Finally – llama packing

I’ve been wanting to take the llamas hiking but have not been able to afford pack saddles. I was lucky to find some for sale on CL. I can’t wait for the boys to see this, I think they’re going to think this is pretty cool. Packing is a great way to teach the llamas all the stuff they need to know for 4H! Here Scoops models his new pack frame.

Please note, I am NOT bigger than the llama, I am just standing closer to the camera!

Barclay and Scoops are buddies.

And Barclay loves to grab his rope and try to lead him around.

All in all, Scoops was a very good sport about wearing his pack for the first time. I’m sure he’s had a pack on before though, but he was good about letting me do it to him.

First egg!

It was strange day around the coop. Started out with the surprise addition of another rooster! This white guy is our neighbor’s rooster. I’ve heard him crowing and seen him down at their barn, which is quite a long ways away. A couple hundred feet anyway. But today he showed up and started hanging out with the wild chickens, I was a little worried he would convince them to follow him back to his own barn! So when I had a chance to get him away from them I let Barclay chase him, and he took off and FLEW over the fence and all the way to the neighbor’s woodpile which is probably 60 feet away – pretty good for a chicken!

Big Bird thinks he is all that now that he has a hen. He was even trying to scare me off by flapping his wings, which he tried a couple times and then thought better of. Good thing for him. I’ve handled Macaws, I’m not even slightly scared of a rooster, and I’m not afraid to tell him so!


I think she is just the most rediculous chicken I’ve ever seen! I love the pantaloons! Too funny!

And she left a surprise in the coop – our first egg! Too bad it got broken 😦 I’ll add more straw to the coop tomorrow. Of course it wouldn’t have broke if she’d layed it in the nest box, instead of on a bare spot on the coop floor!

A new hen!

I have been feeling bad for Big Bird, because the other chickens have their own clique, and ditch him every chance they get (they can fit through smaller fence holes than him). So I’ve been looking for a buff hen for him. Yesterday on CL I saw a free chicken, and from the picture she looked like a buff orp, so I emailed and said I’d love to have her. Score!


So today I went and met him and brought her home, and when I lifted her out of the box, I see she has these enormous feathered feet and a bustle!!


A friend set me straight, she’s a buff cochin! She’s as big as the rooster, and about the same color.


He ran right up to her and pecked her on the head! So I knocked him out of the way and put her in the pen, and left him outside.


The other chickens all wandered off exploring, but he didn’t leave the pen all afternoon!

So with evening approaching I went and got some food and let him into the pen, then scattered the food around so they could scratch for it. No pecking or fighting, they seem to get along just fine. And he looks proud as punch to have his own hen!

I’ll keep an eye on them to make sure they get along ok. The hen is super neat, you can even pick her up and pet her! What a great addition to the coop!

Llamas at County Fair

Our llamas just returned from spending nearly a week at the Clark County fair. Our 4H club was there, and the boys borrowed my llamas for showing. They did great and brought home a lot of ribbons. If I’d thought of it we should have gotten a picture of all the ribbons! The kids qualified to go to State Fair if they want to.

Here they are in Fit & Show:


Costume class:



Obstacle class:



It was fantastic to see the work the kids put into practicing with the llamas finally pay off. Particularly since they were first year kids and first year llamas! There were a lot of other kids in the junior class, so it was pretty tight competition. The llamas did things for them I really wasn’t expecting them to do. At one point the judge had a tie between the boy using Scoops and one of the other kids, and so she asked them to pick up their llamas foot – and Scoops refused! If only we’d practiced that! We’ll be ready for it next year.

After a week of being in a stall at the fair they were really happy to get back to their own pasture today!

Chicken update


Chickens are doing fine. Today I let them out and they wandered all over the yard. At one point I saw they had gone back in the pen, but Big Bird didn’t fit through the gate so easily as the smaller chickens and he was trying to figure out how to follow them. I walked out there, and he came running right up to me! So I took his picture, then went and opened the gate for him. He seemed to appreciate it.

Since they were all together I threw out some scratch for them.




This is the other rooster, he’s the brother of the hens.

More garden update

Planted at the same time:

Squash in the raised bed (those are 1 square foot sections)…

Squash in a pot…same soil, located right next to each other. I think it’s the depth of the soil that makes the difference.
Potatoes in a wheelbarrow. The potatoes are an experiment. I had some potatoes that went bad so I cut them up and threw them in the compost pile. A while later I saw they had roots and were growing, so I took the four best ones and put them in a pot. Then I read they needed to be planted and buried as they grew to produce potatoes, so I transferred them to this old broken wheelbarrow (with some holes in the bottom for drainage. They are growing well, but I don’t know if they’ll have enough time to produce. I also might remove the two smallest ones to give the other two more room.

Basil plants. I might transplant them and bring them inside for the winter, or maybe bring one inside and leave one out in a greenhouse and see how it does.

This is my bed of corn. They are doing well, but still may not have enough time to make corn. As I drive around town I check out other people’s gardens and I see their corn is so much bigger! This bed has a thick layer of manure and hay under it, a layer of newspapers to stop the weeds, and then six inches or so of 3-way soil. In front of the corn is two grape tomatoes which have grown quite a bit, and two watermelons that have also been doing really well.

The grape tomatoes have tomatoes on them, and more coming!

The watermelons are flowering. I hope they have time to make melons. These are supposed to be little mini-melons, the only kind that have time to mature in our short season.

It only had a couple leaves when I brought it home, look how much it spread out!

And my strawberry barrel surprised me by actually producing a couple strawberries! I think it likes all the light it’s getting now that the bamboo is not shading it.

Midsummer garden update

Lots of tomatoes coming on the potted tomato plants.

The potted pepper is starting to flower.
Peppers in the garden have put on a few more leaves, but haven’t grown at all. Same with the tomatoes, pretty much.

Lettuce bolted in teh recent hot weather.

Carrots just don’t have enough room to grow in the shallow raised bed. Those are my biggest carrots.

The empty squares are the carrots, which just haven’t done much at all. Most didn’t even get started. A month ago I replanted the empty spots to give them another chance after the slugs had decimated the first round, but they haven’t done any better.

Two squares of Pac Choi have done nothing.

Overall I have to say the stuff I’ve planted in the raised bed has not done as well as the stuff I planted in pots. Since they use the same soil, and they are in the same area of the yard so they get the same sun, and I water them all at the same time, I am going to theorize that the main difference is depth of soil. Six inches in the raised bed, ten or more in the pots. I have a friend who did a raised bed, but it’s probably 20 inches deep, using a 3-way soil mix, and her plants are far outgrowing mine.

Wore out!

Barclay had another puppy come over to play with him a couple days ago, and they ran and played and wrestled until they were both wore out! He spent the whole rest of the day like this in the middle of the living room, completely oblivious to what was going on around him 🙂 A tired dog is a good dog – an exhausted dog is the BEST dog!