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”
Like looking thru a family album that one brings out when it is quiet. Bittersweet memories.
Morning Emily, it is bittersweet, especially right now after losing Daisy. I do miss that cow. c
A hug and apology for having put my yesterday’s comment on the main page: I guess brain not in gear . . . you have added a few photos since I then looked: as Emily says it is a photo album, one I love to open . . .
the photo album us a lovely idea, c
Cecelia – Marla said you wrote about using diatomaceous earth and I wanted to read about it but I can’t find a SEARCH button anywhere on your blog.
It is a hopeless little box way down past the comments – in the black – a completely empty box that seems to do the trick.. but what did you want to know?
I finally found it. Is there no way to write SEARCH above that box? It nearly drove me crazy the other night. WordPress is supposed to be BETTER THAN THIS. I wanted to know about using DE as flea control on cats. It didn’t seem to work on mine and I didn’t like to touch them after that stuff was on them. It made ’em yucky.
I think for it to be effective you would need to do it often.. most organic remedies are not really remedies they are more preventatives.. Make sure it is dry, if water gets on DE it loses its effectiveness evidently..
It was fun, but a little sad, to come back and revisit the friends who’ve moved on in one way or another. I had forgotten little Marcel and his sweet smile.
Thank you Cecilia for the update. I love seeing everyone and the total history of the farmy.
Now we need Geraldine and Mr. flowers and Pania.
Oops! One more–a portrait of Sheila.
I have come to visit, sent from another blog. I love farms and wanted to live on one when I retired. That didn’t happen, but I did make up an imaginary farm in the Berkshires. I love my imaginary tales from my imaginary farm. But your real farm is quite beautiful. I’ll visit again.
Are you from NZ any chance. Just noticing your name choices for your animals.
Yes! I grew up in Hawkes Bay. c
A fellow kiwi in the US. Hi!
Pure, unbelievable, magic!
You. Must. Live. In. Heaven.
Where are the cats?!!!
I love love love!!!
This Cast page is priceless. My niece is getting The Little Farm Book for her 1st birthday this weekend, so I wrote up a guide so she will know who’s who 🙂
What an excellent idea – i am working at saving images as I go along this year so next years book is going to be even better! c
Love your blog. Feeling connected to your world with a great “crew”.
After reading this, and seeing a pig stretched out on your floor, I feel that the world is ok after all. Thank you! I can’t wait for more.
I love looking at all the photos of your farm animals. I’ve always wanted to draw and paint pigs and cows. I’d like to use your photos as a guide for my paintings if you have no objections. Carol
no objections at all carol – the animals and i would be honoured! c
Hi Cecilia, thanks for stopping by my blog. I can’t believe that in the middle of the free world you can’t get fish! Incredible.
With all these beautiful animals though, who needs fish. I now feel slightly bad about eating them.
Dave