A Lot Of Catching Up To Do

The last post was about the tractor not running right. Well it turns out an algae build up in the fuel lines. I had no idea. The dealer suggested that I add a fuel additive with algaecide to prevent this in the future. Done.

We paid off most of our debts so Lisa suggested that I retire to work the homestead. So, my last day at my previous employment was September 3rd 2021.

We got a call a few weeks ago about some baby squirrels. The nest had fallen out of the tree during a thunderstorm. The people whos yard they fell into were doing all they could to rescue them but they didn’t have the time or knowledge to do it. There were 4 but they lost one right before we got there. They were very dehydrated and it took a couple days of regular feedings before that was fixed. They are now healthy and very feisty little squirrels. We moved them to an outside cage yesterday. Well all but one. Noah escaped and made his way back to the house where we saved him from one of the cats who chased him up the Bell pole. We will reunite him with his sisters today and then open the cage in about a week once they get used to being outside.

It’s been a very wet year so we’ve had a good year for muscadine and scuppernong grapes. I missed most of the muscadine harvest due to back problems but scuppernongs are still falling. I’ve got one gallon of muscadine wine and 2 gallons of scuppernong wine bubbling on the counter. I was able to make 10 pints of jelly with more to come.

I’ve started selectively laying down trees to open up more pasture and increase our firewood pile. Starting with pine and sweetgum trees. Once they are removed I will thin the oaks as needed. I hate cutting anything that produces food and animals love it when the acorns start to fall.

Olives heifer, Sassy, is nearly grown and we are hoping Olive will have another in the near future so we can have fresh milk again.

Violet gave us a little bull calf at the end of July. A good friend of Lisa’s runs a nonprofit Monkey rescue. She wants to add a petting zoo to help raise funds so we donated the little guy to the cause. We didn’t need another bull he will have a good home so it was a Win for all.

I have passed the General HAM radio test.  My computer/radio area is nearly organized and I have my antennas up. It’s time to refocus on studying for the Extra Class license.

With all the rain the garden wasn’t what it could have or should have been. A lot of green beans and some purple hull peas but everything else drowned or was choked out by the weeds.   

Roller-coaster life of owning animals

Over the last couple of months we’ve lost or had to put down several animals due to old age or poor health. I guess we are in the middle of the renewal cycle. We started the homestead almost 15 years ago and so many of our pets and breed-stock are hitting their age limit.

Most recently I had to put down my TV buddy Bruce the cat. He had been sick for a while and neither of our vets could figure out what was wrong with him. Finally decided it was some kind of cancer. He is no longer in pain and is resting in our Pet Cemetery.

Sadly all this heartache is just the beginning. We have 3 house dogs and 2 goats remaining from our original six that are all showing signs of advanced age.

On a much happier note we have 2 new additions to the Homestead. Maxwell or Max for short was completely unplanned but a welcome addition. Someone dropped him off in my mother-in-law’s yard. She had him for a couple days but just couldn’t take care of him as much as she wanted to. She is on a fixed income and already has a dog. So now Max sleeps on Lisa’s pillow.

The other addition is Waylon as in Jennings. He is an 8 week old full but unregistered KuneKune boar. He is a charmer already. He is learning to sit like Hank did and loves his belly rubbed as much as he loves to eat.

New Bees and Milk Buddies

After I lost all the bees last year I’m starting out fresh in 2018. I moved the hives again. They are close to where they were originally. Much more sun there. I had moved them closer to the house and my daily route when feeding the animals. Unfortunately there wasn’t as much sun there and I think that had a lot to do with the problems last year.

Lisa picked up the bees from the post office. She said it was much creepier than she expected with all the buzzing going on behind her. Guess I’ll have to go back to doing all the bee retrievals in the future.

This morning all was still at the hives. I could hear a little buzzing but not much. It was colder than I expected. I bet there is a lot of activity there now that it’s warmed up.

We rescued two kittens from the dump a couple of months ago. Turned them into barn cats. They have already killed a couple rats but they are also addicted to milk.

Guss the gander always shows up to look over the milk process too. This time of year he’s getting aggressive and at times tries reach through the fence with that long neck of his to pinch me.

 

Mishaps, Rescues, and a new calf

     On Thanksgiving day I noticed Abby wasn’t with her mother and brother. I really didn’t think much of it. It wouldn’t have been the first time a baby was left sleeping next to a tree while everyone else moved off only to wake up bleating for it’s mom once it realized it was alone. Still, as I fed the other animals I called to the goats and I never heard her cry out. I decided to make a quick look around even though I didn’t have time because everyone was loading up to celebrate Thanksgiving with relatives. I continued to call out while I walked the area. I noticed something dark hanging in a fallen dead cedar. At first I thought it was just a bag or something the dogs had brought home. As I got closer I could tell it was Abby. She wasn’t making a sound nor was she moving. I thought she was dead until I got close enough to see she was holding her head up. She had been playing on the down tree and slipped catching her leg between the limbs and there she hung, front feet barely touching the ground. I got her out and checked her over. Nothing appeared to be broken but she wasn’t using the leg at first.

     Over the next few days she began to put some weight on it. I still caught her a few times and checked for any sign of a break but everything felt fine. Then this last weekend I noticed I noticed she wasn’t using it at all and it appeared to be swinging unusually. I checked and it was obviously broke above the ankle. Last night with Lisa’s help we put a splint on it. Either the swelling was keeping me from noticing the break or it may have been cracked and something caused it to break after she started using it again. Either way she will be fine in a week or so.

     For a few weeks now we have been feeding some dropped off cats and kittens at the local dump. We decided to take in the remaining kittens this weekend. No we didn’t need anymore cats but one of the kittens was sick and we couldn’t leave it like that. I started putting some antibiotics in their water but the sick one continued to get worse rather than better. So it went to the vet for some stronger medicine. One day and the rattle in it purr is gone. We will keep them in a dog kennel in the barn for a week or two and then open the door and let them be barn cats. Hopefully they will stay. The last two we had at the barn left after about a year and decided they liked living around the house better.

     Last week our oldest grandson Jacob found a baby squirrel. He named it Brandi. It was kind of beat up so it was placed in a cage outside until I had a chance to look at it. It was obvious to me that it was much younger than anyone else thought so I put it in a bird cage in the house with some old rags to burrow in. We have been feeding it with a syringe and a special nipple. Yesterday was the first time we have seen her out climbing around the cage. I have no idea what we are going to do with her if she can’t be released. One of her front feet/wrist may be broken. Hope it heals well. Time will tell.

     Olive had her calf yesterday in a rainstorm. I think it is a little heifer but I haven’t gotten close enough to be 100% sure. The pictures are not that good because the rain was reflecting some of the flash making them look darker. Plus you can see the rain streaking the pictures. I’ll get better pictures later. I’ll go back to milking in a couple days. NO MORE STORE BOUGHT MILK and CHEESE!!!

Lastly here is a picture of Jacob cleaning up around our little barn and refilling the compost bins. He likes driving the tractor.

Friday the 13th was awful!

Friday morning Lisa noticed that Winnie was not acting normal. She was drooling and wasn’t breathing right. She asked me to check on her and tell her what I thought. When I got to her she was acting more normal but her breathing still wasn’t right. She was taking breaths by moving her stomach rather than her chest. I said she needed to go to the vet.

Lisa said it was obvious Winnie was in pain when she was helped into the van but on the way she she got better. She worked her way to the front and laid her head on Lisa’s lap. When they got there Winnie jumped on the front seat and hopped out as if nothing was wrong. She walked into the vets office looking completely normal. Less than an hour later she was gone! The vet said one minute she was sitting up in the cage and the next she was gone. Died before he even had a chance to evaluate her.

When I spoke to him he really had no idea what could have taken her so quickly and we didn’t want to pay for an autopsy. I took her home and buried her in the pet cemetery next to her dad Shep.

We are so thankful that her puppies were all weaned and in their new homes.

RIP old girl you will be missed. I will miss seeing you carrying your bowl around as if you hadn’t been fed.

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On a brighter note we were informed that Kim, Tony, and Jasmine were going to give Lisa a little Nigerian doeling for her birthday. They had 4 to choose from and we picked out a little black one with white markings. For some reason I failed to get a picture so it will come later on. She is only a few weeks old so she will be staying there for a while longer.

After all this time Dozier the rescued squirrel still remembered Lisa. There were several squirrels eating chicken feed and Lisa started calling to them and they all ran for the trees except one. He hung around and she gave him an ear of corn. He never got close enough to touch but he was just out of reach. I thought I had a picture of them but it didn’t take. I guess it was just a bad weekend for me and the camera.

New additions to the farm

Otis is an 11 week old Great Pyrenees. In this picture, at 9 weeks, he is standing next to one of our Yorkies. He is settling in well and not causing too much trouble for a puppy. He is one of the most laid-back puppies you will ever meet.

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The second addition is a hound I rescued from the dump. He had been out there for 4 days scavenging for anything to eat. He was starting to look thin and bony so I brought him home. I can’t watch an animal just wither away. I hope to fine a home for him but if not well find a use for him. At first he didn’t get into anything but the puppy in him finally came out once he got comfortable. I’ve been working with him a little to teach him some basic commands like sit with little success.

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Dozier Release Day

Yesterday was release day for Dozier the squirrel. We opened his cage after his 3 weeks of getting used to the outside. He is doing very well. We didn’t make the mistake with him that we did with Stella. She was far too friendly with us, the dogs and probably didn’t have enough fear of fox, coyotes or hawks.

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We also moved Georgia the goose out. The idea of having a pet goose as “Mother and Father Goose” do is just too much trouble if you aren’t home all day. She is still very friendly and I expect she always will be but she is an outside goose as she should be.

City squirrel goes to the country

We have a new rescue. A lady Lisa works with, but from the Atlanta office delivered this little guy to us yesterday. One of their neighbor boys found it but really didn’t know what to do with it. They asked us if we would take care of it and of course we said yes. They brought the neighbor kids with them and they fell in love with all the animals especially Patty, the youngest mini-horse.
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Solomon

Here is our latest rescue. Our Vet needed to find a home for this little guy and we were the first suckers I mean people he thought of. Lisa has named him Solomon. Originally we were going to have him fixed but Lisa wants to breed him to Loretta, our AGH/KuneKune cross, to sell the piglets as pets. Allot of the people that were interested in out piglets wanted small pets. We have no idea how big this guy will get but I hope he stays relatively small.

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We have him in a playpen with a litter box for now. He used the liter box within the first few minutes.  We still don’t know how we will handle his housing , inside or outside, yet. Well have to play it by ear.

 

Rosco – update

We took Rosco to the vet again and had him x-rayed to make sure there weren’t any metal or other foreign objects.  The vet still believes he is suffering from “limber neck” botulism that just won’t go away. This has been a long rollercoaster with no end in sight. Two or three days where he can’t stand up and then a week or so where he is fine. Over and over again. He has been consulting with other vets but so far there haven’t been any other ideas.