Monday, December 30, 2013

A General Overview of the Dairy-Good Life

So, what does a milkmaid do all day? Well, this blog is dedicated just to that very thing, at least a general idea of how I spend my day, anyway.

It all begins nice and early in the morning. I try to wake up at 6 a.m. every morning, I am not going to lie, that does not always happen. Especially in the winters when it is cold and dark, no thank you! Now, this is different on all farms, I know of numerous dairy farms that are sometimes almost done milking when I am just getting up, but we are a small dairy and we have a little more room to be flexible. Plus, our milk isn’t picked up by the milkman until noonish. There are mornings when I wake up at 5 a.m. and that is Sunday or when we have somewhere we have to be in the morning.

I feel lazy compared to some dairy farmers,
but I love my sleep!

Sundays are a special day on our farm. We still believe that Sundays are a day of rest as the Bible says. We milk our cows and feed them of course, but we don’t work on tractors, no planting, no harvest… EVER. Sundays we milk early so we are done in time to attend church and spend the day thanking our Lord for the wonderful life He gave us. Yay, a few hours of free time away from the farm. (It is the only day we can classify as a day off!)

A.J. and Lucy goose hunting on a
Sunday afternoon

That is what I wish it was always like, but being the dedicated farmers we are, sometimes duty calls and we have to be with a cow going into labor or need to grind feed.

Our Holstein Themed feed bin that has to be
filled every 5-6 milkings

Once I get to the farm, I wash the jars with a sanitize solution to make sure that all the detergent, acid and any other foreign material is cleaned out of the system before milking. Then I set up the milk system, go into the parlor open the doors, move the switches on the collect jars, so the milk flows properly, and let down the feed into the feeders. Then it is milking time and I am off to get the ladies!

This shows our collection jar and bulk tank, along with the
washing sinks.

My lovely Moo Ladies!


We currently milk 64 cows (we are small, small, small compared to many!) If I milk by myself it will take me almost 2 hours but if I have help for most of the time it will only take 1 ½ hours. Sometimes it still takes 2 hours because we like to have fun in the barn. Fun to us is making jokes, listening to music or talking about more serious things going on around the farm or in life in general. Sometimes, we are lucky and have visitors so that cuts into milking time, too.  Our barn is a double-six herringbone parlor and we only have 6 units so we move side to side. (Look for a future blog of all the different types of milk barns).

This shows the right side of the barn, you can see the collection
jars, units, feeding bunk and a little of the feeders.

After milking is complete, it is clean up time and feeding time.  The jars must be cleaned with a detergent and then an acid rinse. My dad usually feeds the cows their silage and I will take a bale of hay out to them. Then it is one of my favorite times of all, cleaning the barn. Now I am not joking when I say this. It is fun to me I guess because I am a neat clean freak. I wash the milking parlor getting rid of any manure or filth that needs to be gone. Along with washing the floors, I scrub the equipment and walls. Then it is nice and shiny clean! Next, the holding pen and the barn get cleaned. We scrape those with the skid loader, believe me, it is a lot easier! The cows usually go out to the pasture during this time.

Dirty Holding Pen

Clean (well cleaner) Holding Pen

By time, all the cleaning is done and finished it is lunch time. After lunch, my afternoon usually is different every day. Sometimes, you may find me in the field spreading fertilizer, running to town for parts, swathing hay or being the taxi cab. I go wherever the guys need me to go or fill in. And then there are the really nice days… where my dad lets me stay home. I love love love those days. I usually nap, do household chores, bake or read a good book. The guys usually get pretty jealous that I get the afternoons off but they can get over it! However, sometimes those days are cut short because the cows need bedded down, calves need taken care of or a cow is having a calf. Then before I know it is 4:30 and I am back to the farm to milk again and go home for the night afterwards! Unless something breaks, a cow needs assistance or one of the guys needs me to do something. Rule No. 1- Everything to do with farming all depends on the weather!

Lovely view of the beef cattle on the Milo stalks


Have a dairy-good day!



The Milkmaid

P.S. – This is only one of my daily dairy products- yum!



Thursday, December 12, 2013

Celebrating 125 years of our Family Farm!

This year has been a very exciting year for the Patterson family; we are celebrating 125 years of farming on our homestead. A few months ago, my mother and I decided we wanted to build a new sign for our farm. We came up with a design using our logo and I suggested that we put the year that our farm was founded. Well no one was really sure of the year so my dad went back to the original abstract and found out it was October 3, 1888. 

Sometimes, it is hard to believe that so many generations have put their heart and soul into making our farm into what it is today. We farm more land, own more cattle and feed more people and it all started because of our ancestors. Pretty cool, huh?

The guys combining a field of Soybeans down the road from the homestead.
Well we unfortunately figured out that it was 125 years after the date had already passed, but you better believe we will be celebrating the rest of year. The first thing we did was have family pictures on Thanksgiving to remember the occasion!

The Patterson Family
(It was a bit windy and cold that day, we were also missing a few smiling faces)
Family is extremely important to us. We cherish every moment we have with them. Plus, we have a lot of personal inside jokes that keep a tradition going during holidays.


The sixth generation farmers

It is nice to be able to spend time with family during the holidays and special occasions and put farming on the back burner for a few hours, but we do work every holiday and weekend. 365 days a year, 7 days a week and we are on call 24/7, it is a part of our lives and luckily we have a very understanding family!

From our family to yours, Merry Christmas!


The Milkmaid

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Blogs and Websites

For my second post, I thought I would share a little about myself and all the work I somehow get myself into. Well, if you read the about me section of this blog, it gives you a good general idea, but here is a few things I did not share.


I graduated from Kansas State University in December 2012 with a bachelor's degree in Agriculture. My major was Animal Sciences and I have a Meat Science Certificate.

I love Red & White Holstein Cattle. I currently only have 2, but I am slowly converting my dad to getting more! 
Annabel and I on a cold, rainy and very messy day before clean up.
We love each other!


My favorite color is BLUE!

Hubs and I have been married for a little over a year, it has been great so far and I look forward to many more! 
It was a beautiful, and not that hot of a day for August!

Lastly, since it is hunting season, Hubs got me into hunting and well I LOVE it! I wear too much camo these days...


Now, for all that stuff I said I get  myself into. Well I have spent the last two hours designing and setting up a website for our farm because we are starting to sell Westeel and Chief Grain Bins and other products. So, if you are interesting in a grain bin, I know just who to talk to! As for the website, it is still a work in progress and I will share the link later! Also, I need to be making a Facebook Page for the farm and spreading the love on social media. I have been trying to get some blog posts written too! 

Along with doing that, I have all that household chore stuff, a very attention-needy puppy, Lucy, and one hungry husband. Oh and I have cute little kittens that I love to play with and need milk! 

Oh, and I have 2 batches of cookies to make for holiday gifts to our customers but I will share a blog on that later (when it actually happens). I am exhausted, it is time for this milkmaid to go to bed and wake up for another day with my girls! (AKA- The Moo Moo Cows) 

Until next time!


The Milkmaid

Sunday, December 8, 2013

Jumping In!

Well friends, I did it. I am jumping in head first with the blogging world. A big thanks to my encouragers, my husband A.J. and my brother Josh. Josh came up with the title of my blog and I loved it, so why not! A lot of my friends blog and I love reading blogs, you can learn so much from them. Anyway, enough rambling. My blog is going to be dedicated to my life as well a milkmaid. I am a sixth generation farmer along with my brother. We work with our dad and grandpa and my husband has joined in the family farm. It is a true blessing. While my brother, Josh, and A.J. handle all the crops and beef cattle herd, I work closely with our dad on the dairy side of the operations. I am not sure how often a blog post will be up cause with farming you never know what will happen that day, but when one is up it will be about what is going on around our farm and sometimes maybe a little of our life at home. I hope if you find time to read this blog, you will enjoy it and maybe even learn a little!

Until next time,

The Milkmaid

P.S. Thanks for reading! Also, here is one of my favorite pictures from this fall harvest, the guys were combining soybeans.