Fiberguild

September 12, 2008

Alpaca Tour

Filed under: Idle Thoughts — willyb @ 1:57 pm

Alpacas and covered bridges can peacfully co-exist.

Check out alpaca-tour.com.  A 60 mile trip across rolling farm land and the foothills of Oregon’s Cascade Mountains that crosses 6 covered bridges and visits three alpaca farms.

Kind of like a wine tour on steroids - and without the buzz or hangover (unless you BYOB).  

This has to be one of the most scenic parts of the Willamette Valley, and still largely maintains its rural character.  Covered bridges have a certain romance to them as well.

The site gives some pretty interesting historical facts.

Good stuff!!

May 26, 2008

Weapons for the Farm

Filed under: Idle Thoughts — willyb @ 12:37 pm

Protecting the livestock can be a real problem, but is a basic responsibility of the farm owner

Good farm fences are the first line of defense.

But, they aren’t perfect. Thus, I have struggled with the issue of firearms. We have neighbors within about 300 yards, so the choice of weapon was a bit of a struggle. After studying ballistics, and considering the most likely predators (dogs, coyotes, and a rare possibility of a cougar) I finally made the choice.

Here are some basic ballistics of common choices:

Cartridge (Wb@MV) Bullet BC 100 yds. 200 yds. MRT@yds. MPBR (yds.)
.22 LR (40 HP at 1255) .100 -0.9″ -38.6″ 3″@55 112
.22 WMR (40 HP at 1910) .100 +2.2″ -16.2″ 3″@70 149
.22 Hornet (45 Sp at 2690) .191 +2.9″ -0.4″ 3″@110 229
.223 Rem. (55 SP at 3240) .235 +2.8″ +2.0″ 3.1″@140 284
.243 Win. (100 Sp at 2960) .351 +2.8″ +1.6″ 3″@130 274
.270 Win. (150 Sp at 2900) .481 +2.8″ +1.6″ 3″@125 278
.30-30 Win. (150 FP at 2390) .268 +2.9″ -1.3″ 3″@105 218
.30-30 Win. (170 FP at 2200) .304 +2.9″ -2.5″ 3″@95 205
.308 Win. (180 Sp at 2610) .483 +2.9″ +0.7″ 3″@115 252
.30-06 (180 Sp at 2700) .483 +2.9″ +1.0″ 3″@120 260
.357 Mag. (158 FP at 1830) .158 +2.4″ -11.9″ 3″@80 158
.357 Mag. (180 FP at 1550) .210 +2.1″ -16.3″ 3.1″@70 145
.45-70 (350 RN at 2000) .189 +2.8″ -7.1″ 3″@85 176

Considering the predators, the ranges in question, and the fact that my wife could well be using the weapon, the choices were fairly easy.

We are using a Ruger 10/22 and a Marlin .357 magnum lever action carbine (with 158 grain solid points).  The Marlin should be sufficient to bring down any predator we will see out to 150 yards or so.  Neither weapon will carry to the neighbors under normal circumstances.

The side benefit of the Marlin is being able to use the same ammunition in a Ruger GP100 revolver.

May 5, 2008

Project Honey Pot

Filed under: Idle Thoughts — willyb @ 6:01 pm

Project Honey Pot is a collaborative effort to stop spam.  From their website:

Project Honey Pot is the first and only distributed system for identifying spammers and the spambots they use to scrape addresses from your website. Using the Project Honey Pot system you can install addresses that are custom-tagged to the time and IP address of a visitor to your site. If one of these addresses begins receiving email we not only can tell that the messages are spam, but also the exact moment when the address was harvested and the IP address that gathered it.

Many folks don’t know that there are malicious programs that do nothing but traverse the Internet “harvesting” email addresses.  Project Honey Pot allows site owners to easily set up a trap to identify these.  I highly recommend all site owners to join the effort.

Does it work?  Yep!  Today I received the following email:

Regardless of how the rest of your day goes, here’s something to be happy about — today a honey pot you installed successfully identified a previously unknown email harvester (IP: 190.19.79.146). The harvester was caught by your honey pot installed at:

www.gatewayalpacas.com

You can find information about your newly identified harvester here:

http://www.projecthoneypot.org/i_51efbe818834aa71c797e2354418b925

Info on all the harvesters that have been spotted by this honey pot is also available here:

http://www.projecthoneypot.org/t_51319.1dd0a

Don’t forget to tell your friends you made the Internet a little better today….

Thanks from the entire Project Honey Pot team and, we’re sure if they knew, from the Internet community as a whole.

It is nice to help make the world a little bit better…

Alpaca Fiber Industry Talk

Filed under: Farm and Fiber, Idle Thoughts — willyb @ 1:35 pm

I was privileged to have been invited to Kinney Valley Alpacas in Ontario, WI to talk about the alpaca fiber industry here in the US. Just got home late last night (Gawd, all joy has been taken out of flying anymore. Take the train whenever possible!!)

It was a great group of folks in attendance, involved, attentive and with hard hitting questions.

A couple of things really stood out to me.

First, I sense real motivation for the transition of alpacas from a speculative “rare breed” industry into main stream agriculture. This was evident on many levels, not the least of which was open discussion of the development of a consumption and hide market.

Secondly, there were a few members of the Alpaca Fiber Cooperative of North America present. There is (and it is probably cultural, as much as anything) a real lack of “ownership” of the co-op. Folks consistently talked about “the” co-op.

I suggested that a simple change in language could bring a huge change in attitude and performance. Instead of referring to “the” co-op, far better to talk about “our” co-op. It is, after all, our business, totally owned and operated by alpaca fiber producers.

I want to thank the Radloff family for inviting me to speak at their farm event. It was a great time and a wonderful opportunity.

April 27, 2008

Spring Into Spring

Filed under: Farm and Fiber, Idle Thoughts — willyb @ 10:36 am

I am not a real picture guy, but this is one worth keeping record of.

Willamette Valley SnowApril 20, 2008
april-snow

April 20, 2008 - This is the latest, most significant snowfall I have seen in over 35 years in the Wllamette Valley. April often has unsettled weather, and freezes are not uncommon, but these kind of conditions are very unusual!

One week later…

April 27, 2008
april-sun

Exactly one week later, on April 27, 2008. This is much more like a normal spring.

One of the side effects of the odd weather this year is that the grass has remained dormant for a full month longer than usual. This is not a good thing for the hay bill.

Hopefully we will see the grass begin to grow now that the ground is warming up…

April 19, 2008

April Showers?

Filed under: Idle Thoughts — willyb @ 5:09 pm

Better than half way through the month of April, and it is snowing in the Willamette Valley!

NWS says to expect “unseasonably cold” weather patterns. Well, I’d have to agree. About 1 PM we started getting dime sized hail and lightening. This transitioned into sleet, then snow, and we ended up with about 2 1/2 inches of the stuff on the ground, and a passing pickup in the ditch out on the highway.

Animals all were smart enough to head to the barn…

No telling what this will do for the fruit growers around these parts. Our apple and pear trees are in bloom, so a hard freeze will hardly be a good thing.

Luckily, no produce has been planted yet. Starts are still indoors under lights. I have seen snow in April once in the past 30 years, but not quite this late in the month.

An interesting weather year this has been.

April 14, 2008

Let Them Eat Cake, or, Pouring Ethanol on the Fire

Filed under: Idle Thoughts, News — willyb @ 10:21 pm

Boy, I feel like I am beating a dead horse. BBC reports:

“US President George W Bush has ordered the release of $200m in emergency aid to alleviate food shortages in Africa and other parts of the world.”

Meanwhile, the farm bill languishes in Congress and is facing a Presidential veto.

Congress wants to include tax cuts for

  • Biofuels
  • Timber Companies
  • Race Horses

Sen. Saxby Chambliss, R-Ga, defended the latter, saying, “Horse racing is a huge agricultural industry.”

Now, I’m confused. We need to contribute $200 million to relieve world hunger while we give major domestic tax breaks to those growing fuel, paper and Christmas trees, and race horses!

What are we going to eat here in this country? I guess that doesn’t matter, since we will be able to drive to the race track where we can have paper race forms helping us decide which horse to put our money on.

“Let them eat cake,” were words famously spoken when the French populace was starving. Seems just as applicable now…

April 13, 2008

Sicko

Filed under: Idle Thoughts — Tags: — willyb @ 11:01 pm

I have just watched (for about the third time now) the movie “Sicko”.

Not sure why I do this to myself, given how angry I get every time I watch it.

In my mind it is downright criminal that this country, the most prosperous in history, does not have universal health care.  Perhaps this is because I have seen firsthand the impact that the lack of UHC has on real people.  In the past 5 years I have seen our health care system (often called the best in the world) ignore several people in my near or distant family to the point that they died.

Our health care system is set up to deny treatment, since paying for treatment is detrimental to the bottom line of HMO’s and insurance companies.

We may have the best health care system, but it is inaccessible to many.  And, to many more it is a source of bondage, chaining them to jobs that they dare not leave.

What does health care have to do with a farm blog?

It really is all part of an unsustainable system - the same system that supports a food supply controlled by a handful of multi-national corporations.  It is part of a system that teaches and reinforces a “me first” and “right now” culture of acquisition, consumption and ultimately exploitation of our environment and our fellow man.

When “we” can think in terms of “us” we will empower ourselves. When we act to further our collective long term interests, we will see change.

April 12, 2008

Third World Hunger - First World Pain

Filed under: Idle Thoughts, News — willyb @ 8:22 pm

Per Bloomberg - ” Further gains in food prices would be ‘terrible’ for the world’s poor and throw hundreds of thousands of them into starvation…Governments throughout Asia, Africa and the Middle East are seeking to combat food inflation and avoid social unrest by curbing exports or lifting import duties on basic food staples such as rice. Global food prices surged 57 percent last month from a year earlier, according to the United Nations, and the World Bank warns civil disturbances may be triggered in 33 countries.”

The price increases are presumably triggered by worldwide shortages of cereal grains, especially rice, which in turn have led to export restrictions by major producers.

Or so it is reported…

A closer look ties it all back into the unstustainable system that has developed over the past 60 years.

Bettina Luescher, the chief North American spokeswoman for the U.N. World Food Program, cites several factors, including, “…a rise in oil and energy prices and an economic boom in developing countries like India and China that is increasing demand, as well as climate changes causing droughts and floods [and], some farmers are shifting their crops from food to those used for alternative fuels, like corn used for ethanol, because of rising demand.”

It is not a third world problem.

In the US there is a multi year drought taking its toll in the southeast.  There are hay shortages over most of the country.  Livestock and poultry producers are reducing production due to increased feed prices.  Dairy production is down across the country, and some States (Missouri for instance) that used to export dairy products now import.

Things are changing, and the change is accelerating, even as the US and global economy enter the most significant slump in at least 25 years and the US dollar is at record lows against virtually all foreign currencies.

April 11, 2008

Tears for Chicken

Filed under: Farm and Fiber, Idle Thoughts — willyb @ 11:11 am

So, one of our layers has moved on to hen heaven.

Now the wife wants to thin the rooster ranks.  There are only three of those poor guys left.  (One of the nice things about roosters is that they are usually the first to fall to things like hawks and other predators - doing their “man thing” defending the girls.)

Leave it to a woman to pass a death sentence for the ravages of testosterone!

I was going to put the hen on the burn pile, which will probably get torched this weekend given the improvement in weather.

Instead she got a “proper” funeral buried in her own little chicken grave.

Not sure what we are going to do when the property is filled with little animal graves.  Between cats, dogs and now chickens we could fill up pretty quick!

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