Sunday, May 29, 2016

May 29, 2016 Puppy Update

The puppies seem to have doubled in size. But not weight. We took pictures but the changes are not sufficient to warrant putting them up this time. Just the same for behavior. They are ALL squirmy, the are ALL grumpy, they are ALL hungry ALL of the time. There is a lot more puppies this time and they are eating in shifts. Their weights at week one are pretty good. none of them have gained a lot of weight.

  • Count Chocula has achieved 15.3 ounces, up from 12.1
  • Sugar Pop had reached 15 ounces, up from 11.8
  • Cocoa Pebbles 15.5 ounces up from 12.4
  • Lucky Charms 15.3 ounces, up from 12.7 
  • Toast Crunch is only 14 ounces, but looks much bigger and has gained. Up from 11.9
  • Cocoa Crispies is a mere 13.8 ounces, tiny and only up from 13
  • Alphabits is really little at 12.8 ounces, I don't know where she started.
  • BooBerry 13.8 ounces and is making prgress from the original 9 ounces
  • Honey Comb 13.1 ounces, up from 10.8

All are healthy and Ann did the de-dew-clawing a few days back. Not a trace of it remains today.

We should start seeing eyes pretty soon.

May 29, 2016 The Plan Defined

When we began this project, on our twentieth anniversary trip to get an Elvis re-nup, the thought was that we had to find a suitable property with a house and add businesses to it in a manner where if we failed, we landed on safe ground. The only intolerable failure would be to lose our home.
The current farm plan

Our plan was to use a philosophy which involved very little bank financing, except that required to purchase the land. In this we failed somewhat because the land we bought came by way of a private party contracted sale.  Finding the Farm, and making the purchase without much cash, put that part of the five years plan ahead of schedule about a year. At the point of my writing this, there is no bank involvement and we intend to keep it that way. But there is no house present on the property as yet. So Step Two, build a house, then add businesses to the property, is where we are in the today. But the plan is multifaceted and always was.

At the onset of the Plan, we knew that we had no money to do this big thing. We only have the money which we might earn along the way. Step One was always to re-enter the dog business first because the it was something we can do from our present home which offers fairly large chunks of cash with which we can go forward. Though progressing slowly at first. Buying our dogs was right on schedule and we have had two litters of puppies so far. But that part of the plan is exhausted until we have a house built. Like every other plan, the dog business plan is much more extensive than simply having some puppies every once in a while. So I hope to explain here how we intend to get to the ultimate goal, a wedding venue with a farming theme.

These are the steps we have mapped out so far. Each might make it, all will likely change as we approach them, none will likely survive intact. But failure is a part of the Plan and none of what we intend to do must succeed in a big way. We need only succeed a little at a time.

The central idea in Phase One is that we must first replace the income that I earn working outside in the real world, so that I can stay home and build the new businesses.

Step one – The Dog Business – Status: We are already in business.

Buy two females and one male and begin making puppies – Done.
Build a kennel facility on the Farm and get USDA licensing - Pending a house.
The Kennel facility, the thing which gets us our USDA license, involves building a kennel which has the following sub-plan: 
  1. A purpose built trailer with three rooms
    1. An open kennel where our dogs live.
    2. A central covered potty area where they can do their business when the weather outside is bad.
    3. A veterinary area with grooming and whelp capacities.
  2. Buy four more females after obtaining the USDA license. This should provide about three litters a year and replace about half of my income.
  3. Open the remaining kennel capacity (fourteen dogs) up for boarding. This should replace another half of my income.
  4. Find a real doggy person who does grooming and obedience training, then give the business over to them as a share crop. This frees up my hands to build the next phase.
The Kennel replaces all of my current income with new income obtained entirely from the Farm, but does not take up all of my time and energy. After the Dog business is well established it can be given away to a share cropper. And while we build all of this there are many other things are happening.

Step Two – Build the House – Status: To be completed in the first year.

Find ten acres with a house – We failed to find this.
Find some acres – Done, but it has no house so we need a plan. Even having found the property and getting a good deal, bank financing to building the house is currently impossible, so we have to pay cash. This involves a sort of shell game approach because we have good equity in both our current home as well as the Farm property. 
  1. Build a new home without bank financing. 
    1. Find twelve thousand dollars cash - Half way there.
    2. Renovate our current home, roof, flooring, paint, landscape. - $8000
    3. Buy a “park model” travel trailer to live in after we sell our current home and build the new home - $4000
    4. Sell our current home to realize the equity in cash - $80,000
    5. Build the new house quickly - $30,000
    6. Furnish it - $15,000
  2. Build the Kennel in Step One using the park model trailer - $2000
  3. Build the Pie Shop caravan and one guest house caravan - $20,000
The house, even before building the Kennel business, also replaces much my income entirely because the current house payment is no longer being made to the bank. At the point where we move I have replaced my income twice over and since we'll have a well, a septic system, and solar power, we no longer have utility bills to speak of. All of which adds to our good fortune.

At this point, once we have the house and are living on the Farm, we must lose any idea that we have the next steps well thought out. Much can change between the second and third steps which we do not know about. But if we fail at the onset of step three we still have a home and a business which provides sufficient income to live comfortably. But the plan is MUCH bigger. . .

Step Three – Build the Farm – to be completed within four years.

The Farm is intended to be extraordinarily intensive agriculture involving peach and pear orchards, chickens and chicken products, strawberries, and row crops, all sold through a Fruit Stand / Pie Shop located in the parking area.

Initially the Fruit Stand will likely be a tent of some sort, but it might be possible to build the Pie Shop caravan early on if the stars align properly. We hope to remodel another trailer to create a fully enclosed pie shop / kitchen / retail space. The remodeled trailers are one way of avoiding the permit process, while maintaining the ability to roll assets out of the way of any flooding if it comes. The Fruit Stand gives us a place to sell our farm produce, but there are many others, such as: consumer supported agriculture (CSA) programs and farmer's markets. If money is not the issue, we would rather sell directly to the public from our property. Once the Pie Shop is built and the level of business is large enough to support life, I will try to find a baker to set up in business as a share cropper. This would likely mean better food to sell while freeing my hands up once more.

During step three I will also endeavor to find a farmer to come into the business to handle day-to-day farming operations for a share of the proceeds. I am hoping for a nice Mexican couple with the sort of know-how Americans once had during my grandmother's lifetime. The Farmer will help build and operate the farm plan during Phase One. I am also hoping to find a nursery willing to partner with the Farm to sell non-food live plants.

The Planting Plan is quite large for the space we have, but currently available sustainable farming practices should allow us to layer crops onto the land without depleting the soils and without buying soil amendments. Our soils are very good, very deep, properly moist, and should talk organic amendments very well. The map show much of the following, but there are a few things not shown above:
  1. The front fence is lined with columnar apple trees to provide fruit to the fruit stand, cider, and products to sell the fruit stand / pie shop. There should be three types of apples available for three months each year.
  2. Rows of orchard (peaches and pears for a uPick operation) allow for chicken tractors full of meat chickens to roll between the rows.
  3. Those spaces between trees where the tractors don't roll allow for three foot width beds where we can plant crops in small bunches. These beds would include cut flowers, bulbs, salad crops, and herbs.
  4. Our strawberry operation will be vertically built and under full cover to allow for a uPick, as well as provide crops for preserves and products in the Fruit Stand / Pie Shop.
  5. Other crops are in open field rows to provide root vegetables, melons, gourds, and corn for the Fruit Stand.
  6. There is a separated Chicken run for egg and chick production which I hope one day to support a cooperative meat bird facility, but that will provide meat for our home and product for the Fruit Stand.
  7. And there will be an area near the house dominated by full sized fruit trees like cherries, plums, apricots, nectarines, and citrus. These would be used to make products or sold as fruit in the Fruit Stand.
The Farm at this point should be three thriving businesses, all operated by people invested in their own success in a cooperative economic system. They will pay a portion to the house and use the house's products, philosophy, and planning. The Farm should provide food and animals to the world through direct sales, internet business, and consumer support agricultural subscriptions. We should have preserved foods as well as fresh produce and on-site edibles available to the public nearly the whole year around.

But as we go forward the Pie Shop / Fruit Stand will certainly be out-grown, while customers will be finding us in ever increasing numbers. We will need to add more customer spaces and reduce the amount of farming being done on site. Our next step will be a very big one.

Step Four – The Barn Store – to be completed within five years.

The Barn Store will contain a cafe, antiques, curiosities, consigned goods, and other consumer products and programs. The Barn Store is an entirely retail operation and part of a much larger retail strategy. During Phase one we will be building botanical gardens all along the back and east fence line. The idea is to add a reason for people to come to the Farm, and give them reason to stay for a long while. We will be installing wide walking paths, sufficient for people to stroll about, which run between seating areas where people can come and enjoy the day. We will openly invite people to come in and sit down. Read a book, disconnect, reflect, and rest. All the while making our products available to them.

At this point I will likely begin looking for help managing the general operation while I concentrate on the next phase of the build out. I am hoping to find a couple of college grads who wish to build something beautiful and then take over day to day operations as we partially retire from farming to begin building the next phase of the project. Our hope is to give these people a ten years contract after which they retain a continual share in the proceeds from the Farm, and after which they retire to do as they please. After ten years the couple can find another couple to take over in their place. And so on  . . . We hope to give away the entire business to our share partners and employees before we are through, but will retain a share of the proceeds for ourselves as well as the land on which all of this is built.

The coming of the Barn Store is the end of Phase One, and also the beginning of the hospitality phase of the project. This will include a bed and breakfast, and the wedding venue we were building when all of this started. There will be more partners, more employees, and more opportunity to fail or succeed.  But I will leave all of this for a future posting.



Saturday, May 28, 2016

May 28, 2016 The Dream Refined 4

Having been able to walk around the property unobstructed and to be able to see things in relationship to other things, we are able to begin thinking about how things fit together a bit better.

The original plan was predicated on the place being fairly small, so the strawberries took up a bunch of space, while chickens and dogs took up much less.There were only four orchards, but much of the original layout has persisted even if the scale has changed over time.
This was the first plan.
The "Stepping Stone Farm".
The first thing we noticed is that the plan we had was for a much smaller place. So we added some things to the second plan. The problem we were solving was the excess of land that probably couldn't be farmed. We decided to do gardens early on, but they were left out of the first plan because the place appeared too small.

This was the second plan.
It appeared we might even make a buck on it if we were lucky.
Once we had cleared some of the brush we thought this plan deserved a great deal more stuff.
So I designed something a bit more elaborate . . . We added a gypsy caravan bed and breakfast, a large chicken operation, and many more botanical gardens along with a man made stream.
This is the third plan.
Everything was larger, and there were a great many more businesses.
  In the third plan the scale was resolved (each yellow line is ten feet from the next) and we could see that the place was pretty large. Large enough to support a pure farming business model. So we were no longer looking at merely building a farm to carry the wedding venue, we were going to have a bunch of planting to do. After clearing the land this is what we think the basic farm should look like:
This is the current plan, phase one.
Included are the businesses which are farming related.
The parts which we will put in during phase two are much more about hospitality.

As we clear and clean more, we assume that the plan will change. But each change, each Tractor Day, each baby step, leads into the next. 

Thursday, May 26, 2016

May 26, 2016 We're Getting Electricity!

Ann signed us up for the gold plan with PGE. They hook us us and give us some outlets to work with while we build. But overall it has been a very good day for the Farm Project. We sold all of the puppies to a chunk of cash and decided on a funding plan which should get us into our new house before the new year. A few big thing fell into place today. Progress is being made.

Tuesday, May 24, 2016

May 24, 2016 Puppy update

The puppies are three days old today. Cinnamon is cleaned up and things are settling into something of a routine.  Not too much to report. Toast Crunch escaped the whelping box on day two, forcing us to buy a wading pool. This worked out well because Cinnamon is larger than Carmen and also had many more puppies. Here are today's pictures:
Count Chocula

Sugar Pops

Cocoa Pebbles

Lucky Charms

Toast Crunch

Cocoa Crispies

Alphabets

BooBerry

Honey Comb

Saturday, May 21, 2016

May 21, 2016 The Cinnamom Bear's First Litter


Aside from the last week, the Cinnamon Bear has had a pretty easy pregnancy. Last Friday through Sunday she had a false labor and we lost a lot of sleep, but overall she was fairly easy to get along with and very cuddly. Last night we went to bed very early, expecting a long night at some point in the weekend. We didn't have to wait long.

I was asleep when Ann heard Cinnamon panting heavily at about eight-thirty and got up to check. She let me sleep another two hours before deciding to wake me. At eleven my eyes finally came open. At twelve we decided to let Ann sleep for a while. At two in the morning things finally got interesting.
Count Chocula arrived at 2:05 AM
The delivery seemed painless and quick.
We named #1 Count Chocula.
A tri colored male weighing 12.1 ounces. 
They came pretty fast for a while after Count Chocula made the scene.


#2 is named Sugar Pops


Sugar Pops came along at 2:16, so I figured wee'd be all done in a hour or so.

She is what we call a "Lemon" Basset because of her lightly colored coat. The coloring might change quite a lot in the next few days, she might become a tan and white, or she might stay a Lemon (we hope).

She came in weighing 11.8 ounces. She also came in hungry and active. She found her first meal about a minute after birth.




#3 is named Cocoa Pebbles
Cocoa Pebbles arrived at 2:40, so things were slowing down a bit.
Cocoa Pebbles
She came in yelling and didn't wish to be handled much. She was a healthy 12.4 ounces and hungry. We thought she'd be a black and white, but the little bits of tan over her eyes make her a tri-color even if everything stays exactly the same.

Cinnamon was a good mother right from the start. She wanted to take care of them all, and we let her as much as we could. Cinnamon Bear is a natural child, doing things naturally has always been her thing.

She'll make a fine Mother Bear.











#4 is named Lucky Charms

Lucky Charms came in about the same as the rest had so far. 12.7 ounces of tri-colored female. She came to us at 2:56 AM

Cinnamon was tiring out a little and started doing less as the night progressed. She would push only as long as she had to so that Ann could assist her in pulling them all into the world.
She also began eating the placenta at this point.




#5 is named Toast Crunch
Cinnamon's Toast Crunch is a wonderfully active male who arrived at 3:21 weighing 11.9 ounces. He had a big voice and likes to use it. He is also likely to develop into a true Lemon.

Cinnamon was very active cleaning up the puppies and trying to keep them warm. Each came out, got dried off, and then moved right into breakfast.



Since the timing between the deliveries made it look like the night would go on for a while I began making breakfast.

#6 is named Cocoa Crispies

Cocoa Crispies was born at 3:58, just as I settled down for a fifteen minute nap. She was the largest of the lot at 13 ounces and was also mostly black with some tan on the face. She has the solid character of her mother, along with the longish back legs of her father. She will be a beauty.






#7 is named Alphabetty

Alphabetty came along at 4:26 AM. She was really striking right out of the chute because she was striped like a bee. She didn't seem all that interested in going anywhere or doing anything in particular. So she just sort of laid around no doing much, and this worried us a bit.

Ann grabbed a towel and managed to make Alphabetty mad enough to start complaining.

By this time Cinnamon was getting to tired to push, but somehow we still got them out as they popped up. Ann was the primary delivery person this time. Lucky for me since the last time there was only six.










#8 is named Boo Berry

I had fallen asleep and failed to see Boo Berry pop her little head out.

She was little, 9.2 ounces, but made up for it with an appetite. She came out suckling on Ann's glove and once she got near her mother she went straight in, pushing her siblings to the side.

Her tri-colored coat makes her look a little like a panda bear.

I have a thing for smaller Basset Hounds. I hope she stays small.













Honey Comb, despite being a non-sugared cereal, is maybe my favorite tri-colored female.

She came to us weighing a scant 10.8 ounces, but had her father's head shape and layed back disposition.

By now Cinnamon was worn out. She slept most of the way through the delivery.
#9 is named Honey Comb



Thursday, May 19, 2016

May 19, 2016 Looking back and moving forward

We are getting dangerously close to having much of the Farm cleared out. So I figured I would show the progress using some of the pictures we have taken in the past year.
This is how we found it.

It's hard to tell the story of clearing the farm using pictures. But the above picture is about what we saw on the first day. It was winter, so the foliage was down a bit. The below picture is the Spring version prior to clearing.

We thought the place was pretty bad when we found it.
We never imagined the extra badness that came with the sun. We didn't know it then, but there was nothing of any value at all in the six foot pile of trash in the Container.Once you got through the hole in the gate there was a goat path to the back. I bought a machete and started chopping. It was a hopeful thing but turned out to be completely useless.

After Tractor Day #3 we finally got all of the trash pushed out of the Container.
Another five or so yards of stuff to get rid of.
I haven't got a picture of the container yet, but the ground is clear, the Container holds the beginnings of our Farm project's furnishings, and all of the way around it only little stuff remains.
This was the backside of the Mobile Home that had burned, and the Motor Home that was parked out back.

And behind the Motor Home there was a Camper.

There were piles of trash everywhere you went. The fence had been cut. We mended the fence on our first day after we got the lease from Collette Kramer. We laughed at the stupidity of the project, but always could see the land underneath all of the rubbish.

After Tractor Day #3 we had much of the trash pushed into piles.

The picture above this one is the same area today.

Today, other than the dirt being trashy, you can see all of the way to the front fence.

If you look at the trees in this picture, you wouldn't believe that it could be the same place.
The motor home sat behind the mobile home, the camper behind the motor home, near the shipping container. All packed tightly with trash, surrounded by trash.

These are the same trees today.

But there is still so much to do.
Hidden around the edges there were piles of trash as well.

And then there was the Blue Tarp of Mystery.

The Blue Tarp of Mystery was in the middle of the property, but couldn't be seen from anywhere. We only found it through exploration, and after some blood was spilled. About ten yards of burnt ash and debris that someone had scraped together. There is still a bit to take off the Farm.
Eventually we got the Blue Tarp of Mystery uncovered and it became the Blue Tarp of Doom.

This above is where the Blue Tarp once lived.

There was a shed. The whole thing teetering on collapse.
Look at the trees on the right.
Jack knocked the Shed down on Tractor Day #2 once we cleared the area enough to get to it.
The trees are the same, the point of view changed.

The trees are the only thing remaining.

This area was actually the front yard of the mobile home.
In the distance is the roof of the shed.
Now their front yard is the only place where a pile of trash remains.
The trees on the right are the same as the ones in the shed pictures.
 The place always had a certain charm that we could see through the berries and trash piles.
From the road you could see why I stopped in the first place.
Standing where this picture was taken took some effort. 
In early Spring the trees and berries flowered you could walk around smiling. Mostly because the trash was covered up under green stuff. But you couldn't see it much of the place.
There was a huge Black Walnut tree near where we found the well on Tractor Day #1.


The Walnut tree tells the story of Creekside Farm so far.
It was one of the first areas we cleared out.