Friday, January 22, 2016

A Snowy Tour of the Barn House Homestead

We had our first Arkansas snow of the year -- we will get two, max, usually -- and I thought It was a good time to give you a tour of the farm as it stands right now.

This is the home I love so much. Now that it has snowed, I wish the roof could be white all the time.
We have a large outbuilding that is going to be used for a combination of a shop and an office/guest quarters. This is a project we have not done much with so far. 


You know you are insane when you are taking pictures of your fences.  I am so proud of all that fencing work!
Here is the animal paddock, With the chicken tractor in the back and the two goat houses in the front. We will have a proper goat barn later, but goats are not that fussy.

This is our house from the back. Not yet painted back there. The elevated area is the pool that has been turned into a play deck. Underneat that deck, something crazy is going to happen,. Not sure what yet.

Here are the Haman beehives. I scraped out snow from the entrances after I took the photo, but they are on screened bottom boards, so plenty of air gets to the bees. The girls maintain the hive at a contstant 90 degrees inside.

Still life of fence and 1970s lawn chair.

This is the other outbuilding and we are not using it yet. Heck, I still haven't cleaned it out. I think it will become either my honey house or a special barn for birthing doelings. It is close to the house and I can monitor it easily.

Side view of the house. Little deck off the living room and kitchen lets out into a small dog pen. We will probably use that dog pen to help our does get acquainted with our livestock guardian dog. 


Monday, January 18, 2016

Here Come the Animals!


My son with a herd of Nigerian Dwarf Goats. He really loves them.
In fairness, the name of this blog should be 1,300 Feet of Fence. I named it before I was done fencing, and, well, I was 333 feet short.

It has almost been a year since we bought this place and began our homesteading adventure. The first year has been about repairing the house, though that still continues, and getting the land ready for animals and food production. We sectioned the land into family living, garden and orchard growing, and animals. It has been excruciating to wait an entire year to get the good stuff, but we have tried to take it slow and be totally prepared.

The land work involved several friends. My heartfelt thanks to Eric Francis, Dave Ragan and Mike Thompson for coming over, digging in and getting sweaty with me. Thanks also to my young paid farm hand, Justin the Rocket, who helped me stretch some of the most difficult sections of the fence, including parts where he had to squeeze between two trees and I, um, couldn't fit. My thanks, as well, to Judith Murray, fellow beekeeper, ex-colleague in journalism, and a person who is really generous with her time. Judith helped us paint a couple of sides of our house, and did a darn good job.

In the summer, the family finished painting the front and one side of the house. It now has a really nice red-barn look, and we are looking forward to finishing the painting in spring.


 In fall, I planted nine dwarf apple trees to begin our orchard.  In winter, I put the final touches on the fencing, creating a gate for the paddock and building houses for baby goats.

Now we area ready for everything. I have food, shelter and watering devices for the chickens, goats and livestock guardian dog. The place is about to be jumping with heartbeats.

As I write this, we are within a month of receiving two bottle-baby Nigerian Dwarf goats. A local goatherd, who, incidentally, is neither high on a hill nor lonely,  has about six does that are nearing the end of their pregnancies, and we hope to purchase from her the doelings that will become the core of our small dairy operation.

Daughter 1 with new doeling.
I don't know of anyone else in central Arkansas who raises Nigerians, which are known for having a very high butterfat content and tasting as good as or better than fresh cow's milk.

Nigerians are smaller than the average goat, but not as small as pygmy goats. They are bred for dairy, rather than for meat or fiber. We plan to start with our two babies, raise them to the age where they can be bred (a year or so) and then start milking the adult does after 18 months, when they have had their first litter of kids (more babies!). The little bucklings will be sold as pets, and some of the doelings will increase our herd, while others will help someone else start their own dairy.

Daughter 2 with the baby.
 We thought for a long time about going straight to an adult doe and milking right away, but we wanted to really learn about caring for goats before we dealt with the added issues surrounding milking and dairy operatons.

More thanks are in order for the goat mentorship I have received. My mentors are three wonderful ladies:

Pat House of north-central Arkansas told me a lot about how her goat farm is situated, and helped me understand how to raise livestock guardian dogs with my goats and chickens.

Linda Brittain of Cadron Creek Farm allowed me to visited her Nigerians with my family, and has answered countless questions. She has been my go-to mentor as I figure out how all this stuff works.

And Dianea Fay of Allen, Kansas, helped me decide whether to purchase a mature doe or, as I ultimately chose to do, work with baby doelings and take my time building torward dairy.

Perhaps even before the baby goats arrive, we will be driving up to north-central Arkansas to pick up our livestock guardian dog, who has already been named Gandalf, despite the fact that I have not even met the dog.

One of these beautiful LGD pups is ours!
 Gandalf is 75 percent Great Pyrenmes and 25 percent Anatolian Shepherd, and he is running around eating puppy chow right now, and getting the feel of his goat barn with his eight littermates. Both breeds were developed as livestock guardians, and most goat farmers I talk to use a cross of the two breeds to protect the herd. I gather that the Pyrennes are more likely to stay with the herd and guard them closely, and the Anatolian is more aggressive in its protection, looking to find trouble at the outskirts of the property. If we are matched with the puppy I am expecting, he is mostly white with two black ears and a random black spot on his head.

And then, of course, are the chickens. No farm is complete without laying hens! We drove all the way to a little town near Jackson, Mississippi to purchase an amazing chicken tractor made by a former plastics engineer.  He has been making them for many years, and has perfected the design. The tractor has a built-in watering system with an insulated tank for water, which gravity-feeds a set of chicken watering nipples through down-sloping PVC pipe. There is also a built-in feed hopper that sits outside the tractor. The hens have to eat through the fence, which keeps the food from falling on the soiled ground within their coup.

Chicken tractors are popular because you don't have to use litter inside of a building and clean it out periodically. Instead, you are moving a coup on wheels from spot to spot in your yard, offering up fresh grass and bugs to graze on, and eliminiating the chance for the birds to tear up any one area. On weekends and summer nights after Gandalf has grown, I'll let the hens range a bit and mess around with the goats. By using the tractor, the nutrient-rich litter is scattered along the ground, and the grass is protected from being stripped clear. Think of a long, heavy chicken wheelbarow, and you have the idea. Here are some pictures of the coup, which has corrugated PVC for roofing so the coup stays rrelatively light, and excessive heat does not transfer to the hens.

Here is the super-tractor, at the home of the man who made it for me. This is an amazing piece of engineering.

Alas, we have no chickens yet, because this is a bad time to find them. They are moulting, generally, and not laying, or at least not laying as much. Very few chickens are up for sale when it is cold. We plan to buy grown hens or pullets, which are young female birds that are about to start laying. There will be no roosters at Barn House Homestead. For that matter, there will be no male goats, either, except for a few weeks after birth. And when you get down to it, about 98 percent of the bees are girls, too. Girl power, here on the farm.

Beautiful Wyandotte at the State Fair.
My coup has room for eight birds, and we don't want to piecemeal this and get two here, two there, because chickens, especially when kept in close quarters, can be pretty mean to newcomers. So we are looking for a small flock of roughly eight birds. Our favorite breeds are the Buff Orpington, Easter Egger (not recognized as a breed yet), Barred Plymouth Rock, and Silver Laced Wyandotte. We would not look askance at a Rhode Island  Red, either. We might end up with two breeds, for all I know, but these are the birds we are looking for. In spring, locals will start offering birds again and we can launch our flock!

Sunday, January 17, 2016

Welcome to Barn House Homestead!

I have been working with my cousin, Kalynda Haaf, on a logo to market the food products we will be producing at the Barn House Homestead. (Hey, how do you like the name?) We are already producing honey, though our volume should jump next year with more attention paid to the bees, and less, say, to replacing crushed water pipes. Next up will be eggs, laid by small flock of hens, followed by  milk and cheese, produced by Nigerian Dwarf goats.

The image you see above is a work in progress --pretty close to completion. We are working on a version for dairy and eggs, as well. I really love the work Kalynda has done on this project, especially since the two of us have not actually met.

Kalynda based the design on the actual front of our barn-shaped house, which looks like this:


Kalynda is the bilingual grandaughter of my father's sister, and she lives in the Netherlands, while I live in central Arkansas. She has been a Facebook friend of mine for years, and we hope to meet in the next few years, Kalynda is a talented designer and has her own business in the Netherlands.She is multinational, with both of her parents having spent time in the US and The Netherlands.

She speaks both Dutch and English, is delightful to chat with, and does really nice visual work.

Here is Kalynda's site: Haaf Visual and while you are there, check out that beautiful owl logo she made by my I am an Arkansas Public School Teacher FB page. Nice!

Here is another treatment of the logo that we plan to use to promote our eggs:


If you need some graphic design work, contact Kalynda throuugh her website, or find her on my Facebook friend list.  She is hoping to come back to the states for a visit and, last I heard, even contemplating an internship here in video production. Perhaps your design job could help her accomplish that goal!