August Top Droppers

August 31st, 2008

Thanks to my loyal Entrecard top droppers for the month of August!  We’ve had a great increase from July!

And hey, this month my wife dropped me more than 3 times!  She’s in the #1 spot!  Aww, she loves me!  So without further ado, here are my top 10 droppers for August.

Quiverfull Family (my sweet wife) - 16 visits

The Handy Guy’s Podcast - 15 visits

Strawbale House - 11 visits

The house that Koen & Claire (re)built.com - 10 visits

An Island Life - 10 visits

Chica & Pumuckl - 2 Egyptian Cats in Germany - 10 visits

News, Views, Thrills & Spills! - 9 visits

Live & Learn - 9 visits

sound of a soft breath - 9 visits

EasyGreensy - 9 visits

Thanks so much for your faithful dropping! Hope to see you back next month :).

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3.7 (2 people)

Slow but sure

August 30th, 2008

Things are going slow but we are making sawdust and lots of noise, and a few things are starting to take shape. Here we have the new gable wall taking shape, we are going from the straw over to stick frame. Stick frame is very fast compared to the straw clay building method. As we go along you will begin to see the roof outline and notice that the South side of the house will have a very long slope. This is part of the passive solar collector part of the house. As we are buildingthe house to be a big solar collector that we just happen to live in, with the end goal to be a self heating  house.

A few days later and we have the panel board going up, we have scaffolding up to help makes things a  bit safer. We had to stop here and build a solar rack to move the panel to as they where on the other side of the new wall and mostly in the shade.

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3.3

Busy as beavers

August 29th, 2008

Busy as Beavers

Here on the homestead fall is in the air I saw a couple flocks of Canada geese go over the other day and that will get me into the fall work mind set. So I have decided to add a little more room on to our house, with a new baby and all it is time for an upgrade also on a few things.

One thing will be the drilling of a water well, I have found a little company in Texas that sells a do it yourself water well drilling kit. So that is in the mail and as soon as it get here we will be drilling or trying to drill. I will be posting on how that goes with lots of pictures.

The big change will be the house and I have some pictures of that project underway, I will keep the blog up to date on that project as well.

The other thing we did this fall is get a new bull for our growing herd of Dexter’s, he doesn’t have any papers but he is a full blood and we have named him Sampson.

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3.3

Carnival of Home Preserving, August 18, 2008

August 18th, 2008
Welcome to the August 18, 2008 edition of carnival of home preserving! I hope you enjoy reading the informative posts this week!  In our garden we have mostly zucchini so far….we are now the crazy zucchini neighbours..you know the ones, perhaps you are one yourself?  Any time you have company, “Would you like a zucchini?”.  We’ll be slicing and freezing the excess.

Canning

Laura Williams presents Laura Williams’ Musings: Barbecue Sauce, a barbecue sauce recipe and canning instructions, posted at Laura Williams’ Musings. .  I see that it doesn’t include any cornstarch or wheat!  We are going to have to try this one, our oldest daughter has allergies.

Heather presents A Guide, sharing the little known beauty benefits of canning and preserving, a tongue in cheek guide, posted at A Place of Quiet Rest.

Anthony presents Grandma’s Kitchen Harkens Back To An Era Gone By, describing a woman who is making canning a business, posted at Stark County, Ohio News And Views….

Michele presents Rhubarb-Rose Jam - using roses in canning,  posted at Frugal Granola.

Fermentation

EcoSalon presents Fermentation Nation with a basic cabbage and carrots fermentation recipe, posted at EcoSalon.

Freezing

Barb presents My Daily Round: Yesterday’s Kitchen Day with a quick and easy method of freezing herbs for single serving use, posted at My Daily Round.

That concludes this edition, hope you’ve enjoyed it, I know I have!  Thanks for coming by.

Please submit your blog article to the next edition of the  carnival of home preserving using our carnival submission form.

Past posts and future hosts can be found on our blog carnival index page.

Please join us next Monday at Paper Expressions by Gwen for the next edition of the carnival of home preserving!

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2.5

A Blessing from our heavenly Father

August 12th, 2008

I’m always in awe of all the wonders God has given his children, flowers are truly one of the most amazing ways that God has created to produce seeds. Man in all his science and knowledge has never be able to come even close, we can only copy an image of this most beautiful gift from our loving Father.

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2.5

Pocket Gophers

August 11th, 2008

I always like to think that God made everything for a purpose and I believe He did - even if I don’t understand why He created them. One of those thing is the pocket hole gopher, one of the best rodents for digging and turning the soil on the prairies.  However, if you are trying to subdue your little piece of earth that the Lord has blessed you with, you’ll find they sure can make a mess of a hay field or garden. They will even dig up a road in their endless pursuit of grass roots and shoots.

In order to get a better understanding of the animal that we would be hunting I got a copy of  “The Mammals of Canada” by A.W.F. Banfield. I highly recommend every home schooling family have a copy of this book in their library.  From our research we learned that the rodent we were after was the Northern Pocket Gopher and it makes it home in most of the prairies of Canada and Northern US states. A.W.F. Banfield had a lot to say about this little dirt digging beast - he has four pages covering everything: he is 9 inches long and makes his nest as deep as nine feet to get below the frost line.

I found a very interesting thing about this little critter - they hold the record for the fastest growing incisor teeth, which as with most all other rodents are constantly growing. The pocket gopher sets the record at nearly 1 and half inches of growth per year. There don’t really do damage to the pastures or fields but it is the dirt piles they leave behind, and the fact that they can eat up to a ton of grass per acre if their population isn’t checked. The fact of the matter is we are raising cows not gophers and that ton of grass is a lot of beef and milk.

Our purpose is to control them, and in that attempt I will share with you how we trap the little beasts. We use a trap that is very humane and the gopher suffers very little.  The traps are placed in pairs in the feeding tunnels, which are about 4 to 6 inches below the sod.

In this picture you can see the dirt mounds the gophers leave behind, they can push up several of these each night. First you need to find the dirt mounds the pocket gophers leave behind – look for the freshest mounds you can find.  The fresher the mounds, the looser, finer and darker the soil will be.  You will soon learn to tell which mounds are the freshest – the older mounds are harder and more compact, not as loose and fluffy as newer piles.

Now you need to take a small rod and poke around the mound or between the mounds until you find a tunnel.   You’ll need to push down firmly into the sod to see if there is a tunnel underneath the top of the ground.

Here are the tools we use.  A square nosed small edging shovel; it works very well for squaring up the hole in which we place the traps.  As you can see the traps are rectangular and need a flat bottom to sit on. Next we have a small thin rod about 30 inches long or so with an ‘L’ bend at the top to help in the job of finding tunnels.  We put a bright ribbon on the end so you can find the rod and traps – it help to spray paint the end of the rod a bright colour, sometimes the ribbon slides down or flies off, making the trap settings difficult to find.

With each pair of traps you will need a rod, and then you will need two traps per setting. I have tried using only one but you never know the direction the gopher will be coming down the tunnel. After much trial and error we have found that a trap pointing each way gets way more gophers. One thing you will learn is that if everything isn’t just right the gophers will pack your traps with dirt.  They are clever little fellows.

Here I have found a tunnel and I’m cutting out a sod square right over the tunnel. (Thank you Kaelynn for taking the picture.)

Now we have the tunnel opened up and we are looking for a through tunnel, you can kind of see the tunnel in this photo.  Some tunnels are dead ends – used only to deposit dirt on the surface of the ground.  We are looking for a traveling tunnel that runs in two directions.

Once you have the tunnel dug out you make it fit your traps. The traps we use have a small hole in the back.  The reason for this?  Gophers like their tunnels to be well ventilated and can sense if air is moving though the tunnel.  If no air is moving then they think it is a tunnel that leads to a dirt mound and they push dirt down those tunnels. So we want to have air moving though the traps so the gopher doesn’t fill the traps with dirt. To do this the trap maker has put an air hole in the back and you as the trapper are to set the trap so air flows though. I can never seem to get the traps spaced just right for sometimes the tunnel is curved or I have dug the trap hole too big.  In this case I just put a small piece of sod over the back of the two traps to make a little air way between the back of each trap.

The next step is to carefully cover the traps with loose dirt. The goal is making sure no light is getting into the tunnel from your digging a hole though the roof of it.  Here you see the dirt covering the traps and the rod in place to mark the trap setting.  You’re all done setting!

When you go out in the morning, you’ll be looking for the rods that mark your trap settings.  Oftentimes the soil on top of the trap setting will be distributed if the trap has been set-off and you’ve successfully caught a gopher.  Be careful retrieving the traps – you don’t want to catch your fingers in one…ouch!  Just keep your fingers away from the trap trigger in the middle of the open trap.  Here you have a successfully trapped pocket gopher, this style of trap closes around their neck/chest.

Enjoy your trapping!

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2.5

Top 10 Entrecard Droppers July 2008

August 3rd, 2008

July was my first month on Entrecard, and things have been a bit slow getting started. I have very slow internet so haven’t been able to get my card out as much as I would like to. As you can see….there is lot of room for improvement here! Please come and ‘drop’ by and see if you can get your name on this post next month!

So, here are my top 10! Thanks for coming by!

About Food - 5 visits

Quiverfull Family - 3 visits - my wife only dropped me 3 times! : O

God’s Best Gift - 2 visits

Gurushabad - 2 visits

Tidbits Of Tammy - 2 visits

Frantic Home Cook - 2 visits

The Vegan Diet - 2 visits

Cyber World - 1 visit

PC Squadron - 1 visit

Thanks again for visiting!  Hope to see you all back soon :).

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2.5

Summer sunset in the North

July 31st, 2008


Here is a very beautiful sunset that the Lord graced us with.

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3.8 (2 people)

Photo contest anyone

July 30th, 2008

Hello from the homestead

This post is an update of sorts, we are still haying, the baler is fixed and we can now see the end in site. Over all the haying is going very well only three breakdowns, all of them repairable so far. Now that we are almost done we have decided to share a few ideas I hope will help to boost the blog. The first one is to host a photo contest, it will be one in which anyone can enter by leaving a link to their favorite photo on their blog, they will be prizes and all those wonderful things. So to get a start on that here is my first unofficial photo entry.
My second idea is to host a photo tour of other blogs that have beautiful photos that they would like to share. Once I have the details worked out I will post them, but in the mean time please leave a comment with an email saying you would like to take part.

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2.5

Making hay while the sun shines

July 29th, 2008

That is the plan and after a week or so of fixing and hauling home some very old but much loved farm equipment, I think we are just about ready to start. If you have made hay before then you know that one of the most important ingredients is lots of sunny, dry, hot weather.

The weather man is saying we will get 4 days of it so I think I will cut the first field - 5-6 acres today - and then see if the sunny weather holds. Then maybe in a couple of days the second field 3-4 acres.

Our haying story starts when we first moved to the homestead and I thought I would cut all my hay and put it up by hand. Well I had good intentions and I did buy the right scythe from the right guy, measured myself and had the handle made to fit me. I cut some and made a couple of hay cocks, even carried it in on the hand cart but when I had the chance to get some free equipment and the use of a tractor for the summer (thanks Mom!). I put the scythe back in the shed.

I think cutting hay by hand is a wonderful way to make hay, but I have made allot of hay with equipment and I know how fast it can go. I can cut, bale and stack under cover my entire hay crop, 9-12 acres in a few days with equipment. By hand you would be looking at I would be guessing here, well over 3 weeks to a month. I just don’t have that much time this year and I need to cut my own hay. For two winters we have been buying and that gets tired real fast when you have to haul it home and pay for it. We had been spending about $1000.00 a year for hay and gas to go get it. So we figured we would buy a few pieces of older, cheap equipment and put up our own. We had the hay just no way to put it up.

The first thing we bought was a self-propelled swather, we got a Massey Ferguson 36 at a farm sale for $500.00. It needed a little work on the cutter, new guards and a few sections; the section bar also broke. So far it has cost around $200.00 to get it ready. We used it to cut the hay fields early in the spring. I needed to knock down two years of uncut old hay growth. It also works great to clip tall weeds and tall mature grass the cows don’t eat in the pasture. That helps allot to keep the pasture clean of weeds and growing even.

The next thing we needed was a baler and it just so happened that my parents needed to clean out some of the old farm equipment that they had been collecting. So I hooked onto my trailer and headed down for a visit. The first thing we hauled back was an old New Holland 269 square baler. All it needed was a tire fixed and a few adjustments to get the plunger to run square. Next was a hay rake, now this piece is vintage - not sure of the date but it is old. With a little TLC, and if I take care handling it, it will rake all the hay I have.

So now I think we are ready to have at it. If all goes well we should have some very nice hay for half the price of buying it, in addition to a line of older but useable haying equipment (not including a tractor). Anyone have a nice tractor for sale cheap?


Update:
We started cutting hay and everything went pretty good, we got all the hay cut with only one break down on the swather, the section bar broke again. We will be making a new one this winter much heavier. Then we raked it and waited for it to dry and waited watching the sky for any sign of rain. We had lots of cloud but we prayed and kept an open line to the Lord and he held back the rain. God is good. After all that waiting and walking the field with a pitchfork, the swather made allot of little piles of hay as it was cutting and there needed to be pulled apart so that the hay would dry evenly. We where then ready to start baling the hay into little square bales and that went very well, until I broke both hay needles. We did get one field finished and the hay stacked. Now we are off to get the baler fixed and we should be able to finish the rest in the next couple of days God willing and the creek don’t rise as there say.

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2.8 (1 person)