A Surprise Visitor

September 25th, 2009
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The wonders of nature are sometimes just outside your window...

Today it was such a joy to be reminded of important things in my life: staying home with my boys, living out in the country and homeschooling them. I’ve learned a lot through their eyes . . .
This morning right before they got started with Math my youngest was looking out the front window by his desk and said – “Mom, look at this owl”.  A brief Science lesson entailed checking out his “Owl”. Which turned out to  be a gorgeous hawk sitting on an upturned raised garden bed frame just outside the living room window.
Now, if he/she was in the back yard we would have had to really jump into loud action and get it away from the chickens . . . but here in the front we were able to observe his great beauty and grand stature. He turned his head completely around to look back at us. Probably thought those things in the shiny cage were rather strange. When the boys were very small we went to Wild Wednesdays in Kenton County and learned about these hawks but we had never seen one close up in our own yard before.
My camera didn’t do justice to him and the glare from the window makes it worse, but we’ve included a picture of our lovely visitor for you to enjoy too -

Marilyn, the Goat Woman

It could only happen to me

September 8th, 2009

It could only happen to me…

The day started out on prescribed schedule: feed/water animals, milk, feed/water boys, do devotions, start school. School had been moved to the office where I sat labeling product for my show this weekend. Sam was in the midst of Language Arts. So far so good. Nathan had gone once to water the white turkeys and broilers. I sent him out again to open the back of the greenhouse for the broilers – I thought I hadn’t done that. Well . . . this is where the “it could only happen to me” day gets really going . . . .

He came running in and told me that the weasel that’s been coming every other day and taking a chicken or two out of the hay barn was after a turkey . . . OK, how’s the turkey??? Nathan claims that he hit the weasel with a machete! Now the machete is for the tall weeds that we can’t get with the scythe or the mower . . . I never knew that a person should have one handy for a weasel. He said he dealt it a mortal wound and it fled down the hill.

Back to the turkey . . . not going to make it Nathan said and was asking for permission to put it out of it’s misery (if it lasted that long). Well, here goes science class is all I could think. . . We went back in time and well, Nathan used the chopping block efficiently as good as his hero Almonzo or “his” father-in-law Charles Ingalls ever would have. So I guess that was history. Then we skinned it and my sink is full of chilling turkey. . . Cooking class???  I’m glad they’d already done their math – I’m not sure how I could have remotely  have thought that  could have been included as school completed. LOL.

I bet changes in schedule like that never happen to you!!! And I was planning on doing 7 more sets of goat hooves today – I think not!

“Wide Load” Signs Needed

September 3rd, 2009
We have a goat that needs wide load signs! We’re pretty sure Miss Maggie is due in December – Could we have our first case of quads???? Don’t know, hopefully just two healthy does. Two other does are probably due in December too – we’re watching them close. What a crazy time to be in the barn birthing animals! (Good thing the barn is getting bigger & the girls will have single stalls – no more of them all escaping at the same time – poor Nathan!).

Kitchen is done!!! Yeh Pat! Soap/sundries room is almost completely painted and re-stocked. Yes, it looks like a bee!
Pat is getting all the windows/sliders to get the back porch turned into a country store for the months of the CSA – should be awesome. He’s so wonderful to get all these pretty things done for me – just in time for the last cheese class of this year.

Goat shares – we’re not going to be in the goat share business any more. We’ve decided that since the goat share area is gray about it’s legality, we are going to not do anything that could be considered illegal. I do not want to prove that I do not own the goats. We will be doing boarding instead. Your goat, your milk, your babies, etc. This saves us from taking all the risks inherent in goat shares.

We have 4 new baby turkeys – we had 5, but one drowned. We moved mother and babies to the broken chicken tractor so they’d be protected for about 4 weeks. In that time they are so fragile – but after that time you can hardly hurt a turkey.

Next week is the Souled-Out Women’s conference and yesterday the boys and I spent a few hours in Versailles making products. We have to return Saturday to finish up. Our regularly scheduled shows start Oct. 3rd – Lakota West. – they continue thru the first weekend in December. Mostly OH shows – and all juried. We hope to be at Cooper HS in KY the weekend before the huge Ryle HS show (which we’re at too).

We’ve added two scents to our line-up: a Candy Apple that is supposed to be a type of the BBW Candy Apple – this one will be labeled Apple Dulce(will start in shampoo and body wash) and the other is a type of the Herbal Essences scent (oh so close and wonderful) that we have named Herbal Extravaganza. I love it when people ask for scents and they turn out to be more than we had ever dreamed they would be.

Note on scents: Almond sells 3/1 over any other scent and the new Violet is so clean smelling that it’s fast becoming my son’s favorite scent – not flowery and hard to explain, but so CLEAN. Thanks Joan for NEEDING this scent!

Time to get back to school and cleaning . . . I have a lot of catch up to do before people come tomorrow to visit the farm. It won’t get all done – but here it’s 24/7 and you never get it “done”. Something always breaks, gets sick or gets interrupted by something more pressing.

Blessings from Marilyn,

aka: The Goat Woman

New – “Old Style” farm kitchen

August 21st, 2009
First: please pray with us for little Ben – my great-nephew, just diagnosed with ALL B Leukemia. 80-85% survival rate. He starts his chemo soon. Mom and Dad, and I’m sure my sister and her husband, Ben’s grandparents will need us swamping them with prayer during this time of trial! Thanks!!!

Farm stuff: The thorny pig weed has taken over.
We have people even right on our street that have never seen it. One thing, it’s not in with the goats . . . it is everywhere where a chicken has roamed around here.

Thorny pig weed is a terrible plant that has HUGE thorns and it is very invasive. It is the worst kind of Amaranth – and while you could eat the leaves – who would want to go thru the pain??? When you get stuck, it is painful for days on end – YUCK!!!

On a good note: the office/sales room is getting painted yellow and black and is actually turning out somewhat cute – Pat has to finish the lighting tracks – the builder or someone made two rooms in the house with lights on the side of the wall instead of in the ceiling and both of them are AWFUL!

Pat is finishing the kitchen tonight – yahoo! We started months ago with a dear woman that came and helped tear it all out, sand it down and get it ready for re-do – - – well, until Pat decided that to teach cheese classes I actually had to have a working kitchen. It was near impossible to tear out the kitchen without complications that might make me cancel a cheese class. So, it wasn’t done until now – we took a month off of cheese classes and started in on figuring out how the builder actually put these counters in – strange is a very mild term. No normal way to put in counters for sure.

So, tonight we will celebrate having a kitchen retro fitted to look like a 1950′s farm kitchen – minus the chrome edges on the formica countertop. (Now, when can I get the matching fridge???). LOL

OK, so it wasn’t short like I wanted – school starts soon, maybe my notes will be short then – it could happen!

Marilyn, AKA The Goat Woman

Summer Updates

August 13th, 2009
We’re cleaning, weeding and getting ready for breeding season with the goats. We hope to have 7 milkers in about 6-8 months.  A few of our chickens have had babies -  and one turkey hen is suspiciously missing . . . after 1 month I’m sure we’ll have lots of new additions to tell you about!

We’ve made lots of soaps this week in anticipation of the craft season starting – I think everyone has finally figured out what my sister Claudia knew all the time: the Shea butter soap is Sensational!! The new Sandalwood shaving soap is curing! I have mint and rosemary soaking in Olive Oil right now to make Rosemary/Mint soap later today. What a pleasant mixture!

As we get ready to start our CSA – we have ideas pouring in from those of you who are desperate for good, clean, truly local food. Keep it up – we need to know what you’d like to see in produce from here and how involved you want to be in the farm. We’re collecting recipes to include with every share day – we’ve gotten some fabulous ones!

Did you see the ABC news report about the 12 most pesticide-ridden fruits/veggies? Peaches tops the list – we hope to offer you pesticide-free peaches next year. All it takes is the weather cooperating as we will not contaminate our fruit or veggies. Makes me a little crazy to see all the news about what’s supposed to be “food”.

Have you seen the Food Inc. movie??? Joel Salatin, my hero! What a role model! From homeschooling to raising chickens – we’ve learned so much from this man.  The movie is coming out to purchase soon and we will have a few copies to share around. This is not a scare tactic movie but reveals a lot about what kinds of food are subsidized and why it’s so much more expensive to buy REAL food. This is just an eye-opener that I think every American needs to see.

We are getting ready to build raised beds. We hope to use the almost the entire front yard, a new bed in between the greenhouse and the goats and along the back of the greenhouse behind the goat yards . . . should triple our garden space. With well over 20 families signing up for the CSA and some working here -  it should be a growing season to remember.  We are scheduling work parties and cherish your help – all of the beds must be done or mostly done by the end of September. This way they can “cook” over winter and be ready to be planted as soon as the ground is ready in Spring.

There are a few things that will be planted right away before winter: spinach, more strawberries, the garlics, etc. Most of the rest of the herbs, rhubarb and such will just need to be covered and protected.

Oh, and the porch needs to be transformed to windows/sliders to make a wonderful meeting place for those coming to visit the farm. Lots to do – but what an awesome time of growing and learning and doing!

Keep the ideas pouring in -  now to go find out if my lost boy is out in the pasture asleep on his goat Whisper . . .

Marilyn, aka the Goatwoman

July 15th, 2009

We just got back from the market on Fountain Square. We hope to continue to sell our soaps and sundries there – but also add our heirloom tomatoes, peppers and melons soon.

The mysterious plants that have been taking over the garden  has finally been figured out . . . they are WHITE PUMPKINS!!! I guessed spaghetti squash, acorn squash – any number of things I know that have been thrown in the compost. As soon as I saw the big round white ball I realized that my 2 year old white pumpkin that I finally threw in the compost, had gone and planted itself all over the front garden. It took a while to figure it out – but . . . mystery solved. We can’t wait for them to be mature so we can share some with you and make some pies, bread and soups. They can be used just like regular pumpkins. (Just don’t try to walk thru the garden – they did not plant themselves in any specific order and all the paths are gone – hidden until Fall).

Pat got the brakes fixed on the truck, front, rear and then master cylinder – what a blessing! He’s off to get much needed hay tomorrow.

If you have some spare time this summer – my suggested reading for you would be: Nourishing Traditions by Sally Fallon. We’re working thru it – and other than entrails (which Pat said are really meant to be burnt on the altar), we are trying to eat exactly that way and stay as healthy as we can be.

I have made Chevre and Paneer today to prepare for our cheese making class on Saturday. Tomorrow I will be getting up early to clean up everything and start the Feta process. We have so much fun in these classes – tasting and making all these fresh, homestead cheeses and making new friends. What a blast!!

We also will be having a cheese making class the following Saturday (24th?) from 10-2 because a few people couldn’t make it this Saturday – if you’d like to join us, please give us a call or an email and we’d be delighted to register you.

We are working with the boys – wethers actually – to see which ones will respond best to noise and distractions so we know who to train for goat carts. We can’t wait to give children rides when they come to experience the farm life.

We are planting our fall garden now – lots of greens, broccoli, cauliflower, cabbage, carrots, beets and more – things that will keep or be frozen/canned for winter. We’ve had a few of you asking for lettuces, spinach and more . . . keep asking, we quit growing some of it for the market garden because we didn’t have enough buyers and it would go to waste (well, to the chickens! Not much goes to waste around here).

Blessings to you all – we hope you’re enjoying your summer as much as we are – stay cool!

Busy as.. well, our Bees…

June 4th, 2009
Wow! It’s been a whirlwind kind of life this past couple of weeks!

The market on Fountain Square in Cincy may turn out to be good. (Every Tues. from 11-2). We have a little hurdle to cross and some decisions to make – but if not having electric and moving booths gets worked out and isn’t detrimental, we could do quite well. People seem to want eco-friendly, healthy and quality made products. I think they appreciate the fact that we raise the dairy goats/bees that help us to produce the products we make.

We will have to travel to the commercial kitchen many times to make our products . . . but there’s a great joy in taking my family down there and all working together to make products out of our beeswax, honey and goat milk that we know is good for our customers and friends.

We have been talking to a very large business that has Amish furniture, cheeses and foods, Antiques and other things for sale that is interested in our products. It is not a done deal yet, but we’re hoping to talk more with them about maybe carrying our products. I’ll let you know more about that later.

We are going to be having our products at the Daylily Farm again this year! Come see Dan and Dana and their wonderful daughters at Sugar Bay Daylilies and shop in their arts and crafts store while you’re there. Free of charge to visit, bring lunch and eat while enjoying the daylilies around you! June and July usually- while the daylilies are blooming.

We start our craft fair season on October 3rd/4th at Lakota West – as of right now, we have 8 shows/boutiques that we have consented to be at. We are still waiting to hear from Lakota East.
The show schedule should quickly be posted on the website – thanks again Pat!

Now if the rain will stop, the evenings/mornings be mild, we will attempt to pull all the weeds that have sprouted and grown like crazy in the past couple of weeks and get 5 acres of mowing done.

I’m off to make some more shaving soaps – today’s line up so far has been: peppermint soap, lemongrass soap and herbal shaving soap (full of bentonite clay to make it slicker than slick). I have some girls that are begging for it because they don’t want to go back to cream. And, not paying attention closely enough – I’ve run out! I have one disc of unscented goat milk shaving soap in stock . . .

Got to get back to work, just thought I’d give you a heads up!!

The Goat Woman

Ala Technorati

May 28th, 2009

Technorati Profile

Got right in for this one.

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Inclimate Weather – and Whirlwind lifestyle

May 26th, 2009

Whew! It’s been a whirlwind few months . . . maybe it’s only been weeks and feels like months.
Sorry – but I haven’t had one minute to write anything for so very long.

All of this wet, soggy, hot/humid weather has caused a little distress for the goats. They don’t do well walking or living in the muddy, sticky conditions – and on top of mud/yuck – our goats are mostly black. Today, I gave specialty worming meds for all the males. The females that are giving milk will not be given this wormer unless they need it – it has milk withdrawal time periods. The other ladies will be given this wormer and then in 10 days all will get it again. I want to get it all gone and then we’ll check for worms in Fall.

Pat has been building a wonderful fencing system on the hill that we cannot use for us humans. But the bucks will LOVE it. It has roses, blackberries, locust, and weeds/brush of all kinds. We will not even have to feed hay! We will provide plenty of fresh, clean water and the boys will get fresh food without any parasites. We like to use the pasture rotation that is most healthy for animals and the land.

The ladies are producing more milk per goat than ever. Probably because their environment keeps improving every year – thanks Pat!!! He works so hard at work and then comes home and gets stuff done!

I’m making goat milk soaps like crazy . . . I was blessed by being selected as one of 16 vendors to participate in the summer-long open market on Fountain Square in Cincinnati. It runs Tuesdays starting June 2nd from 11-2 all summer. Come and visit if you’re anywhere close! This Friday we will travel to Versailles and make all of our products fresh for the summer. (I can bring special orders to the square for anyone who needs that service).

If the blueberries do well, we will be bringing them to the market with us. We hope to double the strawberries, rhubarb and asparagus so more people can get them fresh from us. We still have eggs, and more all the time.

The lavender, comfrey and assorted herbs are growing wonderfully. Pat put in one of 3 counter-tops in my retro kitchen and it looks marvelous – something is always happening around here!

The last SCHEDULED cheese class was this past weekend. If you want to book a private class this summer or want to learn something specific such as soapmaking – give us an email or phone call and we’ll do our best to accommodate you. (If you came to a cheese class and your mozz. didn’t work – we have a wonderfully easy fix for you – just email or call for details). Starting on getting hard cheeses perfected so we can help you along with them.

Everyone helped in the rain yesterday and dug the beds and sowed, weeded, planted. We only had to run to the house twice. Our boots were slick with thick, yucky KY clay – but a quick once-over with a shovel helped that situation. We have some very special heirloom and organic seeded tomatoes this year. We can’t wait to share them with you now that the chickens have been kept at bay. (Our chickens have the run of the farm – true free-range chickens – but they ate my garden planting twice!!!).

We are planting our front “lawn” with melons, squashes, corn, beans – anything to double and quadruple the space and the goodies we produce.

We are looking to please you with what we grow. Let us know what you want us to grow for your eating pleasure!!

the Goat Woman (aka Marilyn).

The Goat Pile

March 17th, 2009
A pile of newborn "Nupines"

Look at this little pile of goats -
One although I do not know which one at the moment, is a doe.
She has lots of brothers, cousins and friends on top of or beside  her.
1st year here on the property all the does were black with a little white and the bucks were all white with a little black and sometimes brown.
Last year the does were all white with black and the male was black with the spot/star on his head. This year – all but 1 out of 6 babies are black with white spots. One is brown just like his mama.
Yes, this buck threw almost all bucks. They are beautiful, but only the little lady is staying.
These, although they look like Nubians are truly Nupines. Their mother(s) are black Alpines and their father is a white/black Nubian. Aren’t they cute??? (In better times all the twin boys would be wethered and pull goat carts for us . . .)