Thursday, January 27, 2011

So Ready For Spring

I went out to check/feed/clean out the chickens and it feels like Spring wants to come.  Of course, we have a few weeks yet.  Sadly.  The birds are all out and getting frisky though.  My roosters are getting a bit cocky and strutting around like they own the place.  Of course, I have news for them, and they know it too when I start walking toward them.

I know I am totally hooked on my chickens when I get all excited and giddy when I find an egg.  I found someone is laying in the ark, but no idea who yet.   I know a Welsummer is laying a nice, big, speckled egg in the other coop.  Two nights ago, Eldest brought in a Silkie egg, and FINALLY, today I have a Sebright egg.  So, that makes, I think 6 in all that I have collect eggs from.  Now, if they could tell the other 32 or so how to do it.  But you know, in another couple of months I am going to be going on about how I have all these eggs and not being able to sell them all.

I have been feeling under the weather this week.  I really mean it too.  I think the winter has gotten to me from a psychological standpoint.  I feel guilty too.  I have so little get up and go.  On top of that, my darling boys have been sick and have shared a bit with me.  I rested up and seem to have dodged a bullet there and feel pretty good today.  I felt bad though because my best friend's mother passed away this week and I wasn't able to make it to the funeral because of my probable contagious state.  I was sure that a big old truck was heading down the road to run my ass over and make me feel like crawling in a hole, but here I am, feeling better today.

The garden is still buried deep under the snow, but I hear it calling to me.  I so look forward to warm sunny days that the sun will warm me as I dig and plant and weed.  I love to weed.  I know it is crazy, but it is such a simple activity to keep your hands busy while your mind has time to contemplate, to ponder, to wander and to muse.  When my sister was killed a few years ago, it was my place to escape to think about her and the memories I had of times spent together with her.  It is therapy for my mind and soul to be out in the earth and moving and making things clean and healthy, not choked and sickly.  How better to heal the soul of losing a loved one than to be amidst the growing, living plants and organisms?  When I die, I want to be cremated and my ashes scattered in my gardens.  I am sure that is against the law, huh?  But that is what I would want.

I must be off though.  The post office called and my first batch of chicken hatching eggs are waiting there for me.  Like I said, Spring is calling.
CC

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Another Year Older

Yesterday was my 45th birthday.  I am not afraid to share that, obviously.  I feel I have deserved the right to broadcast it.  It must be the mentality of growing up in a large family and being close to the end of the line.  I come from a family of 11 children, and I am number 9.  No steps in there either.  My parents were crazy, and Catholic during most of my childhood.  So, in the eyes of my family, I think they still think of me as being younger than I am, especially since I left home and joined the Navy when I was 21.  That age seems to stick in peoples minds when you leave and then return.  They look at you like, "Hey, you are supposed to be young still!"  Well, I am, but I am not.  I would go home and visit and all my nieces and nephews were growing like weeds and I would feel the same way toward them.  We can't help it, it just happens that way.

So, yes, a family of 11.  People always ask me, "What was it like growing up in such a big family?".  Like I would have an answer to that?  What else did I know?  What is it like growing up in a small family?  Or the best one was "Can you remember all their names?"  Duh, do you know 11 people and can remember their names?  I remember their names, birthdays, anniversaries, ages, and lots more.  What a stupid question.


I will give a few clues to growing up with that many in one household though.  When I was a little girl, up to age 8, we lived in a house that had 3 bedrooms on the main floor, an unfinished upstairs, and a basement that was once the main living quarters before the upper part of the house was added.  Yeah, it was as dank, damp and dreary as it sounds-a basement.  But once I moved out of the crib, that is where I slept with my 4 older sisters.  There was a big room with no door and no wall either on one side, and we slept there.  The floors were concrete with those old slate type tiles, and they were COLD!  I don't know what it all looked like before I came along, but it wasn't a pretty place from any memory I have.  There was also a kitchen where my mother did her canning, a laundry area and a huge laundry cart where all 13 of us put our clothes.  So, imagine being the one to have to do all of that laundry.  I swear that washer had to run 24/7, literally.  We even had the old wringer type washer when I was little and loved to help my mother do laundry.  Now I would spaz if I had to do all that way.  She would iron too, including sheets, I remember.  She would spray them and fold and roll them up and put them in the freezer.  I don't know why, I never asked.  But I remember doing it.  She had an old glass pop bottle with this sprinkler thing that fit on top and had a cork fitting to keep it on the bottle.  I loved to sprinkle the clothes and she would iron them, or we would fold them together.

When I was maybe 7-years old, us girls got to move up to the upstairs of the house.  It was not finished, but it was enough for us to be up there.  I don't remember if the bathroom was completely finished, I think we could use it some, but not sure if the shower was hooked up.  Anyway, it was better than the basement.  Oh, and the boys got the bedrooms on the main level, 2 in each.  Did I mention?  There were 7 girls and 4 boys in our family.   Back to the upstairs/girls' room...I got to sleep in a full-sized bed with my one older sister.  The others had their own beds.  This was completely unfair.  The sister I slept with is 9 years older than I am, and with me being 6 or 7 at that time, she was much bigger than I was.  So, there we were, in a full-sized bed with those lovely, old springs under an old cotton mattress (no wonder I have back problems even now).  She slept in the middle of the bed, which, because of the springs that had no support other than keeping you off the floor, sagged drastically.  I ended up hanging onto the side of the bed all night so not to lay on top of her, which she would not have (did not when I happen to let go) been too happy with me about.

When I was 8, we moved.  My father and his brother had been running the family farm together and had a falling out/parting of ways, so my dad started a new business and we then moved to a farm 30-miles away.  Dad ran his business and the rest of us did the farming.  He worked in the field when it was time for planting and harvesting, and occasionally ( usually on Sunday mornings) would come and help do chores.  My parents bought an old house with 12-acres that was a quarter mile away from the dairy farm where we had milking cows.  We had a big dairy barn at the house, but it was not in any shape to milk cows, so it was used for dry cows, heifers, calves and our 4-H animals.  The house itself was probably 200-years old.  It seemed like a big house, but the rooms were tiny, it was OLD, and needed lots of work, but it held all of us.  The boys got to share the big room this time, and the girls split up the rest.  However, us three youngest girls got to share a hallway.  Yes, a hallway!  My two younger sisters had bunk beds and I had my own bed.  Thank goodness for that at least!  That room also served as the sewing room, if memory serves me correctly.  It was sort of a room though, maybe served as a sitting room back in the day that the house was a boarding house/carriage depot.  We never really knew the history of the old place, but it was old, old, old.

My parents had done lots of remodeling and adding on over the years, so it is much more than it was when we moved there.  Now, I have two adult siblings that live there with my mother.  My father passed away almost 3 years ago.  Now it is a big house that is nearly empty.  It makes me wonder what our house will be like when our children grow up and move out?

Yes, I am another year older, and wiser, and crazier and I like it.

Thursday, January 13, 2011

I Couldn't Resist the Itch

I have been broken.  I could no longer resist the temptation of hatching eggs.  I have now ordered my first batch of the season, some bantam Wyandotte eggs for Daughter.  I showed her the picture of the darling little black hen the breeder has and she just fell in love.  "Awwww, she is so CUTE!"  That is about all it takes, you know.  She wants to show standard size Blue Cochins too, but I like to see her hold a chicken her own size as well. They will go nicely with her fluffly little Silkies.

I know I better get some more eggs to go in the bator with them now.  Darn it all (hee hee hee).

It is so cold this morning that it is almost hard to think about hatching chicks and having a brooder going.  I said almost hard to think about it.  But being the tough nut that I am, it is no problem for me.

The spring schedule is already filling up.  Middle started musical practice this week, Eldest has Math League, piano and work (2-3 times a week), and Daughter has dance 2 nights a week and piano.  Now 4-H stuff is getting thrown in more, and Eldest wants to work the sound booth for the musical, which would mean 2 more nights of running him.  I don't think there is time for all of this.  Thank goodness we don't have any more kids.

Well, I need to get back to shopping for eggs to hatch, and then to cataloging my stock of seeds so I can then start seed shopping for my spring planting.  OOOooooooH!  How I love to shop for chickens and garden stuff!!!

Friday, January 7, 2011

I Got the Itch

Which itch is that?  Actually, it is two itches.  First, I am getting that overwhelming desire to get eggs to hatch in my two incubators.  The sad thing is, I am not set for raising chicks for a couple of months when the weather starts to change again, or until I get my brooder house finished.  I have been thinking about the breeds I have and what I want to keep and raise and breed, and which ones are out here that I need to get rid of.  I hate to get rid of laying hens, but then I hate to keep odd birds around.  I wish I had the place and money to keep them all.  Yes, that is what makes me crazy.
The other thing I am itching about is garden planning.  I love to start looking through the seed catalogs and double checking my seed stock and planning and plotting out the gardens.  Yes, I said gar-denS.  We never do anything on small scale, it always has to be big.  I don't know why, but maybe it has something to do with growing up in a family with 11 kids.  Yes, 11.  When there are that many in the family, you have to make large sizes of food dishes and have lots of milk in the frig and a big car.  That is one thing that I have a hard time with still, after being away from my family for last 24-years.  So, our first year gardening here was 2 gardens, each 25-feet by 50-feet.  Every year they have grown longer and wider, and then they joined together, then we started new gardens too.  We have tried to grow all sorts of things, but we also don't seem to be able to just confine ourselves to one or two varieties of things.  For instance, we usually grow somewhere around 10-15 varieties of peppers.  As for tomatoes, there are so many good ones out there and the different types and uses, we grow about 12 varieties of those too.  Then there are potatoes, cabbages, carrots, beans- oh, don't get me started about all the different beans, I will sound like Bubba on Forrest Gump.
We like to start our own seeds for stuff and one year we decided to build a grow stand.  It is 2-feet deep by 4-feet wide and has 2 shelves and we could add a third on the top.  It started out the first 5-years or so in our dining room.  It worked great in here but was awful big to have in here for year around and it always ended up with piles of magazines and paperwork on it, so it was not a good thing.  Now it is in the heated garage and is in a good spot, but collects 'stuff' on it out there until it is time to use it again.  I will be starting the seeds in March, so there is time : \

It is really cold now outside.  I hate to have to go out at all, but my birdies sure appreciate that corn.  I never did bathe the Silkies, they preened and cleaned themselves off pretty good without it now that they are in a pen on their own.  I must build them a new pen more suitable for chickens this upcoming week.  First, we have to make it through the weekend.  Tomorrow is cleaning day, then Sunday is a trip to see my mother-in-law.  We haven't been down in a while and it will be nice to see her again.

Well, it is that time to retire again.
I am thinking warm thoughts.
CC

Monday, January 3, 2011

Happy 2011!

I have heard it said that whatever you are doing on New Year's Eve is what you will be doing a lot of in the upcoming year.  I hope not.  Not that NYE was bad, just I hope I am not sitting around drinking champagne and playing Pictionary.  It was a fun evening, but the next morning I awoke with a headache, not induced from the drink but from my neck and back being 'out of place'.  Not the way to start the New Year or any year.  It is just one of those side effects of getting older.

Speaking of getting older, my daughter had to remind me that my birthday is coming up the middle of the month.  I am not one of those women who dreads getting older and is trying to fight it all the way, but I wasn't thinking that far ahead really.  Her's and my hubby's birthdays are coming up in early March, so that was the real reason she was thinking birthdays in the first place.  She wants to have a sleepover party and invite a few friends.  We never have been able to do that for her yet and it is about time, but I am uncertain if our house will be in any condition for a little girl's sleepover by then.  "We will see." is the answer she always gets.  I am hoping this time we can give her a yes, but that is to be determined yet.

The kids are back in school today.  It is a good thing, they were getting on my nerves as well as each other's.  The weather prevented much outside time these last few days of the holiday vacation for them, so too much time inside together ended as expected.

I like the holidays, I like the New Year, but I really don't see it as a whole NEW year.  It is another day and we mark it with a different number at the end.  Really, isn't starting a new year in the middle of winter just one of those things that doesn't seem quite right?  To me, the beginning of a new year should be like April 1st, or May 1st, when things are starting to regrow and rebirth begins.  Doesn't that make more sense?  Who made all this stuff up anyway?  It is even more confounding to think about what this time of year is like in the Southern Hemisphere, and how does that feel?  We are in the middle of a season, and nothing at all seems new to me.

I did accomplish some things over the holiday break.  We didn't go anywhere, so I relaxed and watched some TV, which I do very little of normally, and I knitted.  I have now completed a hat and my very first mitten ever!  Now to get the second one done to give the set to someone.  I really love to knit now and I am getting better at it.  I also love to sew.  I think the reason is that I am creating something.  It feels good to make something, especially when it is going to be given to someone near and dear to use or wear.  I did knit myself a hat last month.  I needed one to go with my new coat and since I had some yarn that would match....
So far this "year" I have made a hat for Eldest, a hat for Daughter, a hat for myself, a hat and one mitten for my 'other' mother-in-law and have started the other mitten, I have also started and then restarted a hat for Middle Child.  One year I sewed lots of fleece hats and mittens and scarves.  I made them for my kids, their friends, some nieces, my mother-in-law, and father-in-law.  I have done quilting too, but not nearly as much as I would like to have made.  I am hoping one day, if we ever tear down our house and re-build, that I can have my own craft room where I can do all these things that I love so much.

Now, this entry would not be complete without something about my chickens.  They don't care that it is a new year, all they care about is the cracked corn I bring them to eat.  I feel badly for them, they are cold and not very happy.  The ground is so cold that they just want to stay in their coops nearly the whole time.  Can't say as I can blame them.  We didn't even bother opening them up a couple of days ago when the wind was blowing so hard and cold.  The one time I did check the wind chill was -13.  I finally decided to bring my little Silkies into the garage and put them into a rabbit cage after seeing how the big old lug-headed Jersey Giants were walking right over the top of them.  Besides, they were getting all filthy.  The one day it was in the 40s and the ground and snow thawed a bit, they got so dirty that I realized it was time to plan a bath day for them.  My hubby is going to be gone for a couple of days to work this week, so I can get them in without subjecting him to the smell of washing poopy chickens.  I may even let them set in the basement to dry afterward, it is nice and toasty down there.

Well, my day is beginning.  I must feed the outdoor critters and then get ready for a run to the orthodontist.  Yup, we are back to the old grind.

Happy New Year and stay safe and be happy!
CC