This last weekend we picked out a goat! Penelope (we will probably call her Penny) is a 2 year old Nigerian Dwarf doe. She is currently staying at the place that we bought her from to be bred. Hopefully she will go into heat soon and take on the first cycle and we can bring her home at the end of June. Otherwise they will keep her another month and try again. This will be her first time as a mama. If all works out as we are hoping that we will have kids around the first of November and we will be able to start milking her.
I've been told that we need to keep 2 goats for them to be happy. We are going to try the one and see how it goes. If she has a hard time adjusting then we will get her a friend sooner. Otherwise we will plan on keeping one of the kids next Fall.
I am finding that I am a farm girl at heart. I am loving the changes around the "homestead". I am also finding that while I am fairly natural with the animals and feel very confident with their care my thumb is not quite as green as I would like it to be. We are trying square foot gardening this year in our first raised bed. Our plan is to continue with the CSA through this summer and hope that next summer we can raise all our own veggies.
We are trying to stay with heirloom seeds that we can harvest the seeds and reuse them next year. Lofty ambitions! So in our backyard we have red and gold raspberries, potatoes (yukon gold, russet, red, and blue - planted in a round wire cylinder - see above photo), rainbow carrots, lettuce mix, herbs, cucumbers, and tomatoes (still inside until we get some more warmth). We may even get some grapes off our vines this year. We will see. My husband and my mom's husband (thanks Ray!) are in the process of building an arbor over our patio for the grapes. Our vines have taken a beating, so I'm not sure how well they will come back this year. But we do have a couple of buds, so we are hopeful.
Spring is here! And Summer is just around the corner. I am so excited about this season.
4 comments:
This looks like tons of fun which is a problem. Matt does NOT need encouragement.
Kristin & Clay - I love you little farm! We've gone that direction ourselves over the last couple of years. Your chickens are beautiful - almost hawk-like - what breed are they? I'm anxious to know how it works out with the goat... so far we just have chickens and a really large garden, but I'm not opposed to expanding :)
Jen, thanks. We are having a lot of fun. The chickens we got are labeled Ameraucanas. But usually if you get them from a feed store (like we did) they are a mix. Often times refered to as Easter Eggers. True Ameraucanas will lay blue eggs. These should lay green ones. It has something to do with crossing the blue egg gene with the gene for brown eggs.
I am interested to see how the goat turns out too! ;-) I will keep you posted.
Sure he does! You just need better chickens. And NO roosters next time.
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