Below you will find the Cast of the Principle Players on The Kitchen’s Garden Farmy. We have established this little farm in Illinois to grow food – eggs, vegetables, milk, honey and meat, wool – for making blankets, hats, scarves and jerseys for animals and humans, and big birds for beauty and insect control. Everyone needs beauty as well as health. It is important to know where our healthy food comes from, and I don’t eat processed foods, so on this tiny eight acres we grow good food to eat.
We aim to be sustainable and hopefully as self sufficient in this modern world as possible. The big animals are out in the fields all summer long eating GM free feed. Forage! We bring in our own organic hay for the winter. I aim to produce at least ninety percent of the food we eat. Then I know it is clean and good – and anyway I hate supermarket shopping! I know it is not fashionable to be an omnivore but I do raise meat as well as vegetables. So not all the animals stay on the farm indefinitely. Here is our naming formula. All animals for beef are called Bobby. All animals for lamb are called Murphys. All animals for pork are called Plonkers. If an animal has a real name she or he will be kept on the farm as breeding stock, (unless that animal becomes ill or cannot breed or will contaminate others -then the kinder way is to let her go.) We can only sustain a small number of animals on this tiny sustainable farm, we have to be careful not to overload the land. All the animals are treated with care and love not matter their destination. The Cast: The cows are most precious: we have a Dairy cow called Daisy and a Beef cow called Queenie Wineti. If all goes well (touch wood please!) both will supply a calf a year either for beef or to sell as heifers.


Queenie has also left the farm now. The sheep supply meat and wool. My main breeding pair are Hairy and Mama.



I have two pigs. Pure bred Herefords. Sheila is my favourite. Don’t tell Charlotte. These are an old heritage breed and any gilts that they breed will be for sale. 


There are birds too. Big and small. The barn has a flock and there is a free range laying flock who sleep in their own chook house. The chickens are the housekeepers of the farm. They spread cow manure in the fields, turn over all the straw in the barn, lay the eggs that feed the pigs and the house, and are walking fertilisers.

Then there are the peacocks and the guineas.



I do intend to sell any pea chicks. Most animals and birds can bring in a little cash to help pay for the feed for the others. Bees of course for the honey. Honey sells well.


And of course the dogs.


And then there is Blue, the new pup. He is a Blue Heeler and we hope he will be able to work the livestock. That is all for the meantime. I shall be adding to this as time goes by. There are cats to put in and a few more animals are still being found in the archives. So pop back in every now and then, as this will be growing organically. Just like the farmy. Things happen every day on the Kitchens Garden Farmy you know. Things change.


Those two on the right are Queenie’s steer and Daisy’s steer. All the steers are called Bobby.

Though she actually is not meant to be on the porch.


I keep this updated whenever I can but I am not inclined to edit anyone Out when a character moves on. So the text will sometimes be out of date, this is really a list of the past and present cast. 12.21.14 In the latter part of 2014 Daisy my beautiful milk cow, after a long fight with mastitis, had to be put down. It was terrible. In the same week The Big Dog – Cooder died. He was very old. It was a difficult period. And now we have Tane, a mate for Tima. So hopefully we will have little KuneKune babies in 2015.
Love love.. celi
January 2016 update:
Lady Astor, Dutch Belted milk cow.

Her heifer calf Naomi, born in the spring of 2015.

Manu.
Poppy’s two daughters. Tahiti and Molly. They will be bred to the boar Manu (above) later in 2016.
Dexters. In 2015 I began a small herd of Dexter cows with Alex a heifer.
Behind Alex is Naomi our Dutch Belted heifer out of Lady Astor.
Here is Carlos IV. The Dexter bull. 
More coming.
In April of 2016 Alex gave birth to Txiki. She is a cross between her Dexter mother and a lowline angus/ hereford cross father.
celi





89 responses to “The Cast”
How in the world did you take that picture of the bees in mid-air?
luck and patience, I focus on a flower that they are close to then wait… sometimes they oblige! c
Love the pictures, especially the one with the dog playing with his iphone. I guess Apple attracts all kinds of fans, even the ones who clean themselves with their tongue =)
especially those ones!
Hi Cecilia,
I just discovered your lovely blog from a link on ‘The Garden Deli’ blog. I’m loving reading your posts, we do similar things on 4 acres in the UK, really good to have found a kindred spirit!
Alex
welcome alex, right at the moment i feel like things are slightly out of control!so wonderful to meet someone doing the same kind of stuff.. c
A lovely post. Now I really have a feel for your farm and all the members in it.
Does your puppy have his own iPhone, or do you have to share?
GREAT BLOG!!! I will follow and come back and catch up. Looking forward to your new posts!
Thank you for dropping in and introducing yourself, it is wonderful to know who is out there reading.. I shall pop over to your blog shortly! c
hi cecil!
i love your farm!
i have started farming early this year… and i’m way too far yet from what i envisioned it to be… but i am glad that i started anyhow… =)
i’ll pay you a visit from time-to-time…
thanks for visiting me by the way… =)
hugs!
-je-
It is slow but good work, i have been doing this for almost seven years now so you see? it does not take long!,. c
How delightful to have been directed to your blog! Your writing is comical, melodious, flowing and delightful. Your subject matter heartwarming. I live in east central canada on a small family farm. My husband has pigs which we market and sell privately. We have four beef cows who produce calves for us to sell to anyone on our small list. My work off the farm means I will live vicariously through your blog. We are different, yet the same, living off the land and honouring what she provides. I sit now glancing out my large picture window at the bird feeders. Junkos, a cardinal, one lonely sparrow, a few chickadees, two doves, a bluejay and a downy woodpecker entertain my heart and soul. Thank you for your blog. It opens my heart in a way I yearn for. 10000 words, oh my goodness, the best of luck! Faye
It does sound like we are similar, Faye, in that we grow a little food well and feed people well.. I cannot imagine a more natural lifestyle. You have me beautiful birds at your feeders, I only even have sparrows and starlings.. but there are many different types of sparrows.. have a lovely day.. c
So glad littlesundog flagged your blog — I look forward to your future posts!
I can’t believe that you can do all that on eight acres! I have been living in the city for too many years now, with a dream of getting to the country in the near future and doing exactly what you are doing. I had in my head that I would need a lot of land. Seeing that you can do all this on eight acres has opened a new door for me. Maybe my dream can come true sooner than I thought if I don’t need 100 acres to fulfil it. Thanks for the daily inspiration! FYI got a link to your site from “Day by Day the Farm Girl Way”.
This is really helpful! Good to be able to put names to furry or feathery faces before reading more of your lovely blog. And the photos are stunning.
i use to read your blog daily and loved it. now all i can get is one big pic and a short, incomplete blurb. is there anymore and am i just to old and stupid to figure this newfangled one out?????????
click on the date and the rest will appear.. or maybe you have worked that out already.. you can never be too old or stupid around here!
Hi, need to top up twins born on 2nd March as their mother has only one working teat, they seem fine at the moment but they will soon require more milk, so i think its best to start now while they are still in the barn to get used to the bottle and me. Not sure how much i should give them, or how often. Trial and error I guess.
If you have not already, start feeding those lambs with the bottle, the longer you leave it the harder to get them to drink from a bottle, though is it possible she can feed two with only one teat.. if she gets enough extra feed herself? after all a ewe can feed triplets with only two, maybe you can start them on grain in a creep a bit earlier and see how she goes . i don’t know. if they are doing ok now, her milk production will increase for them? interesting..let me know what you decide.
I am still in love with Big Dog. We all need seniors in our lives, and I’m not sure there is a creature wiser than an old dog. There are times when I think that everything I’ve ever learned I learned from my now 16 yo dog. I hope Big Dog continues to be your companion for many years.
Morning Lacey, he is about 18 now? I think? And very old, but still goes off on his walks with us twice a day..though how he survived this winter I have no idea.. c
[…] like to pop in and say hello to Cecilia at The Kitchens Garden. You’ll be as smitten with her “Cast of Players”, as her writing. My favorite is Blue but don’t let the others know! This small sample of her […]
I thought Mama was a Suffolk, but wasn’t sure until I saw you mention her breed here. We adopted three Suffolks last year (appropriate as we live in Suffolk, UK). In a strange twist of fate they had originally belonged to a university history lecturer, they were adopted by local history experts and have now found their way to living with another university history lecturer – how very very strange. They were our first sheep and we promised to look after them for ever (and thus not eat them – really trying not to regret this decision especially as we don’t have that much land). They are full of character – and by this I mean they stand up to the dogs (except Kainaat who has the force), shove their heads in food buckets and trample over us to escape. I do like them though. Love your photos and the blog
Sheep are much bigger and heavier that we imagine and can be pretty pushy. The last of My sheep are looking for new homes now, the flock has become too small to move easily.. love your history buff sheep.. cute! c