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Monday, October 10, 2011

A Farmer's Love



Some like to roam away from home. This will by no means do for the farmer. His love of home is his safety. He must guard against contracting a fondness for being off; Aye, off from the place of his business, the place of his family, the place of his love.

~Leavitt's Farmer's Almanac


Saturday, October 8, 2011

Rekindling The Flame



"Sometimes our inner light goes out, but it is blown again into flame by an encounter with another human being. Each one of us owes the deepest thanks to those who have rekindled this inner light."

~Albert Schweitzer

A Breed Apart

It can't be denied. Some of us can only be described as a breed apart from the rest of humanity. We know not why, but for some reason we feel compelled to live a lifestyle different from most. We like getting dirty. We want to grow our own food. We make friends with animals who will be in our freezer soon. We'll turn down dinner invitations to keep an eye on that ewe who is getting ready to lamb for the first time. And we will get up at regular intervals in the night during freezing winter weather to check on her. In our pajamas. Our souls thrill to the sound of hoofbeats drumming the ground, and a new calf or goat kid brings tears to the eyes. The smell of hay is like salve to a wound. It calms us. Focuses us. Relaxes us. Why can't they make a perfume that smells like hay? ;) We trade out stiletto heels for muck boots that have interesting artifacts stuck to the bottom. And evening wear is code for "something warm, but sheds animal slobber easily". We cry over lost animals who died a death they shouldn't have, but we are straight faced while harvesting those who will feed us. 

We are a breed apart. What makes us live this way? Why are things like this such a passion for us? As if the echoes of generations past are still reverberating within us, we fashion our lives as they had theirs. The farming life is etched in our hearts. Our very souls. It's an ancient calling that rings from time immemorial, and will continue it's tolling still more. We hear it. It calls us. We are drawn to it. First in hesitant curiosity. We want to know more about this seemingly foreign lifestyle that involves so much blood, sweat and tears. Why would something that seems to hard to do, call so many? As we begin taking baby steps in the agricultural world, we realize something. It feels natural. It feels right. We feel a sensation of "I feel like I've done this before", as our hands hold the hoe, or a baby chick, or we successfully milk a cow or goat. So many generations before us lived in this way. We are simply returning to our roots. Our ancestry. Our birthright. Our heritage. We learn to trust our instincts, in a manner not many people know how to do in this era. We watch. We listen. We work. We learn. And then it dawns on us that this seemingly foreign lifestyle is not foreign at all. The farming lifestyle is what we were meant for. We just got a little lost along the way.
But we're here now. Living the life that our ancestors did. It's in our blood, and we cannot lose our passion for this.
 It's a grand ride. Hold on tight!

Friday, October 7, 2011

A Mute Gospel


What is a farm but a mute gospel? The chaff and the wheat, weeds and plants, blight, rain, insects, sun -- It is a sacred emblem from the first furrow of spring to the last stack which the snow of winter overtakes in the fields. 

~Ralph Waldo Emerson

Thursday, October 6, 2011

I'm So Bad...

But I couldn't resist...

 I put down a doeling reservation this week! Actually, it's more like a "If-there-are-two-doelings-you-can-have-one" sort of deal, but nevertheless, I am ultra excited!! I've been eyeing this particular doe for almost three years now, and am finally getting around to possibly getting one of her daughters. Hoorah!

SGCH Remuda EM's RJ Proud Mary 12*M 
DOB: 5/1/04 
Sire: Copper-Hill BW Reuben James *B
Dam: Sungai BS Bess's Emmaline



Photo credit and information goes to Proud Mary's owner at http://www.la-di-danubians.com/

Regrets

One downside to selling goats is that sometimes you let go of ones that you later wish you had kept.

Such is the case with little Beatrix.


As you can see by her ears, she was Heidi's doeling, and while Beatrix was a sneaky little imp, I loved her.

But hay was needed, so she and her brother Bertram, became the sacrificial lambs, so to say, and had to be sold. 

I regret that sale so much... She was a nice little goat.

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

It's A Start

I can't believe its taken me this long, but I finally put a few things in my Etsy shop! How shocking! Still lots more to put in there, but that's for another day...