We have a foster dog! His name is Max. They think he's two years old and some kind of hound mix. To us, he doesn't really look like a hound but a Beagle mix, but he will howl, so we're deferring that he probably has some hound. He was very scared when I met him at the shelter, and I had to lift and shove him into the car to get him home. But he jumped out of the car, saw Dia, and ran for her. They've been Best Friends ever since.
Max is leaving us May 4th to catch a bus to New England to go to a shelter up there. Apparently, they have shortages in shelters in New England, and there is a program that takes bus fulls of dogs from Indiana up there. The woman who runs the foster program says that the shelters up there hand pick the dogs they want from the Indiana shelters and they are often adopted before they even get there.
Saturday, April 24, 2010
Tuesday, April 20, 2010
Spring has Sprung
We had our first day at the market! We sold luffa sponges, purple jalapeno starts, dried herbs, and chili pepper strings.
Chickens:
We planted two types of peas, spinach, lettuce, greens, and strawberries. We also planted two very small pawpaw trees. For those of you not from the midwest, Pawpaw trees are about 10 feet tall when grown, skinny, and produce fruit that looks like a small mango and tastes like a mango/banana. They are very good. This plant is only a year old, so they're small. It'll be a few years before we get some pawpaws.
A strawberry plant:
Chickens:
We planted two types of peas, spinach, lettuce, greens, and strawberries. We also planted two very small pawpaw trees. For those of you not from the midwest, Pawpaw trees are about 10 feet tall when grown, skinny, and produce fruit that looks like a small mango and tastes like a mango/banana. They are very good. This plant is only a year old, so they're small. It'll be a few years before we get some pawpaws.
A strawberry plant:
Thursday, April 15, 2010
Killing things
A few days ago neighbor Bill killed a woodchuck for me over my lunch hour that we had trapped. I was telling this story to a coworker, who was judging me for killing such a big, furry creature. Coupled with the 'inability-to-kill-baby-mole' story, this brings up the question; at what point do we kill something on the farm?
Well, what we do is weigh how much damage the creature is doing and multiply that by what the creature is damaging (venue), subtracting a few points for cuteness.
For venues the creature is damaging, in ascending order of importance is:
yard < garden < barn < chickens
So if a mole is ripping the hell out of the yard, we have big damage, less important venue. If a possum bites a chicken but doesn't kill it, we have small damage but most important venue. In conclusion, we would attempt to drive the moles out of the yard through humane solutions, and shoot the possum.
When we first started trapping the woodchucks, we attempted to relocate them. However, the barn is freakin' GROWING woodchucks like it's a petri dish. We trapped seven woodchucks last year and we're having massive tunneling already in April. So we will continue to relocate them when it's convenient, but lets be honest, I'm not going to drive every woodchuck in Monroe County out to a farm. The huge tunneling is a problem because it compromises the foundation of the barn and also creates huge entries into the barn for raccoons and other chicken eating predators. So we have big venue damage to both barn and chickens. Even with the points they get for being cute, it's just impossible to treat them like pets when there's an ARMY of them.
So ends the explanation of how we determine what gets dumped in the back field for coyotes and what gets to live another day to annoy the crap out of us.
Well, what we do is weigh how much damage the creature is doing and multiply that by what the creature is damaging (venue), subtracting a few points for cuteness.
For venues the creature is damaging, in ascending order of importance is:
yard < garden < barn < chickens
So if a mole is ripping the hell out of the yard, we have big damage, less important venue. If a possum bites a chicken but doesn't kill it, we have small damage but most important venue. In conclusion, we would attempt to drive the moles out of the yard through humane solutions, and shoot the possum.
When we first started trapping the woodchucks, we attempted to relocate them. However, the barn is freakin' GROWING woodchucks like it's a petri dish. We trapped seven woodchucks last year and we're having massive tunneling already in April. So we will continue to relocate them when it's convenient, but lets be honest, I'm not going to drive every woodchuck in Monroe County out to a farm. The huge tunneling is a problem because it compromises the foundation of the barn and also creates huge entries into the barn for raccoons and other chicken eating predators. So we have big venue damage to both barn and chickens. Even with the points they get for being cute, it's just impossible to treat them like pets when there's an ARMY of them.
So ends the explanation of how we determine what gets dumped in the back field for coyotes and what gets to live another day to annoy the crap out of us.
Sunday, April 11, 2010
Moles
We have mole problems. They tear up our yard, and nothing we do will get rid of them.
Today, while moving some straw bales by the house, we discovered a nest of baby moles.
We didn't have the heart to kill them. We put the bale back over the nest.
We've been doing some hiking at a state forest nearby.
Today, while moving some straw bales by the house, we discovered a nest of baby moles.
We didn't have the heart to kill them. We put the bale back over the nest.
We've been doing some hiking at a state forest nearby.
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