Small Choices Are Big Opportunities

“We need a place where the children can make a lot of choices to develop their character.” This was one of our core reasons for shifting from the suburbs to rural-adjacent property. We sought an environment for a child to safely explore, build, and enjoy the outdoors. No more speeding trucks or playground confinement.

That was the vision,. Reality has been both better and different then expected. There has been less exploration, and we’ll get to that later. There has been far more animal management and building opportunities. When you think about it, you may realize it must be so,. We had no idea what we were getting into with livestock. We made small choices, they have had big ripple effects.

Let’s talk about chickens, for example. They require clean water, feed, and shelter. They scuffle about after the bugs and lay zee eggs. Often they use a good nest box provided by the menfolk. Other times they just find their own spot and lay eggs. Sometimes they are clean, sometimes they make a mess on them. The cleaner their nesting spaces, the cleaner the eggs. So we made a deal. Kids, you run the feed and the water for the chickens. You go and find their eggs and bring them in. I’ll pay you a nickel per fowled egg and a dime for every clean egg. We didn’t tell them where to look or how to improve the ratio, but we do sell the clean eggs to cover our feed costs. Given a good incentive, the two oldest have made adjustments and the rate of clean eggs has increased moderately.

“Origami style” AI-Edit of really eggcellent eggs

The original plan was the two boys would alternate each day who runs the chicken chore and who runs the dog chore. We rapidly discovered that one son would take the easy way out and routinely leave extra work for his brother the next day. He would skip filling the feed and water “because they are good for today.” Of course it was good for today, your brother took care of it yesterday.

So we updated the sequence to alternated each week, and the work load evened out. A quiet lesson was imparted on taking care of your own responsibilities. Small choices on repeat each day, adding up to problems solved or problems created.

Pig & Chicken feed in truck bed, new chicken tractor with paint drying on right

It’s meat chicken time of year for us. The spring is a great eight week window of moderate temps for the fowl to prosper. This year it required a new chicken tractor (pictured right) to expand the number of birds we can run successfully. After I built it, the two boys put two coats of paint over it to increase the longevity of the chicken tractor. Why? Because this time they each purchased five chicks and will purchase their share of chicken feed, share in the daily responsibility of the birds, and help with the processing and freezing of the birds. Not because they need to do this to eat, but because they are planning to sell the frozen bird to customers in our circles. Small choices turning into character defining actions, with positive upside for the responsible and diligent party.

Cornish Cross chicks start yellow

A modern tractor has been on the agenda for several years. This year we put the funding together for it, and it raised attention to a different issue. For six years now we’ve enjoyed a functional and capable septic tank system. A septic tank is the sewer system for the house, and we greatly value functional indoor plumbing. Jenny required that the septic tank be located and evacuated as part of the get-a-tractor program. Solve it now before it backs up in the house eventually, which is wise.

The real problem was our ignorance of the location of the tank. It’s not on the survey and ended up over 200ft from the house. Jenny had an guestimate location based on grass growth and soil topography, but nothing reliable and nothing I want to commit limited bandwidth too.

In that limited bandwidth time, we’re taking down a lot of the electric fence runs. This is to reduce maintenance requirements and reduce the barriers to exploration for the kids. So the oldest son comes up to me in the shop. He’s redolent in his profitable task of pulling up now-defunct t-posts from past projects, and earning $1 for each one he returns to the stash.

“Dad, do you have any other jobs for me?”
“Yeah, maybe. If you can find the septic and dig it up to the point we can get it pumped out, $100 for you, but only if you complete the job.”
“YES!”
“You don’t know where it is.”
“I’ll find it!!… … … Can my brother help too?”
“Sure, if he wants.”
“Can he make his own $100?”
“Yes, good question, but only if you get it dug to the point we can get it pumped”

Looks like a dead goat burial, but it’s just a goat scratching his back while the boys try to convince him to depart.

45 hours of man-work by the boys later, accompanied by the young bucks and happy Molly, they dug up and revealed both lids to the septic tank. They received their crisp Franklin’s as the septic truck turned back onto the road a week later. Lot of time to quit on this project, but they stuck to it together until the end, growing character all along the way. A good investment for all parties.

Molly meets the piglets. Hiram supervises.

While we’re here, I want to show you a fruit tree at a friend’s place here in Parker County. They moved into this place and run their own homestead. At one point this was an established peach tree, and it took some comprehensive damage somewhere before they moved in. The trunk is carved out in the center, yet continues to produce flowers, then buds, then fruit.

This tree is quietly making the small choices and producing big opportunities. We’ll do the same, and continue the work on raising Wood children to do likewise.

A Better Story

It’s a sunny Saturday morning. Wednesday afternoon a big hunk o’ beef finished breaking a gate that was pre broken by tree roots. Golden opportunity to move the gate location to better suit our application. Since we’re going to do that, might as well take off some branches banging on the barn. That will unblock sunlight for this space.

The mighty, trimmed

I genuinely enjoy cutting trees. The chainsaw is a work of genius. The results are immediate and gratifying. I run a 20″ Stihl, 18″ Husqvarna, 10″ cordless(Milwaukee and Ryobi) pole saw and a 8″ handheld Milwaukee “hatchet” chainsaw.

Head, shoulders, knees and toes…

I’m also big on personal protective equipment, PPE. It’s hard to replace legs and eyes so some cover is needed. I haven’t always done the chaps and gloves. Near misses with holes in my pants changed my mind.

Good PPE doesn’t get in the way. It can make you even more productive. These ear muffs are quiet when the noise is up but have passthrough microphones for when it’s quiet. Great for working with others. Steel toe work boots, why do anything else around logs? Great gloves drive better grip and reduce hand fatigue.

Cutting wood is even better when you have assistance. The small branches after the big cuts are tedious. It turns out goats love the leaves and the farm team is getting strong enough to help throw them over the fence to the hangry horde.

While I handled major branches and detailed limb dropping (don’t hit the fence!) Jenny cutsmall limbs off with this small Milwaukee battery chainsaw. Highly recommend. Much faster than loppers or machetes. She calls it her lightsaber.

Sometimes you end up burning big piles of wood. After trying it, I don’t care for the scorched earth effect it leaves behind. Some patches are still struggling to grow back 3 years later. We tend to pile up the trimmings and pieces through a wood chipper.

So it’s still a sunny summer Saturday. Morning has departed and team morale is low. Mr. Hungry and Miss Thirsty have joined us. I want to finish this pile of brush in one final push, then we’ll head up the hill for lunch. Satisfaction of a job well done and all that. Just gotta finish this pile of branches tangled up in the grapevines.

It’s go time. Quick quick quick. Left hand holding branches, right hand wielding this lightsaber battery hatchet saw. Wrrr-cut-pull. Wrrr-cut-pull. Wrr-snag-zip.

Uh oh. That went over my hand, not the branches.

Set the saw down and start checking, nausea intensifying.

The glove has been clobbered but the fingers are safe after the chain saw skimmed over the surface. 

This is a well worn Ansell HyFlex 11-735. Regarded as a medium cut level glove with an A4 rating, I’ve used it enough that the polyurethane dip coating wore off the palm side long ago. Fortunately the cut protection is intrinsic to the fabric.

This is a better story because I have four fingers on my left hand. This is a better story because I can tell you I set the saw down and we went inside for lunch. This is a better story because I can report on some errors made by pushing too far with dangerous equipment, not a life changing injury with dangerous equipment.

I like to think we’ll have chain saws on the new earth when Jesus comes to set it up, but I don’t know. In the mean time, it’s right to work smart, work safely, and wear the right PPE. I only get one of these bodies in this life.

The spare pair in the shop. Highly recommend.

The Moment and the Unseen

Situational awareness is a key factor in life. I remember reading a Hardy Boys novel in my young days. The adolescent boys have a good natured hefty friend, Chet, who is in many of their adventures. Amid one of these sleuthing adventures, Frank Hardy tests Chet’s situational awareness.

Paraphrase of a twenty year old memory:

“Chet, let’s test that memory of yours to see if you are ready to be a detective. Our pop used to ask us questions like this when we told him we would be detectives like him.”

“Sure, Frank”

“What was the color of the sweater the man who served us lunch at the cafe was wearing?”

“Well… I don’t know Frank. Does it matter?”

In the story, the color of the sweater didn’t matter and it wouldn’t have made a difference in Chet’s life if he started remembering the color of other mens sweaters. As such, I didn’t incorporate that skill into my life. You can wear whatever color sweater you like around me on back to back days.

There is a camouflage of time that I do find interesting. Nature keeps you from remembering what you see. Everyone has been on the mountaintop, but do you remember the specific view, or the raw awesome beauty transcending the daily concerns?

My memories, when they do tie to specifics, are tied to pictures and discussed later. These are weak and second hand but still worthy of review, and with someone else who was with you they kindle warmth in the soul.

God paints daily at dusk and dawn. The gift is for that moment. You cannot effectively preserve it with photography, pastels or prose. Many treasures of His creation are like this. His critters who live in the moment create for those living in the moment with the situational awareness. It is good practice pace yourself to see beyond the busy and the camouflage of time.

What I see coming from the back door

Children engaging with nature are masters of this. They get even better with practice. They pull parents back into that moment. These barefeet feel the grass better then the shodden souls of the adult.

What they see

For us, it’s part of the zest in the homestead homeschool. It can only be cultivated and never bought. For anyone, part of God’s gift is that the moment is always happening, and the next one is just ahead.

Snug as a toad in a fence post corner doesn’t have the same ring to it.

As a wiser man once said, and I am still learning the fullness of it:

“Therefore do not be anxious about tomorrow, for tomorrow will be anxious for itself. Sufficient for the day is its own trouble.
Matthew 6:34
https://bible.com/bible/59/mat.6.34.ESV