Paul Revere by Cyrus Dallin, North End, Boston

Friday, May 2, 2025

AND NOW FOR SOMETHING COMPLETELY DIFFERENT...

 


Friday milking at the Blueberry Goat Farm!




13 comments:

skudrunner said...

How do you milk a blueberry. What will they think of next.

-FJ the Dangerous and Extreme MAGA Jew said...

Not quite as scary as cows...

Shaw Kenawe said...

High bush blueberries grow all over the goat farm, and that's why the owners named it Blueberry Goat Farm. But we do not milk the blueberries. LOL!

Shaw Kenawe said...

Goats kick. And if they get spooked for any reason, it can hurt! These are Saanen goats. Great milkers.

"Saanen goats are renowned for their high milk production, often being referred to as the "Holsteins of the dairy goat world". They can produce an average of 1.5 to 2 gallons of milk per day, with high-producing individuals potentially reaching 2-3 gallons daily. Saanen milk typically has a butterfat content of 3.7%."

-FJ the Dangerous and Extreme MAGA Jew said...

Are they like cows, and need to be milked 2x a day? My uncle kept 20 dairy cows on the home farm in Iowa... but that was one chore I never had to do (thank goodness).

Shaw Kenawe said...

Normally they’re milked once a day. But this is the kidding season, so the new mothers are producing lots more milk, so they’re being milked twice a day. They produce less milk in the winter. We have 5 new kids: Prima, Poppy, Patrick, Peter, and Paul. I started volunteering when the farm was naming the new born kids with the letter “i”.

Les Carpenter said...

My parents owned a couple goats. Because my daughter was not tolerant of cows milk My parents gave us goat milk. And my father enjoyed the mowing they did for him as well.

Shaw Kenawe said...

I'm not able to tolerate cow's milk, but goat milk and other goat products are ok.

Joe Conservative said...

8 years! Wow! I'm impressed. I always took you for a city girl!

Grey One talks sass said...

The picture made my heart happy. If I'm drinking fresh milk I prefer goats milk. Mmmm... almost a meal in and of itself. And that is you? Well hello you. Sending thanks for your goat posts. If there are bees on the property I bet their honey is stellar what with all the blueberry bushes. Yes, necessary vicarious visit to the farm. I am grateful.

LOL The assumption that a city girl is unaware of farm life - ooo, let me catch my breath. I mean yeah, lots of folks are clueless about where their food comes from but I would never pair the term clueless with Shaw.

As another example, I'm totally aware of farm life even though I lived in cities all my life. Guess it's true that one should not judge because they don't have all the facts. Well they can judge but they look like an idiot in the process.

Shaw Kenawe said...

I began my life in the city of Boston, then my family moved to the suburbs and I once lived in an exurb of Boston surrounded by nature, great birding, and great for foraging and stalking the wild asparagus! I'm now back in the city, but need a dose of country every week, and that's why I've volunteered for these years at the goat farm, which also has 3 dogs, ducks (mmmm, duck eggs!), deer, owls, herons, chipmunks, and all other manner of woodland critters and wild flowers, which are diligently fertilized with excellent goat poop and goat milk whey.

Heavenly.

Shaw Kenawe said...

Yes. That's me. I thought I'd show up on my blog after running it for almost 20 years. The goat on my left that I'm milking is Millie, a very good milker. Unfortunately, the owners of the farm do not have bees.

-FJ the Dangerous and Extreme MAGA Jew said...

Sounds wonderful! I haven't been back to Iowa since my grandparent's 50th. Fortunately, there is a lot of farmland here in Harford County... and every once in a while I sneak over to the local dairy and get a pint of their ice cream... yummmm! :)