all is well

Noah

This past month has been wonderful and full and although I haven’t visited here for a long time I think of it everyday and those of you who support me and enjoy seeing what goes on in my life.

I was able to spend two weeks with my grandson Noah and on both ends of that I was with his whole family.  I get teary just thinking about it.  It has already been so long ago and I miss those baby boys every day.

Just days after returning home from my son’s place, my second doe to kid, gave me quads.

baby goats 2013

 Oh, my!  How I love each little baby goat that is born.  Their first few weeks, they are just precious and will cuddle like a little puppy.

Meet [from left to right] Gilbert, Leopold, Layla Dawn and Fitzwilliam.

With a total of six kids I am feeding 20 bottles a day.  I was feeding 32 for a few days.  Plus during this time I added two cashmere goats/kids so I can use their fiber for spinning.  I’ve only taken a picture of one of them.

baby goats 2013 This is Lynn and her sister, who is black, is Loretta.

I think all of this must be part of the reason that I feel like I can’t get anything accomplished.

I’m working AT my garden.

I’m working AT getting ready for the Farm Chicks Show.

I’m working AT life and a lot of things but I will say that I AM enjoying my days so I’ll just keep work AT IT!!!

Noah and Eli baby goats 2013 Noah turns 2 baby goats 2013 baby goats 2013 baby goats 2013

baby goats 2013

Looking at my pictures, I guess I could say that it’s been a month of little ones and all is well!

 

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is she healthy?

wholesome ~ pure and true

Is she healthy?  I think I ask myself that every day.  I swear…I’m pretty sure that my eiptaph will read…short and sweet,  “She Tried!!!”  The truest summary of each and every part of my life.

My journey towards healthy eating habits began…well, a lifetime ago.

I grew up in a home where the term ‘health food’ was never heard.  However, we lived rural and the way of living that fit our lifestyle was, eating off the land…literally.  We had a garden and my mom spent many-a-summer day ‘putting up’…canning and freezing whatever she could get her hands on to keep us through the winter months.  Fall would add to the bounty of fruits, vegetables, chicken and beef that was already in our freezer and venison would then fill in every remaining nook and cranny.

When I went away to college I worked with a gal who lived out a life of conscientious healthy eating.  I paid close attention and was intrigued with it all.  It wasn’t difficult to compare her plate with the ones that I ate from in the college cafeteria.  I have forever been weight conscious so with that came the desire to eat in a way that didn’t add to my frustration.  Throughout the years there were always people in my life who would strive to make a healthy life for themselves and their families.  I continued to be intrigued, watching closely and learning along the way.  It seemed that there was a clear right and a wrong way to eat.  But would it be that simple?

wholesome ~ pure and true

wholesome ~ pure and true

Do you aspire to a wholesome way of eating for your household?  I have found it to be a difficult and an often defeating goal.  A lot of that difficulty comes with trying to please a family.   I have repeatedly felt my own struggle to be somewhat painful and humbling and one where I too often feel ambushed by my own attempts.

This year I turn 50. [50!!!!] I am able to look at the many benefits that come with that very large and overwhelming number.  One of those being, I can look back at how my  constant attempts have led me to where I am now.  OK…so, in all honesty…yes! I’m still struggling [daily] but the struggle causes me to take steps that move…forward →.  Isn’t that what we want to see?  A forward motion?  I know myself well enough that I may never truly arrive at my goal but the process is good and enjoyable and productive and worthwhile and for that I can smile!

wholesome ~ pure and true wholesome ~ pure and true

I love this life…this journey of moving forward.  There is hardly a thing that I would change about it but along with the GRANDness of it all comes the dailyness of making it better along the way for me, my family and for others.

wholesome ~ pure and true

I have [so] many weaknesses…one of them being pancakes.  The thing that actually keeps me from eating them is the way I feel after I’ve eaten them.  Last night I just had a hankerin’ that I couldn’t overcome so I decided to make a healthy pancake.  I was the only one at home so I made 3 pancakes just for me [I just ate two of them].  They were so good and they didn’t make me feel yucky so I’m going to share the recipe with you, telling you exactly what I worked with.  If you don’t have these same farm-fresh ingredients then improvise with what you have on hand.

Whole Wheat Pancakes for One

½ c. whole wheat flour [I used flour from hard white wheat that had been sprouted, dehydrated and ground fresh]

1 small egg [from the chicken house] and enough goat’s milk [from the barn] and homemade yogurt [w/said goat's milk] to measure a ½ cup  [so, with the egg, milk and a bit of yogurt you will have a total of 1/2 c.]

1 t. baking powder

a tad bit of salt

Mix well and thin as needed with more milk or yogurt.

I cooked the pancakes in a pre-heated cast iron skillet with just a bit of bacon grease.

Served with a generous amount of butter [not homemade but someday it will be], a dollop of applesauce [canned from our own apple trees] and a drizzle of pure maple syrup.

you can find a printer friendly version of this recipe HERE

wholesome ~ pure and true

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field {farm} trip

visiting the farm

I love to visit farms.

I know that it is there where I will see the sweetest faces, meet the nicest people, smell farm-fresh air, appreciate the feel of comfort and ‘home’ and enjoy the awareness of mud as it hugs and squishes and squashes around my muckies.

visiting the farm

visiting the farm

visiting the farm

farm visit

On Tuesday, a friend [Jean] and I ventured to Cheney, WA to visit two farms.  It felt like we were taking our own private field trip…lunch bags in hand.

Our first farm [pictures above] was Valley View Farm.  Our hostess, Janice and I had met a few months ago and we couldn’t seem to tear away from conversation about art retreats and cashmere goats.  Since that day, I’ve wanted to visit her farm and see all of her cute faces, up close.

cute, indeed

She has a beautiful flock for hand-spinning fiber  :: angora goats, cashmere goats, llama, shetland sheep and angora bunnies and… those little cashemere kids were hard to leave behind…so, so cute [and loveable and kissable]

We enjoyed lunch together in Janice’s kitchen and then all three of us went to farm #2,  Fiber First Farm.  Mary and Rod were more than happy to show us their place.  I found my visit there to be very inspiring.  I appreciated their approach in everything they did from the care and planning of their land and buildings  [apparently built mostly by Mary], to the management of their flock, to the attention to their fleece, which I have to add is the most beautiful fleece that I’ve laid eyes and hands on…I think that some of it might be coming my way…yippee!visiting the farm

visiting the farm

As we finished up outside, they invited us into their home.  While Mary showed us their fleece in it’s various forms, Rod served us some nice, hot tea.  It was a cooler day than I had expected and that tea tasted and felt oh, so good.  [thanks, Rod]  Mary showed us her new toy.  Wool combs that she had made as a special request from her family for Christmas.  Now that she has these, this is her preferred way to prepare much of her fleece for spinning.

Thank you, Janice, Rod and Mary for sharing your day with us!  It was lovely!!!

visiting the farm

 

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