Saturday, October 31, 2009

Hi-Ho, Hi-Ho, Off to the Barn I Go

Hi-Ho, Hi-Ho, Off to the Barn I Go. This is my parody of the song from Snow White... It means I'm about to begin my day.

So much planned for today. Off to Amish country to buy some more lye. Becky and I are making soap tomorrow. Becky informed me we may be making up to eight 8# batches... Screech!!! What did she just say? That's a lot of soap. That's somewhere between 240 to 400 bars depending on the size of the molds. And let me tell you, we will need every mold we can find with that much soap. But hey we will be prepared for Christmas and the great beyond.

Hope to get the new kids horns disbudded tomorrow. No my little trick-or-treating devils, but the cute litte Nigerian Dwarf babies. They are so sweet! Buttercup has adopted Snickers little doeling. We are thinking of calling her Sneakers because she sneaks drinks from Buttercup as well as her mom Angelica. She a down-right thief! No wonder she is growing like a weed!

Sunday, October 25, 2009

Science proves it - goat milk is healthier than cow milk


What I've always suspected now has some proof - goats milk is healthier than cow's according to this study. It has been proven to prevent anemia and bone demineralization.

Saturday, October 24, 2009

Two new doelings on the Rocking-M

Kids Corral CR Angelica gave us two beautiful doelings today... Hope to upload pix later this weekend.... Debating whether to keep them.... Hubby says keep them, but he's kind of partial to "Angelica Pickles" as he calls her... I'm kind of fond of her too... She's a dream on the milk stand...

Maybe I'll wait until Buttercup drops her young ones... I truly thought she would kid first... She should go within the week....

And then there is next year's breeding... Noah has to figure out who he's breeding to who.... and get 'er done...

But today's task is donning my knee-high Muck Boots spreading gravel in our sopping wet, muddy barnyard with the hubby before the budding journalist arrives to interview me about my soap.

And then there's tomorrow, off to Carol's farm for the Capering Kids 4-H Goat Club's annual Fall Jamboree... Good times, good food, lots of goats and kids with good friends!

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

So many different types of milk


It seems there is a different milk for every day of the week nowadays.

The Los Angeles Times goes on to explain the differences here...

I still prefer goat milk from my sweet, little Nigerian Dwarf goats any day of the week.

Saturday, August 22, 2009

Rocking M doelings and their new owners make the news


I'm looking forward to seeing Mason and Hattie Luster show their Rocking-M doelings at the Somerset County Fair this Sunday.

Read the wonderful article (from the Daily American) about the Lusters, Nigerian Dwarf Goats and our farm, Rocking M here.

Saturday, June 20, 2009

Friday, June 12, 2009

Crazy Soapin' Farm Life

I need to make soap... Lots and lots of soap.... I just added a new location.

Everyone asks me, " How do you get it all done?" When do I find time?

Between 11 pm and 3 am.... for soapmaking. Up at 5 am on days that are extremely crazy. In the barn no later than 7 am on workdays to feed and milk the goats.

Off to work - designing web pages, print media, working on social media.

Home. Feed the animals then the kids. Off to 4-H meetings.

Oh, did I mention, if you put a load of clothes in the wash before you go to the barn in the morning and put a load in when you get back in the morning, one will have just enough hot water for a shower before the wash fills completely. And, if you put a load in before you go to bed. A seriously tired mother can get 3 loads of laundry done in a day. Now, I'm not saying it is all folded. That would be a miracle!

Home. Catch up on all the rest. Sleep. Wonderful Sleep

Thursday, June 11, 2009

Saturday, June 6, 2009

Who knew a goat could do this

Trolling the net for goat pix and I came across this .. I know goats have crazy balance, but YIKES!

Sunday, May 24, 2009

Wind Farms kill Goats

I am all for sustainable energy.... efficient sustainable energy and the more I learn the more I'm convinced that wind farms are not for Western MD, but rather for places like the coastal shelf where they can be most efficient. That being said, I just came across an article about goats and their demise due to wind farm noise.

The BBC published an interesting article about 400 goats dying due to sleep deprivation caused by the noise of nearby wind turbines. To read more on this... check out this link

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/8060969.stm

Saturday, May 23, 2009

The Original Slim Jim Recipe

I found this "original" Slim Jim recipe posted at the New York Times. I don't know if it is the real thing yet, but I'm going to pass it along to the butcher. I LOVE SLIM JIMS! I hope I LOVE GOAT SLIM JIMS! I'm thinking of culling one of the Boer does and her baby from last year just so I can make slim jims. Goat meat is really low in cholesterol and healthier than beef. After growing up on a beef farm, it is hard not to like beef.

http://events.nytimes.com/recipes/1884/2001/12/30/The-Original-Slim-Jim/recipe.html

The Original Slim Jim

Ingredients

  • 1 lamb intestine casing (4 feet long)
  • 2 1/2 pounds top round chuck, cubed
  • 1 pound beef fat, cubed
  • 3 tablespoons paprika
  • 2 teaspoons black pepper
  • 2 teaspoons cayenne pepper
  • 1/2 teaspoon ground coriander
  • 1 teaspoon ground fennel seeds
  • 1 teaspoon No. 1 curing salt
  • 4 tablespoons kosher salt
  • 2 teaspoons sugar
  • 1 clove garlic, peeled and smashed
  • 1/3 cup lactic-acid starter culture

Preparation

1.
Rinse salt off the sausage casing. Soak in ice water for at least 1 hour.
2.
Combine meat and fat. Run the mixture through a meat grinder into a large bowl, using the finest setting. Add all ingredients, along with one cup of ice water. Knead vigorously until mixture is the consistency of bread dough (about 8 minutes).
3.
Rinse casing one last time. Choose the narrowest gauge tube of your sausage press. Splash the tube with ice water, then pull the casing over it. Transfer the mixture, about two fistfuls at a time, to the sausage press and then pump the meat into the casing, splashing more water on the tubing as needed to stop the casing from tearing.
4.
Preheat an electric smoker to 100 degrees. Hang sausage in the smoker for 22 hours. Temperature should never dip below 90 degrees or go above 110 degrees. After 22 hours, raise the temperature to 150 degrees and cook until the internal temperature reaches 150 to 155 degrees (about 30 minutes).
5.
Remove from smoker and let cool at about 50 degrees in a dry place for 4 hours. Cut sausage into 4-inch lengths.
YIELD
16 servings
  • Originally published with FOOD: ADOLPH LEVIS, B. 1911; A Tricky Stick
  • By Manny Howard, December 30, 2001

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

BUSY AS A BEE

Not gathering honey, but crazy busy today

Posted via email from rocking-m's posterous

BUSY AS A BEE

Crazy busy today!

)  (
.  .
  I         May you always have love to share, health to spare, and friends that care
 U
  (

Thank you,
Missy Russell Martz

Rocking M
Raising Sons, Reg. Haflinger Horses 
& Reg. Nigerian Dwarf & Boer Goats

13509 Old Legislative Road SW
Frostburg, MD 21532
voice: 301/268-8388 before 8am or after 8 pm






There is something about the outside of a horse that is good for the inside of a man.
— Winston Churchill

No hour of life is wasted that is spent in the saddle.   Winston Churchill

Heaven is high and earth wide.  If you ride three feet higher above the ground than other men, you will know what that means.  — Rudolf C. Binding



Posted via email from rocking-m's posterous

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Random Notes to Self

Copper Sulfate will treat foot rot. Mix copper sulfate with sawdust. Put in throw away cement mixing pans from Lowe's in a place where the goats have to walk through... Info courtesy of Fernie Register.

Sunday, March 29, 2009

Robotic Cow Milkers

Well, today I traveled to Annapolis with the fine folks from Western Maryland Rural Leadership. And along the way, we stopped at Mason Dixon Farm where Richard Waybright showed us around his super-efficient farm complete with robotic milkers.

The Waybrights employ 43 people and milk 2,400 head of holsteins daily through the use of robotic milkers. The cows self milk. As they want to be milked, they enter the a milking station, where a robotic DeLaval arm automatically does an udder wash, a milk test and in begins to milk. A computer automatically records each cows milk yield. Waybright's blue-ribbon cow milked 20# of milk per day.

This wasn't the only super-cool thing though. The Waybrights created a tractor that can mow down a 30' swath of silage, utilize a methane digester, and a irrigation thing on wheels to spread manure across their fields at a press of a button. Well, worth the tour!

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Gardening Workshop





Plant peas and beans twice...
Swiss chard manages heat better than lettuce...
Make cucumbers grow to make them climb..
Heritage Tomatoes - cross between Heirloom (taste) and Hybrid (yield)
Plant seed twice as deep as it is wide
Tamp down soil but not compact
Okra takes a long time to grow... more of a Southern plant
transplants: tomato, pepper, eggplant, cabbage, broccoli, herbs

carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, phosphorous, potassium,
nitrogen - leaf growth, too much not much fruit production, manure, blood meal, cottonseed meal
phosophorus - rock phosphate, bone meal, cottonseed
potassium- wood ashes, manure, green sand, compost
synthetic fertlizers are more readily available because they are water-soluable
new garden - Nitrogen - Phosphorous - Potassium 10-10-10
2 cups = 1 lb. synthetic fertilizer
don't fertilize until you get the first set of true leaves
water after planting seeds or transplants, water especially when flowering and fruit
65 gallons
dig a hole 3 or 4 inches deep don't water it is until it is dry...
best time to water - late afternoon before sundown or early in the morning don't water in the heat of the day...
soaker hose cuts down on evaporation..
Add organic matter to soil to conserve water...
2-4 inches deep but don't let it touch the plants - encourages slugs


Weeds

skinny trowels, hand pull, mulch
plant in a row, weed every 10 days...
check label to seed how soon you can spray after using insecticides
slugs - pans of beer, half of cantelope upside down...

www.growit.umd.edu

Aphids - most common - most easy to deal with when they are young....
Whiteflies - in hoop houses mostly
Stink bugs white specks on tomatoes indicates
squash bug - red, adult brown, usually comes after you are sick of squash
Japanese beetle - hand pick - defense mechanism is to fall off so have cup underneath
Cucumber Beetle - yellow and black stripes - tough to control organic

Beneficial Insects
Ladybeetle fit on a pencil eraser
Syrphid Fly - maggot
Ground Beetle
Lacewing - hang under a leaf
Parasitic wasps - eats its hosts - mummy -
Tachinid Fly

Wordless Wednesday

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

SALE: Coffee & Cream Kitchen Soap

Who wouldn't like a little coffee & cream in the morning?
A treat for the senses, the coffee smells so de-li-cious while the cream (made with real goats milk from here on the farm) nourishes your skin. This soap is also great for removing all those icky kitchen smells like onions and seafood from your hands...

$4.50
Approximate 4 oz. bar




Monday, March 16, 2009

Everlasting Fence Posts

Take boiled linseed oil and stir in it pulverized charcoal to the consistency of paint. Put a coat of this over the timber, and there is not a man that will live to see it rotten." (From "Lee's Priceless Recipes" 1895)

Saturday, March 14, 2009

Check!

I received one of the books on my want to read list. Goat Medicine by Mary C. Smith and David Sherman. I am such the geek! At least my family thinks I am... I would rather read than do almost anything else besides be in the barn. They can't understand why I like the barn so much either...

Friday, March 13, 2009

PSA

Sunday, March 8, 2009

Martha Stewart's Soil Recipe

The weather here is wonderful today. So, my planting urges are on full alert. Between checking the goats for new babies and lugging peat moss out of my truck, I'm cruising the net looking at organic soil mix recipes. I found Martha Stewart's recipe here.

Organic Soil Mix

2 bags Organic compost
1 bag peat moss
1/2 bag perlite
1/2 bag vermiculite
1 bag pumice dust
6 cups bat guano
6 cups worm castings
4 cups bone meal
2 cups lime

Organic Tea Recipe

5 gallons purified water
1/2 cup Fish emulsion
1 cup Bat guano
1 cup liquid seaweed
6 table spoons Molasses

Thursday, March 5, 2009

Treatment for Lice on Goats

This website suggests the following for treating lice on goats

In our area, cattle susceptible to lice will get them about July, especially if they aren't eating enough of the mineral lick. We haven't had lice in goats on Irrabina although we have had lice in sheep. We've had them in the cattle at times and rather than use a pour on as we have done in the past, we use a very simple and easy cure. Mostly it takes 4-5 days but can take longer depending on how bad the infestation is. We use SULPHUR. You can buy it in bulk from your produce supplier.

For goats,
use 1 TEASPOON per animal mixed with warm water. Administer orally using a drench gun or syringe at the rate of say 20ml per animal. That is, mix up enough sulphur at 1 teaspoon per animal in 20ml water times the number of goats.

For cattle,
use about 1 TABLESPOON per head per day, which works out to be about 30 grams per head per day. For 35 head (don't worry about size and weight, just number head), that's about 1kg. For 35 head, buy 5kgs of powdered sulphur (not the grains) which will last 5 days. We see a reaction (ie no licking of the body, no rubbing against trees, the coats are dry with more sheen) after 2 days but complete the 5 day treatment. Mix up and feed out as per giving treatments.

After 5 days, even if you see only one animal still licking itself or rubbing, continue the treatment for all for another 5 days. It's simple and relatively cheap.

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Farm bank thrives amid crisis

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/harford/bal-ha.farm21dec21,0,6327261.story

Ted Shelby's article for the Baltimore Sun, (12/21/08) opens with the following sentence.

Our nation would not be in the midst of the greatest financial crisis since the Depression if we had more grain farmers, dairymen and poultry growers running our lending institutions.

and goes on to say

Farm Credit's balance sheet is the envy of the banking industry. Net income for the six months ended June 30 is up nearly 20 percent to $1.55 billion from the same period last year.

and

Conventional lenders reported nearly 8,000 foreclosures in Maryland during the three-month period ended Sept. 30, and that is with state programs aimed at keeping people in their homes.

By comparison, MidAtlantic Farm Credit, which serves most of Maryland and parts of Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Virginia and Delaware, has reported fewer than a dozen foreclosures over the past year.

While other banks have been cutting or completely eliminating dividend payments of shareholders, MidAtlantic paid out $28 million in patronage payments last year. This is a form of profit sharing with its borrowers who are also owners of the bank.

"Having farmers on our board of directors helps keep us focused on our mission," said Frazee. "They are fiscal conservatives and prone not to repeat mistakes of the past."

Sixteen of MidAtlantic's 18 directors are farmers.

Country folks can survive!

I think the key here is farmers don't typically repeat mistakes of the past. There are a few alive who lived through the Great Depression. My father just missed it, but my grandparents didn't and the stories were told and passed on to the next generation about how hard it was.

Brandied Apples with Goat Cheese Recipe

Ingredients:
1 baguette
1/4 cup olive oil
Salt and freshly ground black pepper
1 tablespoon butter
1 green apple, sliced
2 tablespoons brandy or apple vodka (this may be omitted)
1 cup softened goat cheese

Preheat oven on low broil setting.

Slice baguette into 35 small rounds. Coat each round with olive oil and lightly salt and pepper them. Place them on a cookie sheet. In a small saucepan, melt butter and add apple slices. When apples are coated, add brandy and toss gently for about 3 minutes, until apples become slightly soft. Remove from heat.

To construct, place 1 apple slice on a toast round and spoon about 1 tablespoon of goat cheese on top. When all of them are constructed, place entire cookie sheet under broiler and remove as soon as the top of the goat cheese is slightly browned. Be sure you don't forget them, because they will brown quickly.

Goat Cheese Dumplings with Sambal Chili Oil Recipe

Girly goats! Hurry up and freshen 'cause the recipe sounds de-lish!

Ingredients:
24 won ton wrappers
5 ounces goat cheese
1 cup extra virgin olive oil
4 tablespoons sesame oil
4 tablespoons sambal chili paste
parsley to garnish

Lay out won ton wrappers. Place a thumbnail size piece of goat cheese in center of each wrapper. Moisten edges of wrapper and fold wrappers into a triangle. Seal edges making sure to eliminate any air pockets. Blend oils and Sambal paste in blender until smooth. Bring large pot of water (and salt) to a boil. Drop half of the dumplings into water and let boil for 2 minutes,

Remove and boil remaining dumplings. Arrange 4 dumplings on each plate and drizzle with the chili oil mixture and sprinkle with parsley.

This recipe from CDKitchen for Goat Cheese Dumplings with Sambal Chili Oil serves/makes 6

Sunday, March 1, 2009

Bamboo as a goat forage?

From http://www.wildthymefarm.com/agrobamboo.html

An excerpt from Wild Thyme Farm about Bamboo as an animal forage

On our farm where we run dairy cattle and goats on an open pasture we are faced with food shortages during the winter months when grasses are dormant or no longer meeting the nutritional needs of the animals. Consequently we have had to invest in either purchased feed or the energy and labor of cutting and storing grass hay. Recently we have begun exploring a number of perennial crops that hold the potential for extending the forage capacity of the bottomland pastures. Bamboo has become a prime candidate as a perennial forage species as it holds its foliage year round making dormant season harvest possible. Having a high protein content (12%-19%) it is comparable to alfalfa in nutritional value yet does not require the intensive cutting, drying, and storage process of an annual crop.

Bamboo thrives in the rich, moist alluvial soils of the farm's bottomlands. We are therefore researching the feasibility of growing bamboo in proximity to grazing animals. Feeding can be managed by either cutting bamboo and "throwing it over the fence" or allowing animals to g raze in bamboo paddocks on short rotations. WSU is also experimenting with producing silage, a product of fermented foliage or biomass, from bamboo leaves. Silage is typically produced from grass hay and is a common strategy for providing a food source to grazing animals during seasons when pastures are dormant.

Party Games

From http://www.mommyswahmplace.com/partyplangames.html

Name That Candy

Hand each guest a list with all the questions, the person who gets the most correct answers, wins!

1) A Famous Trio
2) A Galaxy Not So Far Away
3) She Loves Chuck
4) The Mighty Twins
5) Good For Laughs
6) Draw a Blank
7) Sultan of Swat
8) The Best Day of the Week
9) Pile It On
10) Happiness Abounds
11) A Rainbow of Color
12) Don't Go To Sea Without It
13) A Hot Planet
14) I Forgot...?
15) Superman's alter ego
16) Ritzy New York
17) Nothin' Between The Ears
18) Lotta Moola
19) Goofy Geeks
20) Tubby Hubby


TV Game

Tell the guests you are playing a game, and give each a piece of paper and a pen. Tell them all to listen good! After you are done reading, have them write down all of the TV shows that were in the story. The one with the most, wins!

I was THIRTY SOMETHING, living through THE WONDER YEARS with my FAMILY and my husband taking ONE DAY AT A TIME. We were doing okay, but THE FACTS OF LIFE were that we were not born with SILVER SPOONS in our mouths. Our savings were in JEOPARDY and we didn't want to be in debt for the rest of THE DAYS OF OUR LIVES. I finally told my husband, it's time to get out of THIS OLD HOUSE or at least make some HOME IMPROVEMENTS. I don't want to start a FAMILY FEUD but I'm YOUNG AND RESTLESS and I want to contribute to the family finances. It's time for me to GET SMART.

Don't be THE CRITIC, I'm in search of AMERICA'S MOST WANTED job. FAMILY MATTERS to me and I don't want to miss out on the PRIME TIME with the kids by hiring THE NANNY. [Your company] offers a great opportunity. THE PRICE IS RIGHT, no investment!!! Part-time work with full-time pay! And WHO'S THE BOSS? I am! But could I get up in front of a FULL HOUSE of PERFECT STRANGERS for 60 MINUTES and tell people how to take home their BOLD AND BEAUTIFUL with [Your company] merchandise and become DESIGNING WOMEN?

Of course, I have experienced some GROWING PAINS, but soon I was able to spread my WINGS and watch my business BLOSSOM. [Your company] has made me feel like I'm part of A-TEAM. I have GOOD TIMES at home with ALL MY CHILDREN. My family CHEERS when my weekly profit-check arrives!

Pass the Gift

This is a very easy one to play! Bring a wrapped gift to your show. After you have introduced yourself, have everyone stand up and get into a circle. Hand 1 person the gift and have them follow the following directions. The last one with the gift in hand wins.

You thought all the gifts were meant for you. But I have other items too.
So hold up this gift and look around, and give it to the one with eyes of brown.

You think you are the lucky one, but let us all share in the fun!
Look around with eyes discreet, and give it to the one with the smallest feet.

Your feet are tiny and very small. Now hand it to someone very tall.
Please, take your time and don't be harried. Give it to the one who is longest married.

You must be proud of your married life, now pass this on to the newest wife.

Of this parcel you are bereft, give it to the one on your left.
The largest earring I'm looking for now, if you're wearing them, step up with a bow.

Now to the person with buttons-- big or small, any kind, the most you can find gets the gift at this time.

Now don't get cross and please don't fight, but pass it to the lady third on the right.

We should stop now, don't you agree? The gift is yours to open and see.

The Detergent & Soap Game

Let everyone know you are playing the detergent and soap game. Tell them you are going to read them a short story and have them right down all of the detergents or soaps they spot in your paragraph. The one with the most, wins.

With joy in my heart, I made a dash for the mailbox. What a thrill to find that my special package had arrived. Giving a shout I raced into the house like a Haley's Comet. "Why all the excitement?" asked my husband. "If you'd use some of the energy to keep the house spic n span and to get the laundry done, I might have enough clean clothes to tide me over." "So, you think house work is a breeze. "I retorted."

Here's the whisk broom now why don't you climb down from your ivory tower and give me a hand?" "And as for the laundry, I thought I woodbury that in the back yard." "One more bold remark like that", he replied" and I'm going to dial the dress shop and cancel the order on your new chiffon dress. How duz that strike you?" "Not on your lifebuoy" I said, grabbing the phone from his hand. "I was only teasing Sweetheart he said, "Now go and open your special package to cheer you up.

Carding, carding, carding

I have been hand carding mohair in preparation of dyeing it for a wonderful yarn I hope to spin. Maureen Pritchard, The Barefoot Spinner, loaned me a pair of carders at the end of her wonderful spinning class held at Millicent's (yarn shop) on the Downtown Cumberland Mall.

I have a long way to get all this fiber carded. And I still have wool to wash and pick thanks to Carol Manger at Briarwood Farms. I yearn for a spinning wheel of my own. All in due time.

Trying to find time to satisfy my curiousity of it all amongst the soapmaking, the 4-H meetings, work, getting ready to kid, and starting seeds for the garden.

Life is busy, but I am blessed.

Homemade Electrolyte Mixture

Courtesy of Fiasco Farm's website

Fiasco Farm has a wonderful website full of useful information. Molly's Herbal Wormer is wonderful, too. I have used it to stop diarrhea in kids that I suspect were dealing with coccidia.

Mixture #1
1 package of Jam & Jelly pectin (Surgel).
1 Tbs baking soda
1 Tbs potassium chloride, Lite Salt (can find in the grocery aisle with the diet foods)
Mix with 2 quarts of water.

Goat Milk Lotion

20 grams stearic acid
42 grams emulsifying wax
22 grams Shea Butter
38 grams Apricot Kernel Oil
32 grams macadamia nut Oil
20 grams Sweet Almond Oil
32 grams sunflower Oil
10 grams glycerin
2.50 grams citric acid
776 grams distilled water
7 grams germaben II
1.8 grams lemon F.O.
1.2 grams vanilla hazelnut
+ 3% goats milk ultra pasteurized at 200° for 60 seconds

Banana Butter recipe

Ingredients

3 cups of mashed banana. Three cups is approximately equal to 10 to 12 bananas

1/4 of a cup of lemon juice

1/2 of a cup of minced maraschino cherry

7 cups of sugar

6 ounces of liquid pectin

Step by Step

1. Measure the three cups of freshly mashed bananas in a saucepan.

2. Mix together the lemon juice, maraschino cherries and the sugar

3. Bring the mixture to a rapid boil and continue to boil for 1 complete minute

4. Stir the mixture continuously to prevent sticking

5. Remove from pan from the heat and stir the pectin into the mixture

6. Mix all the ingredients well

7. Ladle the completed butter into sterile hot jars and immediately seal

8. Process the jars in your boiling water bath at least for ten minutes per pints.

Saturday, February 21, 2009

I learned to spin today

I learned to spin today. Not that new-fangled spinning class you see at gyms, but spinning fiber into yarn. Now I'm googling louet wheels and Angora goats. LOL

Just what I need - another addiction. The first was horses, now its goats, is yarn next. Who knows? But it was fun!

Goat licking

So my 7-year-old says to me today, "Mommy, why is Oreo licking the barn?"

I answer, " I don't know." (because I truly don't - she has all she needs in her little goatie kingdom)

My 7-year-old answers brightly, "She's polishing the barn."

I smile and think to myself, now only if I could put her to work on my hardwood floors.

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Another Teat Dip Recipe

Use this after milking-
Teat Dip
Mix four litres of water, 5 ml of lavender oil, 5 ml pine oil, 2 ml eucalyptus oil, 12 ml cottonseed oil (available in drugstores) and 5 ml methylene blue.

courtesy of Proverbs 31 Nubians and Nigerians on Double D Ranch

Saturday, February 14, 2009

Two Goats in Love

Saturday April 12, 2008
from Molly's Astrology Blog

Capricorn is surefooted when it comes to climbing mountains, but in love, can be secretive and wary. They like to dominate, but want someone they can respect. They're often stubbornly wed to their way of doing things. They're sensual, loyal and mysteriously wise. They're full of quirks of thrifty behavior, dark humor and a melancholy that is at times, enveloping. Only another Goat can truly understand the "crazy cappy," and love them from deep inside the cave.

Stackyard

Visit a new goat finder site:
www.stackyard.com

Goats for Sale

3 AGS Registered Nigerian Dwarf Bucks for Sale
in Western Maryland

disbudded, up-to-date on CDT shots, AGS Registered

Looking for Registered Nigerian Dwarf doelings? Reserve your March 2009 kids today

An adorable solid white buck with blue eyes
Great conformation!
Rocking-M Buttercream $300
Born February 2008
Proven (he has does bred that are due in March)

Gold and white buck with blue eyes
Rocking-M Butter Goldie Spots $200
Born September 2008

Black and white buck with blue eyes
Great conformation!
Rocking-M Butterdoodle $300
Born September 2008
SOLD! Thanks P.A.

Email for pix info@rocking-m.com

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Goat Vets recommended by other goat breeders

Here is a list of goat vets listed by state courtesy of CyberGoat....

Thursday, February 5, 2009

Pink Eye Remedy for Goats

The absolute best is Coni Ross's recipe 1 part Dexamethasone
1 part Gentamicin
1 part sterile water

I use a small eyeglass spray bottle and spray once a day. One or two times and it's done. I checked with a vet and he said that it's so much better than the puffer because the puffer requires moisture to make it work and Pinkeye dries the eye out (no moisture)

Funny Goat Story

Nigerian police detain goat over armed robbery

LAGOS (Reuters) – Police in Nigeria are holding a goat on suspicion of attempted armed robbery.

Vigilantes took the black and white beast to the police saying it was an armed robber who had used black magic to transform himself into a goat to escape arrest after trying to steal a Mazda 323.

"The group of vigilante men came to report that while they were on patrol they saw some hoodlums attempting to rob a car. They pursued them. However one of them escaped while the other turned into a goat," Kwara state police spokesman Tunde Mohammed told Reuters by telephone.

"We cannot confirm the story, but the goat is in our custody. We cannot base our information on something mystical. It is something that has to be proved scientifically, that a human being turned into a goat," he said.

Belief in witchcraft is widespread in parts of Nigeria, Africa's most populous nation. Residents came to the police station to see the goat, photographed in one national newspaper on its knees next to a pile of straw.

(Reporting by Nick Tattersall; Editing by Katie Nguyen)

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Build your own milker instructions

Build your own milker instructions here...

More notes...

From: http://www.mohairconnection.com/goathealth.htm


FEED

As a general rule, we feed grain year around -l lb. pound per animal per day. If you choose not to feed grain throughout the year, begin feeding ½ lb. per day when pasture is no longer available (usually October through April). Growing kids need 1 lb. of grain a day until they are one year old. In severe cold weather, feed extra grain at night to provide energy . A handy measuring container is a margarine tub. One "fill" is a pound. Goats are fussy eaters when it comes to cleanliness - if their grain has been fouled in some way they will not touch it.

For pregnant does, we feed 1 lb. of grain per day until the last four weeks of gestation, at which time we gradually increase feed to 1½ lb. per day and keep them at that level until kids are weaned. (Do not overfeed during early gestation since this can result in kids that are too large boned to be delivered.) For does with twins or triplets, we increase grain to 2 lbs. per day and keep an eye on them. If they look like they are getting too thin, we increase the grain, or vice versa. You get the idea.

We have our grain ration mixed in 1,000 lb. lots. Here is the "formula" (with rounded percentages) for a 12% protein feed: 350 lb. (36%) cracked corn, 300 lb. (32%) rolled barley, 150 lb.(16%) whole oats, and 150 lb. (16%) 38% Dari Blend, which is cracked and mixed with 5 lb BioBaby Premix (kelp fortified with other plant based minerals), 5 lb. PYK (a yeast culture that feeds the rumen microbes), 10 lb. Icelandic kelp, 25-30 lb. diatomaceous earth, 160 lb. (17%) liquid molasses and .4% ammonium chloride (to prevent urinary calculi in males). The Biobaby Premix, PYK and Icelandic kelp are nutritional supplements that we buy from Midwestern Bio-Ag (as well as our diatomaceous earth) . We also feed kelp free choice. Kelp has just about every nutrient in it that a goat needs. You’ll be astounded how the animals fight over it.

When making any change in grain "formulas", or when beginning grain in the fall or ending grain in the spring, do so very slowly to allow the rumen to adjust. Similarly, introduce any new food very slowly.

As to hay, a mixed grass hay is best for goats. Alfalfa is too rich and will cause all kinds of health problems and diarrhea. During severe cold weather, feed the poorest hay you have—this stimulates the rumen, which acts as the goats’ "furnace"
.
Also, allow some bedding to build up during the coldest months of the year—the urine and feces provide healthy heat. Goat urine and feces do not smell — although you may notice an ammonia smell in the Spring just before you clean the barn. In this event, sprinkle a liberal amount of barn lime about and that will take care of it. Goat urine and feces do not contain urea, and for this reason the bedding can be used to directly on your garden for fertilizing and mulching and will not burn plants. A healthy goat will produce feces that look like black, shiny marbles

.Make sure that your goats have mineralized salt (the kind sold for sheep—not the kind sold for cattle) available free choice. (It can be tricky figuring out where to put the mineralized salt feeder so they can’t poop in it!) We feed a salt/Icelandic kelp mix and have observed an increase in overall sturdiness as well as fleece quality since we added this to our nutritional regime. If you don’t have a source, ask us about it.

Friday, January 23, 2009

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Polled Hereford notes

Places to look for Polled Herefords in the future...
Foggy Bottom Farm, Taneytown, MD
>Genetic Partner, Larsons' Polled Herefords
Renner Polled Herefords Bens Run, WV

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

Seasame Seed Oil for eczema

Sesame Seed Oil (Used for eczema, psoriasis
and mature skin. Contains excellent moisturizing properties and also used to help fade blemishes

Solid Bubble Bath Recipe

1/3 cup of cream of tartar (available at supermarket)
1 cup of baking soda (sodium bicarbonate)
1 cup of sodium laurel sulfoacetate SLS (powdered foaming agent)
1/3 cup (more or less) of glycerin liquid
a few drops of water-based soap colorant or food color
any fragrance or essential oil (we used Juniper Breeze)
a mold (we used our small loaf mold)

Makes 18 ozs. Mix the dry ingredients in a bowl and add the colorant and fragrance a few drops at a time until the desired shade and scent are achieved. Mix in the glycerin liquid a little at a time until the mixture holds together in your hand. Transfer to your mold and press firmly into the mold. Unmold after about a hour and check for firmness. If the mixture crumbles, return it to the bowl and add more glycerin, then remold.

If it holds together when unmolded, cut into chunks or slices and continue to let dry on wax paper. May take overnight or longer to harden. Wrap in cellophane, tissue paper or store in container. Use within a month or two.

To use: Drop into running bath water and enjoy the bubbles!

Sunday, January 4, 2009

Poem: The Goat and I

The Goat And I
Robert William Service

Each sunny day upon my way
A goat I pass;
He has a beard of silver grey,
A bell of brass.
And all the while I am in sight
He seems to muse,
And stares at me with all his might
And chews and chews.

Upon the hill so thymy sweet
With joy of Spring,
He hails me with a tiny bleat
Of welcoming.
Though half the globe is drenched with blood
And cities flare,
Contentedly he chews the cud
And does not care.

Oh gentle friend, I know not what
Your age may be,
But of my years I'd give the lot
Yet left to me,
To chew a thistle and not choke,
But bright of eye
Gaze at the old world-weary bloke
Who hobbles by.

Alas! though bards make verse sublime,
And lines to quote,
It takes a fool like me to rhyme
About a goat.

Friday, January 2, 2009

Goat Milk Baths

Homemade Milk Baths For Sale


$4.50

Spicy Milk Bath- made from oatmeal, milk, baking soda with a cinnamon fragrance. 6 oz jar- $4.50 + shipping.

Goats Milk Bath- made from goats milk & citrus oils
6 oz jar- $4.50 + shipping.

Herbal Milk Bath- made from cornstarch and milk with herbs.
6 oz jar- $4.50 + shipping.

Lavender Milk Bath- made from milk and lavender.
6 oz jar- $4.50 + shipping.

Oatmeal Milk Bath- made from oatmeal, milk, hazelnut and lavender oil.
6 oz jar- $4.50 + shipping.

All products are wonderful and smell great. They leave your skin soft. It makes a wonderful gift and its a great way to enda busy and tiring day! Enjoy!

Keep Mosquitoes away

put some pennyroyal or tea tree oil in laundry detergent...