The Living Green Farm Journal

"Sweet fields arrayed in living green, and rivers of delight"

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Thursday, August 30th

Getting stuff done!



The girls and I went down to the farm a couple weekends ago, and for once I got just about everything that I intended to do, done. What a rarity! Either my expectations are getting lower, or I got lucky. Usually I'm down at the farm, and there's some tool that I forgot to bring, or I'm running out of daylight, or there's no one to help... and the job is left unfinished. But not this time!

BatteriesInstalled (23k image)

Of course, one thing at the top of my list was getting the batteries off the pallet in front of the garage (where they have been for weeks, if not months), and into the battery shed. I had puzzled over how to achieve this for quite some time, as each battery weighs a formidable 270 pounds. I had even purchased some 5/8" all-thread rod, shackles and chain from Winks hardware in Portland; my thought was that we could assemble the shackles onto the rod, and the chain onto the shackles, and use four people to lift and carry each battery. When we got down to it, however, it turned out that this approach was overkill. The picture above shows the final result of our battery moving labors.
Kurt on 08.30.07 @ 06:49 AM PST [more...]

Saturday, August 18th

Firewood, et al



A few weeks back, I was at work in a hazel (filbert) orchard. Remember that earlier posting, "An Improbable Method of Reproduction"? Western Oregon is prime country from growing these shrubs, which we train up as trees. The nuts are collected and sold at a great price for the low labor put into them. And the orchards are stunning. They remind me of fairy tales, when someone gets lost in the deep dark woods. The canopy formed in these orchards allows nearly no light to penetrate, and the ground is intentionally swept bare. Part of my summer job involved going to these orchards weekly and checking moth traps. It was my favorite part of the job. Anyways, I was in an orchard one day and noticed a huge berm of cut hazelwood. It was stacked 6-8 ft tall, 15-20 feet wide, and ran 50 feet from a creekside to the roadway. And it had blackberries growing over it. I contacted the orchard owner, whom invited us to "clean it up". A new hazel blight has reached the valley and is requiring growers to extensively prune their orchards, and often replace whole orchards with varieties that are resistant. So these rounds were culled trees and branches, which means they often had a diameter of 8-10", which is ideal for the woodstove. We were caring for the neighbor's horse at the time, and they had given us use of their truck in return. We made four trips out to the hazel orchard and retrieved probably close to 5 cords of wood. Not all of it is dry, and not all of it is very dense. But it's a huge step towards procuring our winter fuel needs.


hazeltruck (168k image)
Channa on 08.18.07 @ 10:08 AM PST [more...]

Sunday, August 5th

Wee Wee Wee, All the Way Home



Friday evening Nate and I went and picked up a piglet! It's another first for the farm, and Nate's already enjoying the experience.
instraw (272k image)
Channa on 08.05.07 @ 09:36 PM PST [more...]

Thursday, August 2nd

We Still Feel Badly About It.


Rainbow's just fine and seems fully recovered from her trauma. Yes, we did it: we had her de-horned. rainbownursing (241k image)

It was a difficult decision for us. We have always been intimidated and wary of Aura's horns. It's not that she's mean, or she wants to use them on us. She just doesn't always know that they are there, and when she swings her head around to scratch her belly, she doesn't realize a soft tender waist may be directly in her path. So it makes us wary.

She did demonstrate she was acutely aware of her horns when Rainbow was born. She would threaten and jab at us with them when we tried to get close. But that's the only time we've had any indication she would use them. And we decided that if the calf was a heifer we would have her dehorned.

But one thing led to another and Rainbow somehow became something other than a newborn calf. Her buds were starting to show on her head. We knew we had to do something, if we were going to at all. We had second thoughts, and thirds, and went back and forth for a week. Finally, we agreed to do it, at least this once. Because she was older than most calves when they are disbudded, and it was our first time, we decided to have a trained vet do it.

So Tuesday morning we borrowed the neighbor's truck. While I was at work, and with Rebecca's help, Nate lifted the growing heifer into the hay strewn truck bed. Nate says he enjoyed watching her bounce as he went over railroad tracks, and that she rode well. The vet looked at her and commented that most Angus are genetically polled (no horns through the marvels of science!). Nate smiled and said, " Well, she's a Dexter." Dexters are not genetically polled, thus the choice of to burn or not to burn. The vet tech warmed up the iron. The iron was a little hand held tool with about a 1 1/2" diameter doughnut shaped piece of iron at the end. Nate and Rebecca held the calf. Once the iron was hot, the vet pressed it to Rainbow's brow. The iron had to be in place on each horn bud for 30 seconds. Any less and there's a chance of regrowth, any more and there's a chance of brain damage. The vet tech kept time. 30 seconds on each side. Nate says it was heart wrenching. He brought Rainbow home, returned her to her lonely mother, and went inside for a breather.

Nate kept an eye on her for the rest of the day, making sure she wasn't damaged too badly. She started walking about and eating in the evening, but it was a full day before we got a scamper out of her.

Yes_that_is_her_skull

She's back to normal now, but we're not sure how we feel about it. It's one thing to raise an animal for its flesh. We know full well going into it that the steer or drake or pig or whatever is going to live and die by our hands. And we minimize the emotional costs for ourselves that come as a result of supplying our own food. But to so severely traumatize an animal that will spend her long life as a vital part of the farm is another story. I don't think anyone on the farm was quite prepared for pain we would cause the little calf. And we're not sure that the experience of driving a hot iron deep into the head of our future milk cow was worth the minimization of horn danger. But then again, Rainbow does not indicate that she is bothered or in pain. So we're still working out the logical and emotional repercussions of our actions. I guess you could say that Rainbow's horns were laid on the altar of farm philosophy and we'll see what the results of the offering are.




Channa on 08.02.07 @ 09:23 PM PST [more...]