Homestead 73

Homestead 73 Homestead 73 — raising longhorns, commercial & dairy sheep, meat rabbits & chickens, while growing food from the soil up.🤍

Electric fencing or permanent fencing? We prefer permanent fencing for our flocks. Both our dairy and commercial flock a...
05/31/2026

Electric fencing or permanent fencing?

We prefer permanent fencing for our flocks. Both our dairy and commercial flock are kept in woven wire pastures, and there are a few reasons why. No one asked, but I’ll share why.

First, when we bought this property it had been abandoned for years, and the previous owners apparently loved electro net fencing for their goats. Untangling hundreds of feet of netting that had become one with the weeds and brush was literal misery. I still have PTSD.

Second, I don’t have the patience to trim the grass around fence lines to prevent it from shorting out the netting.

And third, I don’t want to worry about batteries. If a battery dies, sheep have a solid way of figuring that out before you do. I refuse to spend time chasing sheep because a fence lost power.

With permanent fencing, we simply rotate between established pastures. No moving netting, no setting up new fence lines, no battery checks. Everything is already in place and ready to go.

Plenty of people successfully use electro netting. I am not one of them.

What’s your preference?

Someone told me they wouldn’t buy our sheep milk because they can get a gallon of cow milk down the road for cheaper. Co...
05/30/2026

Someone told me they wouldn’t buy our sheep milk because they can get a gallon of cow milk down the road for cheaper.

Cool. They’re not wrong. Please support that local dairy farmer.

BUT let’s not pretend we’re comparing apples to apples. Not all milk is created equally.

A dairy cow produces 5-7 times more milk than my sheep. Sheep milk is higher in butterfat, protein, and total solids. Different animals, different product, different everything.

Telling a sheep milk producer that cow’s milk is cheaper isn’t the “gotcha” that some people think it is.

As a first freshener, I can’t judge Hetty too harshly yet - she’s still growing into her udder and has plenty of time to...
05/30/2026

As a first freshener, I can’t judge Hetty too harshly yet - she’s still growing into her udder and has plenty of time to mature.

She already has a beautiful medial line and strong attachment support. Her teat size is a little smaller than I’d like to see in a dairy ewe, though.

The ram she’ll be paired with this fall comes from lines of beautiful udders, easy to milk teats, and impressive production numbers. My goal is to combine Hetty’s yield and structure with improved teat size in her offspring.

Breeding should be intentional and goal oriented. It’s the difference between a lamb crop that moves your flock forward or one that wastes resources.

Your ram is half your flock. Invest and choose wisely, friends!

PS this is after her milking. Not before.

05/30/2026

Want a higher yield from your ewes? Try this and thank me later.

Store-bought could never.
05/28/2026

Store-bought could never.

Disease testing. It can be a hot topic in the sheep community. My take is that if we’re willing to invest time, money, a...
05/28/2026

Disease testing. It can be a hot topic in the sheep community.

My take is that if we’re willing to invest time, money, and emotional attachment, we should protect and care for them responsibly. Which means testing them and any new stock that we may bring.

“We keep a closed flock” means nothing if they are carrying highly contagious, chronic, and fatal bacteria.

Some diseases sit for a while before showing symptoms. By the time you notice the weight loss, decreased production, respiratory issues, lethargy, neurological problems, etc. it may already be rooted in your flock. Jump scare.

For dairy sheep especially, disease testing matters because:

• We are consuming their milk
• Lambs are often sold for breeding
• One positive animal can impact the entire flock

If you’re wondering where to start, test for OPP, Johne’s disease, and CL.

Healthy looking animals are great. Disease free are better.

The more I learn about traditional foods and processes, the more I realize how much knowledge has been lost between conv...
05/27/2026

The more I learn about traditional foods and processes, the more I realize how much knowledge has been lost between convenience and mass production.

Real food actually DOES things. It isn’t sterile, dead, or lacking nutrients. For example, clabber. Clabber is NOT spoiled milk. Spoiled milk putrefies. Clabber cultures. Big difference.

My clabber journey has made me curious. What is an old fashioned food skill that you didn’t grow up with but is now a regular part of your routine?

Yesterdays schedule before 11 am:• Ram escaped •I briefly hid in a trailer• Neighbors joined the emergency response team...
05/27/2026

Yesterdays schedule before 11 am:

• Ram escaped
•I briefly hid in a trailer
• Neighbors joined the emergency response team
• My desire to cull him intensified beyond measure

Three girls went in for ultrasounds and all three are confirmed bred! One set of twins and singles for the first freshen...
05/27/2026

Three girls went in for ultrasounds and all three are confirmed bred! One set of twins and singles for the first fresheners.

Staggered breeding for year round milk sounded like a good idea at the time. Will circle back in a few months.

My favorite part about plant recommended spacing is not following it at all.
05/26/2026

My favorite part about plant recommended spacing is not following it at all.

Address

3033 Highway 73
Buffalo, MO
65622

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Friday 9am - 8pm
Saturday 9am - 8pm
Sunday 9am - 8pm

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+14175430770

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