Animals
Houdini Goats
Yesterday was a marathon work day.
I went to the barn at 6:30 AM and, except for breakfast and lunch,
spent the entire day outside....9 hours!
Our weather is still chilly...45 degrees,
but compared to what it has been for so long, it feels balmy.
The scattered showers that had been predicted missed the farm,
so I had the perfect opportunity to catch up on outside work.
When I was done with the routine AM chores, I raked the Nigerian dwarf goat pen.
We try to keep the excess hay cleaned up from the ground beneath the hay feeder.
Doing so helps to keep the ground dry... helping to prevent hoof problems caused by too much
moisture.
We recycle everything here on the farm,
and so this uneaten hay will be put in the chicken yard.
The chickens love to dig through piles of hay, scattering it around as bedding in their pen.
While I was raking, I moved the Nigerians into the pasture across the road from their pen.
This became quite the adventure, as they first made a perimeter check.
A patch of weeds provided a little morning snack.
Finished with the raking, I headed to the barn to finish the last of the hoof trimming.
With the Littles and Donnie Brasco finished, Scarlet...
And Moonbeam...
were all that remained.
Hoof trimming is physically hard work that requires a strong back and knees.
I have learned that it helps to do just two horses at a time.
I keep a natural hoof on all of my equines.
And so, rasping the bottom of the hoof with a file (to remove excess growth)
and smoothing out the edges every few weeks keeps their hooves in great shape.
Plenty of treats for "holding still" help to make the procedure trouble-free.
Trouble free, that is, after I placed a barricade at the entrance to the barn,
to keep the crazy turkeys (who are once again friends) outside.
Back in the dry lot, Moonbeam and Donnie engaged in a little mutual grooming.
It seems that Moonbeam just cannot get enough grooming.
"I'll scratch yours if you scratch mine!"
As I finished sweeping the hoof trimmings out of the barn,
I heard Maddie barking as if she were troubled.
(Yes, Maddie always brings half of the barnyard home on her coat!)
She had earlier found a safe spot (away from the scary turkeys) out by the garden,
but I could tell by her bark that something was amiss.
Looking up towards the pasture where I left the goats,
I realized that there was only 1 goat there.
Poor Stella was bleating her heart out...calling for her long lost friends.
Apparently the other 4 had made a break for it.
They didn't go far....just back to their own pen.
And I have no idea how these four-legged Houdinis escaped...
apparently neither did Stella!
I have to tell you...
the thing that made me happiest yesterday was spreading composted manure.
After months of bad weather, it was finally dry enough to get this job done.
Spring rains will help to drive this rich dark compost into the soil of our hayfields...
fresh organic fertilizer...and another way that we recycle.
With any luck, the weather will continue to warm
so that I can get Spring vegetables planted in the garden...
maybe this weekend will give me the opportunity.
Happy Easter to you and yours from all of us at Bee Haven Acres!
Easter is a "double" holiday this year for me...
as it is also my birthday!
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Of Icy Fingers And Pedicures
And so another Friday arrives.It's been a cold week here on the farm. Beautiful ice sculptures have formed... from water being pumped out of the old log cabin's basement.Frozen pillars dance in a circle around a fountain of frigid spring...
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Pedi Day
With temps in the low 60's and no rain in sight,yesterday was the perfect day to finish my hoof trimming rounds. Last week Red and Ollie were groomed and trimmed. Yesterday... the Bigs had their turn. First Scarlet who patiently let me trim even the...
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Friday Smiles From Maddie And Her Piggies
It has been a perfectly perfect week on the farm.Cool nights and warm (but not hot) days have re-energized me.It is so much easier to harvest and put up the veggies when the weather is cooler! Scattered storms have timed themselves so that I could take...
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A Day Off?
Yesterday was another glorious 60 degree day...one that made me long for gardening. Having the day off from farm chores,(thanks Jim!)gave me the opportunity to get caught up with a few routine maintenance items... like trimming hooves (on all 5 equines)....
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"One misty, moisty morning, when cloudy was the weather....." I was reminded of this nursery rhyme this morning when I went out to do the chores. A thick blanket of fog had settled over the farm since last night's torrential rain storm. Fog like this...
Animals