Such an exciting season around the wee homestead! Weβve got mostly happy snaps and cute vids to share this postβgrowing piglets and bees and veggiesβyippie!
Iβll save the unsavory stuff til the very end, that way those who must can just skip it. (Mighty generous of me, eh? π)
Letβs begin with a bumper crop of piglets, 11 of them, here trying to figure out the basics. This is just one day old, my arenβt they some quick learners!
Later we have a couple more from today, at one week old.
Sheβs been an excellent mama, Patty, this is her 2nd litter.
The garden is going strong already and this is definitely the earliest Iβve seen bumble bees out and about. March 15 is our average last frost date around here, for whatever thatβs worth. Considering weβve seen snow-covered Indian paintbrush before, we donβt put a lot of stock in that date.
If we donβt get a late frost this year it will be our earliest ever for summer planting. Iβve already got cucumbers in! The tomatoes are just about to go in and the peas are presenting perfectly.



On left in the basket is celeriac, another fav of mine I try ever year, but like the fava beans and peas, it all depends on the temperatures if weβll see a harvest. Next to them are tomatoes started under lights indoors and hardening now before planting in a day or two. Iβll plant some indeterminate varieties in about a month, hoping theyβll last longer through the heat. On right, the onions and garlic are looking great.
The old pears have already flowered over a week ago, here you can see Papa Chop napping while surely enjoying their sweet scent wafting on the breeze. Along with the bees!



On the right you can see me filling up the new hive with bees that over-wintered in the nuc where they positioned themselves last spring.


This was such a memorable experience last year that we managed to catch a bit of on vidβwell worth the watch as the colony we just captured as a swarm moves from the hive I tried to put it in into the nuc Iβd placed as a bait hive, moving themselves within just a few hours from one side of the garden to the other.
This was the swarm last spring. It was just a small one and I guess they just didnβt feel quite ready yet for the big hive I tried to place them in.


Thank you maβam, but we prefer it over here!
Well, this time they were a little more receptive to my preference and they are in their expanded home doing fine. π€

The piglets are so cute itβs hard not to take multiple vids watching them. I donβt edit yet, but maybe someday Iβll venture into more serious farmish filming.
And another β¦.
But, itβs not all peaches and rainbows for the piglets. Because you know, βmale privilegeβ. Last year Hubby learned to castrate, which is an absolutely necessary skill if youβre serious about raising pigs. He did the deed, heβs gotten rather quick and good at it, so we made a couple of vids this time. Hereβs the intro.
Iβll refrain from posting an example of the dirty deed though, which I could barely film! Yes, I admit one of my many bad qualities is squeamishness. But in my defense, I know many others way more squeamish than me!
If you really want to see it, youβll have to send me an email. Donβt worry, I wonβt judge. π
And in other bad news, yes, they still spray our beautiful days away. π©


Still, itβs a beautiful life, and while we may complain, we know how to appreciate it all, too.
When all else fails, learn from Bubba.

Let me test that out for ya.β ~So Says Bubba
Thanks for stopping by, wishing yβall a glorious spring!


Awwww, they’re cute when they’re small like that. π
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Looks like you do everything humanely possible to make quick work castrating the piglets. I know I couldn’t do it. Major squeamishness. Too bad doctors didn’t do that when they were circumcising baby boys & insisting that the babies didn’t feel anything because they were too young.
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Love your updates. Cute piggies and love the bees. Glad you didn’t film castration. Yikes.
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My question is, how is getting them to wear earmuffs going to get them to stop squealing?
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Itβs like swaddling a baby. A baby will feel safe and content when wrapped. Same with the piglets, the pressure of the ear muffs on their head has a calming effect. ππ€£π
But sometimes it doesnβt work, so I have a second pair for me, darn little buggers are louder than a ported chainsaw running wide open without a muffler.
HANDY HUBBY
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I’ve castrated sheep, but never pigs. We ended up with many more piggies than we wanted.
Docking the tails is much easier. LoL
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Cute little piggies π· π
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