Until a few days ago, October was a very dry month for us. Thankfully some much-needed and very welcome rain is moving in.
While it's delightful to walk outside and sniff the fresh moist ground, we weren't idle during the dry weeks. Among other chores, we focused a lot on firewood, a chief preoccupation for many people this time of year.
Summer before last, we had a neighbor come in with some huge equipment and clear out a lot of dead trees from the wooded side of our property.
He piled the burnable debris in big burn piles and put the salvageable logs in another pile just below our corral.
We've been harvesting firewood off that pile ever since. In the last few weeks, Don's worked hard to cut it all into rounds.
When enough rounds are cut, we load them into a small trailer hitched to the tractor bucket, and bring them up into the driveway to split.
We've been repeating this process for several weeks now.
We're stacking some of the split wood in the barn:
We're stacking some on the side porch:
And we're stacking some on the front porch:
We have room to stack lots more in all three locations, especially since we moved the kindling box from the front porch to the side porch...
...giving us more room on the front porch.
We always keep the hatchet in the kindling box for splitting kindling as needed.
A funny thing happened yesterday while Don was cutting rounds below the corral. He had on headphones and was listening to a recording of some Christmas choral music (he's participating in a performance in a few weeks), and was singing the bass vocals at the top of his lungs. I was in the house so I couldn't hear him -- but suddenly I saw all seven cows gallop madly across the field and disappear behind the barn. Don came in chuckling a few minutes later and told me all seven animals had gathered in a circle around him as he sung, apparently fascinated by the music. "Let's see if they'll do it again," I said as I grabbed the camera.
The animals weren't quite as cooperative the second time round, but they were still pretty funny.
(I think this is known as "singing 'til the cows come home.")
Even our neighbor's cat stopped to listen to the impromptu recital.
At least, until the cows spotted the poor kitty and went barreling over to investigate.
This hearkens back to an earlier blog post about music soothing the savage beast, when I sang to Amy while she was nursing the orphaned calf Anna.
And speaking of Anna, here she is double-dipping off her full sister, Pixie, who's also nursing her own calf Peggy. (Anna is the dark calf, Peggy is the dun calf mostly hidden behind Pixie.)
Despite the crushing loss of Polly earlier in the year, Anna has fended very well for herself, thanks to the generosity of other cows sharing their milk.
We had more rain due yesterday evening, so I decided to clean the chicken coop, a long-overdue task.
The cows watched me with great interest as I dumped the debris into the compost pile.
By the time I finished spreading fresh hay in the coop, it was dusky...
...and the sky was getting thicker as clouds moved in.
It was pleasant to lie in bed last night, listening to the rain on the roof and knowing the chickens had a comfortable cozy coop.
We have one recuperating bird in the coop. A week ago around 9 pm, I heard a commotion outside. I grabbed a flashlight and went out to find a great horned owl standing on the carcass of one of our young hens (from this summer's hatching). I chased off the owl and picked up the bleeding hen, and tucked her inside an inner pen in the coop to either live or die.
By the light of the flashlight, here's some of the blood from the hen...
...as well as some lost feathers.
This little hen, along with some other birds, roosts in an overflow pen adjacent to the coop. The door to this pen isn't solid, so once in a while an owl will swoop in over the top of the door and drag out a chicken. Hooking a sheet over the door each evening works (if the owls can't see the chickens, they don't go in). I just hadn't started hooking the sheets up yet this fall. You can bet I am now.
Anyway, the young hen survived her encounter with the owl, and while she's now on her feet, she's wobbly. She might be fighting a leg fracture, I'm not sure. We'll keep her quiet and isolated in the pen for a couple more weeks and see how she does.
Anyway, that's some of what we've been up to lately as winter approaches.
I remember well always having an audience when we worked in the pasture. I hope your hen gets better.
ReplyDeleteYour split wood looks substantial but I know how fast it is possible to go through it. It is always nicer to get it ready when the weather is nice instead of cold. We tend to go through about 5 or 6 ricks down here but I am sure you guys use way more than that!
ReplyDeleteI always sing in the garden. Many times my kids sneak up on me and scare me. I think my veggies like it because they grew really well.
ReplyDeleteI think it is going to be a cold winter from everything I am hearing. Good luck chopping.
Gosh I love your updates about the homestead and animals. It makes my day!
ReplyDeleteHi Patrice - What site did you get that beautiful rain chart from? Really great graphics.
ReplyDeletewww.wunderground.com -- their 10-day forecast for your particular location.
Delete- Patrice
Many thanks.
DeleteGreat pictures and stories. Thank you for sharing.
ReplyDeleteMontana Guy
How about posting the audio?;)
ReplyDeleteWe are looking at buying a log splitter.but we have no clue what will actually work for us. What are you using? And how is it preforming for you?
ReplyDeleteWe bought ours 15 yrs ago at Home Depot (whatever brand they carry) and it's performed flawlessly all these years. I highly recommend one. Saves wear and tear on the body, especially as we get older.
Delete- Patrice
Whatever kind you buy PLEASE run non ethanol gas in it.
Deletehttps://www.pure-gas.org/
This will tell you where it is available in your area.
Get a few recommendations from locals, then rent one to see how it works for you.
DeleteMany choices, everything from commercial firewood production units to little bottle jack types that barely make kindling. It all depends on what you are splitting and what you prefer.
Forgot to add, follow Steve's advice about the gas and if you have to use ethanol add Stabil Marine Stabilizer.
DeleteThe blue stuff, not the red stuff.
I keep forgetting to ask. How did the attempt at peanuts work out?
ReplyDeleteEh, didn't work. They never matured beyond the flower stage. Just not a long enough season. It didn't help that we had an unusually cool and rainy June and they didn't grow during that whole month. Oddly I may try again next year in hopes our June weather is better. It was a fun experiment.
Delete- Patrice
Well darn. Here's hoping next years season works better!
Deleteaxes left in the cold have been known to explode when used because of being brittle with cold might want to keep hatchet just inside the door.
ReplyDeleteI have been using a You Tube videos for practice for our Christmas community chorus. I also am a bass singer and it does help to have extra practices. Glad to hear that Don can multitask. Alas, the music we are singing I have to see the words and notes and remain single focused.
ReplyDeleteWhen we lived in Montana aways back in 1979-1980 we would go through many cords of wood as well. The pictures bring back memories. We live in hardwood country now in the SE and burn exclusively oak and locust. Both are good heat producers and locust is really good at producing very little ash. Creasote build up is minimal as well. Only have to clean our block chimney once a year before winter. A plus. When I retired from the US Forest Service my wife suggested we get a gas splitter. Since my manual wood splitter sons had left the nest, I obviously took her up on this. She generally does most of the splitting while I help get the rounds ready. What a handy husband needs is a former farmers daughter to do this manual labor. I am indeed blessed beyond measure. She really likes to do it. Believe it or not! Proverbs 31... An excellent wife is a great thing to find!