Saturday, June 19, 2021

Getting Ready for the Goats

 My son, maybe with a little tongue in cheek, told us he was buying us goats.  My hubby had always said that he would like to have some goats to milk, but we have never really had a place to raise them.  So since we have a few acres here, he thought now would be a great time.  

Here was the problem.  We have no fences.  We have no barn.  We have no money.  So we started small and kept working on it.  First the barn.  We are getting three goats, two does and a buck.  They are just babies right now but we had to think about our future....and theirs.  So we designed a 15 foot by 15 foot goat barn.. It is taller in the front, and slopes to the back.  It can easily be divided into stalls and even an area for milking.  We looked at lumber but it was sooooooo expensive so we economized where we could.  The uprights are actually logged from the property.  They are oak trees that were taken from places where they were either too bunched up or bent over.  We cut them, trimmed them, and set them in concrete.  

We bought inexpensive sheathing for the sides and corrugated fiberglass for the roof.

We have an old concrete mixer that we purchased over 30 years ago.  We have moved it from Arizona to Colorado, and now to Missouri.  We used it to mix the concrete to hold the posts in place.  
We stained it with an inexpensive wood stain in barn red.  It took nearly four gallons.  We are still in the process of finishing the inside and the front.  





Whew!  This was quite the project.  Thankfully we had pretty good weather while we were doing it.  We used lumber from our scrap pile and our neighbor even offered some from his stash.  To place the poles, we used a gas powered auger.  It was supposed to be a one-man machine, but it took one man....and one woman to hold it steady enough.  Our muscles were sore, but not as bad as they might have been if we had dug by hand!
 

                  On to the next project!  A water catchment system. 

 

Friday, May 7, 2021

Time to Stake the Peas!

 It seems like once the garden is planted, time just flies by.  I keep a simple garden book so i can look back on what worked, what didn't, and a record so I don't forget what I planted where.  I just used an old vinyl notebook that I had on hand.  

I punched holes in some typing paper and drew a map of the garden.  I put what I planted and when I planted each item.  
I keep a journal as well.  That way I can note anything that happens that is weird like the late frost we had or when we fertilize, or whatever.  
And I keep all the seed packets and pot pokes that identify species, planting depth, germination times, etc.  For example, I planted two types of peas.  One variety is doing much better than the other.  So I can look back and find what kind I planted and when.  

Speaking of peas!  If you have ever grown peas, there are a couple of things that you probably already know. Peas like cool weather.  Hot....not so much.  Peas like to attach themselves to anything and everything that they can.  That makes them hard to weed and harvest if they are growing in a ball and grabbing on to weeds and each other.  So it is important to get your peas planted early and some kind of stake or trellis is essential.  We planted our peas on March 27.  Even with a freeze they are doing well.  One type was really getting tall so today I went to the garden and staked them up.

So you know that I am cheap.  So last year I found these stakes that I think are used for electric fencing.  You can see that they have these little arm things that hold fence wire.  Well they also hold pea support wires as well.  (Pea support wires aren't really a thing, but they could be!)


After I pounded them into the ground with a small hammer, I wound wire over the arms, wrapping around the post to make them more secure.  I had to go back and get some of the pea plants that were taller to help place them in the wire supports.

Last year I did this but I used baker's twine.  Although it looked really cute, it wasn't right for the job.  The twine stretched when wet and did not give the plants the support they needed.  This wire is very thin, and of course it was free, so I used it and I am hoping it will work as well as I have imagined.  

We are tackling our fencing for our goat babies tomorrow.  I can't wait to show you Randy's $0 invention to roll the wire.  Stay tuned!

Saturday, April 17, 2021

Spring Has Sprung!


 It is springtime here in the Ozarks and that means getting the garden ready.  This is our third garden since we moved here.  We are learning as we go.  The first year we planted in a side area on our yard.....Big mistake!  The soil was so rocky that it tore up our nearly new tiller.  I'm not talking pebbles, but rocks the size of your hand.  And then there are the tree roots!  All the big beautiful trees, well they have big, not so beautiful roots.  We had a great crop of green beans, a few tomatoes and peppers but not much else.  

Year two we moved the garden back near the orchard.  Yep, we have an orchard.  Well at least that's what I call it.  It has a peach tree, two pear trees, a cherry tree and this other tree that blooms but doesn't ever bear fruit.  More on the orchard later.  So we knew that we would have to fence in the garden to keep the critters out, so we had moved a bunch of chicken wire from our house in Colorado.  For fence posts, hubs cut posts from our woods in the back.  

These posts were still green but I was shocked a few days later when they sprouted!  Haha.  The fencing was all set up but we still needed a gate.  It had to be wide enough we could get tillers and wheelbarrows in and maybe in the future a tractor.  But we were trying to keep the cost down.  I remembered seeing some metal posts in the fence row.  There were a bunch of them laying there so I showed Randy where they were at and asked him if there was a way we could use them for the gate.  Well, he has a welder, so he welded them together and trimmed them with some boards that I had salvaged from one of those cable reels.  He painted the metal with some spray paint we had on hand, added a wheel off of a broken little planter and I think it turned out beautiful!
This gate served us well all last year.  And for $0!  We added and electric fence to the bottom (we already had that too).  This year, we decided to expand the garden.  We cut down a tree that was giving it to much shade and too many roots, had to buy some fencing, and we changed the electric fencing to solar power.  We only needed an additional 50 feet of wire which ran us about $37.  The solar fence charger was on sale and we were able to pick it up for $120.  And it will power up to 5 miles of fencing!  Enough for our goats!  Yes, I said GOATS!  

Last year our garden gave us lots of tomatoes, peppers, green beans, peas.  We had a few squash and cukes but not as many as hoped for.  Potatoes and onions and sweet potatoes struggled.  In researching the reasons, we figured out that we needed to enrich our clay soil.  This year we have treated it with Gypsum and compost.  Our neighbor has horses and offered us some of his manure and we jumped on it.....well not literally.  He even delivered it!  So far the soil looks much better but we only have a few things planted so only time will tell.

Our weather is rainy and dreary today so it is a perfect time to be indoors getting ready for my first craft show of the year.  Yes, I have a lot going on but I like it like that!  I hope your day is great and the sun is shining where you live  

Blessings.

Thursday, April 8, 2021

On the homestead...

I started Living on the Cheep! nearly ten years ago.  Then, as they say, stuff happens.  We are now living on a five acre property in the Missouri Ozarks, and other than missing my family, I am loving it here. 

We get asked often why we chose Missouri.  I like to say Missouri chose us.  Both of us in our mid-sixties, my husband with some health problems, we knew if we wanted to own our own home with property, the only way we could afford to stay in Colorado is if one or both of us kept working.  So we did some internet searches and found some affordable fixer-uppers in southern Missouri.  My husband took a few days off and we jumped in the car, intent on finding our dream property.  But wait a minute, not so fast.....

We met with a realtor and looked at five properties.  OMG!  They looked so good in the pictures.  One was missing part of its roof (stolen) one had no pipes or furnace (also stolen)  One smelled so bad that my eyes were watering when we opened the door.  We did find a beautiful affordable farmhouse on 18 acres that we loved.  It did not have any central heat or air.  The three bedrooms were upstairs and the only bathroom was downstairs.  Did I mention we are in our 60's?  I think we would have jumped on this had we been in our thirties or even forties.  And although we do not mind some sweat equity, this would have been a bit much.

As we got back to the hotel that night, we were really frustrated.  My husband showed me another property about an hour away.  It looked nice but so did the others.  But since it was on our way home, we contacted the listing realtor and asked to see it.  We met with her the following day. 

The house is small.  It sits on five acres.  There is a full basement, a detached garage and so many trees.  My husband was hesitant.  I was in love.  Was it the home of my dreams?  No.  But it was well kept, great condition, and a beautiful setting.  We made an offer.  That was March of 2019.  We finally closed the end of June.  To say moving after 25 years of accumulating stuff was hard would be an understatement.  It was one of the toughest things I have ever had to do. 

We just loved the green lushness of the property!  So different from the mountains of Colorado and the deserts of Arizona.  We both had grown up in the midwest but had spent most of our adult life in the West, so its easy to forget.  

Fast forward through our first year on this little hobby farm/homestead.  We moved our chickens and added to it.  We planted a huge garden with little success.  We painted the outside of the house ourselves and worked at a remodel of the bathroom, all while juggling doctor appointments, intensive care for a tick bite, and a total knee replacement.  

We are living our dream on a tiny little budget.  I love sharing what we learn (usually by our own, sometimes painful, mistakes) and what we do to enrich our lives and home without spending a ton of money.  Hope you stay tuned!