tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1701912426411599132024-03-13T21:47:36.011-07:00Farmgirl in TrainingLearning and sharing new farmgirl skillsDomestic Goddesshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15460796074640596194noreply@blogger.comBlogger85125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-170191242641159913.post-3099955667717700342013-09-30T12:00:00.000-07:002013-09-30T12:00:31.687-07:00Cooking up Compost<span style="color: #0b5394;"> I have been doing this homesteading thing for a few years now, and I'm always learning. I have taken an interest in compost. That is normally my hubby's job. Physical labor just isn't my thing. But lately with all that has been going on in my life, I've felt the need to be outside, breathing fresh air and MOVING. </span><br />
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<span style="color: #0b5394;"> This spring I had made my own raised bed garden using a real bed frame. I like to use what we got...know what I mean? Anyway, my daughter helped me with this project...she did a lot of sighing and shaking her head. We hauled the bedframe across the yard to the perfect spot in the middle of the orchard. Hey, the trees are small yet, I figured it wouldn't hurt...didn't think about having to mow the grass. Then we took my little truck to Lowes and picked up some bags of dirt and plants. I felt so empowered....I AM WOMAN!!!!! driving my truck hauling some dirt...grunting and aping like a man....my daughter did a lot of sighing then too. And giggling. I drove my truck...in reverse...through my yard to the bedframe. Oh it was so exciting! The memory still makes me smile. Then I remembered I should really have some compost mixed in with the topsoil. So, my Diva daughter and I drove the Mule(glorified golf cart) over to the pile the guys had made when they cleaned out the pens. I scraped off the top layer to find the lovely composted stuff and loaded up the back of the buggy and hauled it over to the frame. I also put down a good layer of newspaper as a weed barrier and then my composted bedding and then the topsoil on top of that. I planted Kale and Kohlrabi. I have to say, it flourished. We were eating kale all summer. I planted in May and just pulled the plants today. They still had new leaves coming on, but I wanted to try growing garlic. According to the Amish lady at the Market, I need to plant it tomorrow. I cleaned out the bed, fed what plants were left to the goats and pigs. I scraped the last of the compost pile up and hauled it over and spread it around, mixing with the existing dirt. I have one bag of topsoil left so I'll add that on in a bit and tomorrow I will plant my garlic cloves. From what I have read I need to add a layer of mulch over top to help them winter over, and then in spring scrape the mulch off of the shoots. I think I am going to rake up the leaves and then mow them using the bag attachment, instant free mulch. </span><br />
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<span style="color: #0b5394;"> OK, So my interest in compost has been peaked because we don't do anything to make compost...it just happens by accident when we clean out pens and pile up the bedding. I want to make compost on purpose. I want to see how all this works. I want a steaming pile of nutrient rich compost that I can add to my garden without worrying that I'll plant wheat seeds or weed seeds. </span><br />
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<span style="color: #0b5394;"> I'm forming a plan. I just swept out one pen, a holding pen we used for the piglets until they were big enough to go outside...It is dry and fluffy. Then I have the broiler pen, where we brooded the chicks for the first 4 weeks...that is damp and gross. I think If I layer those two, I'll have the start for my "</span><span style="color: #0b5394;">on purpose" compost pile. </span><br />
<span style="color: #0b5394;"> Right now? I have to hunt out my child, who is not filling out the names of the 50 states on his map. This homeschooling deal is making me a little crazy...while he is great about math and science...getting him to do any writing for purposes other than his own, is difficult...that is putting it mildly, because sometimes I'm not so nice a teacher.....</span>Domestic Goddesshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15460796074640596194noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-170191242641159913.post-31950699370790355662013-09-23T07:22:00.001-07:002013-09-23T07:22:30.444-07:00Apple Pie Contest<div align="center">
<span style="color: red; font-size: x-large;">I am now an AWARD Winning Baker!</span></div>
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<span style="color: #38761d;">Yes! I placed 3rd in the pie contest! My ribbon is hanging in the cabinet next to my soup trophy! Oh there really is no living with me now. If I can figure out how to download pictures from the cell phone onto the laptop and then over to the blog...that would be a good thing...Look! The Martha Stewart is coming out of me again! </span></div>
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<span style="color: #38761d;">Charlie Brown is currently working on his biography about Mary Pope Osborn...I learned quite a bit too. I think she was a hippy for a bit after college, traveling Europe, camping in a cave in Crete...Ahhh the things I am learning. When he finishes his sentence writing we are doing a science experiment to show how rocks are formed and reformed. Good thing I am a crafty person who throws nothing out...aka, hoarder of all things crafty. We will shave crayons onto foil...representing weathering and erosion, then heat the crayons to melt them together...molten rock, then add pressure, then reheat, then pour over ice...oh the fun we will have....hmmm...I better go change my shirt and dig out an old apron!</span></div>
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<span style="color: #38761d;">I also have two Angel Food Cakes in the ovens. I have over 40 doz eggs at the moment...need to hard boil a few dozen as well. I would like to try canning pickled eggs...I'm just a little lazy about it...so I think about doing it and then say I WANT to do it. Intentions with out actions mean very little. </span></div>
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<span style="color: #38761d;">Perhaps we will have an egg casserole for dinner tonight. I could make some cream puffs too for dessert...I can feel the arteries clogging now. </span></div>
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Domestic Goddesshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15460796074640596194noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-170191242641159913.post-44602115370783609292013-09-20T09:30:00.002-07:002013-09-20T09:30:22.241-07:00Facebooked out...Where have I been....FACEBOOK! I just deactivated my account because I found myself spending more and more time sitting in front of the computer. I wasn't just looking up recipes and learning new homesteading skills. Instead I was playing games and reading everyone's status updates and then reading all the comments or commenting myself. Information passed that I really didn't want to know. Also, I discovered that people can be really MEAN when they are commenting. You know they certainly wouldn't behave that way in person. I found myself involved in someone else's drama...thinking about it when I had other, better, things to think about. I had had enough and without some eloquent speech about how I was leaving, I just made a clean break and deactivated my account.<br />
Now I am focusing on home again. It's amazing what you can get done in a few hours when you are not repeatedly looking at the computer or the smartphone. <br />
I am homeschooling my 8yr old. WOW. It is a challenge but I think we are going to make it. Third grade is tough. We are using PACyber... not traditional homeschool but I am right there reading lessons, doing science experiments, going over spelling, maps, recipes, music and art projects...whew and this is the first month...well six weeks. <br />
We still homestead. Currently raising meat chickens, layers, turkeys, pigs, goats and a steer. I am constantly either spraying essential oils all over the house, diffusing them in the air conditioning or wearing them so I don't have to smell the pigs. Really...I enjoy farm smells...I dislike strongly, the pigs. <br />
I'm trying to get my husband to butcher my older laying hens. I want to use them for stock. I need to build up my supply for the soup cook off in January. I won last year! There were 11 soups entered. This year there will be more. I need to be prepared. Having that plastic gold trophy really made me feel good. In fact I tell my kiddos they can't complain...I'm an award winning chef now. Tomorrow I am entering the apple pie contest at the Heritage Days festival. Not sure how I will do, but I won't know unless I try! <br />
Still canning and freezing whatever I get from the produce stand. My garden was a bust this year...too much rain then too much sun...the weeds did really well.<br />
But I am working in the sewing room during the times I would normally be on the computer. I am well on my way to finishing some Christmas presents.<br />
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Maybe now I will have time to post and read my other favorite blogs that I have not visited in a long time.<br />
Domestic Goddesshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15460796074640596194noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-170191242641159913.post-44700872729561694492013-01-15T05:17:00.001-08:002013-01-15T05:17:26.151-08:00Oven canning dry goodsA few months ago I read an article in the Countryside magazine about oven canning dry goods. When properly sealed these canned items are good for decades. I thought it was a great idea and tried it. I canned flour and rolled oats...but you can do any DRY good...beans, rice, cereal. <br />
I bought a 50lb. bag of rolled oats for $25. I filled 12 half gallon jars(twice, plus some on the counter), packing them tight by "stomping" the jar on a folded towel. Didn't want to break the jar. The next step is to place the open jars in a preheated oven(200degrees F)for one hour. When the time is up, open the oven and start placing the lids and rings on the jars. It's hot so be sure to wear an oven glove or use hot pads. The OV glove works best because I had my fingers free. Once the lids are snug, take the jars out of the oven and place on a towel lined counter to cool. As the jars cool, the lids seal. This process kills any larva or critter that may have been in the oats or flour. Ever open a bag of flour in the back cupboard only to find tiny black bugs? ick. I usually store my flours and oats in the freezer...but that takes up space I need for meat.<br />
I have been using the oats and flour... they are great. The only thing I have found is that I need to sift my flour before using it. since it is packed down in the jars it seems clumpy and I like it nice and fluffy.<br />
I save money buying in bulk, it is sealed and I don't have to worry about bugs or rancid flour. Plus, with the shaky economy, I have a stock pile to help get through the winter. <br />
Now, I have friends who oven can food, but I don't trust that method. I either water can or pressure can my foods. Since I didn't grow up learning how to can, I stick to the proven safe methods. I would hate to go through all the prep work and expense of buying the products only to have it spoil due to poor storage methods. <br />
But the dry goods seems pretty safe and as I said I have been using them without any issues.<br />
I hope this inspires someone else to try it. It took about 2 and a half hours total time investment filling the jars and heating for an hour and cooling . Domestic Goddesshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15460796074640596194noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-170191242641159913.post-90192264666779993342013-01-14T05:51:00.002-08:002013-01-14T05:51:40.080-08:00Planning and DreamingThis is the time of the year when I sit back with a good seed catalog and plan my spring garden and dream of all the harvesting and canning I will be doing. I generally leave out all the work, digging, weeding and planting. For some reason that always comes as a shock come spring and I end up not planting everything I dreamed about in the winter months. Anyone else do that?<br />
Hubby and I were sitting with our evening coffee discussing what and where we were going to plant. He wants to make the garden area we already have established, a potato garden and establish a new garden area in the side yard outside my kitchen door. While I see it in my head...skipping out to the garden in my apron to select fresh veggies for that nights delectable dinner...I'm leaving out the hours of breaking new ground and all the hard labor that goes into composting and weeding the area. I focus on the end result and not the journey to get there. <br />
You learn so much about life when you think about gardening. I know I do anyway. I see in my mind the future I want, the garden, the herbal business, the booming contracting company...but I have to keep in mind all the work involved and am I willing to do it to get the end results. Or do I need to rethink my goals and make them into something I can manage and am willing to devote my time.<br />
My imagination tends to run from reality. <br />
BUT we will try it. Maybe work it in small sections so that by the end of the summer we will be ready for more next year.<br />
We also discussed what is the most efficient veggies to plant. An example Hubby brought up was to plant cherry tomatoes but purchase canning tomatoes(Amish farms near by sell them fairly cheap by the bushel), plant beans, buy carrots, grow broccoli buy cabbage... <br />
He has a dream of growing a strawberry patch...we tried it before, but all our plants died. We had bought bare roots (200)that is a lot of planting and a very frustrating failure. Maybe if we plant in a different area it will work...more digging. <br />
I suggested horseradish and he asked me why I would plant that, I don't even use it...I think it was just the seed catalog high talking...<br />
Domestic Goddesshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15460796074640596194noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-170191242641159913.post-80493332780461089572013-01-01T10:29:00.001-08:002013-01-01T10:29:28.642-08:00Goals for the New YearI think just about everyone makes up some sort of resolution or goals even if it's to say I'm not making a resolution...see still resolving not to make a resolution.<br />
I've decided that I'm going to list my goals to help me move forward to my dream of being closer to the Proverbs 31 woman. <br />
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Goal number one is to rely on GOD for everything. To trust in Him and to LISTEN for what He needs me to do. Because seriously, I fail on my own all the time.<br />
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Goal number two is to stop being so negative about myself. I need to stop doubting myself, I need to stop being so critical of myself. I am worthy of success and need to stop fearing it. I'm actually a pretty cool chick if I would stop comparing myself to others or trying to be something I am not. I'm chatty and easy to talk to, creative, resourceful, honest and open, passionate in my interests, loyal to my family and friends and I am able to adapt to life's ups and downs without too much mental trauma. <br />
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Goal number three is to focus my main energy into raising my family. Whatever my dreams are for the future, I cannot allow them to interfere with my job as wife and mother today. My children will grow up too fast for me to have regrets later that I focused on my soaps and salves instead of my children. If I can find a way to have it all work together that would be great. But if it came to a choice, family first. <br />
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Goal number four is to research the herbal world. I want to take a few classes on herbs and their uses and to be able to identify them in the wild. I can always keep learning and growing.<br />
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Goal number five is to learn to finish what I start. If you have read my blog before...you know what I mean. Intentions are nothing without actions.<br />
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So those are my goals for 2013<br />
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I'm excited for this new yearDomestic Goddesshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15460796074640596194noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-170191242641159913.post-84970849093408023592012-12-13T09:38:00.000-08:002012-12-13T09:38:03.053-08:00Slowly....I am slowly getting busy making and selling my soap, salves and lip balm. I really have to get over this fear of rejection. The ladies were over on Tuesday and I was talking about how I felt. I would rather not try, than try and be rejected. My Hubby gets soooo irritated with me. My one girlfriend told me the number one rule is to not take the NO personally. She says they are saying NO to the product not me. My issue is the product IS me. It's made by my hands. So much love and passion goes into each product. I have a hard time even pricing the stuff! I sit and think...what if someone buys it then doesn't like it? What if I priced it too high, they will think I'm a rip off? What if... Sounds pretty pathetic doesn't it? I'm even frustrated with myself. I don't know how I even became so full of self doubt. <br />
But I am biting the bullet. I sold several jars of salve and lip balm just from people asking for it. So today and tomorrow I am making a few more jars of salve and lip balm, digging out some aprons I have made and I'm going to set out Saturday. I am surrounded by prim shops and they are all having sales Saturday. I am right in between two of them so I thought what better way to get started. People will pass my house to get to the prim shop. I also have soap at another prim shop...but so far, no sales. I'm ok with that because I'm not there to be rejected...lol. <br />
So I am making the healing salve and a breath ease salve(eucalyptus, rosemary, lemon)and a tea tree lip balm and maybe a cocoa mint lip balm. I finally figured out how to make my labels so I will even have our Up The Creek Homestead name on the products. <br />
I have bottles coming from Mountain Rose Herbs for my homemade vanilla. I also ordered some herbs to make more infused oils and tubes for the lip balm. I'm hoping I can sell more so I can make more.<br />
I really have to lock up the lip balm because my daughter keeps taking it! I told her she was going to have to work it off...the tubes cost about .50each! <br />
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I also tried a new to me idea of whipping coconut oil. I can't remember if it was a blog, pinterest, or facebook. But you whip coconut oil and it gets white and creamy. It's used as a moisturizer. I made some up and added a few drops of peppermint oil. It smells nice...I may add more more, just testing it out now. The coconut oil firms up a bit after whipping but not as hard as it is otherwise. It also melts into your skin as applying it. I think I like to use it more at night as it is pretty greasy feeling at first. <br />
Well, I'm going to get busy.<br />
Domestic Goddesshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15460796074640596194noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-170191242641159913.post-65728345928229901872012-12-05T10:08:00.002-08:002012-12-05T10:08:54.328-08:00I'm still breathing...sometimes deeply...The homestead has been busy. Butchered more chickens, the two pigs(714 lbs), 11 turkeys, and two deer. I think we are done unless they get another deer. I had vacuum sealed meat until my freezers were protesting. Then I switched to canning jar after jar of turkey and venison and stock. Can I just say I LOVE canned chicken stock or rather MY canned chicken stock. YUM.<br />
I am cyber schooling my 17yr old...not an easy task as it seems I am stupid and unable to understand the world today(that's what she says) Well, from what I see of the world today...it sucks. I would rather live in my old fashioned values of working for what we have, giving what we can, taking responsibility for our actions...Even if I home schooled all my kids, unless I sheltered them in a bubble, I couldn't keep them from the worlds influence. *sigh* but I TRY!<br />
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I thought i would post some pics as they are worth a thousand words...<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-K-5wRdShVcg/UL-HVgtDsWI/AAAAAAAAA0k/-JcUC4tGwRs/s1600/moms%2Bcell%2Bphone%2B137.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left:1em; margin-right:1em"><img border="0" height="320" width="240" src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-K-5wRdShVcg/UL-HVgtDsWI/AAAAAAAAA0k/-JcUC4tGwRs/s320/moms%2Bcell%2Bphone%2B137.jpg" /></a></div>My brother and I cutting down chicken<br />
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the makings of chicken stock<br />
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<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-hJl6I0NSSLc/UL-IzC1HQGI/AAAAAAAAA1U/Q94IM-FTD6M/s1600/moms%2Bcell%2Bphone%2B468.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left:1em; margin-right:1em"><img border="0" height="240" width="320" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-hJl6I0NSSLc/UL-IzC1HQGI/AAAAAAAAA1U/Q94IM-FTD6M/s320/moms%2Bcell%2Bphone%2B468.jpg" /></a></div>Sold all but one of my goats. I kept my Saanan for milk. That's an interesting story because I sold the goats because the cost of feed and I figured I would have a little extra cash for Christmas...then I ended up in the dentist office and there went the extra cash...I'm trying hard to be thankful I had the extra cash to pay for the dentist.<br />
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<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/--Lln6lA_-HU/UL-IzofsiZI/AAAAAAAAA1g/7Q3pW89bALQ/s1600/moms%2Bcell%2Bphone%2B1212%2B099.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left:1em; margin-right:1em"><img border="0" height="240" width="320" src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/--Lln6lA_-HU/UL-IzofsiZI/AAAAAAAAA1g/7Q3pW89bALQ/s320/moms%2Bcell%2Bphone%2B1212%2B099.jpg" /></a></div>Made my own soft soap...peppermint scented. I was given a 5gallon bucket of grated lye soap from someone's grandparents house...how cool is that? Anyway, I took some fresh peppermint and steeped it in 6C. of water for about 30 min. then I strained it and added a few cups of the lye soap and stirred it on low heat until it melted. then i let it cool and added a couple teaspoons of peppermint essential oil and incorporated it into the soap. It was a bit thick, so i put some in the blender with a bit of water and thinned it down. Poured it into a bottle with a pump and kept the rest in a canning jar until i needed to refill the bottle. FUN!<br />
<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-bLaSZd508Ok/UL-MFiBqM-I/AAAAAAAAA2I/u4wcVLibV1o/s1600/moms%2Bcell%2Bphone%2B1212%2B185.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left:1em; margin-right:1em"><img border="0" height="320" width="240" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-bLaSZd508Ok/UL-MFiBqM-I/AAAAAAAAA2I/u4wcVLibV1o/s320/moms%2Bcell%2Bphone%2B1212%2B185.jpg" /></a></div>most of our fall was spent at the football field. i find homesteading and sports are not very compatible...that was very time consuming and fast paced days.<br />
<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-sy0UKA6Tor0/UL-MHe3oaoI/AAAAAAAAA2U/9aIMW0sdBLM/s1600/moms%2Bcell%2Bphone%2B1212%2B463.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left:1em; margin-right:1em"><img border="0" height="240" width="320" src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-sy0UKA6Tor0/UL-MHe3oaoI/AAAAAAAAA2U/9aIMW0sdBLM/s320/moms%2Bcell%2Bphone%2B1212%2B463.jpg" /></a></div>This is the pork from our pig raising experience...5 boxes...plus two buckets of lard! That was a family project getting it all sealed and packed in the freezer. Hubby and i sat and made 216 sausage patties. we portioned someone bagged and two others sealed.<br />
<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/--v_L8IZZqgk/UL-MH1eEcyI/AAAAAAAAA2g/7vk884w2rZ0/s1600/moms%2Bcell%2Bphone%2B1212%2B605.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left:1em; margin-right:1em"><img border="0" height="240" width="320" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/--v_L8IZZqgk/UL-MH1eEcyI/AAAAAAAAA2g/7vk884w2rZ0/s320/moms%2Bcell%2Bphone%2B1212%2B605.jpg" /></a></div>And this is why we live the way we do...for our kids. Charlie wrote us this note in church. I keep it in my purse so I can look at it when I would rather run away from home! <br />
Hope you all are having a great fall and a wonderful holiday season!<br />
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Domestic Goddesshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15460796074640596194noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-170191242641159913.post-51909024971111050242012-10-09T04:13:00.002-07:002012-10-09T04:58:08.462-07:00Up the Creek Homestead I can't believe how busy I have been. Canning, freezing, raising animals, raising kiddos...it never stops. <br />
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We finally named our homestead.<br />
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<b> Up the Creek Homestead<b> <br />
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There is a creek that runs behind the house so it could be related to that, but in reality...it comes from "up the creek without a paddle".<br />
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Hubby and I had been tossing names around...wanting to come up with something that was meaningful but described us. Leap of Faith Farm was our first choice because it is exactly what we did, took a leap of faith. But there are way to many farms and homesteads named that. Then we checked out "whim and a prayer" again taken, as was Creekside, Crickside, and Crooked Corner.<br />
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Then, August 12th I woke Hubby up. I had been canning and freezing corn all day and had planned on canning the bushel of peaches that night. But when the corn was done I didn't feel well and thought I just over did it. I had the most horrible pain in my side. I actually thought it was "gas", kept getting in the tub thinking I could get it to pass. When I started vomiting I thought I had a blockage. I was sick and scared. Hubby took me to the ER at 2am, leaving our four kiddos at home, alone. (They are old enough, but we just don't do that!)The nurses kinda rolled their eyes and didn't give me much sympathy. I was in so much pain, I felt like something was going to bust inside...worse than labor, at least that pain came in waves. This was a constant pain that just kept getting worse. The hospital staff took blood and sent me for a CAT scan, an hour and a half later, the doc said I had acute appendicitis and it had to come out. I have to say the nurses snapped into action and gave me something for the pain( guess they figured I wasn't faking for a fix). I didn't care that I had to have surgery...I said, "I can't do this I have a bushel of peaches sitting in my kitchen that isn't going to hold for a few days!" Hubby didn't really care about my peaches or the bushel of beets on the back porch. He was worried about his wife, in the past three years he has lost both his grandparents and his aunt who had raised him. He called my mom at 4am and waited until 630 to call our pastor...I wasn't aware of this, my mama told me later. For my hubby to call the pastor...that was a big step for him. <br />
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Obviously the surgery went well, I'm alive and healed now. After the surgery, and after the meds wore off I started to panic about the medical bills and I said...we are really up the creek! My hubby said not to worry. He felt that everything was in God's plan and we didn't need a paddle... We both, at that time, looked at each other and said Up the Creek... Scary how we think on the same lines. <br />
So that is how we are now Up the Creek Homestead...no paddles just God's Guidance.<br />
As for my peaches, I only lost half of them. My mama and I did what was left when I got home from the hospital and two girlfriends came over the following day and canned the bushel of beets I had on the porch. I was so thankful for their help. My girlfriend came and took my daughter for two weeks so that I had one less child to care for and could rest a bit easier. Amazing how God put people in place to meet all our needs. I am just overwhelmed sometimes! <br />
And that is my Homestead naming Story!Domestic Goddesshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15460796074640596194noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-170191242641159913.post-78523572265404130882012-07-11T11:40:00.000-07:002012-07-11T11:49:28.860-07:00Home made poptartsRecently I have seen several blogs making homemade pop tarts. I don't buy them at the store myself because, with four kiddos, a box doesn't last long. But I thought, what the Hay,why not. My son Roberto loves cooking with me... and eating so we made these pop tarts from a recipe in the book, The Homemade Pantry, 101 Foods you can stop buying and start making, by Alana Chernila<br />
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These are so simple...Pie crust and fruit filling<br />
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Pie crust can be tricky. It's not just the ingredients, but the technique that can mean the difference between a hard crumbly crust or a light flaky crust.<br />
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Ingredients:<br />
1C.(2 sticks) cold butter(do not substitute)<br />
2 1/4C flour plus additional for rolling out on the counter<br />
2t. Apple cider vinegar(ACV)<br />
1/4t. salt<br />
1/3C. water<br />
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Technique:<br />
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Dice the cold butter and toss into the flour. Add the salt. place bowl in the freezer. In a measuring cup measure out water and ACV place this in the freezer. Freeze 10 minutes.<br />
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I use a stand mixer. After 10 minutes take out the bowl and cut the butter and flour together. (I use the paddle on my mixer for a few minutes) slowly add the liquid until the dough forms. (works well in the food processor) <br />
Pull the dough together and form two disks and wrap in plastic and chill for 2 hours.<br />
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Read a few blogs, toss the laundry, and fold it and put it away. Or play Candy Crush Saga on Facebook and two hours will fly by.<br />
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Now is the fun part. Preheat the oven to 375* and line a cookie sheet with parchment paper.<br />
Take out a pie crust disc and roll it out. You can slice it into rectangles or use a biscuit cutter and make circles. Make an even number all about the same size(why I changed over to the circles!) <br />
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Place half the pieces on the parchment covered cookie sheet.<br />
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Now use an egg wash (egg scrambled with a tablespoon of water) and paint the dough. Take a tablespoon of your filling, I used strawberry jam, and place it in the center of the dough. take a second piece of dough and place it over top, pressing the edges together. I used a fork. <div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-FeCiGZe-29c/T_3DZF5ouxI/AAAAAAAAAzk/myEFrw_5uKY/s1600/the%2Bpoptarts%2B024.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left:1em; margin-right:1em"><img border="0" height="214" width="320" src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-FeCiGZe-29c/T_3DZF5ouxI/AAAAAAAAAzk/myEFrw_5uKY/s320/the%2Bpoptarts%2B024.JPG" /></a></div><br />
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Paint the top of the tart with the egg wash and poke a few holes in the top with the fork to release steam. Place them in the oven for 20-25 minutes.<br />
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This recipe made 12 pastries for me. Fortunately, I put up two for my Hubby because when my boys and their friends came in they inhaled them. They were very good. One caution is that the jam is <b>VERY HOT</b> it does burn when it runs out of the tart and down your chin...please wait for them to cool.<br />
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These can be made savory as well using ham and cheese or pizza sauce and cheese...more of a hot pocket I guess.<br />
You can make these up to the point of baking and place them in the freezer. I would put the cookie sheet in the freezer until the pastries are frozen and then put them in a bag together, then place them frozen on a cookie sheet and directly into the oven...add an additional 5 minutes to the baking time. Great snacks for the kiddos to put in the toaster oven. You may even bake them ahead of time and then you can nuke them in the microwave wrapped in a damp towel.<br />
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<a href="<a border=”0″ href=”http://frugallysustainable.com/” target=”_blank”><img src=”http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-XDZ2dzJ8kHA/TsEtvzW6vPI/AAAAAAAAAbA/YZb-BQ4EQPo/s1600/frugaldaysad1.jpg” border=”0″ /></a>">Frugally Sustainable</a>Domestic Goddesshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15460796074640596194noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-170191242641159913.post-6828497520964645482012-06-20T07:51:00.000-07:002012-06-20T08:02:52.632-07:00Making salve for a friendI got a facebook message from a friend asking for help with their dog. She had been using my healing salve on the dog's "hot spots" and could I make some more. So I did a little research and came up with an anti itch salve. I used 1/2c lavender infused olive oil, 1/2c calendula infused olive oil and a teaspoon of tea tree oil. I figured the lavender oil would help stop the itching, the calendula oil would help sooth the skin and the tea tree oil would kill what ever fungus was causing the itch. I melted in beeswax and now have the jars resting. <br />
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It was one of those interesting timing deals. I have been on a quest for beeswax that I did not have to buy online. A woman I sold goats to gave me the name of a local beekeeper who sold raw honey and beeswax. Farr Better Honey. ( I just spent the last 20 minutes trying to create a link to his website but am too computer illiterate to figure it out! So, you can find him at www.farrbetterhoney.com) He is local so I called him up and met him at his warehouse, thus not having to pay shipping! I could not believe the deal on wax, I bought a 1 pound bar for $6.<br />
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I bought 2 for now. His raw Honey sells for about $5 a pound, that's a bit high for me but I really made out on the wax so I bought 3 pounds of raw honey.<br />
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While there, I had my youngest with me who asked a million questions and wanted to SEE everything. Mr. Farr showed us how he puts the frames through a machine to uncap the cells and then they are placed in the extruder which spins the honey out of the frame and into a tank. The honey is then sucked through a pipe and into a dispensing tank. From that tank the honey is poured into the containers. His honey is never heated. It was a great experience learning about the process and he told me he would be at the local festival raffling off a bee hive! I do believe it's worth a try!<br />
I'm really happy I found a beekeeper for my honey and wax needs. He even offered to meet me half way when I needed more! Talk about great service. His wife gave me a FREE sample of their Springtime honey to try. She said to let her know how it tasted. She doesn't eat honey because after working with it all day she can't think of eating it. I am going to eat it, put it in my salves, make scrubs and face masks with it!<br />Domestic Goddesshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15460796074640596194noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-170191242641159913.post-56807332695709828632012-06-17T12:58:00.000-07:002012-06-19T10:56:45.460-07:00Three Little Piggies...We did it. The Pigpen was built...or added on. My Hubby fixed this up with wood from his "stash", a skid we picked up( we actually have a stock pile of these too, never know what you can use them for) and hinges left behind by the previous home owner. I have to say for a hoarder, she had some good stuff we could use!<a href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-hXHVGBXIYZI/T940dAWoIPI/AAAAAAAAAw0/oP2f0Fj2o8I/s1600/pigpen%2B001.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left:1em; margin-right:1em"><img border="0" height="214" width="320" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-hXHVGBXIYZI/T940dAWoIPI/AAAAAAAAAw0/oP2f0Fj2o8I/s320/pigpen%2B001.JPG" /></a><br />
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Today after church we met up with our pig guy and picked up our three piglets. I LOVE them! They grunt and squeal and dig in the dirt! Right now they are checking out their new home. We thought about doing pastured pigs, but we don't have the set up or the finances to get proper fencing for that project. We might get there one day, but for now we have to work with what we do have. I am still in charge of what gets put into them, no growth hormones, no antibiotics. Just good feed, goats milk and some eggs thrown in and lots of water. We are hoping to keep two for the freezer and sell one. <br />
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I would really like to know why the piggies were building houses and the big bad wolf was blowing them down, we have already had to do some damage control as the little piggies showed us the weak spots in our pen arrangement. I guess that is the learning curve. <br />
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It's a beautiful day and I am enjoying the sounds of the farm, from the chickens, goats, dogs and pigs!<br />
<a href='http://gan.doubleclick.net/gan_click?lid=41000000028007181&pid=BCI03545&adurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.unbeatablesale.com%2Fbci03545.html%3Fmr%3AtrackingCode%3D6D108CA7-09C1-DF11-907B-002219318F67%26mr%3AreferralID%3DNA&usg=AFHzDLuBgpdsFGFOfYwayuCug14Hh3mR4Q&pubid=553407' rel='nofollow'>S M B 324905 1/2"Cattle Hog Nipple Drinker Stainless Steel</a><br />Domestic Goddesshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15460796074640596194noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-170191242641159913.post-47614726101535210242012-06-15T15:18:00.001-07:002012-06-15T15:18:49.770-07:00Happy Father's Day....When I was about 10 or 11 years old we spent the summers hanging out in the creek behind our house. The creek wasn't very deep, a few deeper holes here and there and for the most part, quite calm. Now we were allowed to play in the section that had the slow moving water but just over a ridge of rocks the water became shallower and swifter moving. The rule was we were not allowed to go over the ridge. At the preteen age of 11 I liked to press that boundary, floating just to the ridge and then stopping myself before going over it. Then it happened I pressed my luck and lost. I was swept over the ridge and into the swift water. I caught myself on a rock and held on for dear life. I can still feel the fear. As I clung to the slimy rock I was screaming for help. I looked at the bank of the creek and all my friends were standing there watching me. Didn't they see that I was about to be swept into the Lehigh River? Didn't they know I was going to drown. Finally, one of my brothers ran for my parents. I could hear my mom calling, "Missy! Stand up!" She never did understand me. I couldn't stand up the rocks were slimy and the water was so fast. I could feel it pressing on my shoulders trying to rip me from my rock. I knew if I let go that was the end. <br />
Then my Daddy showed up with a rope. He waded into the water and stood in the safe side, the calm side of the rocks. "Missy, catch the rope." "I can't let go Daddy" "I'll pull you up, catch the rope." My dad tossed the rope...I missed it and he tossed it again. This time I managed to grab the rope and I could feel his strength through the rope."Now stand up Missy." Clinging to rope now wrapped around my hands, I stood up. The water was just above my ankles. My dad did not tease me, did not shake his head is disappointment, he just pulled me to him and hugged me. <br />
A few short years later, I lost my Daddy due to a car accident. I was so very angry for a long time. Angry with God for taking my father, my hero. I decided that God didn't care for me so I wouldn't care for him. I rebelled, I pushed the boundaries. I didn't join a gang or start traffic-ing drugs, but I sinned knowingly, openly. I had a void in my life and tried to fill it with whatever felt good at the time. I heard God telling me to stop, almost begging me to stop. You know when people say God always gives you an "out" when you are tempted to do wrong...it's true. I heard him, I saw the "outs", I ignored him. I had a child outside of marriage and then again another child with another man(now my husband)I can't remember what it was that stopped me in my tracks, what triggered a reaction, but suddenly I was very sad. I knew I was living wrong. I knew I had disrespected my Heavenly Father. I could feel the water rushing over me again. I could feel that rock in my arms, the fear that if I let go, all was lost. And then I felt Him there, on the safe side, the calm side and He said "Melissa, catch the rope." "Father, I can't. I don't deserve the rope." "I'll pull you up, catch the rope." Jesus was there. He did not scold me, he held me and told me he loved me and would always be there for me. I began to see the water was only at my ankles, I could make changes in my life, I gained perspective, grew my confidence back. <br />
I still sin. I still press the boundaries. But I know my Heavenly Father loves me no matter what and He will always be there with the rope... <br />
So Happy Father's day to my Earthly Daddy, now in heaven, who gave me a glimpse of God. And Happy Father's day to my Heavenly Father who has shown me His unending love for me.Domestic Goddesshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15460796074640596194noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-170191242641159913.post-8309688991208197462012-06-12T09:03:00.004-07:002012-06-12T09:03:54.411-07:00What I've been doing...<a href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-AcVIFCeEIaY/T9dcYq-d9nI/AAAAAAAAAtU/d-ZYQpVkH4s/s1600/cheese%2Band%2Bgoats%2B001.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left:1em; margin-right:1em"><img border="0" height="320" width="241" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-AcVIFCeEIaY/T9dcYq-d9nI/AAAAAAAAAtU/d-ZYQpVkH4s/s320/cheese%2Band%2Bgoats%2B001.JPG" /></a><br />
Making cheese, Hubby loves coming home to finding cheese balls hanging from the cupboards...<br />
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Attempting to make soap...This batch ended up becoming laundry soap...waste not want not!<br />
<a href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-Onjjbo0DhhE/T9dcZYuGt7I/AAAAAAAAAts/e5BbzwOraLs/s1600/cheese%2Band%2Bgoats%2B015.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left:1em; margin-right:1em"><img border="0" height="241" width="320" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-Onjjbo0DhhE/T9dcZYuGt7I/AAAAAAAAAts/e5BbzwOraLs/s320/cheese%2Band%2Bgoats%2B015.JPG" /></a><br />
Attempted to make bread again and instead made bricks...again not wanting to waste all that hard work I threw chunks into the blender and made bread crumbs which worked really well for my homemade chicken tenders.<br />
<a href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-QJHkj08btk8/T9dcZ7-jDuI/AAAAAAAAAt4/6bMtQOoe3JE/s1600/cheese%2Band%2Bgoats%2B018.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left:1em; margin-right:1em"><img border="0" height="241" width="320" src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-QJHkj08btk8/T9dcZ7-jDuI/AAAAAAAAAt4/6bMtQOoe3JE/s320/cheese%2Band%2Bgoats%2B018.JPG" /></a><br />
These are those baking soda shower discs. They are supposed to be like the Vicks Vapor discs, But I wasn't too thrilled about them. They did brighten up my shower floor though, even if they didn't open up my nose. I got more vapors making them then using them.<br />
<a href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-SncYyyouYHc/T9dcaOSGycI/AAAAAAAAAuE/MOs3kCKKL68/s1600/cheese%2Band%2Bgoats%2B038.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left:1em; margin-right:1em"><img border="0" height="241" width="320" src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-SncYyyouYHc/T9dcaOSGycI/AAAAAAAAAuE/MOs3kCKKL68/s320/cheese%2Band%2Bgoats%2B038.JPG" /></a><br />
Potting my herbs I love growing plants and walking by running my fingers through them and smelling their wonderful fragrances.<a href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-IKsMXbiJaXY/T9de192MtvI/AAAAAAAAAuY/a1yWGcuj6p8/s1600/cheese%2Band%2Bgoats%2B036.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left:1em; margin-right:1em"><img border="0" height="241" width="320" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-IKsMXbiJaXY/T9de192MtvI/AAAAAAAAAuY/a1yWGcuj6p8/s320/cheese%2Band%2Bgoats%2B036.JPG" /></a><br />
My Hubby left his Gas job and went back to working for himself...We prayed about it for months before making that decision He was gone for 8 days home for 3 and with the farm stuff and our children it was taking it's toll. Amazingly circumstances all fell together making it possible for him to go back into business and be able to be home. God is GREAT! I truly believe God is in charge and I see him working in our lives. So we planted this tree to remind us of taking the leap of faith. Then we planted fruit trees and berry bushes...really planting roots at home.<br />
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<a href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-5cQrHfbcP7E/T9de2jmhM5I/AAAAAAAAAuw/cNXRsBBGSrU/s1600/shed%2B004.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left:1em; margin-right:1em"><img border="0" height="214" width="320" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-5cQrHfbcP7E/T9de2jmhM5I/AAAAAAAAAuw/cNXRsBBGSrU/s320/shed%2B004.JPG" /></a><br />
Hubby built a shed to sell out of stuff here at the house<br />
<a href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-Yk2KQMbf-MA/T9de3Ez4-hI/AAAAAAAAAu8/id20buHAsvQ/s1600/goats%2Band%2Bjam%2B001.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left:1em; margin-right:1em"><img border="0" height="214" width="320" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-Yk2KQMbf-MA/T9de3Ez4-hI/AAAAAAAAAu8/id20buHAsvQ/s320/goats%2Band%2Bjam%2B001.JPG" /></a><br />
We went berry picking together. Hubby did much better this year picking. The last time we did this together he ate more than he picked! I love it when he does stuff like that because he is usually so focused on the goal that he works non stop. Apparently that work ethic does not apply tp berry picking! But I made 35pints of strawberry jam and quite a few servings of strawberry shortcake.<br />
Then we moved onto getting more goats!<br />
<a href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-xmgg4Oi-w-w/T9diusvtrBI/AAAAAAAAAvM/_i8HzMMce2I/s1600/goats%2Band%2Bjam%2B005.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left:1em; margin-right:1em"><img border="0" height="214" width="320" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-xmgg4Oi-w-w/T9diusvtrBI/AAAAAAAAAvM/_i8HzMMce2I/s320/goats%2Band%2Bjam%2B005.JPG" /></a><br />
This is Grace, an Alpine Doe...really nice goat, great weed eater!<br />
<a href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-izUD_P35zLE/T9divKqoYDI/AAAAAAAAAvY/8z_hErNOMOY/s1600/goats%2Band%2Bjam%2B015.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left:1em; margin-right:1em"><img border="0" height="214" width="320" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-izUD_P35zLE/T9divKqoYDI/AAAAAAAAAvY/8z_hErNOMOY/s320/goats%2Band%2Bjam%2B015.JPG" /></a><br />
These are her bucklings they only stayed with a a few weeks, I sold them to another homesteader who has an issue with poison ivy. She named them Stihl and M'owen.<br />
<a href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-HuP2HflgGrY/T9divd6vq9I/AAAAAAAAAvk/El_c3EcHB1s/s1600/goats%2Band%2Bjam%2B028.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left:1em; margin-right:1em"><img border="0" height="214" width="320" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-HuP2HflgGrY/T9divd6vq9I/AAAAAAAAAvk/El_c3EcHB1s/s320/goats%2Band%2Bjam%2B028.JPG" /></a><br />
Ummm...Hubby and our buck Potter working out some testosterone in the goat yard...I don't ask, I just try to capture these moments <br />
<a href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-vgONJjjC1wQ/T9divnYu5TI/AAAAAAAAAvw/LH0TiWMiFSQ/s1600/goat%2Bfarm%2Band%2Bdorks%2B017.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left:1em; margin-right:1em"><img border="0" height="214" width="320" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-vgONJjjC1wQ/T9divnYu5TI/AAAAAAAAAvw/LH0TiWMiFSQ/s320/goat%2Bfarm%2Band%2Bdorks%2B017.JPG" /></a><br />
We drove to NY to get a new Lamancha and her two kids, but once we were there the Lamancha was much smaller than expected but she had this Saanan and her doeling for sale, cheaper than the lamancha!Her name is Willow and she is much bigger than this picture shows and STRONG, Hubby wants to build a cart for her to pull. But she is an excellent milker. The previous owner was not milking her. Said the last time she milked her she was getting a half gallon a day. She gives me a GALLON a day...Between the three milkers, Molly, Grace and Willow, I get 2-2 1/2gallons of milk a day!<br />
<a href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-QrRBpRUqT28/T9diwEYD7UI/AAAAAAAAAv8/ugkbk75BxG8/s1600/goat%2Bfarm%2Band%2Bdorks%2B018.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left:1em; margin-right:1em"><img border="0" height="214" width="320" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-QrRBpRUqT28/T9diwEYD7UI/AAAAAAAAAv8/ugkbk75BxG8/s320/goat%2Bfarm%2Band%2Bdorks%2B018.JPG" /></a><br />
This is her daughter Sandy she is also large and I believe will be a good milker when it's her turn.<br />
<a href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-ovrRJJF0g30/T9dmA9WcMqI/AAAAAAAAAwM/_44rwXEmrUg/s1600/001.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left:1em; margin-right:1em"><img border="0" height="214" width="320" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-ovrRJJF0g30/T9dmA9WcMqI/AAAAAAAAAwM/_44rwXEmrUg/s320/001.JPG" /></a><br />
This is a pot of yogurt. I have got to find ways to use up all this milk! The yogurt is perfect for the kids for smoothies. Also making ice cream, and buttermilk...who knew how easy making buttermilk was. I just added a 1/2c. of regular buttermilk to a quart of milk and let it sit on the counter overnight. Then back into the fridge and it is ready for use!<br />
<a href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-_tKKYWatd0I/T9dmBNkgfDI/AAAAAAAAAwY/BfQYB7aHu6w/s1600/goat%2Bfarm%2Band%2Bdorks%2B033.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left:1em; margin-right:1em"><img border="0" height="214" width="320" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-_tKKYWatd0I/T9dmBNkgfDI/AAAAAAAAAwY/BfQYB7aHu6w/s320/goat%2Bfarm%2Band%2Bdorks%2B033.JPG" /></a><br />
This is the start of the solar electric fence we are stringing in the field to pasture all the goats. It will cut back on feed and we can get another steer to raise without worrying where to put it!<br />
<a href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-gv8u-UTHx9k/T9dmBZ1KB2I/AAAAAAAAAwk/Eo2vp8loSjE/s1600/goat%2Bfarm%2Band%2Bdorks%2B028.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left:1em; margin-right:1em"><img border="0" height="214" width="320" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-gv8u-UTHx9k/T9dmBZ1KB2I/AAAAAAAAAwk/Eo2vp8loSjE/s320/goat%2Bfarm%2Band%2Bdorks%2B028.JPG" /></a><br />
This is the separation fence we added to the goat yard to keep the kids(goats, not mine) outside and away from the bigger goats that bully them. I didn't even get pics of the other stuff we are doing. I have got to show you Hubby's chicken tractor built with stuff we have laying around, our garden and my children who are growing as fast as the weeds! <br />
I feel so blessed with all that God has provided for us...talk about overflowing!<br />
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<br />Domestic Goddesshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15460796074640596194noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-170191242641159913.post-15639238195925190042012-04-26T18:07:00.000-07:002012-04-26T18:07:14.384-07:00Gratitude<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-yRRgnOIM3Yw/T5nuAVGdX6I/AAAAAAAAAtE/FJDIHgyaxCY/s1600/grocery%2Blist%2B002.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left:1em; margin-right:1em"><img border="0" height="241" width="320" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-yRRgnOIM3Yw/T5nuAVGdX6I/AAAAAAAAAtE/FJDIHgyaxCY/s320/grocery%2Blist%2B002.JPG" /></a></div><br />
This is a few weeks old, but I love that I have help planning the weekly menu. I'm really grateful for all the recipes I find on blogs and other websites! <br />
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I'm waiting for my Hubby to come home tonight. He might not be home until midnight but at least he is local this week. <br />
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I have to take this time to show some gratitude.<br />
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I tend to whine quite a bit....waaa my Husband works out of town too much<br />
I am soooo thankful he has a job <br />
waaa my kids are driving me crazy<br />
I am thankful they are healthy and creative and strong minded and independent<br />
waaa I'm not good enough<br />
I am thankful that I am smart, funny, creative, strong minded, independent, passionate, and able to do whatever I put my mind to do.<br />
waaa I'm a horrible housekeeper<br />
I am thankful that I am not on Hoarders and no one has ever gotten food poisoning from my cooking. <br />
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I'm sure I whine about other things too but I'll stop there! <br />
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<br />Domestic Goddesshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15460796074640596194noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-170191242641159913.post-15173225369862031612012-04-24T10:51:00.000-07:002012-04-24T10:51:24.395-07:00Lost a goatI was recently trying to sell off some of my goats. I sold Saturn and her new kid and was searching for a new home for soupy.<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-ABCbd1KtrXY/T5bdyqkPOSI/AAAAAAAAAs4/HRBY0ENoRoI/s1600/saturn%2B007.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left:1em; margin-right:1em"><img border="0" height="241" width="320" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-ABCbd1KtrXY/T5bdyqkPOSI/AAAAAAAAAs4/HRBY0ENoRoI/s320/saturn%2B007.JPG" /></a></div><br />
Unfortunately something went wrong with her. She seemed depressed. I thought it was because her mom was gone. I felt horrible. Knowing how social goats are, I thought if I put her in with the triplets it might help. It didn't. In fact she seemed to get worse. She was just very quiet and not herself. I just kept thinking that it was because of not having her mom around. It wasn't until she started with the scours that I thought she might be sick. I tried giving her electrolytes, making sure she had plenty of fresh water and hay. I gave her extra love and attention and watched. But she didn't get better. Sunday morning Robert found her laying outside in the goat pen and not in the shed. I went to give her a dose of antibiotics and discovered my antibiotics were expired. So we got another bottle of electrolytes into her and I ran for antibiotics. I've never done any of the injections before, we don't do it very often. Hubby was out of town working, so I felt for a fleshy area and gave her the injection. I don't know if I did it wrong or if she was too far gone, but an hour later she was gone. Isaiah was pretty upset. she was such a sweet goat. My brother happened to pull in to visit as they discovered the goat had passed and offered to help dig a hole. So the boys and my brother went out back and dug a 3 1/2 foot deep hole to bury the goat. It's really sad when we lose an animal. But this has definitely spurred a clean out mode in all of us. Pens are being cleaned out, goats are getting dosed with diamotceous earth. not sure if I spelled that right but added to their food it help get rid of both internal and external parasites. <br />
We talked to some local farmers and they said it sounded like cochcidosis not sure if I spelled that right either. But they suggested that we treat all the critters because our goats and chickens are housed together.<br />
I guess this is what we will be doing. <br />
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The work doesn't ever seem to end here at the ranch...Did I mention we are working on a name for our little homestead? <br />
Hubby is out job hunting right now. Looking for something that will allow him more freedom but still provide health care benefits. The company he has been working for for over a year has begun working out of town every week. While that may be good for some families, the money is not worth Dad being gone for 7 or 8 days at a time for our family. <br />
So we are going to have to make ends meet in other ways. The fact that Hubby was self employed for most of his working life, gives us the confidence that we can subsidize the regular income with some side jobs and selling our hand made and home grown products. <br />Domestic Goddesshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15460796074640596194noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-170191242641159913.post-47593181414251528722012-04-18T08:46:00.000-07:002012-04-18T08:46:11.343-07:00People are like Easter Eggs? I'm rambling again!People are like Easter eggs. We all start out relatively the same. Maybe a little bigger, smaller, rounder, maybe brown, white pink or green. But then we get dunked into life...or dye and that experience is what makes us different, still the same inside but different.<br />
<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-Bs1znDk-onE/T47Yu41VESI/AAAAAAAAAsg/G5symHaktUg/s1600/easter%2Begg%2Bdyeing%2B006.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left:1em; margin-right:1em"><img border="0" height="241" width="320" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-Bs1znDk-onE/T47Yu41VESI/AAAAAAAAAsg/G5symHaktUg/s320/easter%2Begg%2Bdyeing%2B006.JPG" /></a></div>Pretty soon you look around and everybody has had one experience or another coloring their lives, their personalities. But yet we all fit in the egg carton<br />
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But if you notice on some Easter eggs, some are broken or cracked, allowing the dye to get inside and scar the inside. Sometimes it makes the egg even prettier and some times it makes it undesirable to eat. <br />
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Life is like that for people too. Sometimes we are broken and cracked and allow the experiences to affect us on the inside. Some people use it to grow stronger and more beautiful, while others allow it to eat at them and make themselves ugly and unapproachable.<br />
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And then there are the eggs that you have to peel bit by bit to get to the inside and end up shredding half the egg in the process...<br />
people are like that too...holding themselves together tightly not allowing anyone or anything to get inside. <br />
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But no matter what, once the shells are off, and broken, shredded, dyed doesn't matter when we make egg salad.<br />
And when people lose their shells, broken, shredded, scarred doesn't matter as Jesus leads us to Heaven.<br />
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<br />Domestic Goddesshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15460796074640596194noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-170191242641159913.post-17906363454551358632012-04-09T19:31:00.000-07:002012-04-09T19:31:03.740-07:00Goat MamaI'm a goat mama for sure. The triplets are really keeping me hopping and Molly their real Mama has been keeping me just as busy. Thankfully Molly has been giving me about a gallon of milk a day. That's fabulous because I need three quarts a day to feed her kids...I was just going to use milk replacer but it is so expensive! And If she's pumping out I'm going to use it. I have more than enough for my soap now stored in the freezer. Now that my kids are going back to school I'll have some left for yogurt making...I hope to try making that next week.<br />
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I had to do some "culling" so to speak. I sold Saturn and her new kid last week to a goat farm in NY. They sent pictures of her relaxing in her new home and the little doeling frolicking with the other baby goats, She fits right in. I still have Soupy who needs a home. She is too small to breed with a beor and really ends up being more of a pet. I can't afford to feed something that does not have a purpose here. I had her posted for sale and someone was planning on coming to get her and then never showed up. I have her with the triplets, the other does are really pushy with her. I hope I can find her a home soon before my Hubby decides to take her to auction.<br />
<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-eH09exHaQjk/T4OYc-FruaI/AAAAAAAAAsI/0N42-w5pORE/s1600/saturn%2B007.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left:1em; margin-right:1em"><img border="0" height="241" width="320" src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-eH09exHaQjk/T4OYc-FruaI/AAAAAAAAAsI/0N42-w5pORE/s320/saturn%2B007.JPG" /></a></div><br />
My Hubby was creative with what we had laying around and built this nifty crate to haul goats. The front end has hinges on top. We put the crate in the back of MY truck lift the front end and load the goats in. Lower the front end and close the tailgate and there you go, hopefully escape proof!<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-E-J7z0Gvkw0/T4OZDzvQaII/AAAAAAAAAsU/eAIPoYCXhGA/s1600/saturn%2B001.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left:1em; margin-right:1em"><img border="0" height="241" width="320" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-E-J7z0Gvkw0/T4OZDzvQaII/AAAAAAAAAsU/eAIPoYCXhGA/s320/saturn%2B001.JPG" /></a></div><br />
Yeah Charlie was trying it out! <br />
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Other than the goat drama going on things have been the normal spring busy. Hubby has been working out of town every week which isn't much fun but until he can find something else this is what we will deal with. It is what it is and I am so thankful for his job and the sacrifices he makes for us.<br />
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Tomorrow I am making another batch of soap. I sold almost all of my last batch. Hubby made me molds that I am going to try out. Hopefully I'll have pictures to post if they don't leak!. But with these molds I can work out two batches a week. Keeping it simple. No fancy scents...just using essential oils. This batch will be eucalyptus and my next will be unscented. So I have time to order more essential oils! <br />
I also need to make more salve. I actually have people asking for it. It's really exciting. My own daughter, who I constantly argue and fight with, told me she liked the salve, it made her zit go away over night. Maybe I can get her to help make the next batch?<br />
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Well, Off to measure out my oils for the morning.Domestic Goddesshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15460796074640596194noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-170191242641159913.post-23489187238696274002012-03-21T11:53:00.000-07:002012-03-21T11:53:07.456-07:00And A SingleOur Beor cross goat Saturn had her kid this morning. I sat out there on goat watch, because I missed Molly's birth. There wasn't any sign of Saturn having her kid other than she was making small quiet bleating sounds. Last night all she did was yell, so I put her first daughter in with her to help calm her. But this morning all looked normal so when the neighbor wanted to talk to me about pulling bushes out of the drain ditch I didn't think anything of it. Why I was just outside the barn, I would HEAR if anything was going on. But No, when I walked back into the barn. I checked Molly's kids and heard a baby bleating, looked in Saturn's pen and there was a kid! <div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-45sP57jHNF4/T2ogYtr__wI/AAAAAAAAAr8/xnqKmsmUNY8/s1600/baby%2Bgirl%2B001.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left:1em; margin-right:1em"><img border="0" height="241" width="320" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-45sP57jHNF4/T2ogYtr__wI/AAAAAAAAAr8/xnqKmsmUNY8/s320/baby%2Bgirl%2B001.JPG" /></a></div><br />
How I missed it I just don't know. But she is a solid red color with the pinned up ears. Too cute. I'm trying to decide if I want to bottle feed all the babies and go ahead and milk Saturn or not...need to discuss with Hubby. It would solve a housing issue if I did.<br />
On Friday we are getting another Milk goat. A Beor/Alpine heavy milker already bred. I guess I really have to get my butt in gear collecting all I need for soap, cheese, yogurt, and lotions. I'm going to have alot of milk! <br />
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I did my first craft show on Saturday. I sold $62 worth of my soap and salve and of course eggs. My eggs sold the fastest! And I almost had a bidding war over the last two dozen! I had all my children with me and my seven year old was "challenging" I don't know how other women take their children to craft fairs and make any money. <br />
One good thing that happened was that I met a business couple who wanted to know if they could buy my soap and salve to sell in their shop. I am hoping that we will have a little extra cash left out of our tax money that I can buy supplies to make more soap and get containers for lotion. My Hubby was very excited that I sold stuff. I was discouraged. I felt I wasted a whole day sitting there. He said you SOLD your goods, you were seen and you made contacts. I am proud of you. It really touched my heart that he was proud of me. He is excited that I can start selling my own products and is willing to help me by building molds and preparing an herb garden. So we will see where this leads.Domestic Goddesshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15460796074640596194noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-170191242641159913.post-7559322157110890302012-03-20T05:46:00.001-07:002012-03-20T05:46:43.230-07:00TRIPLETS!!!!!!<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-FBSNi6CVscw/T2h7gMaKhvI/AAAAAAAAArY/pMwB_ftzzV8/s1600/triplets%2B049.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left:1em; margin-right:1em"><img border="0" height="241" width="320" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-FBSNi6CVscw/T2h7gMaKhvI/AAAAAAAAArY/pMwB_ftzzV8/s320/triplets%2B049.JPG" /></a></div><br />
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Born FINALLY this morning around 4am. The little black one is a buckling and the two white/brown/black ones are darling little does! So precious! The smallest little doe seems to be ignored so I am becoming the goat mama right away. I had colostrum frozen from last year and thawed it and bottle fed her. I love bottle feeding babies. Now she has a full belly and is bouncing around with her brother and sister.<br />Domestic Goddesshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15460796074640596194noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-170191242641159913.post-29671845537421139142012-01-24T11:31:00.000-08:002012-01-24T11:31:47.175-08:00I didn't forget!I didn't forget...I was distracted. Hubby was home this weekend and of course we had much to do together. <br />
Well, we got out of the diesel sucking truck! Yay.... but into another vehicle payment. But I have to say this payment is MUCH smaller, the truck is much smaller and the gas use is much smaller. So our monthly payment and gas usage will go down several hundred dollars a month. It feels like a weight has been lifted. It frees up more money a month to pay down other debt, if that makes sense.<br />
I found it ironic that the loan company that financed the new truck is the same loan company that holds our mortgage. When we tried to refinance the mortgage we were told our debt to income ratio was too high and we were stuck with the rates we had. But apparently, when the dealership paid off the diesel truck, it allowed room for the new loan. So in April we are going to apply to refinance again...hopefully it will be successful. <br />
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I have to say this farm girl in training LOVES the new truck, because it is smaller I am more confident driving it. Hubby says if I clean out my van he will just take that to work and let me have the truck, because I am the one doing all the farm hauling...picking up feed and hay. I'm not going to mention that I only do that about once a month. But I had to get hay in my van yesterday because it was raining and there is no cover on this truck bed. <br />
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I went grocery shopping today with my list, and spent $40. I made up my menu from what I had at home and just had to add a few things and 10 of the 40 was a can of coffee! <br />
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Yesterday when I got feed I was talking to a few farmers. Got a new lead on hay, learned how to feed my Boer goats, and was filled in on the local goings on...Really, men gossip as much as women!<br />
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Ok now my kiddos are home and I have to feed them. They are starving!<br />
<br />Domestic Goddesshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15460796074640596194noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-170191242641159913.post-46712025717062526872012-01-20T13:01:00.000-08:002012-01-20T13:01:19.209-08:00Natural cleaningI scrubbed my toilet today! I know... really...why would I post about my toilet. Well, my housekeeping skills are, shall we say...a bit under developed. But I have been cleaning out and cleaning up. I got my handy dandy steaming machine out and said I'm cleaning the bathroom. I added a few drops of tea tree oil to the water. Tea tree oil is a natural antiseptic, anti fungal, disinfectant...it does it all! Anyway I steam cleaned the entire bathroom including the toilet. But inside the toilet was nasty. We don't use our upstairs bathroom very often, you would think it would stay cleaner. But alas it's ignored. So the ring around the toilet bowl didn't come out with a swish or with a sprinkling of borax or scrubbing with baking soda. So I thought back to those British cleaning ladies and remembered "the pumice stone". I slipped my rubber gloves back on and dove in. That stone knocked off the build up in a matter of moments! I have a sparkly white toilet bowl now and the freshest smelling bathroom without using nasty, harsh chemicals. <br />
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I also use baking soda and a half lemon to scrub the tub. The baking soda does the scrubbing, the reaction with the lemon juice helps with lifting out the dirt and cutting soap scum, and the lemon peel releases the natural oils from the peel that soaks into the porcelain leaving the tub lemony fresh. <br />
Vinegar water with a drop or two of essential oils cleaned the floor and baseboards. <br />
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So far, I have cleaned the upstairs hallway and all the door frames and doors, my bedroom, my youngest's bedroom and the bathroom. My daughter did a great job cleaning her room and the boys...well, we'll be working on their rooms. My next project for this weekend is getting my sewing room organized. It looks like a room from the Hoarders Series. I'll post a before and after pic of that room! <br />
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I've posted a few items on Craigslist to sell to help pay off some bills. If I can go through more of our junk I might be able to sell some more. <br />
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I've been listening to Joyce Meyers on CD and the topic that really hit home was about being faithful with what you are already blessed with. She asks...are you faithful with paying your bills, are you faithful with caring for your car, are you faithful with the dirty laundry... Oh my. I keep telling my hubby that he needs a positive attitude and that if we complain about what we do have why would He give us more...Let me pull the log out of my eye so I can see that I am not so faithful with the blessings God has given me...taking care of what I do have shows God I am faithful, sharing the extra that I have shows God I am faithful, taking responsibility for my actions shows God I am faithful.<br />
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Natural cleaning is having such a new meaning to me.Domestic Goddesshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15460796074640596194noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-170191242641159913.post-51705064967408797852012-01-19T10:41:00.000-08:002012-01-19T10:41:12.745-08:00Buying in Bulk...I did my grocery shopping last week. I made up a meal plan for two weeks of meals and made my grocery list to go along with it. I often go to the Amish store which sells foods in large quantities and at great prices. For example: I buy oatmeal for .59/lb/ I got a 7.25lb bag of rolled oats for $4.28. I separate it into gallon freezer bags and keep it in the freezer. I pay .49/lb for flour I can get a variety of flours at that price but I like the pastry flour the best for baking. I buy raisins and dried cranberries at less than half the price at the grocery store. lunch meats and cheeses are the same quality or better than the grocery store. And I can take my own jugs and fill them with apple cider vinegar...I just think that's fun!<br />
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Now I don't buy in bulk only because it's a money saver, I have to buy large quantities because I have a large family. Well, some of the homesteading blogs would laugh with their eight to twelve kids, but I feel we are a large family. I feel it even more when all their friends are over for dinner and my family of six becomes ten or more! <br />
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Now that I have teenagers...I hide food. I put labels on my cheese that say ...I'm using this for a meal, don't eat it as a snack!!! Keeping snacks around is crazy. I bake a few batches of muffins and throw a bunch in the freezer. A few days later I check the stash and there are two muffins left. Now if they were getting heavy and laying around I would shut off the oven but they're not! They play outside, one runs, the others build forts and rabbit traps(they don't ever work, so he can keep building them) One dances to her music...then their friends come over, and they terrorize each other...It's fun. But then they eat and their friends eat and then after dinner they want a snack or a snack before dinner to hold them over. It's crazy. But as long as I can buy in bulk I can afford to feed them all. <br />
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I do watch what they drink. We hardly ever have soda. It's Milk, Water or Tea. And I do complain about the milk because I have to buy it at $4 a gallon. I have decided to put a limit on the milk purchasing. I was spending $16 a week on milk alone. Don't tell me it's not worth raising a goat. I think it's cheaper to feed the goat than buy milk 52 weeks a year!<br />
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Which brings me to my goats...I'm excited one of my does, is due in mid Feb and my dairy doe is due the first week of March. I love baby goats! I'm trying to talk my hubby into going into strictly dairy goats. We get the milk and can sell or eat the the kids...that does sound mean, but I grow them up to eat them. <br />
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Ahh but it is getting time for them to come home for school so I need to make up a snack because they will be starving!Domestic Goddesshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15460796074640596194noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-170191242641159913.post-33940719763805218012012-01-13T09:55:00.000-08:002012-01-13T09:55:19.442-08:00Impulse buyingToday's Daily Goal with frugally sustainable challenge is to plan how not to impulse buy. <br />
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I am pretty good about staying out of the stores but I JUST, as in two minutes ago, realized that I have made 3 purchases from Amazon.com in a week. I ordered a book for my son yesterday and I got the book in the mail today- it hasn't even come out of the account yet! See I justified ordering from Amazon because I discovered that I didn't have to use a credit card and could basically use my debit card. 13 dollars here and 14 dollars there... this week I spent over $40! <br />
That can't happen anymore!<br />
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Now grocery shopping is where I impulse buy. I have to be ready with my menu plan and grocery list in hand and all by myself. I spend more when my Hubby is along, if I go with my girlfriends or my kiddos. Today I did veer off the list because I got a good deal on a product I use all the time. It is being discontinued and the price was knocked down from 16.99 to 9.99 for 101oz can of olive oil. I'm actually excited about the find! I did some bad impulse shopping too. I bought fried chicken at the deli and a soda... I could probably lose some body clutter as well if I would stop that kind of impulse shopping/eating!<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-axzP3VjoykM/TxBuz39nT1I/AAAAAAAAAq0/Yzc9XHtxd80/s1600/012.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left:1em; margin-right:1em"><img border="0" height="320" width="241" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-axzP3VjoykM/TxBuz39nT1I/AAAAAAAAAq0/Yzc9XHtxd80/s320/012.JPG" /></a></div><br />
Well, it is really chilly here today. I am going to pop a chicken in a pot and make some broth for next weeks soup. I'm going to get rid of some books and go through the boys clothes and pack a few bags for good will. I even have a lift chair I need to find a new home. Wish I knew someone who needed it--Domestic Goddesshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15460796074640596194noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-170191242641159913.post-20157993171808501732012-01-12T15:12:00.000-08:002012-01-12T15:12:54.650-08:00Decluttering---So much for a committed daily post! My Hubby was home for three days, so I had no time to sit in front of the computer. Todays Daily goal was to make a plan for getting the clutter out of our lives. I have lots of clutter. Both the kind you can see (stuff) and the kind you can't (debt, emotions, obligations)<br />
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I had already started to declutter before I saw the topic on the frugal challenge. I was on the phone with my SIL and noticed my book shelf. I have a host of devotional and Christian books, the sad thing was, there were romance and vampire books right beside them, mixed in among them. And at that moment I felt compelled to pull all those "trash" books out. A verse came to me about not being able to serve two masters at the same time, then the verse about only allowing pure and good things into my life and the verse about a mouth can not say both blessings and curses... Let's just say I removed the books quickly. I still have two more bookcases to go through. <br />
I also started cleaning out my cupboards--- it's really not good to have your glass pans falling out right?! <br />
So slowly but surely, I'm getting the stuff out.<br />
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That's the material stuff...<br />
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I also have to work on the "unseen" clutter. Debt, is a big clutter. It's an awful feeling that you can lose everything you worked so hard for if the paycheck is too small. So I am trying to do what I can to help. Not buying more, selling what I can and creating items to sell. I think working on the debt will help get rid of the emotional clutter. <br />
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Well I have a plan and I just need to stay focused enough to see it through. I really do like to de clutter, but I have to think about doing it, it doesn't just come naturally...<br />
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Now for fun.. Here's a picture of the note I found on my night table last night ...<br />
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If he brings something back home, he's got to get rid of something else!<br />Domestic Goddesshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15460796074640596194noreply@blogger.com2