Tuesday, June 23, 2009
I had my wife take these pictures out of our kitchen window. It is nice to see so much green in June without having to irrigate all month. My pasture goes to the fence with wood posts in the background. You can also see the steel T-posts which are part of my management intensive grazing program (mig). The zone the calves are in has had ten days rest and the main herd just left the middle zone and moved to the furthest back zone but the are down at one end doing whatever it is they decided to do at the moment. The reason I'm blogging on these calves is that i'm collecting my thoughts on the beasts. Where they are now they won't even make a dent. There is about two acres of irrigated ground in that zone and I have a total of 5 zones one of which is about twice the size of the others but has many weeds. I will soon be blogging on that pasture and my sheep project that hopefully will make me money and fix that pastures problems all in one fell swoop. Back to the calves, I have located a large source for weaned and unweaned holstein bull calves like the ones seen here. Many of you know that I am an independant rep for ABS and I've been thinking that I could trade units of semen to some of these dairies that currently aren't buying from me for weaned calves. My commission would go towards the calves and I would have instant equity in them. I also hope that it would be a foot in the door for more sales down the road. The strategy is what needs to be developed next. If I was to say aquire ten to twenty more of the monsters what would be my next move? Would I just run them with my beef herd? Would I sell them this fall? Will they be eating my stockpiled reserves for my beef herd? Will I make decent money? When do I sell them? So many questions, yet I still like the idea.
Tuesday, June 16, 2009
Update
The chaos has been overwhelming and my wife hid the camera from me. I feel bad if I post without a picture I prefer pictures myself. I better update all of my a fore blogged items as well. First off is the milk goats, things haven't been very well there. When the first kids arrived they were listless and poorly developed and soon died. I then took action and put the other doe on an aggressive mineral program involving injections and a trace minerlized iodized salt block. This seemed to be working but the developmental damage was already done. The next set of twins lived longer but were also afflicted with the same problems and died as well. Make sure when you buy goats that they have been on a solid mineral and nutrition program. Goats are more susceptible to mineral deficiencies than cattle. I do have one of the goats on loan to a neighbor who will make cheese and share with me. So there is a silver lining.
Chickens
The chickens are in full swing, i just got done incubating eggs yesterday. The hatches all went well. All in all i probably hatched 600 chicks. I sold most of them but did hold back a couple hundred for myself. The plans for them is to select 30 or 40 for my replacement birds and sell the other pullets as started in the spring for ten bucks each. My hens from this year i will sell as well. The roosters will be the problem to get rid of. I have a few leads on ways to get rid of them. I will be happy to get a few bucks out of them. I will eat any extras I have when the chickens go on welfare this winter. I did build myself a chicken tractor last week and it is really neat. All of my birds are locked up due to the youthfulness of my garden so i'm short on coop space. So the tractor works great for getting young birds ready for the real world without getting them into trouble with big chickens or cats or any of the other dangers a young chicken can face.
The Cows
The cows are all well, I added a few holstein bottle calves to the mix and used up my extra milk replacer i had laying around. They are eating grain, grass and hay now so they aren't far from weaning. My yearlings i bought this winter have been doing well and two of them were pregnant so that could have been a wreck but both calves are alive and well and I only had to pull one. I will be AIing my cows and heifers here shortly to a bull owned by ABS named Ribeye javascript:hereford("29HP0906") I hope that link works. I need to find more pasture so that i might have more room for cattle.
Hogs
The hogs are monsters and are ready for freezer camp. They are ready for their appointment to be made. I'm ready for them to be gone. I did however come across a deal on a sow. My buddy was buying one and wanted to know if i would buy one to. I said of course as i try not to ever turn a good deal down. We keep them and Ralph (the boar) over at my buddy's place. I should have a bunch of little piglets in a few months.
Pigeons
I sold all of my barn pigeons the other day for three dollars each. It was good to see them go but now i want to go catch more. My racing homers have a squab but I would like to sell them so that I can keep some chicks in that pen.
Puppies
We sold all of the Bassets and they were all gone within the week they turned eight weeks. The Goldendoodles are selling are will be old enough to leave this week. It will be good to get some kennel space back.
I will get some pics up soon
thanks
Chickens
The chickens are in full swing, i just got done incubating eggs yesterday. The hatches all went well. All in all i probably hatched 600 chicks. I sold most of them but did hold back a couple hundred for myself. The plans for them is to select 30 or 40 for my replacement birds and sell the other pullets as started in the spring for ten bucks each. My hens from this year i will sell as well. The roosters will be the problem to get rid of. I have a few leads on ways to get rid of them. I will be happy to get a few bucks out of them. I will eat any extras I have when the chickens go on welfare this winter. I did build myself a chicken tractor last week and it is really neat. All of my birds are locked up due to the youthfulness of my garden so i'm short on coop space. So the tractor works great for getting young birds ready for the real world without getting them into trouble with big chickens or cats or any of the other dangers a young chicken can face.
The Cows
The cows are all well, I added a few holstein bottle calves to the mix and used up my extra milk replacer i had laying around. They are eating grain, grass and hay now so they aren't far from weaning. My yearlings i bought this winter have been doing well and two of them were pregnant so that could have been a wreck but both calves are alive and well and I only had to pull one. I will be AIing my cows and heifers here shortly to a bull owned by ABS named Ribeye javascript:hereford("29HP0906") I hope that link works. I need to find more pasture so that i might have more room for cattle.
Hogs
The hogs are monsters and are ready for freezer camp. They are ready for their appointment to be made. I'm ready for them to be gone. I did however come across a deal on a sow. My buddy was buying one and wanted to know if i would buy one to. I said of course as i try not to ever turn a good deal down. We keep them and Ralph (the boar) over at my buddy's place. I should have a bunch of little piglets in a few months.
Pigeons
I sold all of my barn pigeons the other day for three dollars each. It was good to see them go but now i want to go catch more. My racing homers have a squab but I would like to sell them so that I can keep some chicks in that pen.
Puppies
We sold all of the Bassets and they were all gone within the week they turned eight weeks. The Goldendoodles are selling are will be old enough to leave this week. It will be good to get some kennel space back.
I will get some pics up soon
thanks
Saturday, May 2, 2009
Canine Confusion
The chaos continues here at our mighty little homestead. I got the cross fencing done on the south pasture so that my intensive grazing program can go into effect. We bought three Holstein bottle calves the other day. The weather has been wonderful one moment then hail and snow the next. I did find a herd (3) of wild goats out on the desert. Their capture and addition to my herd is inevitable now. I guess yall are wondering about the pics well the Basset pup I put on because I think she is cute. The momma eating the Popsicle is Eloise my beloved Basset female. Eloise and my daughter Adelia are both helping out in this picture, Eloise is nursing three goldendoodle puppies from one of our other dogs. In the past Sadie who is the mother to the Doodles hasn't been able to care for all of them and will pic out a few to neglect. This litter was no exception so we decided Eloise and a little goats milk might do the trick. The puppies seem to be doing fine and it has been a few days (the pics are a few days old) the pups live with their Basset stepbrothers and sisters full time and Eloise doesn't seem to mind them being around. Eloise doesn't care for them nursing a whole lot and hence Del with the popsicle keeping her appeased.
Wednesday, April 29, 2009
Sky Rats
Now Pigeons or Sky Rats as I call them are a very overlooked enterprise in today's modern agricultural age. When one looks at the possible revenue streams they could add to their modern Homestead the lowly Pigeon may very well be a great source for income while not encumbering to much of one's time.
The time has come for the lowdown on my pigeon venture(s). The above pics are of my birds in my mighty loft. The top pic is of a couple of my fancy homers I can breed these and sell the offspring for about ten bucks each once they are weaned. This is a pretty decent return on your money especially if you can find a source for free grain and pigeons don't eat much. The second pic is of a group of barn pigeons I've captured while messing around my barn at night. The procedure is very simple, shine a light in their eyes and catch them with a fishing net. Put them in the loft and away we go. Then get in contact with your local dog trainers and sell them at three to four dollars each. I used to get real aggressive with it and would go out and catch them and would sell many many pigeons until I acquired pneumonia from the pigeon crap i was ingesting. That brings up my next point, always wear a dust mask because pneumonia is far from the worst thing you can get from these flying disease bags. Back to selling them, I always try to keep a few on hand and not stress my good hunting spots to hard. I like to visit them every once in a while and catch what I can and let the rest repopulate the hunting ground. This logic is different from my original approach of catch them all and go back later to get the last three. At this current time I probably have 15 pigeons living in my barn who aren't in my loft, several of which are setting on eggs. I try and catch their squabs (baby pigeons) when they are feathered and working on flying, they are easy to catch and can survive just fine until they are good flyers. Good Luck with the pigeons
Saturday, April 25, 2009
PUPPY MAYHEM!
It has been a few days since I've posted and I do apologize. I've been busy busy lately, in the tractor for three days helping my old boss out. Branding and working calves for a couple other people then driving cattle to the desert today. To the dogs, we are breeders of fine Basset Hounds and Goldendoodles. We recently had a litter of Basset pups. This is the first litter we've had conceived via Artificial Insemination. I did it if you were wondering. The papa is Gus Gus and he has 78 champions in his 7 generation pedigree which is phenomenal. Eloise is my couch dog who is now busy with her litter of nine pups. Five tri colors and four mahogany pups make up the litter. Now the dog venture is one we have been in a long time and we are still getting used to all of the ups and downs of it. It is the most time consuming and one the more difficult to do well. If you have ever thought of breeding dogs I would suggest research research and money. Quality can vary so much in dogs and you just as well be breeding the good ones and doing a good job at it. I once envisioned a kennel operation that was much larger than I now see in the future because to do it right takes alot of resources and time. Enough about my views. I do love my Basset hounds, they are very fun to be around and my kids love to have puppies to play with. Socialization is built into these pups at a young age.
Next post, I've got alot to blog on so we'll see where we can go with it. Maybe the new incubator and the gamebird operation or the heifer that wasn't supposed to be bred that calved. Or the pigeon enterprise may come up.
Sunday, April 19, 2009
Go Hog Go!
These are my hogs. They are a great set of hogs, I got them in February and they have been growing extremely well. The deal with these Hogs is that they aren't really my project as much as a cumulative project of five different parties one of which is myself. They are all except one owned by my friends who have no place for a Hog at their own place, so they all stay here. I am blogging about them because a swine enterprise can play an important role in an Agriprenuer's operation. They are efficient converters of surplus foods, crop aftermath, food supply byproducts and grains into quality pork. I see real potential in the burgeoning heritage markets. One could pick a breed, raise and sell breeding stock as well as produce higher quality pork than is readily available on the open market. This can all be done on a relatively small piece of ground. When I get to my new and bigger farm I would love to get a more indepth facilities in which I could move into the breeding arena and then I could really crank out the pork. My choice for breeds would at this time be either the Berkshire or the Hereford.
Saturday, April 18, 2009
Nurse Cow Mania
For Those of you who have wondered about the picture on the blog header it is a pic I took when my daughter and I watched our nurse cow have a calf in the cottonwood trees in our north pasture. The calf is only a couple minutes old in the pic and still wet and slimy. That was a couple weeks ago and I should probably bring yall up to speed on the whole nurse cow program. Sara is the nurse cow, she is a milking Shorthorn cross I bought from my old boss who used her as a nurse cow. She has a terrible bag, I often wish I had a pasture in which I could keep her where nobody could see her. I am a little vain when it comes to udders. Sara's disposition isn't aggressive but she isn't what you would call pleasant either but she makes a lot of milk and with a little coaxing will take care of the calves I put on her, so she works. The calves in the above pictures are calves I bought off of a feedlot that is feeding slaughter cows and some of them up and calved. The exception is of course her natural calf which is the black brockle faced calf. I bought the other two a couple days after she calved and grafted them on, it has been about a two weeks now and things seem to be going smoothly. The two options I have to contemplate are to wean the calves in two months and bring in a new group or to leave these guys on and let them all grow huge on the vast quanities she produces. I'm leaning toward the second option. I would however really like to get another nurse cow or three. I will keep my eye out while in my travels for a likely canidate(s). Now the last question with which my mind has been wrestling is what to breed Sara to? I hate naming cows. I have been contemplating going back to a Milking Shorthorn with VERY strong udder traits but my mind has wandered over into the ABS Beef Catalog and I'm considering a Red Angus Bull. Maybe an Ayreshire wouldn't be a bad move? Well I'll leave yall with that to think on. I hope tomorrow I can get my Hog post done and bring you up to speed on the pig project.
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