Thursday, November 16, 2017

September to the beginning of November

We started out September with intentions to slaughter a steer (named September, LOL) for Eid ul Adha. Those plans changed when we couldn't catch him within the days of tashreeq. We slaughtered a lamb instead and put 61 lbs of meat in our freezer, al hamdulillah.

We finally lassoed September sixteen days later and embarked on the slaughtering, aging, and butchering of the largest animal we'd ever dealt with. Considering  he was quite small, only weighing around 1,000 lbs (453.6 kg), it was a practice run for when we slaughter Youngbul next year, when he will weigh around 2,000 lbs (907 kg), insha'Allah. Al hamdulillah, we managed it and filled our 14 cubic foot freezer with around 500 lbs (226.8 kg) of our own organic, grass-fed, zabiha beef.


It was also a month of gradual harvesting, bringing in quantities of tomatoes, hot peppers, zucchini, cucumbers, melons, corn, etc. We made batches of green tomato chutney, tomato and chili jam, sweet relish, sauerkraut, dill pickles, sun dried tomatoes, strawberry jam, and more. Al hamdulillahi Rabbil aal ameen.

Preserving also extended to our dairy, as we had up to a gallon of raw cream each day. We shook it into butter, froze some, and made jars and jars of clarified butter and ghee for shelf stable storage. We also rendered tallow and suet from the lamb and steer we slaughtered, al hamdulillah.

Early October brought freezing weather, so we gathered up our little pumpkins, dug up our peanuts, and started harvesting our potatoes. Garlic was planted out and most of the garden was cleaned up and prepped for a long winter's rest.

By the end of October we finished replacing the nine old windows in our mobile home with new thermal pane ones. This has made a huge difference to the insulation of our home, alhamdulillah.


We added two more solar panels to our array to beef up the system prior to winter. We now have 500 watts serving our main battery bank, powering our freezer, fridge, and other general needs. We have 200 watts powering our living room battery bank, which is only used for charging phones, powering computers and lights, etc. We also moved the bank of panels out 100 ft (30.48 m) to an area in the garden to enable them to get uninterrupted sunlight all day, all seasons.


Early November we brought Daisy and Azalea back over to the animal corral. This makes milking much faster in the  colder months and they have a barn for shelter in harsh weather. We also bought a new ram, who we've named Cyril the Magnificent, to service our four ewes.


We had a special order to bake a cake for a wedding celebration - a triple layered vanilla cake with vanilla buttercream and strawberries. Al hamdulillah, it was enjoyed by all and we received a lovely thank you note.



Stay tuned for an upcoming comparison between us and other homesteaders out there...

Thursday, November 9, 2017

Off-Grid Lighting

When we lived on the grid, we used to conserve energy by switching off the lights in the rooms we weren't occupying. Now we have lights on all over the house and farm all night long. Energy hog off-gridders?  No way, masha'Allah! 

We bought four 12 packs of outdoor solar lights ($9.97, Walmart) and two packs of screw-in hooks and light up our home from dusk to dawn. We have placed them throughout the house, so if anyone gets up at night they can see to walk around. It is soft lighting, so a couple in each bedroom serve as non-invasive night lights. To light up our whole home cost about $45 in solar lights and hooks. We simply put out the lights to charge each morning and bring them in before sunset.



We also have solar lights positioned on the main out buildings on the farm, along the driveway from the gate to the house, and other key locations. We even bought some solar motion detector alarms for the corners of our garden area that are still going strong over 4 years later masha'Allah.

We have a few solar charged LED lightbulbs that we use for bright light in the kitchen, living room, and bathroom. What happens if we have a couple of very cloudy days and they don't charge well? We have a couple of standing lamps which we plug into our inverter (running from the solar charged battery bank) for bright light.

No lighting bills, no continual expense for candles or oil for lamps, just light from the light Allah sends. Al hamdulillah!