Tonight will be a quick post as I need to do some exciting things like clean my house (where is that cleaning fairy that never seems to show up at my house??). I'm also a bit on the grumpy side as my allergies are driving me crazy right now. I mentioned in my last post that we haven't had rain in over a month (and it seems to be just our immediate area as our new farm has had plenty of rain in the past month, go figure) and the dust is just driving me crazy and I sneeze all the time. I have no idea why it decided to stop raining but I would really appreciate it if the rain clouds that keep showing up about 2 miles south of the farm would move 2 miles north and park themselves over us for a day or so!
I hope everyone had a great weekend!
Cuff Links and Harmony grooming each other
Dutch hanging out and looking over Murpy's back with Wiz in the background
Clay, Chili, Boo and Justin
Jason with Fuzzy Punch; I told Jason that the picture would look a lot better if Fuzzy had his ears forward . . . . . . so Jason put his ears forward; Fuzzy Punch was being very tolerant!
Boo on the run
Cinnamon
MyLight, Harmony and Missy
Asterik and Sebastian
Alex, B-Rad, Winston and Ogie
Sebastian and Faune
Mina and Jo, World's Cutest Fainting Goats
Jo leaping off the bench
Lucky found a convenient place to rest his head on Lightening's back
Although the week of rain that we've gotten here (between 2 and 3 inches total) has been wonderful for my pastures and baby trees, I would gladly have sent it to you. There are hundreds, if not thousands, of acres of second cutting timothy hay down in the valley fields (timothy is our major economic crop) that will hardly be worth feeding to cattle, let alone exporting to the far east...
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1 comment:
Although the week of rain that we've gotten here (between 2 and 3 inches total) has been wonderful for my pastures and baby trees, I would gladly have sent it to you. There are hundreds, if not thousands, of acres of second cutting timothy hay down in the valley fields (timothy is our major economic crop) that will hardly be worth feeding to cattle, let alone exporting to the far east...
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