Showing posts with label Dairy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dairy. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Thanksgiving A List of Giving Thanks!

My family - as always I am thankful for my family and this year in particular for my Brother, Steve Marshall. We took a long journey through our parents illness and passing together and I am so grateful to have had him at my side! Thank- You Steve!
                                                                                    
Here Steve is at work on the restoration of the Nathan Hale School House Museum at New London, CT.  www.historichouseguy.com

I am thankful for Grandchildren: There is nothing like the smiles and hugs and kisses of Grandchildren and to hear them call "Grandma!"

                                                  Zoom Zoom Zoom in your homemade car!

I am thankful for family milestones:


                                                   My son Tim graduated from High School    

                                                                               

                                                      William's Baptism was a special day!

I am Thankful for all my children and all those children I spend time with!



I am Thankful for life's simple pleasures,
Country

Beauty
Nature
Good Food
Memories
Sunset and Rain
My Work
The Ladies at the Dairy


 Thanksgiving


past blogs of family and home:

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Connecticut Harvest a Corn Story

Corn Harvest in Connecticut is  a story of 2011 rain and mud. For every day spent out trying to chop corn into much needed corn silage there is three days of rain. In the spring we had so much rain we couldn't plant all the fields some had standing water in them.
                                        Ruts in the fields, these are  minor compared to some

Corn likes it hot and sunny. This year we had mostly a cool rainy summer. The corn is shorter and the ears are smaller.

Fall comes and it is time to begin harvest but the rains just keep coming. Some days it takes a tractor or bulldozer to pull the truck to catch the corn, and a duo of vehicles to chop as well. Then repairs to the rutted fields have to be made when they dry.  When good weather comes the crew is working steady to get that  corn home to the silage stack.
                                                                            

Everyone will be happy when the stack is full and covered and we know we have enough feed for our dairy cows for the next year.
                                                                          
 The tarp covers the old corn we are feeding out still. The new corn is pushed and packed by the bulldozer. The tight packing into the cement lined pit completed, the plastic cover is laid over it and weighted by tires to protect from wind damage. Then the stack of freshly chopped corn ferments. This is the basis of our dairy cows diet.
                                                                    

A milk producing cow will eat approximately 40 pounds of corn silage a day. So it is important we get all our corn home and undercover. The frost begins to sap its nutrients so time is of the essence.

Our family came to this farm in 1772. The first 100 years here they were subsistence farmers. In 1871 they incorporated the dairy business. www.mountaindairy.com Since then the rhythm of the farm has stayed in tune with the seasons. The crops coming and going on the land are the basis for maintaining the dairy cows. The days of horse drawn milk delivery are gone and the glass bottles are only a Christmas Season novelty.The work of milking has gone from hand to machine, what is consistent is the Stearns family being stewards to the land and animals. 

This is our family story, of working the land and the land nurturing the generations.

For more of my farm and agriculture related blogs look at:
www.carolynstearnsstoryteller.com/2011_07_01_archive.html

www.carolynstearnsstoryteller.com/2011_08_01_archive.html

Sunday, July 10, 2011

Signs I'm NOT in Downtown Mansfield

        Signs I'm NOT in Downtown Mansfield

                                                                       
                                                             contents under pressure


caution ahead


Parking Lots


water color memories


                                                Make Hay While the Sun Shines

                                                                                
                                                                   Oh Deer!


Hometown Pleasures



                                                                         Whoa!

                                                                                 
                                        Water everywhere but not a drop to drink

                                                                                  
                                                                 homegrown

                                                                             
                                                            Girls Night Out

                                                       I Love Mansfield, CT.