Yum! Quail on the grill, cucumbers and roasted squash from the garden.
The first batch of quail didn't hatch very well:(
But we had enough to learn a few things. They start out very small.
They can "fly" pretty young.
This is where we learned to "process" them for the grill.
Right now we have 65 Cortunix chicks in the new Brooder Box.
We have 140 Texas A and M eggs ready to go into the incubator.
Our first Cortunix should start to lay eggs soon, and we can hatch our own as soon as the males learn what they are supposed to do once they get ahold of the females.
All in all, a success.
Friday, July 30, 2010
Tuesday, July 27, 2010
Homemade Play Dough
Playdough Recipe
2 cups flour
1 cup cornstarch
1-1/2 cups salt
2 Tablespoons cream of tarter
3 Tbsp oil
1-1/2 cups salt
2 Tablespoons cream of tarter
3 Tbsp oil
Food Coloring
3 cups water
3 cups water
(colored ahead of time with the food coloring)
1. Mix all ingredients into a large pot. Be sure to add the food coloring to the cold water before adding to the other ingredients. This will give you a better color. (We used approximately 20 drops - the water should be quite dark.)
2. Cook on medium/low heat stirring constantly until it begins to form into a dough.
3. Turn out onto a cutting board or other surface and knead for 1-2 minutes until it is the right consistency.

4. After it has cooled, store in an airtight container. It should stay good for 3 months in an airtight container (does anyone believe this?)

Cindy
Monday, July 26, 2010
Meanwhile....back at the ranch....
we have been busy, happy, working, loving where the Lord has placed our footsteps. Obadiah is next to our mongo amaranth plant. They are usually about 4' tall. Good compost makes all the difference.
Note to self: If you plan to use Diestel's compost, make wider rows. This is our melon patch. We are a little unsure how we are going to harvest it..... Joey is trying to come up with some strategies. It is as thick as it looks and there are hundreds of melons set.
The tomato and cucumber patches need tied almost every day. The cucumbers are coming in strong and the tomatoes are just beginning to come in. Again... next year wider rows.
The guys made us a mama hen house that can hold four chicken families in separate areas. We have 18 healthy, strong chicks from the ever turning incubator - 9 copper morans and 9 leghorns. They should begin laying around Christmas time - Chocolate brown eggs for the copper morans and white for the leghorns. The two mama hens are doing really well. We have room and mamas for the next batch getting ready to come out of the incubator.
Everyone eats squash..... EVERY DAY. Enough said.
The corn and pumpkins are thriving......
The Lord has blessed the work of our hands.
Be healthy and well
Cindy
Note to self: If you plan to use Diestel's compost, make wider rows. This is our melon patch. We are a little unsure how we are going to harvest it..... Joey is trying to come up with some strategies. It is as thick as it looks and there are hundreds of melons set.
The tomato and cucumber patches need tied almost every day. The cucumbers are coming in strong and the tomatoes are just beginning to come in. Again... next year wider rows.
The guys made us a mama hen house that can hold four chicken families in separate areas. We have 18 healthy, strong chicks from the ever turning incubator - 9 copper morans and 9 leghorns. They should begin laying around Christmas time - Chocolate brown eggs for the copper morans and white for the leghorns. The two mama hens are doing really well. We have room and mamas for the next batch getting ready to come out of the incubator.
Everyone eats squash..... EVERY DAY. Enough said.
The corn and pumpkins are thriving......
The Lord has blessed the work of our hands.
Be healthy and well
Cindy
Tuesday, July 13, 2010
Life in the Summer
Hello my long lost blogging friends. Since we last talked it has been insane busy around here with gardening, chickens and chickens and chickens and some ducks and
SWIMMING!!!!! Yeah for swimming. Otherwise, all I would be doing is weeding, watering and tying the endless rows of tomatoes :)
........ except that maybe it got a little too busy - I seem to have lost my voice. This is an old, old, OLD injury from my babyhood through my whole life - but I have been free from this problem for quite a while. I have actually had to take a week off - not for something fun, but just to sleep and NOT TALK! Anyone that knows me understands my dilemma. I am also trying every remedy I have ever tried, heard of, or persuaded anyone else to do. I appear to have maxed out on a few remedies - today I am trying something else.
DETOX might be hitting next :) but my voice is coming back. It is not gone for months, but weeks. This is good.
While I was doing nothing but sleep, our oldest son was teaching his son to wakesurf. I totally missed it, but thanks to friend Melissa, I saw some pictures. His folks said I could share them.
Enjoy
Cindy
SWIMMING!!!!! Yeah for swimming. Otherwise, all I would be doing is weeding, watering and tying the endless rows of tomatoes :)
........ except that maybe it got a little too busy - I seem to have lost my voice. This is an old, old, OLD injury from my babyhood through my whole life - but I have been free from this problem for quite a while. I have actually had to take a week off - not for something fun, but just to sleep and NOT TALK! Anyone that knows me understands my dilemma. I am also trying every remedy I have ever tried, heard of, or persuaded anyone else to do. I appear to have maxed out on a few remedies - today I am trying something else.
DETOX might be hitting next :) but my voice is coming back. It is not gone for months, but weeks. This is good.
While I was doing nothing but sleep, our oldest son was teaching his son to wakesurf. I totally missed it, but thanks to friend Melissa, I saw some pictures. His folks said I could share them.
Enjoy
Cindy
First, you have to gear up.....
Wait a minute, just what are you geared up for???
Wait a minute, just what are you geared up for???
Next you need to learn how to fall off the board.... 1-2-3-Jump
Dad is there waiting.
.....and he's UP!
Yep.... I'm totally cool :)
Tuesday, June 22, 2010
Five ways to prepare your child for swim lessons
Swim lessons (in my opinion) are a critical part of growing up. Genuine swim lessons cannot begin until a child moves past their fear of putting their face in the water. "Gentle" toddler swim lessons that involve lots of splashing, bubbles and playing are a lot of fun... if you have a lot of time and energy to work with your toddler.
If you want your toddler to move into swimming, they must get over their fear first. There just is no way past this point. If you can begin this process at home, either in a tub or a small child's pool, it can lower the child's anxiety level and allow productive swim lessons to begin.
Please note that I am not a professional swim teacher, but I am a hobby one...... and I love it a lot, lot, lot. It is really rewarding to see the little guy who screamed at you for three days move within a week or so into "one more time Teacher Cindy" off of the diving board. (It usually takes about 3 days for a child to move past their fear if they are not conditioned to putting their face in the water). NOTE: I don't mind the screaming at all - just a part of swim lessons :) :) :)
So..... my list (to be used with adult supervision ONLY):
A child can be considered "ready" for actual instruction when they can get into the pool independently and put their own face into the water upon request by the teacher.
1) A great first step is in the bathtub over the winter or in the days or weeks leading up to swimming. The water is warm, which is a huge plus. Use a watering can, a bucket, a pot - something and dump water over their head in a sitting up position. I give my usual "underwater trigger" of "ready...go - 1-2-3...stop" to help them learn the breathing pattern.
2) Blow bubbles, starting with eyes and nose out of the water and progressing into making all kinds of rude noises by blowing against the bottom of the tub, face fully submerged (we have boys around here and that brings much laughter :)
3) Use the rings as a distraction/reward to teach the feeling of being on your tummy in the water, going under, retrieving and coming up. This would be especially important if you have had your child in a life jacket in the pool a lot. Going horizontal in the pool when you are used to being supported in an upright position freaks kids out. It is probably the most difficult thing to overcome, and the tub is a great place to start the process.
4) Lay the child on their back in a couple of inches of water. Make sure the water is only to the child's ear. Let them get the feeling of being on their back in the water while fully supported. You can add more water as they get comfortable with this and then support the child with your hands to float on top of the water.
5) Tigger Hops: This is a great safety technique for kids of all ages and it can begin at home. From a standing position have the child squat down then JUMP up as high as they can go with their hands over their heads. This movement is a great motor skill to develop for any sport.
So, that is my list...... be sure to reward their good behavior with something special. We use a "Treasure Box" which is filled this year with Raw Revolution, LaraBars, non-sugar suckers and other treats.
Cindy
If you want your toddler to move into swimming, they must get over their fear first. There just is no way past this point. If you can begin this process at home, either in a tub or a small child's pool, it can lower the child's anxiety level and allow productive swim lessons to begin.
Please note that I am not a professional swim teacher, but I am a hobby one...... and I love it a lot, lot, lot. It is really rewarding to see the little guy who screamed at you for three days move within a week or so into "one more time Teacher Cindy" off of the diving board. (It usually takes about 3 days for a child to move past their fear if they are not conditioned to putting their face in the water). NOTE: I don't mind the screaming at all - just a part of swim lessons :) :) :)
So..... my list (to be used with adult supervision ONLY):
A child can be considered "ready" for actual instruction when they can get into the pool independently and put their own face into the water upon request by the teacher.
1) A great first step is in the bathtub over the winter or in the days or weeks leading up to swimming. The water is warm, which is a huge plus. Use a watering can, a bucket, a pot - something and dump water over their head in a sitting up position. I give my usual "underwater trigger" of "ready...go - 1-2-3...stop" to help them learn the breathing pattern.
2) Blow bubbles, starting with eyes and nose out of the water and progressing into making all kinds of rude noises by blowing against the bottom of the tub, face fully submerged (we have boys around here and that brings much laughter :)
3) Use the rings as a distraction/reward to teach the feeling of being on your tummy in the water, going under, retrieving and coming up. This would be especially important if you have had your child in a life jacket in the pool a lot. Going horizontal in the pool when you are used to being supported in an upright position freaks kids out. It is probably the most difficult thing to overcome, and the tub is a great place to start the process.
4) Lay the child on their back in a couple of inches of water. Make sure the water is only to the child's ear. Let them get the feeling of being on their back in the water while fully supported. You can add more water as they get comfortable with this and then support the child with your hands to float on top of the water.
5) Tigger Hops: This is a great safety technique for kids of all ages and it can begin at home. From a standing position have the child squat down then JUMP up as high as they can go with their hands over their heads. This movement is a great motor skill to develop for any sport.
So, that is my list...... be sure to reward their good behavior with something special. We use a "Treasure Box" which is filled this year with Raw Revolution, LaraBars, non-sugar suckers and other treats.
Cindy
Thursday, June 17, 2010
A Project in Process
We have all been working hard around here to make the pool area safer, cleaner and function better. One of the big projects involved turning an old, unworking, hot tub into a kids pool. The next generation is coming up and I am tired of fishing kids out of the middle of the silly thing. Also, cleaning it was a nightmare because of the different levels and little corners.
It started out looking like this (well, once we drained the swamp):
This mess got pressure washed and scraped with a wire brush, then rocks added to the middle:
Next came the big concrete job :) :)
(normally their concrete jobs look more like this)
First you gotta fire up the old mixer. I think it is older than I am. It is a good thing George keeps anything and everything.... and keeps it working :)
Add a little concrete and water, mix and dump.

Devise a high tech concrete delivery system....
Lots of advice on how to properly spread it around.
Looking for a nice, straight.... or kind of straight... board.
Yep, it works :)
Floating it out with a little advice from the peanut gallery....
I'll help Papa!
You are never too young to figure out how to finish concrete around here.
.....or a little instruction from Dad...
It is all ready to be cured and painted.... The process will take a couple of weeks.
The baby obligingly slept through the process.
Then, time to move on to the next project..... the never ending fence fixing.
A semi-finished kids pool. Somehow water got in there. I have no idea how that happened. Dad planned to put the final coat on with the sand mixed in so it is not slick.... all possible kids are frantically scooping water out.
Cindy
It started out looking like this (well, once we drained the swamp):
This mess got pressure washed and scraped with a wire brush, then rocks added to the middle:
Next came the big concrete job :) :)
(normally their concrete jobs look more like this)
First you gotta fire up the old mixer. I think it is older than I am. It is a good thing George keeps anything and everything.... and keeps it working :)
Add a little concrete and water, mix and dump.

Devise a high tech concrete delivery system....
Lots of advice on how to properly spread it around.
Looking for a nice, straight.... or kind of straight... board.
Yep, it works :)
Floating it out with a little advice from the peanut gallery....
I'll help Papa!
You are never too young to figure out how to finish concrete around here.
.....or a little instruction from Dad...
It is all ready to be cured and painted.... The process will take a couple of weeks.
The baby obligingly slept through the process.
Then, time to move on to the next project..... the never ending fence fixing.
A semi-finished kids pool. Somehow water got in there. I have no idea how that happened. Dad planned to put the final coat on with the sand mixed in so it is not slick.... all possible kids are frantically scooping water out.
Cindy
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