Monday, October 18, 2010

Our weekend

Not much to share, Mike and Cortney did clean up in the garden on Saturday, collecting more dried bean pods( a 5 gallon bucket full of one variety and a old milk crate with another), burned the dried bushes from the bush beans, pulled up the cabbage roots. While I worked indoors on cleaning and getting odds and ends chore caught up. In the late afternoon we did clean the stove pipe and stove in preparation for our burning.If your are interested in a tutorial look under woodstove care for pictures.
We did it the old fashioned way but removing a section of pipe and holding a bag over the end of the pipe to collect the soot, if you'll recall our disaster when experimenting on a new way( easier, so so we thought, LOL!) last year.LOL!!!!

I woke up Saturday with a scratchy throat, so immediately took 2000mg Vitamin C, began my day by drinking echinachea / elderberry tea with a liberal amount of raw honey and increased my Vitamin D3 from 3,000mg to 5,000mg. The scratchy throat went away by about midday but I felt it settling into my sinuses. By evening the nose was plugged tight, which I hate not being able to breath through my nose, so fought sleep off and on all night.


Sunday we'd scheduled to butcher turkeys, six total( 5 tom and a hen), would have been 6 toms but one was injured fighting and lost some weight while he was down. We had all but one turkey sold, or so we thought.*sigh*  When I called people on Friday to let them know their birds would be ready for pick up early next week( this week) two people cancelled their orders, sighting $$$ problems and one lady I couldn't get a hold of, but am fairly sure she's just out of town. So this leaves us with two toms and a hen that were not claimed. Our freezer space is limited so we made the decision to butcher only what we actually had sold and one for us; in other words three toms.
Butchering turkeys seems easier to me than butchering chickens, we timed ourselves and it took 12-15 minutes per bird. All three toms( one was butchered when the buyer arrived, because she wanted to help and learn about butchering) dressed out at 20-25lbs and all were plenty fat *wink* We always pay special attention to the organs( heart, liver, lungs) and all three toms organs were very healthy.
Of course since our toms were bronze and they did have some pin feathers there is a little cleanup involved in getting the coloring scrapped from under the skin. Once they'd been thoroughly washed and the final inspection for pin feathers complete, they were bagged( well, the one buyer took her tom home for final cleanup) and are chilling in the refrigerator downstairs. 
Today I'm putting together an ad for a local paper and will advertise the remaining two toms and pray that the other woman who wanted the hen contacts us soon, otherwise we'll butcher the hen for our freezer :o)

I still am congested but feel fine. I was able to clear on side of my nose to breath through last night and after taking hot tea and elderberry tincture before bed, I slept like a log*wink*
Today's "plan"( as Cortney refers to it) is to harvest ripe tomatoes from the greenhouse,wash, cut and add them to the ones already inside waiting to be milled. Cortney most likely will mill them while I'm getting supper started, stew, in the dutch oven. We also have laundry to start, typically it takes us two days due to clothes line constraints, especially now that our day time temperatures are cooler and the clothes take longer to dry.

                          
                                What a blessing!, all the shelves are FULL :o)
                                Herbs collected, dried and now in their storage containers

We'll need to clean up the dunk pan( used for butchering) and the cooling tank buy dumping them out and washing them down to dry in the sunshine. If we have time after this we have two large heads of cabbage still waiting to be shredded and packed into the crock for kraut. The plan is to do a video of the shredding with a slaw cutter, and the steps in packing it into the crocks, then do follow up videos as if ferments. To bad we can't share the smell*wink* For something that smells so bad, when it is finished it sure tastes good, Ummmm. Ummmm. :o)

15 comments:

Mama Mess said...

Glad you had such a productive weekend and that you are getting your cold nipped in the bud before it begins!

Denise said...

Too bad we dont live closer cause we would buy a turkey from you. Your pantry looks wonderful! Wish mine was as big...sigh. Can you post some tips on how you do your herbs (storing them)? The only ones I do right now are lavender, basil and stevia but I have loads of oregano, chives and thyme.

Kelle at The Never Done Farm said...

Good wife,
I'm glad too, this is typically how we try to do it, catch it before it truly begins :o)

Denise,
Sure, we'll work on a post on drying and storing herbs. For quick info. we simply harvest prime stock herbs, bundle and hang on our front porch to dry. Once thoroughly dry we remove leaves and flowers and store in glad jard with a good sealing lid down in our basement pantry. You can also store them in a freezer( make sure they are either vacuum sealed of in a good sealed glass container and NOT in a frost free freezer, as the process those type of freezers go through will burn and dry out your herbs.
Thanks for your comments ladies, bless you both! :o)

Anonymous said...

Hope you can find homes for your turkeys! yum! I would think they'd be easy to find people who would want them. I'd take one if I lived nearby! All your canned foods are so pretty and bright!! Looks like something on Martha Stewart!!...debbie

Kat said...

Now THAT'S a pantry!! Good work. I have had a few years when my pantry was so full of canned goods. I absolutely love seeing food in jars! I wish I were close enough to get one of those Toms. And I will be waiting for the videos on kraut. I LOVE Kraut. Thanks so much for sharing.
Sinus problems are bad here right now.

Lois Evensen said...

A busy weekend that would have been much better without the cold. I hope you find buyers for those extra turkeys. It seems there will be people looking for Thanksgiving birds very soon, too.

Feel better!

Lois

Farmgirl Cyn said...

Hokey Toot, Kelle! Your pantry looks amazing!
Sure wish we lived close enough for one of those turkeys. We ordered from a local farm that raises them on pasture with organic feed, but they are pricey....$3.50#. Sure better be the best money I ever spent on a turkey!

Kelle at The Never Done Farm said...

Debbie,
I sure wish some of you were closer too*sigh* People around here just don't seem to appreciate Farm Fresh, Naturally raised meat.
I can honestly say I'm no Martha, she's to organized, to perfect, well.... just to much*wink* I will agree the canned goods are colorful and now you understand when I say just going down to the pantry makes my day :o)

Kat,
Thank you, I'm blessed to have a very handy husband. What this shows is only one side of one half of the pantry. There are shelves to the left of the picture that hold canned items( tuna, evaporated milk,pineapple,etc...) condiments and bulk jars/ containers of dried beans, oat gluten, lentils, powdered sugar, etc... then there is honey in gallon jugs, dried beans we've collected from our garden and the herbs, herb vinegars, herb oils and tintures.
Behind those shelves is my bulk storage are for flour, wheat beries, pastas, oatmeal, farina, rice, etc..... and the refrigerator we use for milk and eggs,as well as overflow for us*wink*

Lois,
Thankfully I didn't feel bad just stuffed up. Today it's 75% better already so hope to have it knocked out by end of tomorrow.:o)
People want the turkeys, they just think they should get them for the same price as the grocery store sells them.*sigh* As it is we really don't make money on the turkeys, not if you figure in our time, added to the feed costs.

Cyn,
Hokey Toot! right back at you, $3.50 lb for organic fresh pastured turkey. I'm almost afraid to share what we sell ours for, you're going to REALLY wish you lived closer to us! Okay here goes, we ask $1.75 lb, ours free range (in the afternoons) and we purchase organic/ natural grains( oats/ barley, wheat and corn), alfalfa hay, kelp to suppliment them and of course garden and kitchen scraps.
Once people have had fresh turkey they just can't go back to frozen, store bought, it's just getting them to try it that is frustrating. We gave one to friends for their family Christmas gift one year. It was a tom and her dressed out at 34lbs, they were skeptical that he'd be tender. Anyway they cooked him and
they were so excited they called us on Christmas day to tell us he was moist, tender and very juicy, they've bought one ever year since.
Sadly next year we won't have any to sell, as our hatch was pitiful this Spring and we're downsizing the flock for just our own use and if there were any extras, we'd sell to regular customers.
We now only have one tom left to sell and I'm waiting on a return phone call and he may be sold. :o)

Kelle at The Never Done Farm said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Janice said...

Your pantry is beautiful!!!

Faith said...

Kelley, what a beautiful pantry!

You've worked hard for that, that's for sure. Too bad on the turkey buyers. Freezer space is such a difficult commodity to come by.

Last week I actually spent many hours researching the possibilities of building a human powered, walk-in freezer.

Impressive, as always. :o)

~Faith

Rachel said...

WOW! You've been busy, girl! :) Missed you on Sunday morning, but hopefully next time I'll be better organized and give you more warning! :) The girls talk incessantly about Courtney! They miss her something fierce! We heard she's still selling pumpkins & corn and we plan to stop by this Sat around noon to buy some!
Take care!
<3 Rachel

small farm girl said...

Oh Kelle,
Your pantry looks wonderful. I'm so jealous. lol. Eat some chicken broth with black pepper for your stuffy nose. If nothing else, it will taste good. lol.

Tracy said...

We also cleaned out our wood stove chimney this week - preparing for when the weather will turn cooler. We had to take much of the stove pipe apart anyway, as we put in a different type stove this year. So some sections I could just take outside and clean out. But the pipe down the chimney we had to do much as you did - luckily not a lot of build up in there. (we burn almost exclusively osage orange).

I will echo above comments - wish you lived closer and I would buy one of your turkeys. (maybe you should begin considering mail order!) We hope to get turkeys ourselves within the next year. Graze them out in our orchard area.

I love learning so much more from fellow bloggers like you!

Kelle at The Never Done Farm said...

Wildflower cabin,
Thank you :o)

Faith,
We too are looking at building a walk in "Cooler" as this week we experience a great loss( I'll share about it in a post)
Now all but one turkey is sold, we decided we'll keep the hen for ourselves.


SFG,
Thank you, Cortney made me chicken and rice soup( from chicken leftover from baked chicken) and boy did it hit the spot!
Don't be jealous, just think of what you can have your Dh build in your new home and once it's built then you can begin filling it*wink*

Tracy,
We had a small chimey fire once and that was enough for me, so we clean ours every two months in the heavy burning season. An hour or so worth of cleaning or the chance you can loose you home and maybe even your life. I'll take the hour out of my time*wink*
We burn cotton wood with some other woods mixed in but also didn't have much build up.

I echo you compliment back, and wish you lived closer, maybe then I wouldn't feel so alone in the way we live. It doesn't help when even close family thinks you are strange*sigh*
Blessings to each of you and for the remainder of your week.
Kelle

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