Any day, lol. Technically have a week, but we're in the "safe zone." Now I just need the midwife to get over covid before I go into labor.when is baby due? I did not read a few pagesI hope I did not miss the news.
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Any day, lol. Technically have a week, but we're in the "safe zone." Now I just need the midwife to get over covid before I go into labor.when is baby due? I did not read a few pagesI hope I did not miss the news.
I still, envy your compost sifter as a worm/casting harvester!
I don't have a picture of my cart. It's like a two wheeled wheelbarrow. I can pull it behind or push it ahead of me. I counted the shovelfulls of compost and put in 9 or 10 heaping. Ok, I'm a wimp.What do you use to haul your compost?
I don't have a picture of my cart. It's like a two wheeled wheelbarrow. I can pull it behind or push it ahead of me. ... We have a cart like the one you show, but since I'm doing the pulling, I like having the wide handle on my smaller cart.
Sounds like a good plan! I do actually have a small covered run, but it's just a small part of the big run. I really don't *need* to clear snow for them, but I still do. I always feel like I could use the exercise in the middle of the winter.Well, depends on where you live and how much snow stays on the ground. Last year we had snow cover from end of October till about mid April. I don't have the energy to go out and shovel the chicken run all winter long. My better idea is to cover a section of the run with a hoop house type structure that will not collapse under the snow load, and then the chickens can enjoy some fresh air and snow free ground. Maybe this fall I will actually get something put into place.
We buy good, quality, fertilized bermuda for our horses and goats. We get it loaded from the field, literally as they are baling. We pay $6/bale for 60 lb square bales. If you buy it later after it has been moved into the barn, it's $7/bale. Hay production is the ONLY thing this family does as a source of income so they have several hundred acres but they ALWAYS sell out by mid-October.It takes me HOURS upon hours to put up hay, plus the $12 grand in machinery and on top of that the buildings to cure and store it. I'm always surprised it doesn't cost MORE per bale. Come winter, I can charge 12$ for high protein alfalfa and grass hay and get it. As the large rounds are hard to store, hard to move, and 99% of them here are late cut/one cut cattle quality low protein bales stored in the outdoors. Some of them stored that way for years, so they're bordering on silage, which cattle love, but isn't good for horses.
About hay and straw prices, I had one of my pastures cut and baled for hay, regularly, for a Dollar a bale up till four or five years ago(usually between 150 to 200 bales), when I sold off my sheep, goats, pony and my horse died from cancer. That pasture now almost, looks like a young forest, in four years! Now , I use trails for nature walks in that pasture, with twenty foot tall pioneer trees! Straw from my county farm supply store, has gone up from a dollar a bale to $4 each , in small orders, in the last four or five years. Good, clean horse quality Bermuda hay(what is used here the most) went from $3 to $6 per square bale in two years, in orders less than 100 bales, a few years ago. Alfalfa cost a small fortune here! The work involved and the cost of equipment would make my hay the most expensive in the world! I might should of kept getting the hay cut and selling it, but was out of storage room in my crowded sheds, anyway, and did not have the energy to work it. I wonder what it would cost me now, to get it cut and baled, if the pasture was still good? I bet, it would not be a dollar a bale!
Hey all. Back from the thumb doc. He was nice enough, but I don't think he was focused on me while I was there. He just grabbed my hand poked it, made me cringe and slap away his hand, looked at my xrays and said, yup, you broke it in two places 18 months ago, but it's healed now. But arthritis has set in in all thumb joints and the joint at the wrist is bone on bone. Told you it hurt like hades.
Tylenol and steroid shots every 3 months until I can't stand it any more, then they'll cut it open and shave the bone. Oh joy. (forgot, he actually mentioned taking ibuprofin, nice reading of my file dude, I"M ALLERGIC TO IT.)
I told DH the dog was treated more thoroughly than I was. How long do I have to suffer? My primary doc is the one that did the xrays in November and he didn't see the breaks, I saw the xrays today, and even I could see them!
Tylenol doesn't even touch it, let alone not being able to actually USE my thumb. No pens, scissors, I drop things. OMG and the headache I have now after the shot, which was also not comfortable.
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Garden gets watered today and if I feel like it I'll get some gypsum and aspirin on the tomatoes.
The pizza sauce made and canned yesterday has been liberated from the jars and is simmering to thicken again all day. Then I'll recan it tonight.