Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Little House on The Prairie books for sale!!!

Yesterday I received a gift catalog from a company and before tossing it, I flipped thru it.  I've no idea how it ended up in my name, but I only use catalogs like Fifi's and the like for idea inspiration...not purchasing ideas.

But this catalog yielded a foodie that I will be purchasing. And I thought you might be interested as well.

ABC Distributing...http://www.abcdistributing.com has the original 9 Little House on The Prairie books for a great price!  The full set, original Garth Williams drawings and all, is just $26.95 plus shipping. It appears merchandise shipping on that price is a whopping $9.95 though. That still makes the set a pretty good price when you look around....unless you find a great sale elsewhere.

You can order online: http://www.abcdistributing.com

By mail and money order: ABC Distributing PO Box 905 Deerfield IL 60015-0905

Or by phone: 847-615-7366

The product number for the complete Little House on The Series boxed set is 653033-1LHS

Blessings from Hands and Hearts Farm!

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Want a real hoot?

If you aren't a long-time follower of mine (not that many of you are I suppose...) and just know me from here at this blog, you might be interested in seeing more of me....LOL.

I started off blogging at the Original HomesteadBlogger many moons back, probably 5 or 6 years now.

Yes, I've always been gifted with chatter.

Seriously though, there are some good things tucked into those far-away pages, and loads of links.

And no, I didn't really categorize any better or more consistently back then either, sorry.

Still, you might find some useful goodies just browsing around....

Abundant Blessings Homestead


-blessings from Hands and Hearts Homestead!

This Week...

Has been busy. Well, hectic, at any rate. Chaotic fits, too.

We wrangled the neighbors horses back into their pasture. He recently fenced his property on the other side of the creek and moved his females in. They have close to 20 acres or more fenced off of wood land, pond and clearings.



He lives a mile or better down, at the head of our lane. Of course, he and his wife work days, so when we discovered the horses were roaming the access road and creek, there was no one to call. I couldn't just leave them out. Some folks around here get rather twisted when you mess with their animals, but I would hope if say, my cow were walking around the road up there and they saw her, they'd bring her back and shoo her behind a fence if we weren't home.




I've been sewing on the last truly needed dresses for the girls, and started attacking the pants and shirts for the boys. I don't like making shirts. I'm not at all good at sewing them, the collars give me fits, the button holes always seem to have a problem...but, in the interest of saving money, I have a load of fabric here and there's no reason I can't make them. They just give me a headache :-(




We found the new barn babies...




She just had the 2, same as her last litter. Fine with me. I like barn cats and all, but I have enough really. I'm glad she isn't like Black Momma...she used to pop out 7 each time!

Today, the original plan called for sewing more shirts, cutting more broadfalls out, schooling and so on. What happened in real life was hoof trimming and barn cleaning. So much for plans, right?














It might not look like much, but it is...was. We worked just over 4 1/2 hours out there raking out all the well-composted bedding, scraped down the old layers that still held moisture...and stink, oh my! We hauled over a dozen and some wheelbarrows full of that rich gold soil to the garden. Then we had to get the area leveled back out. Buddy, the Great Pyr, likes to hollow out the far corner for his bed, the goats tend to paw here and there, etc. It was running down hill into the barn stalls, not good when we usually have heavy rains in the fall. So, we raked and shoveled and tamped. I think we did pretty good, but here's my Word of Homestead Wisdom for the day....when building a barn, space those support posts far enough apart, and your roof line high enough up that you can back your tractor in! Not that we built this barn to begin with, but the side roof is low...like barely head high for me at 5.5'...and the posts are too close...man, if I could've backed the tractor in just enough for the box blade to get in there, clean out would've gone much faster. And I'd be much less sore in the shoulders. Much less.

Trust me, I'll take a sore bum from riding the tractor over stiff and aching arms and shoulders from shoveling and lugging a loaded wheelbarrow any day!

The rest of this day, what's left now as it's after 2 pm, will be quiet schooling and reading. I need to recreate my LHOP-On The Banks of Plum Creek/Week 2 notes on the school blog...again. That's twice now the autosave has failed and either then computer or the iPad has eaten my post. Arghhh...technology.

What's been happening around your homestead this week?



-blessings from Hands and Hearts Homestead!

Thursday, September 8, 2011

Wood and Drywall and Paint...oh my!

Paint. Everyone seems to be painting lately. Walls, furniture, barns, etc. I am feeling a bit left out. I live on a perpetual work-in-progress homestead here. Barn repairs always on the list of needs, the house itself in various stages of changing and modifying. There are several things I like about this place, but the constant upheaval of projects in the works gets a bit tiring.

My kitchen is plywood. The floor is laminate needing to be pulled up, and most likely replaced with plywood like the rest of the rooms already have. We have pulled out the cabinets, leaving just one small island counter area where the dehydrator sits. We mounted one section of my new countertop....I have 2 other sections yet, then original plan was for an L-shaped island, but we moved the cookstove into the space the island was to hold so honestly, I have no room for the other counter sections now. It's just one long counter, with the sink in place. No cabinets below, just open leaving space for my 5 gallon buckets of grains.

Immediately off the open kitchen is the Great Room. This a doublewide mobile home, so the main area is totally open. We pulled out the front wall a couple years back and enclosed the porch area, so the living room area is about 32x16 pr so. In this space we have the cookstove on the back/kitchen end, and my sewing area, our living room space with 2 couches and a chair, our dining area with my 9ft table, and our school area with 3 tall book shelves, 2 smaller shelves, and the turtle home. There isn't really much for wall space, just 1 wall about 8 1/2 ft. The other open wall space holds our school boards, a 4x8 white board and the same sized bulletin board. The other wall areas are broken up by windows, leaving only bookshelf room between them.

There is a small room space we haven't totally opened up to the Great Room yet, but I'm hoping Dewey can do it this year. This space is technically the dining room in the mobile home design, but my table simply wouldn't fit in there. It has been my sewing room and now houses the wood stove. Ideally it needs to be opened more to the Great Room. The wall with doorway to the kitchen needs to be reworked and sealed. Right now, that is the wall where the 2 refrigerators stand in the kitchen, and on the 'wood room' side is my brass and pewter baker's rack.

Aside from this open floor plan space, we have a small hallway to the children's bedrooms and main bath, and thru the 'wood room' is the master bed and bath area. We are pulling out walls and rebuilding them, replacing the cheap balsa wood style wallboard with heavy-duty industrial drywall and replacing the 1x2 so-called studs with actual 2x4 studs. Honestly, I can't believe then pictures even stay on the walls around they are so flimsy. It's a mobile home, though, so I know it's just how it's done. I miss a 'real' home.

I want to paint, but where to begin? What colors do I really want? A part of me really likes The fresh country farmhouse look....a light, minty green table and trims, crisp white walls and cabinets. But....we heat and cook with wood half the year. Wood smoke does not mingle well with white paint, especially not in a kitchen. I do have a life here, and scrubbing walls daily doesn't exactly fit in.

My other color ideas move toward my favorites....earthy, woodsy tones. I like spring and summer's bright colors, sure, but I am very much a fall and winter color way type. I'm just not sure how I want to work them in yet. I love the rich, deep browns and greens, the rich autumn yellows bordering on deep pumpkin tones, burgundy, etc. I would love maybe the right color of deep wine on the upper walls, with a chair rail and bead board on the lower walls in maybe a rich green...? I don't know. I can picture it, just don't know that I really want it in the entire area. The kitchen is very much open to the Great Room, so I need to blend somehow. I like the split wall look, and love beaded boards. Then again, barn boards would be great too.

The darker colors will make us look like we're living in a cave I'm sure, but the daily cleaning will be easier. We'll see. Lots of ideas rolling around. I suppose it is just paint...if I don't like it when I'm finished, I can always paint again :-)


-blessings from Hands and Hearts Homestead!

Wood and Drywall and Paint...oh my!

Paint. Everyone seems to be painting lately. Walls, furniture, barns, etc. I am feeling a bit left out. I live on a perpetual work-in-progress homestead here. Barn repairs always on the list of needs, the house itself in various stages of changing and modifying. There are several things I like about this place, but the constant upheaval of projects in the works gets a bit tiring.

My kitchen is plywood. The floor is laminate needing to be pulled up, and most likely replaced with plywood like the rest of the rooms already have. We have pulled out the cabinets, leaving just one small island counter area where the dehydrator sits. We mounted one section of my new countertop....I have 2 other sections yet, then original plan was for an L-shaped island, but we moved the cookstove into the space the island was to hold so honestly, I have no room for the other counter sections now. It's just one long counter, with the sink in place. No cabinets below, just open leaving space for my 5 gallon buckets of grains.

Immediately off the open kitchen is the Great Room. This a doublewide mobile home, so the main area is totally open. We pulled out the front wall a couple years back and enclosed the porch area, so the living room area is about 32x16 pr so. In this space we have the cookstove on the back/kitchen end, and my sewing area, our living room space with 2 couches and a chair, our dining area with my 9ft table, and our school area with 3 tall book shelves, 2 smaller shelves, and the turtle home. There isn't really much for wall space, just 1 wall about 8 1/2 ft. The other open wall space holds our school boards, a 4x8 white board and the same sized bulletin board. The other wall areas are broken up by windows, leaving only bookshelf room between them.

There is a small room space we haven't totally opened up to the Great Room yet, but I'm hoping Dewey can do it this year. This space is technically the dining room in the mobile home design, but my table simply wouldn't fit in there. It has been my sewing room and now houses the wood stove. Ideally it needs to be opened more to the Great Room. The wall with doorway to the kitchen needs to be reworked and sealed. Right now, that is the wall where the 2 refrigerators stand in the kitchen, and on the 'wood room' side is my brass and pewter baker's rack.

Aside from this open floor plan space, we have a small hallway to the children's bedrooms and main bath, and thru the 'wood room' is the master bed and bath area. We are pulling out walls and rebuilding them, replacing the cheap balsa wood style wallboard with heavy-duty industrial drywall and replacing the 1x2 so-called studs with actual 2x4 studs. Honestly, I can't believe then pictures even stay on the walls around they are so flimsy. It's a mobile home, though, so I know it's just how it's done. I miss a 'real' home.

I want to paint, but where to begin? What colors do I really want? A part of me really likes The fresh country farmhouse look....a light, minty green table and trims, crisp white walls and cabinets. But....we heat and cook with wood half the year. Wood smoke does not mingle well with white paint, especially not in a kitchen. I do have a life here, and scrubbing walls daily doesn't exactly fit in.

My other color ideas move toward my favorites....earthy, woodsy tones. I like spring and summer's bright colors, sure, but I am very much a fall and winter color way type. I'm just not sure how I want to work them in yet. I love the rich, deep browns and greens, the rich autumn yellows bordering on deep pumpkin tones, burgundy, etc. I would love maybe the right color of deep wine on the upper walls, with a chair rail and bead board on the lower walls in maybe a rich green...? I don't know. I can picture it, just don't know that I really want it in the entire area. The kitchen is very much open to the Great Room, so I need to blend somehow. I like the split wall look, and love beaded boards. Then again, barn boards would be great too.

The darker colors will make us look like we're living in a cave I'm sure, but the daily cleaning will be easier. We'll see. Lots of ideas rolling around. I suppose it is just paint...if I don't like it when I'm finished, I can always paint again :-)


-blessings from Hands and Hearts Homestead!

BlogShare: Common Sense Homesteading: FDA to Consu...

A Plain and Simple Homeschool: BlogShare: Common Sense Homesteading: FDA to Consu...: Common Sense Homesteading: FDA to Consumers- "You Do Not Have the Right to C... : I came across an article in Countryside magazine recentl...

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

A Test Posting

Being out and about on the homestead, and utilizing the iPad for schooling so much, I am testing out the BlogPress app to see how it might work for us.

Do you use an iPad for schooling or daily things? What are your favorite apps?


-blessings from Hands and Hearts Homestead!

Sunday, September 4, 2011

BlogShare: Common Sense Homesteading: Is What We Eat and Drink Making Us Sicker and Dumb...

Common Sense Homesteading: Is What We Eat and Drink Making Us Sicker and Dumb...: We're told that if something is allowed into the food and water supply, it's supposed to be good for us, at at the very least, harmless. S...

September is for....

...birthdays.  That is the theme this month. And next month, too.  Well ok...we are in our 6 month birthday season run actually.  This month we had Jacob, aka Wild Child, who turned 10 yesterday on his vacation to Grandma's house.


My Grandmother, aka Great Great, turned 92 the same day, so they shared their birthday fun.

...anniversary memories.  Next week, on the 15th anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks, my oldest turns 25.
Next month, we roll out 3 more children's birthdays, November brings just 1, December is Dewey's and my birthdays, January has 2 children and February has a birthday and anniversary.  It's busy around here from July on in the birthday department :o)


We made a long turn-around trip from Mississippi up to Vincennes, IN and home again Friday. Can we say L.O.N.G drive...5:30 am to 9:30 pm and near 700 miles.  We met up with Grandma (who met up with Dewey before meeting up with us...) and swapped children. Two weeks ago I drove up and gave away 2 children to Dewey to deliver to Grandma's for vacation time.  Friday, we met up to swap out those 2 for 3 more. Of course I missed those first 2 vacationees, but I'm not liking this group vacation at all.  My baby is up there.  Sure, Wild Child is up there, and the 18 year old farm hand too, but Emily is up there.  My baby. For 2 weeks. That's 14 days. That's dang near 340 HOURS.  I'm not liking this.  Sure, Dewey says I'll be fine, but what does he know.  He isn't here, 24/7, tethered to the daily moods, attitudes, giggles and pouts of these kids like I am.  And this is my baby. She isn't just having a sleep0ver, she's STATES away having a sleepover. I need a hobby. Something other than children.


I had new tires ordered and put on before we left this round. Expensive hunks of rounded rubber. My van takes heavy duty truck tires, and while I didn't go for the top-of-the-line pricey ones, I did go for the mid-priced at a bit over $700.  Despite ,my nearly 210k mileage on the van, and the shoddy lumpy roads I drive on, my last tires lasted 3 years...the best time I've gotten out of any tires.
My 'tire guy' races custom Mustangs...something about iron GT-40 heads and Elderbrock intakes and NOS stuff....all Greek to me but apparently a big deal if you understand all that stuff. Which I don't. But, whatever floats your boat...or speeds up your Mustang, as the case may be.

Homestead projects this month are mainly centered on making sure I bring in enough hay for the season. You'd think haying went well this year, but it didn't.  Early cold messed it up nearly as bad as the ensuing drought did. Hay is in short supply yet again this year, so that is our main focus this month. I want at least 20 round bales lined up in that back pasture waiting for use. That means hustle and direction this month.  We have a barn to finish clearing and compost to be relocated to the garden to be tilled in for winter.  I have a tree to remove so I can rip ground extending from the garden to the barn. Expansion is a good thing. 

Dewey bought a hay fork for the tractor (gotta love a man who buys something practical and needed as a gift. LOL...keep your city girl 'shiny' bling ladies, I'll take my 'farm livin' bling any day!) No more man-handling the round bales for us. What a breeze it is moving them and unloading the trailer now.

Other projects, aside from the sewing blitz I've had going on gearing up the masses with fall and winter clothing, I've been working on some quilting, yarn work and so forth. Remember that great jelly roll I picked up for a quilt?


Well, I finally settled on a pattern of sorts and have it pieced. No...it's not finished, but the blocks are stitched together and when it gets down to crunch time, it will all come together. I suppose there is something to be said for the stress of last minute work.


I've also finished and sent off the baby set I made for my cousin's daughter's baby, due in November. Just in case there's a shower, I wanted to have my gift up there and ready. I still don't much care for the bow-legged pants look, but I'm hoping it looks better ON a baby than simply lying on my table for a photo shoot. I will give the pants another go at some point, but I'll definitely make some changes to the weird increases in the thigh sections.



I finished the Peas and Carrots sweater set (that's a pacifier strap wtih it). I have to whip up some booties for it yet, and I may do a hat as well, but it's ready to go.  Our friends' daughter is due in a month.



The last set is a sweater and a baby snuggly...you know, those backwards bathrobe things. I thought it would make a great carseat/carrier cover blanket, no hassles for the belts and such. I think they turned out fairly nice. I'm happy enough with how it worked that I'll make more of them for sure.


My other yarn work has been on larger sweater projects.  I found this book at Hobby Lobby called The Crochet Closet by Lisa Gentry. The projects are pretty good, and the sizing is up to 2x in most projects. 



The first project I'm working on is the sweater from the cover, but I almost went with this vest instead. The yarn I picked is a wool blend in a pebbled path sort of browns mix. It's working up quickly (when I have a chance to actually work on it that is) and works across in 1 piece then sleeves.




 We went on a nature stroll around the property when Dewey was in overnight last week. It was hot, but hunting season is coming in soon and the walks will be abandoned. I don't care how much blaze orange your wear, high powered rifles, dogs and 4 wheelers don't encourage me to take many walks.
We walked along collecting pretty things along the way, searching out the hickory nut and walnut trees for harvesting (the only nut harvesting I've ever done was back north when those blasted walnuts needed plowing out of the driveway....I don't even know when they really come into readiness for harvesting and such. Anyone?)


We gathered fallen nuts, acorns and weeds along the walk...this is known as chigger weed around here. During the right time of the season, the stems are literally coated with chiggers....ugh. They are pretty though, and the butterflies seem to like them as well so they can't be all bad.


Emily likes flowers...though she fought her brothers hard for nuts and pinecones for her bucket.

Andrew really enjoyed the touch of wildlife from our walk...He ate most of Emily's flowers, shredded a few pinecones by batting them around the floors for a couple hours, and then feasted on the long feathery grasses they collected.  Getting in touch with his inner wild cat, I imagine.


Homestead First Aid...you know, back not too long ago, women were urged to make and roll bandages for the WWI and WWII troops. Sure, maybe they didn't use stretchy waffle weave  in Pepto Bismol pink, but still, the idea was the same....
Use it up,
Wear it out,
 Make it do,
 or Do without!


The goats are doing well. Kendra is still stiff-walking with that hind leg, but she has no issues climbing and jumping for tree limbs, so I call it a good heal.  A few weeks back they were all circling the dwindling hay bale, eating and lounging, and they pushed on it just right and rolled it over onto Kendra who was laying next to it. We were outside, so it didn't stay on her long, the children got it rolled off her, but it had her laid out on her side with her leg in an odd position.  We didn't feel anything broken, not that I'm a student of goat anatomy, but there was nothing obvious with her leg. She had a very limp foot though and wouldn't stand, let alone walk. We let her rest for an hour or so, then worked on getting her up and moving. I'm sure she had the wind knocked out of her if nothing else. 
When we got down to the business of tending her leg, I realized I had no badnages, no ACE wrap, nothing. What's up with a working homestead full of animals, not to mention children ,not having a fully stocked first aid kit?? 
So...we made do. I pulled out some stretchycotton knit fabric and wrapped her leg providing it some support while she strengthened and allowed it some rest.  We did a poultice of comfrey and soaked her wrap in the tea as well, reapplying and heating the tea soak for several days.

Go ahead...tell me where I've failed my cow this year...we haven't had her AI'd yet. Is that really wrong? Woody is 5 months old this month, and we intended on having her done before this. She should have been done a month back, but time got away from us with so many other things, I just didn't have time.
Pathetic, I know. It's a shot, wait 10 days and give another shot, then get the AI straw out here within 24-48 hours. Hardly a severe time alternating event, but we just forgot and never set up the deal. Yes, I have the shots here. Hopefully they are still 'good' (I never really looked into their care because I picked them up from the Vet with the intentions of doing it right away...) We really should get moving on her rebreeding. Right now, this month should put her at June delivery. That isn't a bad time, though it could be hot it's not likely to be sweltering miserable.

Woody is growing like a weed. I need to get another picture of him up, he's a gorgeous deep rich dark chocolate color, unlike his red momma. And a sweetheart...he comes to his name (ok, we're weird with animals...do you really want a bull to come to his name? hmmm...) and likes to play. I think he needs a toy. You know, other than my rubber water barrels.


And lastly....the gratuitous cute puppy shot from the homestead...This is Sissy (yes, how southern cutie is that name...she came with it). She is a stinker, don't let the cuteness hide that fact. And she has a shrieking yap that will cut glass when she gets excited...or scared...wants to eat...wants to get your attention...sees a butterfly come too close to the window...you get the picture.  She is about the size of a jumbo Tootsie Roll.  Ok, a fat, overstuffed, 4-5# Tootsie Roll. Spoiled utterly and completely by Abigail who can't even go to the bathroom without Sissy whining terribly and pathetically at the door the whole time. 

Sissy's 'job' around her is to herd the chickens.

Of course she has a job. This is a homestead, a working homestead, mind you. Everything out here serves a need, has a purpose for being. It may seem like I collect merely for the fun of collecting, like dogs, cats, clutter, etc. But no. Homesteads need to be functioning. Everything having a purpose, having a use. Sissy, the fat tootsie roll, is just large enough to herd the chickens.

As long as they don't turn on her and chase her.
Because she runs.
And runs pretty dadgum fast considering she has like inch long stubby nubs for legs under that roll.

So there you have it. September plans that touch on the number of things being handled around this little neck of the woods.  Another added task as rains become more frequent for the season...house jacking. No, not like hijacking, but floor and bottle jacking under the front porch at my door. Rain tends to completely sog out this clay and with too much rain, my front door gets an undistinguished sag going on.  Pretty much traps us inside. Not bad if the children are already outside, but a big stinkin' deal if it pours overnight and we are all inside.  It makes for interesting escape ideas. I know I've said many many times that this mobile home is far from air tight and all, but when the door won't open and the windows have furniture in front of them it tends to be alot more air tight than one might like.

No, we are not trapped inside the house in the even of fire or such.  It's a mobile home...it does have great 'pliability' so to speak. In the event of a fire, we are not about to piddly dinker around worrying about whether or not the front door will open. A well placed kick to the window will afford a handy exit...as would simply yanking the door hard. But, on a daily basis, I try to discourage the damage-the-house ideas here.

Happy Fall Y'all...almost!

Jer.6:16

Jeremiah 6:16
Thus saith the LORD, Stand ye in the ways, and see, and ask for the old paths, where is the good way, and walk therein, and ye shall find rest for your souls.

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