I like to save resources on the farm by reusing things or reducing waste. Here are some things I do:
I have two male goats who live outside in a pen all the time. They have
two hay mangers and two nice dog houses to sleep in. I take any uneaten
hay from the hay mangers daily and spread it in their dog houses for
fresh bedding.
The male goats waste a lot of hay by pulling it out of the mangers and
not eating it. Every week I rake this fairly clean hay up and put it in
the chicken yard. The chickens love to dig through it for seeds and
bugs. If I throw 1 cup of scratch grains on this
hay, the chickens really tear into it!
My does go into the barn at night where they have individual hay mangers
in their pens. My oldest doe and my youngest does are picky and won't
always eat all of their hay each day. I take this clean hay out of their
mangers and put it in the mangers of my two
middle does. They will eat just about anything so they don't mind
getting clean leftovers from the other goats.
Any spilled hay gets raked up in the barn and distributed in the goat
pens for fresh bedding. This helps to keep the pens fresh and eliminates
the need for me to buy hay or straw just for bedding.
My goats love fresh, clean water. After two days they will not drink any
water if it is stale. I take this stale but clean water and use it to
water the chickens and the lettuce plants by the barn. Any poopy water
goes to water the flower pots and seedling
trees.
When I rinse my water buckets out I always dump the rinse water on my flower pots. I never dump it on the ground.
All of my dirty goat bedding goes directly on the garden for mulch. This
works great during the fall and spring to cover the empty space and
renew the soil. During the summer I put the dirty bedding in the compost
pile for later use as topsoil. The chicken
manure goes in the compost pile.
My husband owns a wood chipper for his business. Any wood chips that
people don't want, he brings home and puts in a big pile. I use these as
a base for my goat pens and for covering muddy spots in the goat yard. I
also use them for the chickens.
I unplug the electric fence at night. I bring the goats in the barn at night so no one is out on the pasture anyway.
When I prune the maple trees or raspberry bushes I give these cuttings
to the goats. They love them! I also cut raspberry canes in the fall
before the leaves fall off and bundle them for drying in the hay loft
for the winter. The goats love to eat these when
they are in labor and right after giving birth. It's a nice treat and
raspberry is supposed to help with labor and delivery.
I rake all my maple leaves up in the fall and bag them for the winter.
The goats love getting a few handfuls of these every few days as a
treat. Just be sure that they are very dry before bagging so they don't
mold during storage.
I never mow my lawn. I use portable electric netting fence to move the
goat pasture all around. It takes only 20 minutes to move and I move it
every 3 days to give the goats fresh forage and to keep the lawn cut
short. The goats do a good job at cutting the
grass and they fertilize as they go. I have gotten pretty creative with
moving the fence so the goats get to all parts of the lawn.
My chickens get any melon rinds, corn cobs, leftover pasta and
vegetables from the house. I compost the rest of the food waste. The
goats get any stale cookies or crackers.
All cardboard and paper from the house go into the compost pile. It
composts fairly well and is cheaper than paying a dump fee to dump it in
someone else's hole in the ground. In the winter we use it to start
fires in our two wood stoves to heat the house.
I use rolled up feed bags as insulation in the eaves of my hen house for
the winter. The eaves are open for ventilation so I plug them with feed
bags for the cold weather.
I use an old lid off of a large tote bin as a rain cover for my electric
fence charger. It covers the charger and the power cord so they don't
get wet. I also have a solar fence charger that I can move around for
spots where the plug-in can't reach.
All of my milk that I don't need for my house goes into buckets for the
neighbor's pigs. The neighbor's drop off buckets with lids once a week
and I fill them up with goat milk. The pigs don't mind if the milk is a
little fermented by the time they get it,
they love it!!
That's some of the things that I do. How do you farmcycle?
Monday, July 23, 2012
Friday, July 20, 2012
Pictures!
Here's Figaro the Angora wether. Quite fluffy and quite wonderful!
Here's Miss Primrose. She is also quite nice. Her and Daisy live together and are future milk/kid producers.
Here's Brun. He's the buck for this year. He'll be bred to Lucy. He's got a buddy, Bro, the wether who keeps him company.
Tuesday, July 10, 2012
Things I have learned so far....
There are some things that I have learned in my journey with
raising livestock.
1. Don’t count your chickens before they’ve hatched: There’s
a reason this saying is about animals and not something more predictable, like
the weather. Animals will always surprise you. That little doeling goat who
shows potential may be a 2 gallon-a-day milker when she grows up, or she might
get coccidiosis and kick the bucket next week. Don’t start planning on things
that you can’t control. This isn’t to say you should never make plans, but
don’t act surprised when your best laid plans are made into manure by your
animals.
2. Do what you can with what you got: Sure, a brand new wood
paneled, welded bar horse stall looks pretty, but guess what? Your animals
don’t care what it looks like. The only thing most farm animals care about is
if their surroundings are safe, sturdy, and tasty. A horse isn’t going to be
any happier living in a fancy new barn than living in an old run-in shed. As
long as the roof doesn’t leak, there’s plenty of food available, and it is a
calm place to live with happy interactions, the horse will be as happy as can
be. An old horse trough makes a great new duck pond, a leaking water bucket is
a new grain bucket, and an empty feed sack makes great barn insulation. Look
around at what you have and make it work for you.
3. If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it: Farming is a constant
learning experience and everyone has a different way of doing things. Be
careful, though, about changing things that work well in the first place.
Animals tend to be resistant to change. Some people might have great luck with
putting their goat kids on a strict CAE, coccidiosis, and deworming schedule
starting at birth. The schedule might sound perfect and might be the key to
keeping your kids as healthy as possible. But it might also be the key to
killing your kids with kindness by changing too much of what you know already
works. I killed three kids this year by changing too much too soon. I thought
what worked for someone else should work great for me. Big mistake! In all the
changes I forgot to keep the same some very key elements that I already knew
worked, like using probiotics after using antibiotics and the dangers of feeding
too much grain. I should have stuck with my old program and only changed one
thing at a time.
3. Don’t go overboard: I jumped in when I first started by
buying up all the goats I could find. I got old ones and young ones and
pregnant ones and sick ones. If it was free or cheap, that was music to my ears.
I have found that this isn’t worth it in the end. Take your time and research
what you really want and what you want to do with it. Don’t just jump at the
next Craigslist ad you see. Ask questions, talk to people in your area and on
the internet, and look at a lot of animals before deciding what to bring home.
Keep in mind that chickens can live from 4-8 years, goats live 10-15 years and
horses can live to be 40. Getting animals is a long term commitment. If you get
15 goats and then decide next year that you don’t like goats, what are you
going to do them? Have that figured out before you bring animals home.
4. Breed within your means: This goes along with #3. Baby
animals are super cute but they eventually grow up to be bigger, eat more, poop
more, and get into trouble. It’s your job as the caretaker for your animals to
consider what happens to what you will produce. Is there a market for baby
goats in your area? What if they are all males? Are you willing to do what it
takes to care for that situation (ie: slaughter them or sell them for
slaughter)? I have had a lot of neutered male goats come back to me over the
years. This is because people bought them as cute little babies and then
realized after 5 years that their cute baby is a large, unruly, food-consuming
machine. I have now decided that all of my extra male baby goats will be used
as food for my table. I feel this is a much more humane endpoint than being
used as coyote bait (that happened last year), or bounced around from home to
home (yep, one of my boys got that treatment) or just straight up neglected
(seen that, too).
4. Be willing to go the distance: There are ways to farm
that are easier and cheaper than others, but you still have to be willing to do
what it takes and spend what it takes to keep your animals happy and healthy.
Farming is a lot of work, takes a lot of time, and can cost a lot of money. Be
prepared for that before you start. Are you willing to take a day off of your
off-farm job to wait for a vet to come and charge you $300 to help your sheep?
Are you able to stay up all night long to wait for your cow to give birth? Can
you imagine putting down your horse that got pneumonia suddenly and is very
sick? If you aren’t ready for this stuff, you might want to reconsider getting
livestock.
5. Have fun with it! Farming and raising livestock can be a
lot of fun. Animals are amazing to work and live with. Don’t be afraid to
change something that isn’t making you happy. If your llama is a pain in the
butt and he makes you dread doing chores, perhaps it’s time that llama found a
new home. Farming will be a lot of work but it should be a lot of fun too!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)