to the responsibility of taking the life of the animal being eaten and we feel good about having ensured the animal lived a happy life according to its nature before becoming our food.
We continue to strengthen our connections with neighbors in the hope of creating several collaborative relationships like the pig raising we just completed. Some new neighbors have a strong interest in having goats so we're talking with them about doing them together. They'd have them on their land to put some of their lawn area to better use & reduce their mowing and the two families would share the costs of raising the goats, the milking & other chores and their useful products: milk and poop.Another neighbor we're getting to know has some foraging skills which he's offered to teach us and we've started discussing jointly hiring an experienced forager to instruct both families at once. Informal talk has also begun between Cheryl and others about the possibility of getting a shared family cow. Cheryl & Jayne dream of a Jersey or Guernsey with their sweet personalities and all that wonderful rich yellow milk (Mmmmmmm, stupendous butter!)
Now to the philosopher's corner--we're entering a special and needed time of year, the time of darkness. In the coming months remember to go within, restore, reflect and be with the darkness. This time is an opportunity for discernment and inspiration if we find our still point and listen. Two pertinent quotes:
“Into the darkness they go, the wise and the lovely. ”
― Edna St. Vincent Millay
“Someone I loved once gave me a box full of darkness. It took me years to understand that this too, was a gift.”
― Mary Oliver
Remember self-care during the holiday season :-) |
2 comments:
Great and detailed post! You guys continue to amaze me with your homesteading. Such a treat to read about it here. Thanks!
Just reading this...and laughing...I think I know that "you're-not-dealing-with-a-pushover look." Love ya. Beth
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