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.

Raising Firewood, Cattle Shrinkage, Family Camping

There’s an old country song by Luke Bryan. It hails from the era of Taylor Swift breaking country music, and carries the fun storytelling that Nashville twanged before pop took over.

Rain Is a Good Thing”

2023 and 2024 were dry. I wrote about it “Wherefore Art Thou Raineo” and because we lived through it, it stands out as a bad time. Grass wasn’t growing, so we had to feed hay as early as July. Hay costs escalate because the grass isn’t growing. Shipping in from out of state works, and costs only money. Much better then the old days without trucks and highways when you had to put cattle down if the grass was short.

Compounding the issue for ranchers was shortfalls of rain in other areas. Hay prices were not just high in North Texas, they were high across much of the cattle country in the USA. Ranchers responded by selling head into the meat market and sacrificing future calving production capabilities. The size of the national herd is quiet undercurrent of our national wealth diminishing in real terms, in real time, separate from the impacts of inflation on purchasing power, and it has accelerated downhill following COVID:

While the mean rainfall in Parker is 33inches a year, the decade after the 2011 drought were ‘bumper crop’ years of rainfall. For ten years trees could thrust every higher and ever wider, an explosive growth period. That all crashed back down in 2023 and 2024.

How do trees respond? They’ve become over extended, stretched beyond their means, living the good life of the roaring twenties on cheap credit and an aversion to future risk management. It’s the boom and it’s the bust, and the bust means the wind breaks off limbs.

We’re talking big limbs, the kind I can’t get my arms all the way around, and they crashed down all over the Raising Wood homestead throughout 2025. For a sense of perspective, in 18 months I wore out a Stihl chainsaw cutting down limbs and dead trees.

Good! Now we can put firewood up for sale at the end of the drive. Laid down some landscaping fabric, found some firewood racks on the clearance area at Lowe’s, picked up some stencils and poly board and Hobby Lobby, and boom, we’re in business as Raising Wood Firewood.

For our family purposes, the revenue is not the primary goal. We’ve made enough back to cover those expenses listed above. What is wonderful is a combined family project, and a tangible leveraging of lemons into lemonade. It would be much easier to grumble about breaking trees and leave them to rot on the ground for 5-10 years. It is much more fun to convert them to firewood. They are the right size that every child can help with moving, stacking, and racking them. We can all delight together when someone venmo’s $6 to Jenny for 24 pieces of wood they quietly picked up from the rack.

Bottom of the trailer is entirely firewood

You also have plenty of wood to camp with. We joined a church group for a camping trip at the end of October and provided the firewood for seven families, which is cultivating the joy of generosity for each of us.

Speaking of camping, the boys have taken to it with great zest:

And speaking of down logs and chopped trees, finding a beaver dam was a fun time:

And speaking of a fun time, how about a David vs Goliath cast iron cookoff?

And speaking of a cast iron skillet, guess who is having the most fun cooking?

Life is good and we are blessed. Lemonade from Lemons is antifragile.

On the topic of drought, lemons into lemonade, and woody growths: Mesquite trees have an inverse relationship with dry years. Everything else withers, and the prickly mesquites grow stronger. Helps keep the soil active and fights erosion, which is nice. Stabs tires and hands, which is not. However, I have two strong boys with saws who were delighted to be paid 25 cents per stripling they cut down for the burn pile.

They each made some good money, learning some responsibility and task management along the way. Then we roasted marshmallows over the coals, because nothing tastes better then thorns turned into ash.

Small decisions steadily made become habits, and habits become character. Much of what we do at Raising Wood involves this habit forming, character creating process. So i noticed one morning a visual example of that development.

Our firewood rack for home use is stacked up against the fence at the top of the yard. It runs over a hundred feet and has fruit trees between the fire pit and the firewood stack. Over time, the result is that the wood behind the fruit trees remains high and untouched, while the wood that is a straight line walk from the firepit to the wood rack is readily consumed.

Finding these blind spots is an opportunity for improvement and refinement, both in our physical space and our own personal character. Making lemons into lemonade, one day at a time.

Book List 2025

I find keeping a list of books read in a year helps me both read more frequently and recall the contents of a work more effectively. Prior years: 2024, 2023, 2022, 2021, 2020, 2019, 2018, 2017

Bold denotes highly recommended

Fiction

David Lindsay – A Voyage to Arcturus
M.R. Kayeser – The Curly Wolf
Ryan M. Patrick – The Martian Incident
Susana Imaginario – Asterius
Brian Hemming – Murder on the Stellar Schooner
Frederick Key – Cobalt Agonistes
Eric Postma – Shoot the Devil 2: Dark Matter
J.R.R. Tolkien – Tales From the Perilous Realm
J.R.R. Tolkien – The Fellowship of the Ring
J.R.R. Tolkien – The Two Towers
J.R.R. Tolkien – The Return of the King
Kenneth Grahame – The Wind in the Willows
Sean Valdrow – The Rooster Rider
Larry Correia- Graveyard of Demons: Saga of the Forgotten Warrior 5
Richard Paolinelli – Seadragon
David J. West – Let Sleeping Gods Lie
Louis L’Amour: Fair Blows the Wind
Milo James Fowler – Double Murders are Twice As Bad
H. Rider Haggard – King Solomon’s Mines
C. S. Lewis – The Magician’s Nephew
Milo James Fowler – Captain Bartholomew Quasar: Starfaring Adventures
John C. Wright – Somewhither
David Skinner – The Giant’s Walk
Larry Correia – Hear of the Mountain, Saga of the Forgotten Warrior 6

Non-Fiction

Phillip Freeman- Patrick of Ireland
Johan Hari- Magic Pill: The Extraordinary Benefits and Disturbing Risks of the New Weight-Loss Drugs
Arthur Herman – How the Scots Invented the Modern World
Michael Pollan- How to Change Your Mind
Charles Towne & Edward Wentworth- Cattle & Men
Georges St-Pierre- The Way of the Fight
Dave Munson – They’ll Fight Over it When You’re Dead: The True Story of How I Survived Terrorists, Morons and an Assassin to Build One of the Coolest Leather Companies in the World
John C. Wright – The Lament of Prometheus: An Examination of David Lindsay’s A Voyage to Arcturus

Lizzie Collingham – The Taste of Empire: How Britain’s Quest for Food Shaped the Modern World
Ed Yong- An Immense World: How Animal Senses Reveal the Hidden Realms Around Us
Jack Dunn – Streets of Steel: South Africa Untold: The Last Stand Against Home Invasions

Development

Dr. Henry Cloud – Trust
Ed Catmull – Creativity, Inc
Jon Del Arroz – Churchianity
Carissa Quinn- The Arrival of the King: The Shape and Story of Psalms 15-24
Dr. Gabrielle Lyon – Forever Strong: A New Science-Based Strategy for Aging Well
Robert Pirsig – Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance: An Inquiry into Values

She Gets It

Dropped Lelee the heifer off at the butcher Friday morning.
Two year old is crying while we drive home.
“Are you sad she’s gone?”
“NO I WANT TO EAT LEEEEELEEEE”

The result of finding the hens laying in the goat hay feeder after a few days

Games for Children: To Boldly Go Where No Hasbro Has Gone Before

In ancient times, including my own childhood, board games consisted of endless variations of Sorry, Candyland, Clue, and Monopoly. Nothing need be said the miserable experiences Uno and Skip-Bo bring to the table. Mix some classic peer-to-peer strategy in with Checkers, Chess, and Backgammon to complete the repertoire.  Today, let’s look beyond that for more interesting, cooperative, and enjoyable options.

The Raising Wood Project includes 4 kids, ages two to ten. As part of building and sustaining attention spans, there is very little screen time provided to the children. As part of building relationships with each other, we prioritize and invest in interactive and cooperative games.

The cooperative game model has grown in the US market in a huge way over the past two decades. Previously the domain of the European socialist entertainment mongers, it turned out to be a lot of fun. Eurostyle should have always been part of the USA game dynamic. Seriously, not every game must end with one winner and everyone else as a loser.

You know that feeling at the end of the game against someone else, where you can’t win and you must waste your life so they can pursue moving fiddly bits about to document the progress of their victory. You dread it, so you don’t start the game, either to avoid the loss or dragging someone else through the struggle session. Now no one is having fun.

For children today, we can do better. Out of the two dozen or so games in the house, here are some winners. They’re so good you can even play them with your children together. These are battle tested, surefire winners and you can slap them on the kitchen table with confidence the first time, and every time.

Invasion of the Cow Snatchers

Imagine you have your own flying saucer, and your task is to abduct cattle. You get an intelligence card with the placement of the different obstacles in the pasture, the placement of the cattle about the pastures, and go use your magnets to pick them up.

This solo puzzle game is quick and easy to pick up, and difficult to master, a superb piece of design and game development. Works for all ages, and can present a good diversion for after dinner drink time when the parents want to keep hanging out. For kids, it develops problem solving, dexterity, mental resilience against failure, and buckets of laughs. Probably does the same for adults.

Hoot Owl Hoot

The sun is rising and the baby owls must return home. Use color cards to travel the loop. Everyone is responsible for all the brother and sister owls making it home. No owls left behind, if you will.

Really crushes in an age 4-7 crowd. The cooperative element is well done and the game plays quick. Even better, children can continue the game while the parent must divert to responsibilities. Skills include paying attention to groups status, not just your own player. Also develops task oriented conversation and problem solving.

Deduckto

All the deductive thought requirements of Clue without the tedious, mind numbing, time stalling, ridiculous affection of using dice to move about a Manor. Instead, it addresses the classic question of man: Who am I?

Players must solve for 3 categories of clues to reveal their own identity, which is concealed to the player. All other players can see the identity and assist with a yes/no question sequence for matching elements. This plays fast and will surprise you with how often the kids can beat you with their own skills. Those skills include deductive reasoning and rapid processes of elimination

Honorable mention in the who dun it category is Outfoxed. Clever secret decoder system to qualify in/out clues and a time limit as the suspect may escape. Longer set up and tear down makes a barrier to entry compared to a single stack of cards in Deduckto, so it stays on the shelf more.

Forbidden Island

Cooperate together to escape an island that is flooding. Escape with the artifacts to win. I don’t enjoy this and prefer Pandemic far more, which is a dynamite family game for up to 5 players. Kids love Forbidden Island without me, and the game will usually make it through a second play before everyone moves on. Skills include probabilistic reasoning, cooperative resource management, and moving quickly.

Castle Panic

You stand upon the walls of the citadel. The trees are distant and the goblins teem on the edges, just out of bowshot. You know they’re soon going to come from all six sides. You also know your brothers and sisters stand alongside, ready to dispatch the enemies and rebuild walls as they collapse. This game is hard, often very hard and you’ll lose a lot. But you’ll win and lose together, and the cooperative mechanism is tight. Good for children, adults, and a mix together for up to six players. Builds skills of planning, allocation of effort, and dealing with suddenly bad problems.

Dishonorable mentions, because I found them tedious and dull yet my children love them, allow the into your home at your own peril: Settlers of Catan Jr and Taco vs Burrito.

Keep an eye out for these, they make great gifts for Christmas, birthday, or reward for something done well or character development inflection point in a budding child’s life. Have fun out there.

Digging Real Holes, Planting Emotional Seeds

If you let it, and nurture it, Homestead life can establish its own outlook on life

This means feeling the flow of seasons and the rhythm of weather. Discerning the quality difference in pasture beef, pork and poultry compared to any industrial version. The joy of planting, the care of cultivation, unto the pride of harvesting. The zest of integrating systems both mechanical and organic. The excitement with two boys when they find these bizarre new mushrooms, oblong spheres the size and shape of cowpies that explosively decompress when you step on them.

This also means feeling the downside emotions. I’ve touched before on a dark reality of small scale livestock: sometimes they just die. On the small scale these critters have names. Each has taken time  and snuggles, consideration and care.

We Moderns are proud of our ability to breezily skip past the mud and the blood. We try our best to scroll past fear, uncertainty and doubt. We have amusement and therefore we feel distance from death. Sure, we’ll dabble with it in our fiction, but we want to control it. Then when the dark times come and we can’t heal a family member and can’t get the doctors to just fix it, it becomes a severe crisis that we never trained for.

Some hobbies fight this trend. They engage our core being to reground truthfully with our surroundings. Those who hunt and process their own game feel it. Gardeners know it also. A great director can bring us to the brink of understanding. A great novelist can pull you deep into expanding that understanding. Jesus lived through a dark world then and lives through it with us now. His greatest miracle may be the patience to let us each grow and develop that emotional depth in our own time. Surely it’s easier for Him to just call the whole broken place to an end and start over without the suffering.

This is Dot: bred, born, snuggled, raised, pastured, trimmed, dewormed, bred herself, now mothered three set of twins under our care.

One of these twins was easily a third smaller then her brother. Frequent interventions by the shepherds to coax her into nursing  were required. It worked, and behold, great joy and satisfaction from all of the family involved.

Dot’s mother, Phoebe, gave birth a week or so earlier. A single kid, the first of the season, very lively. The name Skippy was correct and applied within a week. Great joy and satisfaction, the children gave this one many snuggles.

Last week brought a change in the wind. Dot showed a range of signs of infection, and even with treatment required a put down within four days of symptoms.

Simultaneously, that happy kid Skippy no longer skipped, but stood alone in the pasture as the sun set. Momma phoebe stayed in the pasture, knickering to call Skippy to the rest of the herd. Turns out Skippy couldn’t walk anymore and we couldn’t fix it. In the morning, the children demanded to take Skippy to the vet. Jenny and I relented. Skippy passed in the waiting room. No known cause of death. Deep emotional impact and lots of processing together in conversation. This ain’t Paw Patrol, y’all.

So it’s Friday night. There’s a Texas Rangers game on the radio, and Terrik Skubal is wrecking our bats. There’s a family digging a goat grave together for more then 2 hours. The seeds of emotional maturity we are planting together in this process will bear fruit in days to come. Like most cultivation, there are thousands of indirect decisions that feed into the final product. This is part of our process of Raising Wood.

Well, we have two goats who need milk. We have one goat in milk without a kid. Checkmate Phoebe, you have a new job. Three or four times a day, we will hold her so the kids can nurse. Hopefully she’ll adopt them as her own. If she does, it will be through their persistence and not her eagerness. The persistent widow of Luke 18:1-8 comes to mind, and boy are they persistent.

It’s beautiful when an adoption takes place. The contrast of salvaging life from death is a satisfying emotional experience.

Few things last forever, nor do we want sorrow to linger. The weekend was enjoyable while gathering with friends. No one dwelled on the hard things, that season has passed. Come monday night, Valentine gave her own set of twin kids. The children will feed her leaves and snuggle the kids and come up with names for them. The resonant satisfaction of that experience will also yield its own fruit in season.

“baby goats” is a very exciting set of words for her

This is Raising Wood. It’s good for the children and good for the parents. We are very blessed to be able to do this together, and I encourage you to find something more then modern to engage your family with.

Baby Goat Time

I’ve been out of town training for work this past week. Our running joke is that things go wrong when I’m gone, and Jenny suddenly has to figure out what to do. This time it’s been quiet and I’ll be home tonight.

Then this morning , a happy development.

Video call from Jenny, a discovery in the morning mists, a new kid in the herd.

Nursing is working and the kid is already cleaned up. A perfect overnight/early am delivery from one of our sturdy does.

Oh yes. Hello Phoebe. Thanks for picking a warm and dry morning!

“I did it! I made a thing!”

I find carpentry projects relaxing, mechanical projects educational, and fencing projects routine. I have no experience with welding projects.

Message to Jenny after test run
(said in homage to the excellent show, Clarkson’s Farm) (this contains the most melodic fence post pounding you’ll encounter)

Then this particular mix of carpentry, mechanical, and fencing projects combined into a welding project. I set off down the YouTube rabbit hole of DIY welding. 2 hours later I was convinced I could totally do this, no problem, and the cheapest wire feed flux core welder at Home Depot would be fine.

Leaning right

This gate post was bent out of shape thanks to an aggressively growing tree. I cut the bars previously connecting it all together, and now pushing it all out of place. I used a come-along to pull the post back to vertical, then put overlap metal rods on the fence rails to tie it back together with sister joints. Then used the grinder to remove splatter and numerous sharp edges.

A fine, upstanding gate

Turns out, I was right, but not about what I was convinced of. The smallest cheap Lincoln kept throwing the 20amp breaker in the shop so I moved to generator power. Then the welder was undersized for the thickness of the metal and ran into thermal overload very quickly. Each time added a twenty minute cool down period.

After this project I returned the tool and sized up the the next one. Both problems solved. The welds are all ugly, and these kind of farm applications are great learning opportunities for my hands.

All projects need interruptions. Miss Molly Tamale the new puppy was happy to oblige by getting her head stuck in this fence chasing Hay Bale the barn cat during one of the shut downs.

The other end of the cattle run needed a control gate. Maple is quieter than steel and I need calm cattle. Now there’s also a loop I bent and welded for the sliding latch to anchor against. I am inordinately proud of this whole assembly, thank you very much.

The big win at the end of these upgrades is a cattle run to reliably load cattle onto the trailer. The picture above shows where the stock trailer will back up to, this is the gate opposite the repaired gate. Now they will pass through to either pasture or trailer, at our direction. The log is there to bridge the gap when the trailer is fully backed up.

It does work. We have done the three easiest loads ever over the last week while getting the AI process done on two cows.

I was also able to convert some old bedframe steel into a dolly for a pig feeder. One afternoon of messing around and a lot of convenience added to the pig feeding process. New welding skill, for the win. Headgate attempt is next.

Kids have been experimenting with locks and dams in the pasture, they got much better water retention then I expected
Leveling up skills, matching these leveled up sunrises.

2024 Grab Bag: – Incremental Improvements & Answers

2024 was our smoothest year. After 4 years of tweaking, adjusting, improving and optimizing we had the lowest ratio of labor + chores : production yet.

The biggest improvement this year has been integrating two boys (now 7&9) into dog and chicken management. It is a daily task to manage feed and water for the Livestock Guard Dogs and the Hens, as well as collecting the eggs. They are compensated per egg, so it varies by the day. They are really quite good at it and I’m proud of their efficiency in the task.

We cleared a huge range of branches on the north end of the pole barn and replaced a broken gate system. While we did the replacing, we went ahead and moved the placement of the gate to better fit our trailer access needs. Incremental improvement!

You will notice the red Packout tool storage system on the 4×4, and also in this picture in the house while I remodeled the bathroom. Huge time saver, a lot less walking back to the shop and much faster access to each tool, because it always has a home. Even for a DIY Homestead grade guy like me, this system is worth the investment for the time savings.

On the topic of organizing tools: Love getting the extension cords off shelves and workbenches. Now there is a single hanging organization system, another incremental improvement that pays dividends. When it is time to string up cables for deicing water tanks, easy access to each cable.

Family nearby replaced their wooden garage doors. They kept the wood for me and I converted them into worktop and shelving space in the shop. Nice improvement in feed & supplement storage and access for a low cost. Milk crates fit perfectly in the second level, making organization on the shelves a success. It’s a wonderful feeling when the shop is a asset to walk into, not a liability you groan and try to avoid.

While we’re in the shop, let’s talk about these Enbighten wifi electrical outlets. Originally I installed motion detecting LED panels in the shop. The idea was they would auto off when I was not in there at night. It’s a great plan, except the cats keep the lights on most nights. The shining is annoying in my bedroom window. Now I can turn them on and off from an app on my phone. Additionally, I can manage the electric fence remotely from the phone. Find a break and need to fix it? Turn the fence off. Make the repair. Turn it on. Huge time savings for electric fence maintenance, easily dozens of hours in a year. Incremental Improvement!

Since we’re looking at extension cords, diligent children, and a home remodel, check this out. There’s a green extension cord on the right side of the driveway. That 300ft of connected cable is there because the boys wanted to get our Nativity scene set up at the end of the driveway. I was in the middle of fussing with replacing trim and said “go help me by getting the power lines out there.” They knew where the cables were in the shop and ran them out without assistance. They were proud of their work, and they should be. It was a great help and gave them skin in the game as we set up the Christmas lights together.

Looking at equipment that drags gear around, sometimes you just barely manage to finish chipping wood and get the tractor in the barn while the steam is blowing out the radiator. Not a great feeling, and this is going to be some time investment to find the root cause and remedy the overheating.

Since we’re in the barn, time for hay! We haul the cattle hay around on the utility trailer. To feed the goats, we tip a bale over and cut it open, then peel hay off to toss into the feeder systems. I just like this pic of the girl and the goats playing around, so now you get to see it too.

Jenny developed an incremental improvement to this feeder from last year. She salvaged broken halves of 5 gallon buckets to make a new hay base . This prevents the tiny bits of hay from packing together and cementing the bottom of this wire arrangement and encourages more comprehensive eating of the hay.

Another Jenny concept: Affixing sheet steel on the north end of the barn. This greatly improves the storm resistance of the goat area in the winter. In the summer there’s still plenty of cross breeze to keep it from overheating. This expands the functional area of feeding hay to the goats, resulting in a healthier flock over winter.

Down at the south end, the other half of the flock has its own area. Jenny’s idea (see the theme?) was to add a passthrough gate for the farmers to farm better. Now it has a gate. Incremental improvement worth 2 minutes a night for 100 nights each winter. That’s time well spent.

You may run the numbers in your head and say “Well Robert, that took you both 3 hours to arrange and install. That’s 6 man hours. Not a good investment, that is a 2 year return to your labor!” To which I will say, “any minute saved on a daily chore is a minute farther away from frustration, annoyance and burnout. Taking 3 hours on a nice Saturday to make this a joyful experience for the family year round is worth it. Or in economics terms, the opportunity cost of our labor every night is high compared to the opportunity cost of a slow and peaceful Saturday morning. See also, that smile up in the pic.” Incremental Improvement!

A picture of a kid with a kid with another kid in the background is a good segue to some of your questions following the latest chicken processing day:

Q: “The air drying: I had not heard that needs to be done, I assume this is because you give the birds all a good rinse and just want to keep that moisture off of them for freezing?”

A: Bird skin will struggle to crisp up if it’s frozen with soggy skin. Drip/air drying helps with that. Eviscerate on the table, spray off with a hose, dunk in water in a utility sink for 10-20 minutes. After it sheds heat in the sink we move to a cooler with ice. Target is under 40f within the hour. The joints will feel stiffer when cold. Then drip/air dry for 15-20 minutes with those stiff joints. I run a big shop fan on low to keep air moving over it gently. Longer is fine too.

Q: “For bagging, you’re not using a vacuum sealer or anything, but the bags look nice and tight to the bird. Are you just dipping the bag in water to push the air out and then sealing it?”

A: I fully recommend these, We use them because Neighbor J.P. uses them because he learned to use them on a nearby pasture poultry operation. 100% success rate for both of us. texaspoultryshrinkbags.com/products/10-x-16-shrink-bags Unless the bird is over 8lb, then we size up to the turkey bag. There’s a straw that goes into the bag in the cavity of the chicken. When you dunk in 195f water the plastic begins to shrink. Remove from water. Pull the straw out and tighten zip tie completely with pliers. Let the bag dry and then label with included labels, which have excellent adhesion.

One for the road folks! There’s always some Wood to raise in 2025, Godspeed on your endeavors.

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.