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, July 14, 2012

Chicken round up

For the last two nights, the boys and I have been in charge of "putting the chicken's to bed.)  That basically means, rounding them up from our yard and getting them in the coop.  You also have to shut the front coop door or the lovely coons will eat all the chicken feed.

It typically takes J about 15 minutes to round up the chicken.  The first night, it took us an hour.  By the time we were down, I was sweaty and my ankles were all scratched up from trying to scare the chickens out of the brush where they like to hide.  There were a few near miss ankle sprains as I was trying to do this in my work clogs :)  Pick-Pick was pretty useless.  JJ was helpful, but I think a good herding dog would have been better!  Either way, 60 minutes later, we had all 28 chickens safely in the coop.

The second night went better.  We had them all rounded up in about 45 minutes.  This time, JJ did most of the running around and I stood near the coop door to entice them in.  Pick-Pick, who was vacuuming the grass with his new pretend vacuum cleaner, was again pretty useless :)  We found all but one white giant.  30 minutes later, I saw from my kitchen window, the white giant standing outside the coop.  I went out to the coop, quietly opened the door, and he walked right in!

Farmer J is on chicken duty tonight, thank goodness!


Sunday, July 8, 2012

The boy who cried 'bat'!

If you never read my entry, "Houston, we have a bat problem?" you might want to read that entry before this one!

We know there are bats in this 1840's house because:

-We hear them in the attic and walls
-We see them flying in/out of our house around dusk
-We met a previous woman who lived here as a child and she had many memories of hearing the bats in the walls (her bedroom was upstairs as well) as well as an encounter with one in her room!
-The house was built in 1840-- it's not exactly new construction and there are many cracks/holes for little bats to fit through.

So... going back to late June.  I'll set the scene:

Late Friday night.  The children are asleep. J is reading a magazine in the fireplace room.  I'm at the computer in our formal dining room.  It's about 9:30 p.m.

As I type away,  I feel a breeze past by my left side, hear an odd noise and see something land on top of the hutch in front of me.  It's brown.  I first think it's a moth but it's way to big for a moth.  "J, I think there is a bat in here!"  J enters the room and confirms the bat!  I immediately scream (very girly like) and dash under the table (with my rear sticking out as this table is pretty little).  I open my eyes... and the bat is under the table with me!  We are practically nose to nose!  I REALLY scream (again picturing the bat scene from "The Office"), hit my head on the table and then run to the bathroom (shutting the children's door on the way.) Amazingly, the children didn't wake up to the noise of their hysterical mother! 

I peak out of the bathroom door and ask J if he sees the bat.  He says "no" and tells me to check my back/hair.  I freak but calm when I see in the bathroom mirror that there is no bat attached to me.  My husband, armed with his head light and my brand new tupperware, catches the bat with his lightning speed.  He is my hero!


I still get wigged out when I look at these pictures but,
you can tell this bat is very little.  It is a "little brown bat".


Here's another picture of the same bat. You can see by the 
size of J's thumb, this bat is pretty little.  



So Farmer J lets the bat loose outside and we go to bed.  In the morning, we share the story and pictures with our children and they all laugh at Mama!!  I still don't find the story very funny.

Two days later... and this story is where we get the title of the blog entry from ("The boy who cried 'bat'),
my oldest says, "Mama, there is a bat in my bed."  Now you must know that my oldest is a story teller and we OFTEN have to ask if he is telling the truth or telling a story.  After hearing and talking about my bat encounter the other day, I'm certain he is just bat obsessed and is "telling a fib."  As I'm telling him the importance of telling the truth and not making up stories, J comes out of his room with yet another bat in tupperware.  THERE WAS A BAT IN MY CHILD'S BED!!!  Are you freakin' kidding me?  I apologize to JJ for not believing him and we all check out the latest bat in tupperware (this time at 4 p.m. in the afternoon).  No need for another picture as the bat looked exactly the same, even in the same tupperware (now I am down x2 tupperware bowls.) J releases the bat outside.

According to "Orkin" pest control, bats are a "protected species" until mid-August, as they are close to being an endangered species.  We have to live with the bats for another few months.  We put "sonar" bat sound machines in every room of the house.  We can't hear the noise but supposedly, the machine put's out a very high pitched noise that bat ears cannot tolerate, so they stay away. 

Since then, we have had one more bat in the house, this time a "big brown" bat.  Luckily, I was not home for that occasion.  

In another 6 weeks, a lovely person from "Orkin" will come to the farm and help with our bat problem.  I realize that the bats have been here much longer than us but it's time for them to find a new home.  You can't mess with a Mama; the bat in my child's bed was like declaring war on us! 

To be continued...

Saturday, July 7, 2012

Summer on the farm!

We first saw the farm in January, in the dead of winter.  We moved here in April and saw first hand the farm in bloom.  And now... summer on the farm.  Of course, we are now in July and just finishing up a major heat wave--which I can't quite talk about yet--still recovering from heat stroke :)  So... let's go back to June when the grass was still green and needed to be mowed...



 Our trusty lawn mower! 
It takes J and I about 6 hours
to mow the lawn. We take
turns-- it's our new workout!

This is two bags full of clippings. We 
get about 3 wheel barrels full, if we
mow the whole lawn in one day!
Typically, we just mow a few hours each day.

Here is farmer J building the chicken tractor.
More to come on this... still a touchy issue :) 

In the summer, on the farm, you never 
know what your child will find! JJ 
found a deer skull!  

My parents gave me this egg basket for my
birthday.  It's an antique and will be very
useful when my girls start laying eggs. Thanks 
Mom and Dad! 

 This is one of my favorite views
on the farm.  All the beautiful
purple flowers in bloom. 

 Summer tea.  After spending time
in the south, I've been
really into sweet tea.  J made
me some homemade sweet tea!

Another gift from my parents-- a nice 
place to keep all our kindling. This
will really come in handy next winter. 

 A summer boat ride at my parent's cabin-
Papa and pick-pick.  I love this picture and 
had to add it! 

We don't have a sidewalk but
we have a lovely brick pathway to our
front door.  I came back from work
to find each brick beautifully
colored by my family-- guiding me home. 

 Bright hot, pink petunias! In full 
bloom in late June.  

 The garden in late June.  Luckily, all of
farmer J's hard work (i.e., creating
garden Fort Knox) is paying off. 
The garden is growing beautifully!

 Here is one of our Rhode
Island Reds (i.e., no name meat bird).
Our roosters are getting very big--
and very noisy at 4:45 in the morning!

p.s. This blog is dedicated to Karina-- my number one fan!