Monthly Archives: October 2009

Poor Kitty and Home Remedies for Pets

This morning Kitty was fine. Then this afternoon we came home and he has an open gash in his foot. We have no idea how or why this happened.

Kitty's wound
Kitty’s wounded right back paw

Close up of wound
Close up

So I used my basic first aid skills and put together a few items to help him:
First Aid Supplies
Alcohol, neosporin, cotton balls, bandage, tape

Kitty's bandage
Kitty’s Bandage -He really wants to chew it off

I hope he’s ok and doesn’t get infected or something. We rarely take our animals to the vet because we do a pretty good job of treating things at home. When Schnoodle had liver problems – her eyes were turning yellow from jaundice, she was moping around and drooling- and she almost died, we took her in, but the steroids didn’t work. Our last option was to use herbal remedies;  we found out that milk thistle helps livers, and ever since then we just give her a little bit of that in some “treats” and she has lived another 4 years or so since then! So now we take milk thistle too, as a preventive medicine.

When Kitty had a blocked urethra and was trying to pee everywhere in the house, we called a veterinarian friend of ours (who lives in another state) and she told us to take him to the vet immediately because he could turn toxic and die. Well, it was a Sunday night about 9:30pm and when we called the on-call emergency vet office they said it would be about $200 just to see him, let alone what it would cost to “fix” the problem. So we took a risk and looked up alternative medicine regarding that and found that male cats often don’t drink enough water and get clogged up down there. We fed him canned tuna in water with concentrated cranberry  juice and he was fine by the next day. He also has ever since lived outside.

We were not so lucky with the black chicken, but overall, our rate of home remedy success for our pets has been pretty high! And that’s true even for our own personal health as well.

What do you think of this post?
  • WOW (0)
  • Awesome (0)
  • Interesting (0)
  • Useful (0)
  • Bummer (0)
  • Whoa (0)

Winter in Greeley – Already!

Well it’s officially the first snow and it’s only October! Cassie and I moved the chicken coop -with the chickens inside of it- into the greenhouse last night. The wind had picked up and the temperature was dropping. Good thing we did because this morning it would have been much harder to move the coop in the snow.

greenhouse snow

It was funny because the chickens were all asleep, but when they woke up they had been magically transported.
Chickens and snow

As long as you keep chickens dry and out of the wind they can withstand some really cold temperatures (last year -20 and things were ok). So moving them into the greenhouse affords them quite a bit of protection.  When it is sunny, the greenhouse can be 20-30 degrees warmer even in the middle of winter. Tomorrow its supposed to be back up in the 50’s and most of this snow will melt away and the chickens will be extra toasty.

Chicken coop in Greenhouse with Kitty
With Kitty on top of the chicken coop inside the greenhouse

What do you think of this post?
  • WOW (0)
  • Awesome (0)
  • Interesting (0)
  • Useful (0)
  • Bummer (0)
  • Whoa (0)

Tour of Greeley and Centennial Village

Today with Leadership Weld County, I went on a tour of Greeley where we discussed the culture of the area. It was a cold day, and even began to snow! We started the day at Centennial Village. Centennial Village is a museum recreation of what it would be like to live in Greeley in the late 1800s. They have moved in all sorts of old buildings like houses, an old church, a one-room schoolhouse, even a small train station. Inside of these buildings they have all sorts of artifacts from that time period. When I was a kid I was in a program where we dressed and acted like kids from 100 years earlier including using the slate boards to write.

We reviewed Greeley’s history.  It was a community with a Utopian vision built on these values: temperance (these old no-drinking laws remained on the books until 1969 in Greeley!), religion, education, agriculture, irrigation, cooperation, and family values. In order to be part of the Union Colony, as Greeley was called at that time, you had to apply to come out and pay a share of money. Nathan Meeker was the main founder of the community, but his life ended unfortunately when he ended up getting scalped by American Indians. His house is still in Greeley as a museum as well.

Then we drove over to the Chamber of Commerce and walked to the Greeley Museum and learned about Rattlesnake Kate and her famous dress made from 140 rattlesnakes she killed, skinned and sewed into a flapper-style dress as well as hearing about other famous people in Greeley’s history.

With Unicycle
Me and Jamie with some old unicycles

Next on the tour was the Weld County Courthouse.  We got to see some of the architecture and heard stories of the ghosts that reside there including one of someone who was hanged out on the lawn of the courthouse. We also heard about drug court which sounds like a very good program that Weld County is proud to have.

Next up, we walked to the Union Colony Dinner Theatre, then off to the Union Colony Civic Center. This was quite impressive as we were able to go behind the scenes. We even got to go into the powder room that Lyle Lovett will be in tomorrow night. We climbed the catwalks and played with the spotlight. It is quite a thing to put on a show!

Overall, a lot of the information I had already heard, but there were some things, like the catwalk and some of the old courtrooms I had never seen or done before. It was really neat remembering how and why this area exists.

What do you think of this post?
  • WOW (0)
  • Awesome (0)
  • Interesting (0)
  • Useful (0)
  • Bummer (0)
  • Whoa (0)

Fall Gardening and Harvest in Greeley

This weekend we started the task of the last harvest. Things are starting to turn brown and since the frost hit, our basil, tomatoes and peppers have not been happy. We decided to go gather up as much of the bounty as we could wrangle together. We started to turn under the garden and we need to do the same to the greenhouse and move the chickens in, but that we might save for  another warmer  day. Here is a fun video I made of our harvest, greenhouse and garden. I just started playing with Youtube’s video editor so it was kind of fun to do. I hope you like it:

The fall bounty
Here’s some of the bounty all washed

Purple potato
Look how purple this potato is…and iridescent!

Today we made egg and potato breakfast burritos with this and since it’s chili out, I’ll use some of these ingredients to make some chili to stay in too!

What do you think of this post?
  • WOW (0)
  • Awesome (0)
  • Interesting (0)
  • Useful (0)
  • Bummer (0)
  • Whoa (0)