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Monday, November 02, 2020

Happy 2021 and 3 Canadian years in review

Happy New Year!  It has been six months since our last post.  As you can imagine, things became quite busy with our little 'farm', continued building on the cottage as well as our house, and some work as well!  If I'm really honest as well, I just didn't make time for blogging.  I will try to make this more regular, for you and for us to have a record of our progress!  How were the last six months?  We lost quite a few chickens to a fox that is occasionally fed by some neighbours.  We moved into our home in July and we have been loving it ever since. We are still loving having chickens!  They're entertaining and fresh eggs are amazing.  We filled our freezer with a great deal on a half a cow, a quarter pig, and 45 meat chickens that we raised and then butchered ourselves.  Our potato harvest wasn't as wonderful as we had hoped, but a local farmer did well so we have a hundred or so pounds of potatoes in a makeshift cold cellar.  We plan to actually build a cold storage spot this summer for better use.  We will need to do some soil testing and building up of our soil before we plant this year. We have been learning a lot! 

The Chicken Lover

An early-summer raised bed

Supper in the new chicken coop!

Our latest animal- Toffee!

Fermented vegetable soup base

Austrian Baking for Christmas

Happy New Year from our family to you!!!


Just before New Year's I ordered our seeds for this year, having done an inventory of last year's seeds. I am SO excited to get planting this year! Then we spent a few days up at our cottage, shoveled a place on the ice free that we could skate and plan hockey.  It was a great winter 'camping' experience.  The only downside is using an outhouse when it is below zero!  

Elena checking the ice depth

Our first day was beautiful and the ice was 8" thick all over!


Ice hockey in the snow


The days end in front of the woodstove.

Now we are back at home and are making lists of projects for this year.  It has been a relaxing and rejeuvenating time.  And so I will leave you with Jonathan's summary of our first 3 years in Canada- created but unpublished in November.  God Bless as we start this New Year together. Let's go out is Faith, Obedience and Praise!


3 Canadian Years in Review

We moved from Austria to Canada on the 21. of November 2017. Now that was three years ago. Since then we got to know a lot of different people, we played some Sports which we had never tried before, we have had more time to spend together (especially up at the cottage), we bought 16 acres of nice land and now have moved in to our house that we started building in 2019. 

Some people (still) ask if we like Austria or Canada more. That is an impossible question to answer, because Canada is just missing some things (hills and mountains, at least where we are; some friends and one side of the family, because they didn´t move with us; Austrian Food and baking, although we can make ALMOST everything they don´t have here). But Austria didn´t have some things either (Some sports, snow for Christmas, our 16 acres of land, the other side of the family). 

So looking back at three years... What did we do? Here are some pictures from the 21. November 2017 to the 21 November 2020.












































Friday, July 03, 2020

Finally, a Homestead!!!

Some days it feels like this state of being constantly busy never ends.  The blog is never written on time.  The kids only have shorts or jeans with holes in them.  The meal plan is only a faint thought in my head.  Birthdays bring on a sense of stress that I normally never feel, just because it adds a few things to our seemingly-endless list of jobs.  It sounds a bit bleak, and it's been stressful, but I can see a light at the end of this LONG tunnel. We are now weeks away from moving into our home.  Our very own home.  We prayed over it and planned it, designed it and have now built it.  Well, Dominik and Jonathan have, almost single-handedly, and we are thankful.

But apart from the fact that I really am really thankful that we can soon move in and have our own space, I think that we have moved on in another way.  When we started this blog we named it 'Vamos Homestead Adventure'.  Well, it has been more of a 'Vamos Construction Adventure'.  We have learned a lot.  Jonathan and Rebecca can both install lights and sockets, do insulation and vapour barrier.  They can cut boards and do all sorts of little things.  But now we have moved on. I now have a garden in.  We have some laying hens and some heritage chicks.  We have poultry netting to attend to, and foxes and rabbits to watch out for.  It feels much more as though we have made that step and can say that we are now running a homestead.  We have plans for more, but as we know with the house, we have to just go at it one project at a time.

So, now that I did take the time to buy the kids some non-holey clothes (I work at a thrift store- it's amazing!) and have celebrated two lovely birthdays, I will get you up to date with our progress.

Back in the spring I spoke with someone advertising on kijiji to buy 20 Dorking chicks.  Unsexed.








 Then, because I would pick them up just after hatching and they wouldn't be laying until the autumn, a friend suggested that I get some larger hens which were already laying.  She has a connection down in Elmira, where many hatcheries are, and we bought 10 hens.  To date we have only lost one to a fox.  Dominik went running out and rescued another one from it's clutches!!!  The nine layers roam around inside the netting during the day and have their accommodation in a modified `chickshaw`, ala Justin Rhodes, at night.


The little chicks, who aren`t so little any more, spend the day outside in a chicken tractor and the nights in our unfinished house in a cardboard box.  A big box.  We had them in the box that the air exchanger came in, but now that they have grown and it`s hot, they are in the box from the freezer!  I would really like to have them outside all the time, but there seems to be a shortage of hardware cloth in the world, and so I wait.  I will keep checking at TSC and other stores and when I have it then they can stay in their tractor.  I just have it made with chicken wire now and it isn`t sturdy enough.

Another project which I began in the spring is our garden.  I found a man who sells organic seed potatoes, including some european varieties.  In Austria I was used to buying potatoes either as `mehlig`or `fest kochend`.  This tells you the texture of the potato- floury and good for mashing or firm and better in salads.  So, I ordered both types: German Butterball and Linzer Delikatesse.  7 kg in total.  I took some and cut the larger ones into two pieces and they have all sprouted and are growing beautifully!

Well, the above was written last week....then.....this happened:

We had a shock this week.  I was driving home from town when I saw a fox trotting merrily towards me on the road with a chicken in his mouth!!!   Dominik and Jonathan were in the house cutting boards and hadn`t heard a thing.  We ran out of the car and over to the chickens and, although the laying hens were wandering around inside the poultry netting as usual, there were no chicks to be seen.  After crawing into their pen we found our one crippled chick and a rooster alive while another rooster was dead.  The rest were gone.  17 chicks were missing!  Well, I figured that I knew where the one in the fox`s mouth was, but what about the others?   We waited for the fox to come back,  ready to get him, but he didn`t come.  Finally 6 chicks appeared out of the bushes near the poultry netting.  We then found four more.   We were thrilled to have 12 live chicks- especially after thinking that we had only 2! 




I know that our daytime pen for the chicks wasn`t fox-proof, but there isn`t any hardware cloth to be had- anywhere!  We had been taking them in at night (into our unfinshed house in their cardboard box) and having them out in the day.  With the kids bouncing on the trampoline it was never a problem.   Now we have moved that pen inside our poultry netting and we have left it turned on all night.  The large hens are in a Fort Knox of a coop, so that was never a worry.  Now we have built an overnight shelter for the chicks which is also secure.  I had enough hardware cloth (which is a metal mesh) to do that.   Still, we still have some alterations to make before we will really feel secure.  We have also started to build a live trap large enough for a fox.  He has been marauding up and down the road, we`re told, and so we`re out for him.




On a positive note, we spent time weeding the potatoes and onions this week.  Now I can finally see where the onions are!  Next year I will definitely plant seeds inside in the early spring and then transfer these plants into the garden. Seeding directly means that both the plants and weeds have to grow up enough that you can tell one from another.  The row looked like a nice strip of green carpet until I weeded it- and that took some time!  In the front, closer to the house, we have a few raised beds with chicken wire around them to keep the local rabbit out.  We have a variety of things growing here including one bed specifically for herbs to be used in teas and other kitchen projects.


The Salad garden a few weeks after planing- spinach, peas, lettuce, basil, marigolds and nasturtiums.

The Salad garden in the last week of June.

Horseradish

About half of our tomatoes

Styrian Pumpkins (Austrian!)

Blueberries and Raspberries.


Then I discovered that the poison parsnip (an invasive plant here) is starting to bloom.  I spent the morning on Saturday going around with a long-handled clipper, cutting them down.  I left them to dry where they fell, as it is the sap in the middle of the stem which is so dangerous.  We will mow the smaller plants after we move in here.  We have to prevent them from going to seed for a few years in order to be rid of them.  They spread quickly when ignored.  Something else that we have a lot of, growing wild, are grape vines!  This isn`t so bad.  We will try to string some of them up to organise their growing a bit.  Otherwise they climb up and take over trees.  I still have to look them up but maybe we will be able to make juice and/or wine with them. 


One of our many wild grape vines.


Inside the house we worked on a few electrical items, to be ready for our final inspection.  Then, to our joy, we started on the floors!  Dominik, Jonathan and Rebecca have been working together on it and have their system down. After the wood is laid we will stain and then finish it.  We have taken sanded plywood and ripped it into 5 3/4" planks, 8 feet long. We cut the boards into different lengths and then use a biscuit cutter to put the boards together. They are also glued and nailed.  This should all take about two weeks.  And then, we will move in!  Well, it SHOULD take two weeks, but I have been setting dates to move in for ages and then we have to move them.  We have also finished painting everything except the main bedroom!

Working on the floors.


The floor of Jeremiah and Josiah's room.



We put a darker grout between the tiles. This is the shower.

Jonathan has learned how to install a lot!

Rebecca in the room that she will share with Elena.  They had no problem agreeing on this lavender colour for their walls!

Jeremiah working on the walls of his room.

For Jonathan his paint colour was the icing on the cake! (Literally- that's what it's called!)

Dominik working on our shower.  The glass wall is ordered to divide it from where the sink is. 

We decided to bring the ceiling colour down a few inches in each room, instead of installing moulding. 
June was our month to finally have our septic installed!  We have been eagerly awaiting it.  Now it's in and it makes it easier for company than having to direct them out to the back of the large juniper bush!




In June we also have a few birthdays to celebrate!  Jeremiah turned 10 and Rebecca 14.  For Jeremiah's birthday Dominik took the boys up to our cottage where they had a few days of 'Man Time'.  They got to fish and go out in the boat and on the kneeboard.  They barbequed and relaxed.  It was a good break for them.  For Rebecca's birthday I packed her a picnic lunch of her choosing (pressed picnic sandwiches and strawberry cheesecake in a jar- BBC Good Food recipes) and we went to the beach with a friend of hers.  It was a lovely, hot, sunny day and we both enjoyed it.  These breaks were very welcome in our schedule of building!



Now we are at the house every day and have more and more to keep us comfortable. The kids have a trampoline, a sandbox and now a little beach volleyball court too! This makes our house a place of fun and not just work.  For our Sunday barbeque lunch Dominik made us a table to eat at.  It consists of a board, covered on one side in white tyvek, sitting on cement blocks.  But it has served the purpose for lunch and dessert and for board games as well.


Our temporary table for Sunday playing.

It's a large freezer!  That and our fridge make life easier when working all day at the house.

We are learning every day in this journey of homesteading.  We have a list longer than you can imagine of things still to do, but we are getting there.  I really look forward to getting our kitchen set up and really focus on some healthy meals again!  Right now we eat breakfast and lunch picnic-style at the house, and then get back to my parents to cook supper.  I come with some kids and cook and then Dominik and Jonathan will come later.  Sometimes quite a bit later, depending on their work.  Being together again in the evenings will be great! 

I will leave you there for now!  Thank you for your patience as we try to get this blog out- at least occasionally!!!