Monday, December 31, 2018

Goodbye 2018. 2019, bring it!

2018 and I said our good-byes in a big way this weekend.

When we moved in to this house almost 7 years ago I was excited to see copper pipes. This year, or maybe last year, I learned that when copper pipes age they develop pin hole leaks. I have now had they pleasure of the company of plumbers 4, well actually 5, times to replace or repair sections of pipe because of these leaks. Friday the most recent pin hole burst open, thankfully in a place that did much less damage than the last one. I want to start by saying I have an excellent plumber, if you need a recommendation. But he has been in great demand this weekend. He got to me Saturday morning. Friday night I turned off the water to the house after filling up some jugs and buckets. Saturday afternoon, less than an hour after he left, the pipe was spraying a mist on the basement wall in the same spot. I was also working in the basement while he was here, so I know he was working hard on the leak. He was as frustrated as I was to hear that it was leaking again.
He tried to come back Saturday evening but I couldn't stay up late enough until he finished another job. On Sunday, circumstances beyond his control kept him away. On those days I turned the water on long enough each day to refill my water carriers; enough to drink, wash my hands and flush the toilet a couple of times. He came back today and fixed it. I just ran downstairs to double check to make sure it wasn't spraying again. Fixed. It's good to have water on demand.

Also on Friday I got a text with these pictures.

You may remember that about 5 months ago I gave three goats to Chattahoochee Hills magnet school for their agriculture program; two does, Dena and her daughter Qunita and Dena's boy (neutered) Paco.
 I've been to visit them since then and met the other goats in the pen with them that included a couple of bucks. So Thursday or Friday Dena had two babies. I think they are both girls, but I didn't really get to look closely enough. They were squirmy and not used to being handled. I got the okay from my friend who is the principal (who had sent me the photos of Dena and her babies), and Saturday I went by the school to visit. Dena looks a little ragged, as you do when you've just dropped two babies, but the babies are gorgeous. I also noticed that Quinta is pregnant. She has a full udder, and I expect will probably drop hers soon. I asked my friend to make sure he tells me when hers are born. This time I will remember to take raisins to the new moms.

Sunday was kinda chill and laid back. Just before time to start evening feeding and lock-up I made a run for Chinese take-out, ice cream and bourbon. A girl's gotta have her treats.

This morning was business as usual, up just before sunrise to feed everybody and milk Daisy. It wasn't until a couple of hours later, after coffee and breakfast, that I realized a tree had fallen on a fence and goats were out. I don't know if you can picture this, and sorry, I was a little too frantic for actually taking pictures, but when I walked up the hill to check on the goats, everything looked fine until I realized that when Daisy and her babies walked by the fence post between their pen and the very open field next to it, they were on the wrong side of the fence post. I should not see the fence post in front of them when they walk by it. Shit! I had just casually walked up their in a pair of Crocks (don't judge!) that I usually wear only around the house, especially when the mud is this deep. I carefully walked into their pen, around mud holes to see if I could get them back in. I got alfalfa out of the storage shed to tempt them back in to the feeder, but I couldn't compete with the greenery on the other side of the fence. I had to run back to the house for my boots and some pears. I got them back inside the fence but couldn't keep them there. As soon as I went to the open spot to try pulling the fence back into place, they followed me to see what I was doing and went back through to the other side to munch.
I don't know my neighbor on that side very well, but I have his phone number, so I sent a text to see if he was at home. He and his teenage son graciously came over to help me keep the goats in while we fixed the fence. It is very much a patch job, but it should keep the goats where they belong for now. Tomorrow morning I will take a walk around the larger fenced area to make sure there are no other gaps.

Plumbing problems, new goat babies to visit and a goat break-out have made for a kinda hectic last few days of the year. But I'm gonna call it a successful weekend. Plumbing is fixed; babies are adorable, and my goats are back inside repaired fences with the bonus of having friendly helpful neighbors.

As I write this the fireworks and gunfire for New Year's Eve have already started at just after 8pm. Every New Year's Eve and July 4th I listen to gunfire knowing that the bullets fired into the night sky by drunken revelers, come back down with enough force to injure or kill a goat or chicken. And every year I promise myself I will put better roofs on their shelters. Sigh.

Here's hoping we all have a happy and successful new year.

Monday, October 1, 2018

Hog killing time on my grandparents' farm

For my vegetarian and animal loving friends, please be aware that this does include a description of hog killing on my grandparents' farm.

When I was a kid, my brother, sister and I spent many summers and holidays on my paternal grandparents’ farm of about 100 acres in rural east Tennessee. I remember it as not so much a commercial farm, but a family farm that my grandfather had grown up on and inherited from his father. They did sell most of the beef they raised, and, for a while they also raised tobacco to sell. But in my memory, it was mostly about producing food for the family: vegetables, fruit, milk, eggs, beef, pork and chicken.

Summer was all about my grandmother’s big garden; picking strawberries in June, tomatoes in July, beans and field peas and weeding throughout the summer then canning and freezing it all in September and October. For some reason, hay bale hauling was one of my favorite fall chores. It was sweaty, hard, itchy work, but I loved it. It tested my muscles, and, as a young girl of the sixties, I didn’t get to do that a lot. When I was too small to throw bales onto the trailer, I got to drive the tractor. Technically I just kept it moving in a straight line until the end of the row when my Papaw would run to the tractor from where ever he was to make the turn to the next row. Through the years I learned how to drive on a tractor. As I got older, I loved competing with my male cousins (all younger than me, so I had a little edge) to get to the next bale, grab it by the twine and throw it onto the barge-like trailer behind the tractor. It didn’t take but a year or two for them to get big enough to put me to shame. Then, possibly the most fun part, and, as I look back on it, definitely the most dangerous part, was when we all piled on top of the high, rickety pile of hay strapped down on the trailer to ride behind the slow tractor across a divided four lane highway to get it to the barn. When the highway came through in the 1920s, it divided the farm then operated by my great-grandparents, leaving about a quarter of the land on one side of the highway, with the rest on the other side. The hay field was forever on the opposite side of US highway 11E from the barn where it was stored to feed the cattle in winter.

Another of my favorite memories was hog killing time. My memory is foggy around the timing. It had to be at least late fall, possibly around Thanksgiving because most of my aunts and uncles and cousins were there, and it would need to be done in cold weather to keep the meat from spoiling. Papaw used to say it had to be “cold enough to make your nose run and your eyes water but not cold enough to freeze the meat". My brother and I were the oldest grandchildren. We usually participated in this from beginning to end as soon as it was deemed we were old enough. It was a long, grueling day that started with a rifle at close range to the head of a hog that had grown up trusting my grandfather enough not to run. In childhood, I never questioned this action and how easy the hogs made it for Papaw and why that was. But I also trusted him completely, accepting that he was doing the right thing. I still believe he did the most humane thing he knew to do. His animals were all treated well; Angus cows raised and finished on grass, pigs roaming free in a forested area, laying hens in a large coop free-ranging in a field near the house during the day.

I remember a couple of cousins who took off running to the house from the sound of the gun shot. I know enough vegetarians to know that experiences like that would have made many people, children and adults, question their desire or even right to eat meat. But, even as a child, from my perspective meat was another product of the farm, along with the strawberries, tomatoes and beans. As an adult I have killed and cleaned my own meat chickens, chickens who lived comfortable, free range lives until the end. I know now that it isn’t as easy as I thought it was as a child, and I don’t imagine my grandfather considered taking a life to be an easy thing to do. But for him, it was part of farming and feeding his family.

After killing them, the animals had to be immediately bled. I thought this part was pretty gross, watching thick, dark blood flow around the sharp butcher knife, used to cut the neck, and puddle on the ground around its head. I think my brother was more fascinated than disgusted. They were huge animals that were then rolled up heavy boards to get into the truck bed, an activity that involved several adult men. Besides my grandfather, there were my father and uncle, a hired man who lived on the farm with his family and possibly one or two of my grandfather’s friends with whom he would probably exchange the favor at some point. On the truck, the body was hauled about a quarter of a mile up the little dirt road, passing my grandparents’ house and heading toward the upper barn to the scalding and butchering station. There was a large, somewhat rusty metal tub, half of a huge metal drum cut lengthwise, next to a platform about 3 feet by 4 feet that ran the length of the tub at exactly the height of the tub’s edge. A couple of feet away from the platform was a tall upside down U-shaped wood frame, well braced at the base, with two big S hooks hanging from the top crossbeam with two pulleys used to haul the carcass up to hang from the hooks.

There was already a fire burning under the tub full of water when we got to it with the pig. The water was hot enough to make you want to avoid putting your hands in it, but made the pig’s skin nicely warm to the touch on a cold autumn day. We rubbed Vasoline on our hands as a barrier to the cold and also to the heat from the water. The hog was rolled into the tub with ropes that wrapped around it at the inside hip joints of the front and rear legs The ropes were pulled tight and let go slack over and over to bounce the pig around in the water to loosen the tiny hairs on every bit of its skin. While it was in the water we began pulling and scraping the hair on the places we could reach that were above water. When Papaw thought it was hot enough, it was pulled onto the platform beside the tub of water where we finished cleaning up the skin. Timing was tricky, it couldn't stay in the hot water long enough to cook it. The backs of the hind legs were cut lengthwise a few inches just above each hoof to expose tendon under which large hooks were placed, each attached to a rope. The hog was pulled up into the frame and hung there on the hooks by its tendons. I have two memories of this process. One is of two men, each pulling the rope attached to a hind leg over pulleys on the crossbeam until the body was at the right height off the ground. The other memory is of attaching a rope to the back of the tractor to pull the carcass into place. We probably tried both at different times. I'm betting the tractor method won out in the long run.

At this point the slaughtering process takes place and moves quickly. Even in November weather in east Tennessee, the meat has to get to the house as quickly as possible after being cut into pieces. Papaw kept a sharp butcher knife for just this purpose and cutting down the meat into sections was his role. The head is removed (and saved, nothing wasted - I distinctly remember eating hog brains scrambled with eggs for at least one breakfast.) and he made one long cut lengthwise down the middle from anus to neck, being very careful not to nick the anus or intestines and contaminate the meat. Now the piecing begins.

Being a tomboy and forever curious, but also a girl fascinated by my grandmother’s cooking magic, I determinedly participated in both ends of this process. My brother and I carried batches meat cuts to my grandmother’s spotless kitchen where she was ready to begin preserving the meat. Larger sections, like the hams, were loaded in the back on the truck whatever was the cleanest cardboard lying around. I made the transition from field to kitchen and helped Mamaw sort and preserve the meat. I loved her food and always enjoyed learning about how she worked her magic. From canned tomatoes, jams and jellies, pies and biscuits to sausage and tenderloin, I wanted to know how to do it. Some parts of the pig were cut into meal-size roasts, wrapped in paper, or in later years, in plastic or foil, and put in the freezer. Some parts were cooked and cut into chunks to can in wide mouth pint jars with about an inch of fat on top as a seal and finished in the pressure cooker. The pork in jars was my favorite, served with pinto beans, cornbread and a spring onion. It was always tender and flavorful.

The hams were my grandfather’s domain, seasoned and hung in a room of the “little house,” the four room building where my grandparents “began housekeeping,” as my grandmother would say. They lived in this tiny house until their third child was born, when Papaw and his two sons built the two story, three bedroom house I first knew them in. Their fourth child, second daughter, was born here. By the time I came along, the little house was all storage. The back room to the left used to be the kitchen and was now furnished with saw horses under plywood for curing hams. Papaw piled salt, sugar and spices (I wish I had thought to ask more about this recipe because I loved his ham more than any I’ve had since) on the plywood and rolled the ham around in the pile, rubbing handfulls into the meat until it was entirely, thickly coated. Each ham was carefully hung with a rope tied around the ankle bone from a hook in the ceiling and left to cure.


At the end of our holiday, when each family said their goodbyes and drove down the gravel road toward the highway, our coolers were loaded with cuts of meat on ice and boxes or grocery bags filled with jars of meat, beans and jellies Mamaw had put aside for us. All of it was the best food I’ve ever had. As we drove away my grandparents stood in the driveway and waved to as long as they could see us. Not confined by seat belts, my brother, sister and I were on our knees facing backward waving back.

My mother didn’t have much talent with food, so I learned the old ways of cooking from my grandmother, and I will be forever grateful for that. I remember the very first time I saw her open a grocery store tin can of beans for supper. I chided her good-naturedly, but truly I was confused and disappointed. When she could produce the incredible food she had always served, why would she buy the same kind of factory produced green beans from a store that my mother artlessly served? At the time, she was delighted to have the convenience of not having to do all the work it took to grow and preserve those beans. I sadly remember a time when her large garden was reduced to a small spaces for just a few items.


From my grandfather, I learned that animals raised with care on pasture make the best meat and the best kind of farm life. But I also remember where there once were chickens and then an empty coop, eventually torn down; the hog pen thick with trees, empty of pigs, the fence taken down and a swing set put up near a chestnut tree. With only the two of them living on the farm, it all became a physically, and probably financially, unsustainable way of living. I believe there were cows until Papaw died. By that time my parents were also living at the farm, and my father had reopened a small section of the garden, more as a hobby than farming.

I’ve been told by a cousin that my grandparents would be proud of my attempt at small scale farming. My first thought was that they’d probably think I was nuts for setting myself up with all this work when there’s a grocery store up the street. But maybe they would be pleased by my efforts. I wonder if they would be baffled by the words organic and sustainable that describe a way of life that they took for granted. I like to think that they would be appalled by the poisons that go into our food, the disgusting ways meat animals are raised, the horrible lives of warehoused laying hens. I feel very lucky for the experiences they gave me that taught me how food can be produced with respect and care for the land, the soil and the animals. I appreciate the fact that, through their example, I know I can produce and preserve much of my own food and how to do it.

My brother with a pig head.


Sunday, May 6, 2018

You've Come a Long Way, Baby

Two items in the category "You come a long way city girl".

  Snake season is back. I spared you the photo. They all look about the same. Long, black, sometimes black and white, four foot to six foot coiled nuisances. I know they have their positives. I am willing to sacrifice a couple of eggs if he's keeping the venomous snakes at bay. I just don't need him hanging out in the chicken coop all day eating all of my eggs. So we have an agreement; he gets an egg or two and, when I catch him, he goes out. (I realize I've gendered an animal that I don't really know the gender of. Moving along.) I have a stick I keep in the chicken coop just for snakes. It's been in the same place since last summer. It's always frustrating. I try to snag the snake with the stick in just the right spot to pick him up and toss him out, while he wiggles around trying to get away. Finally, in frustration, this time I reached out and grabbed his tail hoping to sling him out of the coop. Yes folks, I grabbed a snake. I did make note first that he was fully stretched out so his head was 4 feet away from the end I was grabbing. But still . . . .
  I once jumped, screamed and ran in the house when I found a tiny 6 inch baby snake while clearing an area to plant flowers. I made Joan go out and make sure it was gone and there was no mama or siblings before I would go back outside. I once considered moving out of our East Point house because I found a snake skin by an outside wall. I once had to be led through the snake exhibit at the Tennessee Aquarium with my eyes closed because there was no other way to get to the next exhibit. But this week I grabbed a snake by the tail. Alas, I wasn't able to hold on long enough to sling it, but it did leave the nest box I'd found him in and slithered out of the chicken coop, belly full.

Part two: I have neighbors who like to shoot guns. One is usually sighting in his rifle or shooting at a target to prepare for hunting season. One is a Union City police officer (A Union City police car is frequently parked in the driveway) whom I assume is getting ready for his or her annual qualifying shoot. Based on the direction I hear it from, I assume this is the one who has at least three different calibers of weapon. I can hear the difference. One sounds like a damn cannon. This is the shooter I heard this week, the one I've heard so many times that I don't even stop what I'm doing any more. This time, my neighbor across the street, one who doesn't hunt, called to ask me if I'd heard that gunfire. His daughter wanted to go outside to play; but the gunfire made her nervous, and he suggested she stay inside. I reassured him that I knew who all gun toting neighbors are and most of them are nothing to worry about. I explained about the Union City officer that lives behind me and that I assumed this was him (or her) and that his daughter should be safe to go outside.
  I didn't tell him that the only neighbor that makes me nervous with a gun anymore is the one who lives directly behind him (In hindsight, maybe I should have). He is the only one I've known to be drunk, firing off an antique black powder gun just for fun. He's also the only one who has actually required police presence when, in our first or second year here, he threatened suicide and threatened to shoot his wife if she called the police. Our first awareness of the situation was a late night helicopter and two Fulton County police cars with blue lights flashing, sitting on the road below the hill the goats live on. I saw the blue lights as I was finishing up milking. We were planning to walk the dogs and take some eggs to a neighbor, so I walked up the road toward the police cars with my arms in the air (with a carton of eggs in one hand that looked like who knows what in the dark) to see what was going on. Both officers had their backs to me, and I think I startled them a little when I said "hello" from a distance to make myself known. One suggested that maybe we shouldn't be out walking the dogs. She would only say that a neighbor of ours was having a rough time. We found out the rest from an online news source the next day. The police had surrounded his house but he'd managed to slip away into the trees for a while before they found him. He still lives there, but I don't think his wife does. I've never really tried to get to know him.
  I will admit that New Years Eve and July 4th are kinda scary here. I usually try to stay indoors myself and worry about bullets coming back down through a roof of an animal shelter. But the rest of the year I don't worry much anymore unless a shot sounds closer than usual and comes from a different direction than I'm used to. That happened recently, and I started texting neighbors I knew had guns, hoping it was one of them, and I would get reassurance. It was none of the neighbors whose phone numbers I have, and the strongest possibility was he of the drunken firing off of a black powder gun. But it was only the one shot and nothing more. So what are you gonna do?
  I surprised myself by being the one to reassure my neighbor that this controlled gunfire was probably safe, even though some of those shots sounded like something really big. The first time I heard gunfire here, there were a lot of shots fired; some in quick succession, some more slowly. This was on a Sunday afternoon before we'd actually moved into the house, and as far as I knew at the time, there was only one other occupied house on the street. The gunfire was coming from the direction of what used to be a commercial nursery where there are some open growing areas on the back side of the property and other areas of trees convenient for hiding in, and my brain went haywire imagining things like drug deals gone bad. I called the police. When the officer showed up (quickly) she drove down the street and back (it's only about a quarter of a mile long) and reassured me that she didn't see anything. By that time the gunfire had stopped. The next time we heard lots of gunfire coming from the same direction, we were both there and agreed that it didn't sound normal (What did we know of normal out here? The only gunfire we heard in East Point usually came from Cleveland Ave and our police office neighbor and good friend would explain later what the crime in progress had been.) and called the police again. This time a different officer explained that there was a kind of unofficial shooting range in that direction and we shouldn't be concerned. They knew the folks and knew it was a safely run range. So that was the first of several directions that I learned that gunfire from there is probably okay. Now I'm kinda getting used to my neighbors' shooting habits, and I don't usually go running inside or call the police anymore. Heck I've even done some target practice here myself in the driveway, shooting at a box with a hill behind it, shortly after the second time we saw a coyote in the field next to the chicken coop.

Monday, April 16, 2018

Greenhouse update

I am proud of myself for creating a budget for the greenhouse once the money got into my account. I made a list of the materials I needed and priced them out, in some cases choosing the best price and in other cases choosing a local source I felt loyalty to. I was afraid that if I just went to Home Depot and started buying, I'd be out of money before I had everything I needed. 

The plastic I ordered from Growers' Supply is here. All I need to get now are the 16 foot cattle panels and some 12 foot lumber. For that I am relying on help from a friend with a 12 foot trailer, so I'm working on his timeline for now. I'd just borrow the truck and trailer, but I have no confidence in my ability to back them up. The person helping me with the construction is on standby until I get the last of it together. (In reality, he's in charge of construction and I'll be there to do what I can to assist.) The seedlings in the basement are holding their collective breath until they can be moved out of the currently cramped quarters.

Thanks again to everyone who made this possible in so many ways. I will be getting out the promised perks soon.