How’s the Hothouse and Market Shed project going?
Well this is where I left you last, the big trees were down,
Well sure nuff, early (early for us lazy bones) on Saturday morning, Greg the Operator showed up with the excavator to dig out all the stumps so that the site could be leveled, graveled and the building started. One of my favorite children’s books is Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel, by Virginia Lee Burton, (a girl, in case you didn’t catch the Virginia part) this was pretty much like living in that book for a few hours.
The excavator began making quick work of the big stumps in the ground. I was in making coffee and so I missed a lot of the beginning work but Anna caught much of it on video and in pictures.
Greg would lift the stumps way up in the air and then open the grip and drop them from up high. All that crazy action to get as much soil as possible off of the stumps before tossing them over the fence. The excavator is on tracks not tires, the potential for a lot of underground water to be pumped up to the surface with the back and forth motion made it necessary for the stumps to be shook and dumped in a pile on this side, then the
crazy prehistoric robotic alien jaws would toss them over the fence to be moved one more time after that to the rot pile. No stump burning piles are allowed any more.
Mr. Leonard, holding the coffee cup, has even gone to testify to the legislature that not burning is actually harder on the environment and creates more pollution than just burning them. Oh well, ranting about the current “green” movement is for another day. Or more like days, ’cause if I said it all at once it would be a long post even for me.
Gregg chatting with Bruce, telling us that the thumb broke on the second stump pulling. The thumb is what grips and holds things in the bucket, or “scoopy thing” just in case it isn’t called a bucket. Gregg is my new hero! We were all in love with Gregg on Saturday, okay some of us still are, Dirt sent him home with a bottle of plum wine (sorry Kimberly, but we had to give away one from your special cache) but I still want to bake him a cake every day, every time I look at my beautiful building site!
In the middle of the excavating lambs began to drop. We ended up with five lambs from three ewes on Saturday. We went out to check on the first batch that dropped just to make sure everything was going well.
But then came back for the final touches that Gregg put on the site. He exchanged the small bucket for a larger one and because the thumb was broke it would not stay back so it got chained up to the “wrist” so that the “fingers” could fill in holes and smooth out the dirt.
Mr. Leonard, with Dirt’s help, predicted that the area would be pretty wet and a big mess, needing a lot of special help and $ if we were going to have it ready to build before August let alone by the end of this month. Well, that may have been true on any other year but this one… Everything is going so well that if I don’t make my schedule, I am nothin‘ but a looser. A blessing and a test all rolled into one!
Justin from up north, joined us just in time to see the leveling of the site and help get the truck unstuck from the driveway, it pays to have an extra truck driver on hand.Now for checking on the lambs…
and look more lambs have dropped in close proximity to the first batch! This is a problem! We run to jump in to the escalating issue.
You see, some moms are not satisfied with just their lambs, they want every one’s lambs and will attempt to adopt all of them. Sometimes if we are not out there right away it can be a confusing mess to try and get the right moms with the right babies.
This is why we take the ewe’s and lambs into the barn once they have dried off and nursed. We try to wait at least that long so that the mom’s aren’t quite so nervous on the trip into the barn. But they need to be in the barn eventually not just to protect them from Bald Eagles and Coyotes, but to protect the new lambs and new moms from the bossy older sister and auntie ewes.
Anna catches the lamb so that Dirt can catch the ewe. Justin is the newest inductee into the world of lamb rustling and ewe driving.
Anna makes sure mom knows where her lamb is. Then the slow dance begins. Around and around we go, closer and closer, less and less tense around Mr. Vick…
and snag! the ewe is caught so she can be taken in the barn. This first batch will go in now. Then we will do some other farm work and come back and get the other ewes and lambs.
Bet, Anna and Justin spread lime on the front pastures, Dirt and I ran into town for some lunch fixins‘ and seed potatoes. We ate a lovely lunch and then headed out back to spread more lime and minerals on the hay fields out there.
Dirt is really diggin‘ on having the PTO driven cyclone spreader on the back of the tractor. It sure beats having a hand driven-hand held spreader, makes a week-long job get done in an hour or two, one of a few reasons, excuses, as to why the pastures and fields were a bit on the neglected side lime wise.
Bet asked to be chief tractor driver for this job, we were all good with that, especially since the lime is virtually dust free!
The rest of us gave the dogs some well needed entertainment and exercise, and the some of us just lounged around thinking of how tired we were from all that stump pulling. Man, my back hurts.
It was a splendid day, the sky was clear and blue, the mountain was in all his glory, just a great day to accomplish a ton of work and visit with a friend from way up north.
The site? She is lookin’ pretty stinkin’ good!


And ready for the next phase, Building!!!
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