John Muir quote

To protect our children's privacy, we will not be posting any pictures of their faces or sharing their names within this blog. Please refrain from using their names when posting any comments to this blog. Thank you!

~Protective Mama


Everybody needs beauty as well as bread, places to play in and pray in, where nature may heal and give strength to body and soul.

~John Muir


Welcome to The Wary Farmwife seasonal journey! My goal, to blog daily (give or take a day, week or month) to showcase hobby farm life across the seasons. Stop by The Wary Farmwife blog and check out what we're up to...our front porch door is always open!

Saturday, November 23, 2013

Aoife & Beatrix...pregnant?

I've been wondering, and many people have been asking me, how we will know if Aoife & Beatrix are pregnant? So... I 'goggled': "how do you know when an ewe is pregnant?" Basically, my five minute research yielded no great answer to my question. Many sites stated it was "difficult" to determine if an ewe is pregnant without "ultrasound or other medical equipment." Another site stated you will know if your ewe is pregnant if she does not go back in heat. Well, that doesnt help me much either, as I don't know what an "in heat" ewe looks like. Another website stated a ewe will be visably "pregnant" about six weeks prior to full-term gestation. On another website, I came across the "Sheep Gestation Table/Lambing Date Calculator." This table was some-what informative as I figured out the typical gestation period for a sheep is 145 days. If Aoife or Beatrix got pregnant today... we could expect baby lambs around our 11th wedding anniversary (mid-April.) We got Ace (0f Base- as I like to call him- sorry, I came to age in the '90s) in the middle of October. If they started 'gettin' busy' a week or so later, we could see lambs as early as the middle of March. So, to answer the question of "How will we know if Aoife & Beatrix are pregnant?", I will answer with: We should have a good idea if they are pregnant by February or March, as they should be visably pregnant. If we do have baby Tunis lambs in the spring, this is what they will look like (see below):

Sunday, November 17, 2013

The Rainy Days of November

Here are a few pictures to cheer you up on this wet, rainy day!  These photos were taken by Farmer J a few weeks back, when we still had leaves (and green leaves at that) on the trees.  

 Here is Mr. Ciaran. His fur is growing longer and more fluffy by the day.  It's fun to pet him and run your fingers through his dark, black furry coat.  He is getting ready for winter! 

 This is a picture of the pasture, with the bee hive just beyond these trees (to the left).  J's first attempt with a hive and bees was not successful.  He has even recycled his bee box to start fresh in the spring.  
 Here is another picture of the pasture- looking in the opposite direction.  You can see a buff orpington hen and a barred rock hen (black and white) in the fore front and the goats/sheep near the barn.  Ace, our rented ram, is becoming a little more "male" with every passing week.  He is starting to 'ram' Farmer J and me, especially in our rear ends, whenever he can get the chance.  We have him for about another 4 weeks.  I'll be ready to have one less mouth to feed-- especially as we are now also feeding two barn cats (that have found a warm home in the upper part of the barn.)   
Here is Ciaran, Pickle (in football jammies and fireman boots) and Padraig-- three of my four kids! 

Sunday, November 3, 2013

The Little House in the Big Woods

As a family, we are reading the story, The Little House in the Big Woods.  I randomly came across the book when I was at our local library looking for the first book in the Harry Potter series.  No Harry Potter but I spotted the first book in the "Little House" series!  I immediately knew that I wanted to re-read the book...now whether the book would be as interesting to the rest of my family was still a question of mine. But, I knew that the book took place in the Midwest (familiar), that their home was a log cabin in the woods (familiar) and that the children in the story were close to the same ages as my boys (familiar).

Here is a link for more information about the book:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_House_in_the_Big_Woods

I started reading the book out loud to J and the boys while they were a captive audience (trapped in our mini-van) en route to pick up Ace.  As our mini-van is older than my oldest child, there is no built in DVD player so any entertainment is better than staring out the window.

Now, even without entrapment, the boys are requesting I read them the "little woods" story.  This first book in the Laura Ingalls Wilder series has been a great bedtime story to lull the children of mine to sleep (and buy some time before bed (when I realize I put them to bed way too early because the black sky outside has tricked my brain into thinking it was later than the actual time.))  

So far, we are all enjoying the book!  The boys love the stories about the woods, wildlife (bears, panthers) and anything associated with Pa Ingalls and his gun (including some step by step instructions on how to make bullets).  Before we started reading the book, I thought the boys were not going to enjoy it as all the children in the book are female; however, the life of a pioneer child appears to be intriguing to either gender.

As a mama, I enjoy reading this story to my children.  Their eyes get larger and larger when they hear how many chores and responsibilities pioneer children (of their same age) had to do each day.  They also find the chapters that discuss spankings and the "no playing but only being quiet and calm on Sundays rule" (my paraphrasing here) quite interesting.  With the holidays around the bend, I really loved emphasizing how happy the children in the book were with their handful of homemade presents they received on Christmas morning.

Farmer J likes the book too.  Ironically, he just told the boys to go grab the book so we can read a chapter before bed.  The fire in the wood stove is roaring, our little cabin in the woods is warm and toasty and we are together as a family.  Life doesn't get much better than this!

Better go... we are about to start reading the next chapter,"The Two Big Bears."

Stay warm!