New Additions

Yep, we already have a lot of pets (5 rabbits, 1 cat, 1 dog, 2 kittens) but we just added more!  We now have 5 crayfish, and um… a LOT of underwater snails!  The crayfish (also called crawdads, crawfish, or mudbugs) are fascinating to watch.  We have the four biggest ones in a large tank, and the smallest one (which is mine by the way!) is in a fishbowl so he/she won’t get eaten.

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I named mine Mudbug, and the other four are Duncan, Mike, Bart, and Jamie.  Sometimes the big ones fight each other, and they make their own little nooks and crannies to hide in in the tank.  But I think the most fun thing to watch is when they eat.  Believe it or not, they love frozen peas!  When we give them to the crayfish, they grab the peas and start tearing off little bites.  I took a video of one of the crayfish eating, and one of a cute little underwater snail trying to lick the glass of the tank – two more videos for my YouTube channel!

And here are some pictures.  (The last crayfish picture shows the swimmerets – the little feathery things under its tail.  The swimmerets help the crayfish swim, they fan water over its gills, and for the females, they hold the eggs!)

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And here is a snail.

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***Allison***

P.S  We also have 5 black swallowtail caterpillars!  (But no pictures.)

Hear Ye, Hear Ye!

We now have another bunny on the farm!  My brother Jeff bought him just yesterday.  Here is his “profile.”

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Breed: New Zealand

Color: White

Name: Olaf (!!!!)

Gender: Buck (male) (Update: several weeks later, we found out that Olaf is actually a female! But when I first wrote this post, we didn’t know. XD )

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And look at the last thing on the list – he’s a male!  Since we have two female New Zealands (Lily and Mango) we are going to breed them, which means that you will probably be seeing some pictures of cute little baby bunnies!  Sadly, it will probably be awhile, because we have to wait until the rabbits are older to breed them. 😦  But probably sometime next year.

And now for the pictures!

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I love his beautiful, snow-white fur.

One more thing: I have several posts to do, but which do you want me to do first?

Oh – one MORE thing: should I do a profile page for all our bunnies, like with a picture, and information about them and stuff?

***Allison***

Lightning

A couple of evenings ago my family sat outside and watched two amazing lightshows – a gazillion of lightning bugs, lots and lots of lightning that flashed pretty much continuously for about an hour.  And don’t worry, the storm wasn’t close, so I wasn’t in danger of being zapped while taking these pictures.  Lightning is certainly one of God’s majestic nightlights!

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***Allison***

Bee Tree

So from the poll results in my last post, I should either keep doing my blog the same or do more crafts.  Unfortunately, no craft tutorials can be found currently in my brain, so I’ll stick with “keep doing it how you are” for this post. 🙂  Which means… you get to see pictures of a bee tree!  I was so excited when we saw this fallen tree in a woods on our farm with bees swarming around it – and honeycomb inside!  Here she is!

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-Allison(walk, arboretum, Lily) 009-Allison(walk, arboretum, Lily) 008What amazing little creatures God created!  You could almost call them cute, but definitely fascinating.

What is your favorite insect?

***Allison***

Making Maple Syrup

Yes, we made maple syrup – almost three gallons of it, in fact!  That’s one good thing about winter – it’s the time to make maple syrup!  You have to have below freezing nights and above freezing days to get the sap running.  Another reason you can’t make it in spring is because the tree buds make the syrup taste weird — believe me, we’ve tried it.

This year we made two batches in February and one in March, and I am proud to say we didn’t burn any of it! (We weren’t that lucky last year.)

If you’re wondering what it’s like to make maple syrup, read on!

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Maple syrup starts as sap inside maple trees.  The sap tastes like water, only faintly sweet.  It’s hard to imagine how thick and sweet the sap will get when you taste it in the beginning!  Even though it basically tastes like water, it’s still really good and it is quite refreshing.  My sister Megan agrees:

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To get the sap out of the tree, you drill a hole into the wood so the sap can run out.

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Since you can’t attach buckets to a hole, you use either a really-truly-genuine maple syrup spout or make your own.  We did both.  The spout that Megan is drinking out of in the first picture is store bought, and the one in the picture below is a copper tube spout my dad made.

Hammer the spout into the hole you just drilled.

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Attach the bucket quickly, before the sap runs out the spout!

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Now just repeat the process about fifteen more times!  We used seventeen buckets and tapped seven trees (you can put more than one bucket per tree depending on the size of the tree).  After you have tapped all the trees, you wait.  And wait… until…  Yes!  Finally the buckets are full!  You drag out a couple five-gallon buckets for the sap.  Put a cloth over a bucket to strain the dirt out, and pour in the sap.  Even though the sap doesn’t taste very sweet, it sure makes the buckets sticky!  Now is the time to pull out that old, 40-gallon copper kettle and clean it up.  Hang it between two barrels and build a fire under it.  Be sure to put a fire ring or a ring of metal around the kettle to hold the heat in and help the fire reach the sides of the kettle.

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Pour in the sap and let her cook!

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By cooking the sap you are making the plain ‘ol water evaporate and leaving the sweet stuff behind. It will take several hours for the stuff to cook down (*yawn*), so bring a book or two. You can’t just go off and mind your own business though, no sirree, you have to stay by that fire and feed it, oh, maybe every 5 minutes. The fire is awfully hungry, so you have to cut up a bunch of old pallets to help the fire grow and become strong and healthy – and capable of boiling down that sap as fast as possible.

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On one of the wood trips, you notice that the sap is getting lower and that some of it has splattered on the side of the kettle and made sparkly, shiny spots.

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The sap is almost gone from the kettle.  There is just a little bit left in the bottom, and it starts foaming.

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This is the scary part: if you leave the kettle on too long, the maple syrup will burn, and all your hard work will be completely wasted; but if you take it off too soon, you will have to boil it down for an extra long, long, time inside on the stove.  Decisions, decisions!  When you decide to take it off, there is barely anything left.  (40 gallons of sap boil down to just one gallon of syrup!  *collective gasp*  So we actually harvested about 120 gallons of sap from just seven trees!)

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Carefully pour the sap (it’s practically syrup now!) into a big kitchen pan.  Even though it looks like there is barely any sap left, it turns out there is about two gallons – more than it looks!  You’re almost done!  Put a candy thermometer on the pan and watch for the temperature to get to five degrees above the boiling point where you live – in our case, 218-220 degrees Fahrenheit.

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The syrup will be boiling and foaming when it’s done.  You can’t eat it just yet, unless you don’t mind eating ash flakes, dirt, and sediment with your syrup.  You have to strain the syrup to get out all that yucky stuff.  At first we tried using paper towels, coffee filters, and other such things to strain it, but it didn’t go too well, so we got real filters, especially made for filtering maple syrup.  First you put the filter holder on the pan you’re going to strain the syrup into, then you put a thick filter in it, then a thinner one inside of that, and then you pour the maple syrup in.

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Once the maple syrup is strained, you put it in jars and can it, but first – have a taste!  Ah! Sweet and syrupy delight!  Pancakes, anyone?

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I hope you enjoyed “making maple syrup”  Too bad I can’t send you a sample through words… Maybe you’ll have to try making maple syrup yourself next year!

***Allison***

Tidbits

I have lots of little things to post about, so I thought I’d just post them all together.  Here goes!

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Several days ago we saw this GORGEOUS sunset.  I seriously think this was the prettiest sunset I have ever seen.  The colors were so bright, and the clouds were all swirly.

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Isn’t it gorgeous?!

-Allison(sunset) 003                                                                                              Scents

If you haven’t tried this, you should!  Put orange or clementine peels in a small pot.  Put some water in the pot, and add some cinnamon and whole cloves.  This makes your house smell amazing! -Allison(sunset) 024                                                                                         Surprise!

This is a gross but true story: We got our Christmas tree a couple of days ago, and the kids insisted that we move the furniture so we could put the Christmas tree in its customary spot by the window.  Since we moved the couch, we had to sweep all the dust up. My brother was trying to vacuum up a dust bunny, but it wasn’t going too well.  You’ll never guess why.  Do you give up? Ok: it didn’t sweep up well because it wasn’t dust at all – it was a dead frog!!  Yep, a really-truly dead frog.  Actually, it was more like a petrified frog chip, it was so dry and hard.  Why this is so funny is because that frog was the one that had hopped out of its cage months before, and we never knew what happened to it.  We thought maybe the cat got it, but nope!  My mom said that maybe the dead frog was what we had been smelling a while ago.  Gross!!

Oh, and one other little thing: Complete-the-Set game

This is just a little game I made up that’s fun to play while traveling or waiting for something.

1.  Choose one person to be “it” for the first round.

2.  The “it” person thinks of a set (primary colors, initials, etc.)

3.  “It” tells the other players all but one of the items in that set. (For example, if the set was “primary colors”, the “it” person could say “blue, red, and…”, or “red, yellow, and…”, but they couldn’t say “blue, red, yellow,” because there wouldn’t be any part of the set left to complete!)

4.  The other players take turns trying to complete the set.

5.  Whoever guesses correctly first gets to be the new “it”.

Have fun!

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Happy Holidays!

***Allison***

A Snow Post

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YAY! Snow in November! And even 4 inches of snow in November!  That was enough snow for a lot of fun.  We went sledding, made a snowman (and not just your ordinary snowman), and just played around.

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Here is the snowman we made – he is 16 feet around!  (And yes, we measured.)  We proclaimed him a Thanksgiving snowman because of his, well, stoutness from eating too much Thanksgiving dinner. ☺  His arms are tomato stakes, his nose is a corncob, his eyes are made from oreo halves, and his smile is some smooth stones.

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I also got some neat pictures of snowflakes.  I zoomed them in a bunch so you can see the shape of the snowflake better.  The snowflakes are all in a clump, but I circled some interesting spots in the pictures so you can see the individual snowflakes better.

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♥Maggie in the snow♥

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♥Diamond by the snow (or else it’s Rutabaga, it’s getting hard to tell them apart)♥

How much snow did you get?  What did you do in the snow?

***Allison***