Saturday, August 6, 2011

Tomatoes and Peppers





This year I was able to can whole tomatoes for the first time. My friend gave me instructions on how she cans tomatoes in a hot bath. I do not have a pressure canner. I also got to make a batch of sweet banana peppers too. The leftover tomatoes I sliced and dehydrated to save for snacking and meals over the winter. This has been a productive season for my canning skills. I am looking forward to apples and pears for jams and sauces in the fall.

Friday, August 5, 2011

Dorper Sheep





At the Texas County Fair in Houston, MO we got to see the Dorper sheep for the first time. Our neighbor is thinking about breeding these sheep on his farm. I had never heard of this kind of sheep before. You do not have to shear them, they are a hair sheep. This is great as finding shearers is very hard these days. These sheep were very docile and stocky, sold for meat. The breeder was showing ewes and a ram pure blood Dorper. His daughter won 1st prize showing her sheep without a halter or lead rope. After seeing these sheep I think my neighbor is on to something fun and exciting to raise. We also enjoyed seeing the young children learning how to show their livestock.

Texas County Fair





Here in the Ozarks we have farm fairs starting up as fall rolls in. Though a hot 100 degrees, people brought in their livestock to be judged. There were swine, poultry, goats, sheep, rabbits and bovines. They also set up tractors for all to see. I got to see several kinds of chickens I was interested in adding to our farm. We are hoping to see the car demolition derby they are having at night this year after the animals all go home.

Making Bread



One good thing about hot summer days, you can proof bread outside. I was able to get my two loaves of sunflower seed bread to rise on my deck. They both baked up nice and brown. And my cat Daisy waits for our dinner guest in the head chair of our kitchen.

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Deadly Heat

Today was a bad day for our chickens. One of our year old hens died in the coop a victim of the heat, it was 108 today. And we have 2 other hens missing at nightly role call. I had no idea chickens could die from the heat even under the shade. We had the coop open and the chickens were free to run out and into the pasture. This afternoon we installed a box fan to keep our flock cool. I hosed down the coop and the yard. The coop and the pasture are under the shade of trees. Tomorrow I will hose down the yard for the chickens and give them watermelon to keep them cool. I hope the heat will be ending soon before I lose all my chickens.

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Damn Hot

It is way too hot here in the Ozarks. The grasshoppers are baking on my deck, the horses are melting and the chickens are laying hard boiled eggs. I put out 2 loaves of bread to rise on the deck and they were cooking instead! It was 105 out here and that is too hot. Everything is dry. Wildlife is coming to drink out of my horse water tanks. I can barely keep stuff watered. We need rain badly out here. This is way not normal for this area. And now it is August the hottest month normally. We are praying for a good rain in church. It has been like this for the last 3 weeks and that is not normal. I get my outside chores done before 10am and stay inside until dusk for feedings. Lets hope cool fronts come soon and bring rain for all our trees, plants and animals.

My First Love



My husband does not get it, but I had a first love before him - it was a car. It was a 1965 teal Ford Galaxie. How could someone love a car? It was not the car itself, it was the attention my Grandfather gave me while we worked on his car back in the 1970's in New Orleans. He loved this car and it was how he communicated with his first grandchild. I learned at a young age how to speak car. I learned about chrome, mag wheels, engine sounds, spark plugs and making this car purr. You take care of your car and it will take you anywhere. I understood how to maintain a machine and how it can serve me. It was my first love that car and I miss my Grandfather.
Yes, my first love had mag wheels.

Sunday, July 31, 2011

Century Link- Coyote Stupid

Congratulations Century Link, you get awarded my prized Coyote Stupid Award.
I read a blog about how in Vermont they are getting fiber optic high speed Internet in very rural areas. They are using horses to pull the cable along the power poles. Here in Missouri we have horses, hills and power poles, but we also have Century Link. They have one man to install DSL for the town of Summersville, MO. Right, one guy! And that is his second job!
We called Century Link to ask if we will ever get DSL, they have no ideas. We offered to pay Century Link to install DSL at our farm, they laughed at us and said they don't do that.
I called the head of sales and he said there are not enough people on my street to make the Internet worth any money to them, nice huh? Am I living in a cave?
Basically Century Link is doing a great big nothing for the Ozarks of rural Missouri. They are keeping Missouri residents in the stone ages keeping us from having what the rest of the USA has, high speed Internet. All our Federal Government will do is just give Century Link more money. And Century Link will just buy up other phone/Internet companies and keep being the big fat MONOPOLY it is.
They did it to Show Me Power, a company that tried to get fiber optic to the small rural towns. Century Link lowered their price for Internet until Show Me Power could not make any more sales. Then after Show Me Power went belly up, Century Link stopped adding any more fiber and sat on the money.
So thank you Century Link for keep us in the dark ages. Thanks for giving the rest of our state that wholesome hillbilly backwoods backwards profile we love. Thanks Century Link for holding back sales, deliveries, movies, realty, e-mail and all other forms of Internet commerce the rest of the US uses. I am so damn proud of how you are keeping Missouri behind, I could just scream.