As for me and my house we will serve the Lord....



Monday, December 27, 2010

Birthday week is over

The rest of the world may have just celebrated the Christmas holidays but in our house we don't just celebrate Jesus' birth but three of our birthdays in the same week- this year our daughter Jessica was still teaching on her birthday December 20th so we went over early and played games and watched her blow out the candles on Saturday the 18th.
On Wednesday December 22nd the whole family and some of the neighbours were here to watch Garry blow out all 54 candles on the giant black forest cake I made. (sorry no photos- we are having trouble recharging the camera in Canada)
The guys did the fast morning milking/feeding of the herd traditional for breakfast/present opening- which was delayed slightly when our daughter-in-law and the girls arrived at 9 am instead of the 8:30 we were aiming for breakfast time. Seth, Jonah and Luke (next in line at 19) slept in until 9 am since they were stuck helping him with the late night milking when some of the employees didn't show up- they finished around 1:30 am, and checked out their stockings then.
Breakfast was followed by the marathon four hours of present opening. The little girls ate more candy than they got (other people's stockings were raided by the preschoolers) and went home at 7 pm after the turkey dinner. Jonah is very excited- his brothers bought him an ebook reader to take back to Ukraine. Remote controlled helicopters were a big hit- the big boys should have gotten them too, as they flew them more than Seth and Jonah did.
Yesterday Garry and I were off to Steinbach early where we did 4 minutes following the announcements about our mission- with the powerpoint which operated just fine (although I forget to pick up my new flash drive afterwards) Afterwards Garry took me out for lunch and was surprised at the check- someone had paid our bill already (thanks!) Then we returned home for dinner and birthday cake (Luke made it and covered it with mini m&ms to the delight of Xaris and Havi) and I managed to get all 52 candles in one try.
No one had checked how much milk was shipped on Sunday morning, so Matt couldn't stand the suspense and went to check after dinner was over (with the early milking the morning before there is more milk the next day) and was excited to report a new record- just over 19,000 liters for one day (yes in Ukraine we are making about 260 liters a day.) Matt and family left after we watched the original Grinch on bluray so the girls could get to bed on time- the scheduled entertainment - the Eagles game is postponed until Tuesday because of snow- my parents say about 20 inches and it's blowing like crazy today- big drifts in New Jersey.

Garry's hoped for departure for Ukraine did not happen today---our passports and visa renewal are still at the embassy after the next day priority mail took.... not the planned mail on Friday there on Monday...but according to Canada Post tracking it was delivered on Wednesday the 15th at noon. It is 2 weeks (plus holidays and weekends) for processing so it is not coming back yet- it looks like Garry will certainly miss out on seeing in the New Year in Ukraine. The kids are planning a new tradition here......pizza cook-off.
Victor says all is well- except they are running out of brewers grain to feed the cows and can't get more until after the brewery reopening in January. Garry has him looking to buy some sunflower meal to help tide the the cows over the loss of their favorite protein source.

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Sunday--the outdoor nativity program in Manitoba







Sunday December 19th- it’s a different world here in Manitoba- the boys were dealing with the birth of 5 heifer calves overnight (as many calves as we will have in a month in Ukraine) Garry drove to Gimli Manitoba to speak at the Free church there. He also met with the adult Sunday school class and went with a half dozen people for lunch after. He left at 7:30 am got back at 4:15 pm- too late to get to Matt’s for the Sunday school outdoor nativity program. I had finished a new display board for him (the old seemed to disappear this year) and put a 10 minute powerpoint on a flash drive for him. Unfortunately, they couldn’t get it to work, so it’s good thing he’s an interesting speaker! Garry gave out some of the new prayer cards- version one- they didn’t come out as well as we hoped so I plan to print more of a newer version on Monday.
Meanwhile I went to church in Piney where Matt’s sermon was on the Christmas story from the book of John. Havilah our 2 year old granddaughter walked up and said” hi Grandma” and put her arms up for me to pick her up. I showed the 4 minute set of slides before prayer time, and answered questions for 10 minutes. Then I watched Havi and baby Keziah (after her nap) as the practice for the program happened about 2 pm.
Havilah informed me she did not need mitts on as the sun was shining and would warm her hands as she held them up. The animals showed up – pairs of miniature ponies, goats and sheep. The guys had hoped to have some of our calves or a cow there but our farm's trailer had lost a bearing on one wheel and it wasn't fixed yet. Luckily the owner of the animals could bring his in his own trailer.

While some of the older girls made comments about needing air fresheners (outdoors and –10 C no less) Havilah tried petting the ponies and was thrilled to feed the sheep some straw in their manger after filling the manger for baby Jesus and lying down in the straw in front of it, while the starry backdrop and various lights were lit (extension cords found) and the angel choir practiced singing hymns. Four-year-old Xaris is the angel on the right, bottom row with the dark pink hat with strings.
A teenaged wise man was missing and Seth beat Jonah at rock, paper, scissors to get the part. Seth’s was in the actual performance at 4:30 (the guy was still missing) as the sun was setting and the temperature was dropping (I got a couple pictures before my camera needed to be charged- I am having some problems with getting it to charge well- the plug is 220 since we bought it in Ukraine, it is a USB but doesn’t always charge on the computer).

After the short performance, everyone was invited back to the church for hot soup and cookies. Luckily it was not as cold as last weekend when it got down in the –33 Celsius range- that’s well below zero in the Fahrenheit scale too. A number of visitors came to the performance and sat on the bales of straw Matt had made for seating. Jonah helped direct traffic; Matt had cleared snow for parking with the big front end loader. There was a thudding of mitted hands after the first song and Blueberry the cat, who had come close to check out what was happening, took off across the yard like a shot. He watched from the nearby barn window after that.

Friday, December 17, 2010

The farm in Manitoba
















Victor called yesterday morning- late afternoon Ukrainian time (it's 7 hours ahead of us in the central time zone) to say hello from Maxim and himself and ask about buying a heifer for sale in Nikolipolia- I think they are getting her- she is about 2 months pregnant (cows- like people- have a a 9 month gestation period) The fresh cow that calved last week is milking 15 liters a day already, they said.


To prove that exciting things happen on larger farms in North America, while we are here in Manitoba, I'll post if there is some interesting news (with photos.) At 6 am yesterday morning I woke up and heard a strange sound- at first I thought it was the cats- there are three in the house- but then I decided to get up and check it out. I went down to the basement and found that Wiggles was having puppies in one of Micah's blue reclining theater-style reclining chairs. To give you some context when we got home last we we commented on the fact that she looked huge. The boys replied that she had done it in the summer and there were no puppies then so she must be doing the same thing again. We got Wiggles about 4 years ago, she was about a year old and she has never had puppies, so everyone assumed she was sterile. So she had 7 puppies by the time I found a box and we got her settled in an empty bedroom. After I washed the the chair up (it was very wet- luckily not bloody) later in the day we realized she'd had 8 live pups, mostly black but a few with white under the chin or belly and a couple brindled ones with brown striping.

I took some photos outside as Matthew was engaged in an interesting project. He is a part-time pastor for a small area church and they are going to do a nativity Christmas program Sunday afternoon, with live animals and Sunday school children, outdoors in Matt's barn- he lives across the road from the church- I'll try to post some photos afterwards- it should be interesting. Anyway, for the program they wanted some small square bales for the audience to sit on. They had not baled any on the farm here this summer, and there were none left. He had searched for some for sale and was now desperate enough to try opening a big round bale and using the square baler in the snow to make some- he got 11 bales finished in during several hours of struggling with mouse-chewed strings and broken shear bolts. I was teasing him that there were no bales- large or small) in Bethlehem anyway- maybe a haystack.


You can see that the snow is here to stay for the winter- it has been rather balmy -10 to -18 this week, after the deep freeze on the weekend, but that doesn't melt snow. Micah and Noah were moving weaned calves from the barn where the babies are into the next barn. Noah had made a stack of bales to block the wind in front of the opening to this barn and they were trying to figure out how to get the first calf inside when I went by. The other photo is of the big cow barns on the other side of the road- the smaller calves live on the same side as the house.


The other excitement of the day was Josh decided to dump (throw away) 5000 liters of milk from one of the tanks, The night before while the guys were playing basketball in Winnipeg an employee decided to run the tank washer on the empty milk tank. Unfortunately, it was not empty- no one is quite sure how he managed to do it- but there was a lots of water some soap in the milk (which you could not taste or smell) and so the guys saved some for calf feeding and Garry made cheese curds to eat. The rest went down the drain. Poutine anyone?

Monday, December 13, 2010

Home and news from the farm - from Monday


While we are enjoying the cold (-33 C) Manitoba weather and hanging out with family, Garry had exciting news from Ukraine- another cow has calved- the one with horns about a foot and a half long- and gave birth to a heifer (female) calf. Our herd is getting bigger, they were waiting until Garry left, I guess.


Garry went out to the barn here on Friday morning and decided everything looked much bigger here than on the farm in Ukraine- the barns, machinery and even the cows! I was waiting until Monday to publish this story because Garry has been keeping a secret from the family at home- ever notice that all the photos lately never showed his face? That's because he has been growing a surprise beard (the last time he had a beard was 25 years ago) and all the kids had not seen it yet. Somehow this post got lost and didn't get published so here is Garry with his beard for all of you to see. He said he would shave it off after everyone saw it but it still exists as of December 18th!

It could be he was too busy- he has been driving and visiting everyday since we got home- he even flew to Calgary for a day and half for a meeting about a Mennonite Brethren project that

may happen in our village. We met with most of the members of the Steinbach building team on Friday night and an enjoyable time was had by all. Saturday we drove out to our daughter's house in Morden to celebrate her birthday early- Garry and the boys are playing basketball again on Monday, her actual birthday. They won the game on Wednesday night, after his Calgary trip, Garry even scored once. He got in a round at the Golfdome Friday afternoon in Winnipeg with one of the his golfing buddies and our son Josh.

Friday, December 10, 2010

All's well
















We are home in Manitoba for Christmas now. All is well back in the village- Victor and Maxim were trying to negotiate the purchase of a 2nd calf cow due at the end of December this afternoon when Victor called this morning our time, before we headed into Steinbach for the annual mailing of the passports and visa forms to the Ukrainian embassy in Ottawa. Seth and Jonah needed photos for the form so they had to come along- you attach one photo so there is one left for the next year- Garry and I had our done last year - so we can get the photos done and mail it at Shoppers Drug Mart there.
We drove with Victor in our car to Kiev Wednesday night- the warm weather made it foggy, and the front driver's side tire required some fixing from a hole- they had to put air in and bang a dent out of the rim, but it went for about 100 km on it while we were looking for a place to get it fixed. We stopped at the McDonalds about a third of the way to Kiev for coffee for the guys and snacks- I tried one of the new year specials (Santa or Father Frost comes for New Years instead of Christmas in the Soviet Union) - it was a pie filled with apple, cream and raisins. The boys napped on top of each other- the three of us were in the back seat. This is when you really notice how much the boys have grown in the year and half since we came to Ukraine.
We arrived at the airport in Borispol around 1:30 am and our flight was due to leave at 5:35. Our plane was not listed on the departures board but Garry called the call centre- they said no problem and Garry disappeared to take a nap on a bench while the boys rested, drank pop, and watched the luggage with me. Jonah made friends with the airport cat- a black and white one I had seen while waiting in the airport in November- it looks very well-fed. Suddenly around three am I noticed that a cancellation noticed had come up on the board and when I walked over to check it was our flight. I was frantically looking for Garry, trying to phone him- I think he'd turned his phone off- when just as suddenly the line of people in front of the information booth disappeared along with the red word cancelled.
So I was hopeful that we would depart on time- which we did. We went through, checked our baggage and proceeded through security (body scan) and went to wait by the gate, where the boys played cards and enjoyed the birds that flew around, when they weren't sitting in the rafters- I tried to get a photo of one. Every once in a while a sparrow would swoop over the chairs down the building then head back up to chirp with its friends. There was a Santa or Father Frost in the middle of the room- Garry took my picture with it while we were waiting.





We arrived in Frankfurt on time with three hours until our connecting Air Canada flight. There was a huge line to go through another security check towards our gate. No problems until the announcement as it was time to board. Half-hour delay because of the late arrival of the flight crew (it was snowing in Germany- apparently they got up too late to get to the airport on time.)
Then it got worse- we sat on the tarmac about an hour after boarding so landed in Toronto about a half hour before our flight to Minneapolis was taking off. Matthew and Kari had driven 2 cars down to the city so we would drive one back when we arrived at 3:30- They would stay for her family's Christmas celbration. So when I called they were nearly there, driving thorough snow- and my news was that we were flying into Winnipeg, Garry had convinced Air Canada since the next flight to Minneapolis was leaving at 8:30 pm, we should get to go home sooner- it only took about 10 different counters to find someone to do it. We left Toronto at 6 on a full plane(just missed getting tickets for the one at 4 with all the running around), and Noah picked us up at the airport in Winnipeg in Josh's truck. Garry was home in bed befoe we would have landed in Minnesota with 6-7 hours to drive to St Labre. So except for Matt and kari taking two cars to Minneapolis, for nothing......all's well that ends well.





Wednesday, December 8, 2010

a different view







Yesterday I wrote about how excited I am to be heading home to Manitoba Thursday morning. So today I wll mention that Garry, while excited to see the kids and grandkid, is a little reluctant to leave his little farm here in Ukraine. Two cows are looking like they will calve soon, more are due this month (two on his birthday, the 22nd)--- and so much could go wrong while he is not here to keep a watchful eye on those calving and recently fresh cows! The 17 cows milking had 276 liters in the last 24 hours- almost a 16 liter per cow average-they keep giving more(we are making about as much milk as in September when They first came, and there were 30 cows milking- amazing what good feed will do.)
That is why we are sending off our visa applications as soon as possible after landing- Garry wants to come back on the 27th of December if possible. The plan is that the boys and I will follow mid- January.


Anyway the grain finally arrived this morning- of course the ground was not frozen as Garry had hoped- remember I said it was warm at 2 am? - it's plus 9 C today, and the yard in front of the barn is a muddy mess. The driver could not back up the way Garry had hoped so they had to cut a "grain spout" door in the front of the barn so the compicorn could get blown into the bin- Maxim welded together a framework for a door to close the opening which they are putting up this afternoon before we leave. That's Maxim in the orange coveralls in the haymow door in the photo- the trucker is on top of the truck (Garry took that photo) Garry is happy the four ton of grain fit in the bin with room to spare (and the ceiling stayed up- I was teasing him it would collapse under all that weight.)


Garry was busy stapling plastic over the straw bales that are stacked against the wall in front of the cows and the end wall that faces north- except where the barnyard door is. Think of it as another layer of insulation- they are using the plastic that has been cut off the silage pile- white side to the inside of the barn. It should help keep the barn warmer when the cold air and snow comes back to Ukraine!


Hopefully Garry can enjoy his time at home while Maxim and the milker ladies and Victor take care of things for a few weeks. He has finished everything he wanted to.

I'm so excited







that apparently I can't sleep it's 1:20 am and I have been in bed for three hours trying to fall asleep unsucessfully in spite of the fact that the suitcases are packed, the last load of laundry is drying on the rack, the boys cleaned up their room, and dissected the cow eye for biology- it comes up for module#9 -we just finished 7 and plan to get three done while we are in Canada- after getting it into Ukraine in my luggage in September- it was a nice scientific preserved specimen I ordered from a homeschooling supply company- I was not bringing it back home again! As you can see Seth read the directions while Jonah did the cutting- when they do a microscope experiment, Jonah reads and Seth finds and they take turns drawing the required pictures (Seth's drawing, like his writing is neater than his brother's- Jonah has the disadvantage of being a lefty.)



Garry and I had an uneventful trip into the city later this afternoon, we went to one of Tanya Yatsenko's English classes- to listen to their presentations about Kiev. We now know what to see there if we ever get someplace other than the airport (which is acually in Borispol) and the train station! The students (older teens in photo) did a pretty good job, but they did have much of the same information to recite- except the final presenter- a guy who talked about the history of the football (soccer) team. I know a lot of info about culture, churches and the founding of Kiev- generally thought to be by three brothers, their sister- there is a monument in Kiev- which is named after the oldest brother.



We dropped by Victor first for tea and I took a picture of his new entry Garry helped build the day of the "car fire." When we got home it was cold in the house (except the boys rooms- the pipe was very hot there), the water was not pumping through the system properly- Garry added water, but it does not seem to have solved the problem yet. It's not that cold now, but it seemed warm outside when I tossed Mooshka out- I had missed doing it earlier- the reason she came to live in the village was she does not understand the use of litter pans. I then discovered that the door is unlocked and the key is missing - there were 2 keys but I haven't seen the other one in weeks. So now I have something to do in the morning- hunt for the keys if I ever get to sleep.



Garry's truck of ground grain is supposed to come then- after it didn't come today again- he says now he knows to order it a week before he wants it. They are getting extra brewers' grain and putting it in a pile as the beer factory is closing for a couple weeks on the 16th- no product- no by-product! They are feeding a lot of it to stretch the hay supply out - they hope to buy more hay in January.



The brewers grain has definitely helped production- the ladies are milking only 17 cows now with over 250 liters of milk a day. The ladies dried off four more cows yesterday(they must have given about 2 liter a day each- hardly worth washing them off). The guys are feeding the dry cows that old hay they harvested in November- along with a bit of corn silage and brewers grain. Maxim decided to mix the drycow feed together so they eat it as they were gobbling the "good stuff" and not eating the hay -so they are getting a hand-mixed TMR.



So its 2:30- guess I'll upload a couple pictures for you- let you know when we get to Canada- well maybe Friday. 3:20---I am going to get some sleep- i promise!

Monday, December 6, 2010

The real team meeting







Last night I actually did some more cooking for today. We left home around 9 am this morning with Maxim, first we went to Nadeeya- one village to the right on the highway to give the trucker for the brewers' grain money to get another load. Then we headed toward Dnepro with a detour to Salonya to drop Maxim off at the mill where the "compicorn" would be ground. All the time we were driving I was balancing this cake on my lap in the front seat, while Seth held the tree and Jonah the taco layer dip on his lap.



We try to get together- the efccm missionaries in Dnepro (and us) about once a month for team meeting- Novemeber was so busy we never got together, so we decided to have one for sure before we left for Canada this week. So this week Saturday Marina N, native Ukraianian missionary and part of our team is getting married to Zenya, who was a student at English Summer Institute two summers ago- last January when we booked our tickets with return date of this Thursday they were not even dating so we are missing the wedding.



Anyway the rest of the team decided to surprize Marina (and Zenya) with a -its all about you- pre-wedding party at team meeting. Marina did not even catch on to the theme for about 5 minutes until she noticed that all the tree ornaments on the tree in front of her were hearts! Zenya came in a few minutes later, and we had a good time- Orben and Trish had even gotten good wishes via email from some former team members. We had a special prayer time for them to ask God to bless their new life together (and to pray for safety on the honeymoon- they are going to Sharm-El Sheik in Egypt where the shark attacks took place in the last week!)



We always have a meal together, normally Trish Bellamy has us bring stuff for a shared lunch since we meet at their house most months and today we had lots of goodies- Olya had made little shells -some shaped like hearts with delicious fillings- like shrimp, or egg. I made a heart-shaped cake last night after our company left.



Afterwards Seth spent more than an hour in the chair at the dentist- all new braces and now he has rubberbands to stick on at night- no face mask like Jonah, but now he will be more sympathic to his brother I think.



We hurried home after the dentist- once we got out of the downtown traffic- so Garry would be there when the grain truck came. Turned out the compicorn will be delivered until Tuesday- Maxim came back by marshuska around noon. Wednesday we leave for Kiev so Tuesday will be packing and dissecting a cow eye for biology class for the the boys.

Sunday tour





























Last Sunday Garry invited the whole church out to see the barn and lunch. Twenty people signed up right away, but by Thursday 42 were coming. We ended up with Victor's van, a marschuka (hired van) and a couple of cars driving out after the service (and communion- it was the first Sunday of the month.) We left ahead of them so I could set out all the salads and sandwiches and squares I've been making since Thursday evening. Yes -that's why I haven't posted in a couple days- been cooking like crazy.







Anyway- they arrived (I'm not really sure how many came but there must have been at least 10 kids), checked out the barn, the house, had lunch (around 2 pm) - there was some food left- so I made enough, I gave out recipes for brownies and pickled carrots. I got many thank yous and ochin koosnees ( very tasty- I learned it from Maxim) Garry says that he was told he was a lucky man with a wife who can cook like this.
Unfortunately it was muddy outside- It was 10 above (like 50ish F for Americans) on Saturday, the snow melted and even though the forecast had called for around freezing for Sunday it was foggy and warm- so mud, instead of the frozen ground Garry had hoped for! The milker ladies did extra cleanup in the barn for the visitors.




Seth was my photographer and got some of the children playing hide and seek in the haymow, and all these other pictures you can see. Moosha's former owners- Tanya and Olya came and enjoyed seeing their cat in her new home and her kitten. The kids really enjoyed playing with the kittens, and even tried playing hide and seek in the house!







The vans left around 4:30 and every empty pop bottle in the house left full of milk Garry sold to our visitors- I even put some of the ice tea I had made for drinking into other containers! The milker ladies even found some at their house. Most of the cleanup was throw away paper plates and cups with a few bowls to wash- the puppy got a big plate of stuff, and put the leftovers in the fridge- after Maxim finally got got to eat- he was so busy talking to people in the barn he never got in until they left.

Sunday, December 5, 2010

The feed bin is finished!







Garry and Maxim finished the feed bin on Friday- they used the loader to pick up the chute as planned, and got it fastened to the ceiling with some lag bolts. Maxim worked on making the valve to turn it on and off so they can fill the wheelbarrows with ground grain- or compicorn as its known here. While he did that Garry cut the hole in the bottom of the bin (as in photo- Garry took these pictures for you) that they had lined with steel the morning before.



Garry noticed that the steel on the bottom of the bin was showing a little rust already while he was working inside it. The roof of the barn has a vent at the peak. The moist air coming up from the cows in the stable forms condensation on the inside of the barn roof, which freezes and then with the warm sun hitting it in the morning- it rains down. Not a huge amount of water, but enough to make the steel start to change after a day! The guys rigged up a roof over the bin with boards and some used plastic off the silage pile, which should keep most of the "rain" out of the bin. Not just the steel to worry about- wet grain will spoil too.



The main reason that Garry decided to build a feed bin before going home is- the mice have chewed so many holes in the bags of grain that they put downstairs that the guys have to run over to the steel barrel that they have been feeding out of as grain pours out everywhere. So this steel-lined bin will keep the mice looking for dinner from eating the grain. It will save the step of shoveling grain into the wheel barrel as it will fall neatly into it from the chute- then all the guys have to do is feed it to the cows.



We are going to get a delivery of grain that we bought from the lady a week or so ago, ground and delivered from the mill where it is stored, Maxim is going to go watch them do it on Monday so we don't get cheated (it's a Ukrainian thing- it seems no one is trustworthy in the former Soviet Union, because that is how things were always done.) I think that there is some beam reinforcing to do yet in the morning on Monday.



Milk production is up, even though cows are going dry- Friday afternoon to Saturday morning the cows had 260 liters I think- the most since November 11th according to Garry. Sunday morning (they give the most in the morning since it is 9 hours since evening milking, the other two milkings are 7 hours apart) they had 111 liters- averaging about 13 liters a cow. The fresh cow is milking good already, and drying off a couple cows that are giving a few liters a day is sure to help the average! She is Luba's cow to milk, and has gotten her cows' production up the the same level as Yana's now (the ladies have certain cows that each one milks, and are paid according to how much milk their cows give- this is the way they were paid at the other farm.) So that is a good thing, and hopefully they have the same number of cows freshening this month, so one lady is not making a lot more money than the other.
In the morning I'll post about what has been keeping me too busy to write this weekend, I need to sleep.

Thursday, December 2, 2010

It's beginning to look a lot like....







It is beginning to look a lot like... Christmas....December 2nd and we woke up to snow outside this morning- a blanket of white covering the ground. Garry says it was cold outside feeding the cows this morning- he had me put warm gloves on the “what we need to bring back from Canada list”. They fork the corn silage into the bucket of the loader from the pile outside twice a day, they tried using the bucket to scoop it the first day, but got too much dirt in it.
It has been about -7 C all day, with a cold wind blowing. The snow made Seth decide that Polo could come in the house for the day- even though it was as cold or even colder yesterday. Jonah did decide to wear his shoes for their daily walk to the store to buy bread (and chocolate bars- too cold for their usual ice cream treats) he has been wearing his sandals until today. They even found hats and gloves to put on.
Garry bought a string of Christmas lights for indoor use, we have no tree for them, it looked like lots of work to put them up on the beams, so we ended up hanging them on the old hay rake (made by Victor’s father) that hangs on the living room wall. There are eight settings, so they blink or fade at various rates.
Today Victor brought Pastor Andrei (from our church in Dnepropetroesk) and his wife (they were married in August) out for dinner at one o’clock- and they arrived at 1:05- surprising me as I was just finishing the corn chowder (Victor normally runs behind schedule). The salads and taco casserole were already done for the second course, so I phoned Garry as he and Maxim were hard at work in the barn all morning. They were working on the feed bin and the straw wall.
Around three o’clock we finished talking (and tea) and they headed outside for a tour of the barn. I got a photo of them in the milkhouse as Victor was filling up a jug of milk for them to bring home. We are having people from the church out for lunch and a tour after church on Sunday- apparently the sign up list has grown from 20 to 40 people coming now (unless the weather keeps some home.)


Garry and I were planning to go to Marina’s tonight for a Christmas party- there will be students from Summer Institute there as Thursday is her English discussion group that they are invited to at the end of Institute each year. Unfortunately when we got into the car at 5:30 to leave it was drizzling- freezing rain. Garry got some water to clean off the windshield, but it was completely iced over from the rain falling before we even drove through the village. So we decided to turn around and stay home. Better not to chance driving on icy roads, and wrecking the car. The temperature outside still reads -6 but Garry says the wind is blowing out of the south tonight instead of the north like it was this morning. It is supposed to be 8 above on the weekend, so the warm air must be on its way.

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Making the barn warmer...





























So this morning it was 3 C (0 is freezing for non-metric Americans- don't worry more than twenty years and I'm still thinking in F) according to the thermometer Garry hung up inside the middle of the barn last night. It was 10 below zero outside and didn't change much all day, it got up to -7 and the puddles stayed firmly frozen- you can see them in the picture of the tractor by the barn.



The waterbowls were frozen at the ends of the barn this morning- but were thawed out by pouring in some hot water with no problems, since Garry turned off the water last night. An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure (does that saying have a metric version now, I wonder?) Garry went to work moving bales around to block air coming into the stable from the haymow- either the cracks in the floor, mostly the large spaces between the outside of the building and the ceiling of the stable/floor of the haymow as you can see in the photo looking up at the ceiling in the barn. Garry had moved some bales around to make a path when he was supposed to get the other straw bales,(which she may be willing to sell in the spring) so he had to put them back to cover the floor. Tonight he was wondering why his wrists were sore- they were scratched up from the straw, of course.

Maxim went to Zaporosia with the milker ladies this morning- since it's December first it was payday for Yana and Luba. He got back at 12:30, just as we were sitting down to dinner. After dinner they went back to work outside, I washed out the kitchen door mat and hung it outside- you can see the icicles hanging off it a couple hours later when I went outside to take pictures around 4 pm.

Victor had arrived by then with the steel for the feed bin. He and Garry were working in the haymow, they got one side piece on- you can see Garry (and his reflection) screwing in on in the photo. I climbed up the ladder and over the bales to get a picture of it- it's a simple design, basically a big box upstairs, then there will be chute to open downstairs to get the ground grain out. Garry hopes to finish it Thursday.
Maxim was working on the bale insulation wall downstairs by the cows (he's tying them into a string framework so they don't fall)- apparently the ducks think its safer on the other side of the barn now, as they were next to the ladder when I climbed up. When we climbed down around 4:30 the temperature was -4 in the barn, Garry climbed into the tractor to get the corn silage inside to feed the cows.
The good news is that the cold prevention measures must be working- Garry went out at 9 to check on things and he said it was 7 in the barn. It was -7 outside and the wind is blowing again. It would help if he is able to refill the far side with more loose hay- it's about a third gone now. Garry wanted to refill it before we left with that lower quality first-cut hay to feed the cows while we are gone to Canada, but the man he bought the hay from has not decided whether to sell us more now. It's a little cool in our bedroom tonight, better find some caulk for the window before we leave (heading to Kiev in one week for the flight to our Christmas holidays with the family!)