Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Happy Halloween!!!





Franken-Bandit (our preemie calf with one eye) and Jack-O-Oreo (our Nigerian Dwarf goat) wants to wish everyone a Happy Halloween! Please be safe!!

Thursday, September 13, 2007

Channel 3 Moos



What a fun Tuesday morning! Channel 3 and Dan Davis came and spent the morning doing the weather on the farm and promoting the Rural Route Festival which is this Saturday the 15th! Sam Bush, one of the girls who takes horse lessons on the farm, stole the show as she talks about the milk bar. Thank you to all of our horse lesson girls for coming out that morning and struttin your stuff on your horses and to their families. Also Thank You to Kokobelli's for bringing out the awesome bagels and coffee! And as always, we couldn't do most of the things we do without the help from Jenna Davi and Ethan Brody, Highland High School students, who are so dedicated to Superstition Farm! Thanks Everyone! We still have some tickets available to the Film Festival, so if you haven't got them yet....please go to our website and pick them up!

Thursday, September 6, 2007

Films on Farm!

We are preparing for the first event of the new season. It is the Rural Route Film Festival. "No Festival Required" is leaving their usual digs in DownTown Phoenix to try something new. We love the arts here on the farm and hope our neighbors and community respond for events like this. Looks like Channel 3 agrees! Brad Perry is scheduled to come out on Sept 11! He has allergies and hay fever - so wish us luck! Tune in and see what we have in store!

FOR RELEASE WEEK OF SEPTEMBER 9 2007

No Festival Required and Superstition Farm presents

“Selections from The Rural Route Film Festival”
Saturday, September 15 2007
$10. Admission barn opens at 7 pm show at 8 pm hayrides until ?
Hayrides Antique Tractor Petting Zoo and Indie Cinema
Dairy Products Drinks and Snacks For Sale
Superstition Farms 3440 S. Hawes Rd. Mesa AZ 85212
Website http://SuperstitionFarm.com
Film Info-http://www.nofestivalrequired.com
Films have adult content and are suggested for mature audience only

The Rural Route Film Festival was created to highlight works that deal with rural people and places. The creators of Rural Route Film Festival leave it up to the film and video artists to explain their own definition of "rural." Great shorts, high-quality works from all over the world are submitted and carefully selected for this show.

Subjects include a threatened cooperative farm in downtown Los Angeles, Canadian small-town zombies, a stirring mockumentary of the unsung mimes of the prairies, and understanding fast talking auctioneers and their role in the vanishing family farm.

The film screens in a wonderful setting-The Superstition Farm, a family dairy farm with over 1,000 dairy cattle. The admission includes hayrides, dairy nighttime tour, a petting zoo and an antique tractor display. With cows lowing in the background, enjoy quality independent cinema on hay-bale seating in an outdoor air-cooled barn!

Come early for the sunset milk toast!
A Night To Remember!

so check out filmsonfarms.com and get you and your friends a ticket - limited seating!

Tuesday, July 10, 2007

Bird Bras???




So I went out this morning to let the chickens, turkey and ducks out of their coop and I was so worried because the coop was FULL of feathers! I thought something got into the coop during the night and attacked one of our precious birds!! But I guess its that time of year where they all start molting! Oh NO! It starts in their breast area as you can see on Sugar. Luckily she still thinks that she is beautiful! Does anyone know where we can get bras for our naked breasted ladies? Interesting molting facts.....

Birds must spend a great deal of time caring for their feathers, since their lives depend on them. Preening, bathing, dusting, and other feather care operations, however, cannot prevent the feathers from wearing out. Because formed feathers (like our fingernails) are lifeless, horny structures, incapable of being repaired, worn feathers must be replaced. This process of replacement is termed molting. The old, worn feathers are loosened in their follicles (sockets) by the growth of new intruding feathers, which eventually push them out. Molting occurs in regular patterns over a bird's body. The adaptiveness of such patterns can be illustrated by the arboreal woodpeckers, which retain the key inner pair of long tail feathers used in bracing and climbing until the outer feathers have been replaced. This is the reverse of the pattern found in most birds, which molt tail feathers from the center of the tail first, and then progressively toward each side. The majority of adult birds molt once or twice a year, and the temporal pattern, not unexpectedly, is related to the wear rate on the feathers. Feathers of species that migrate enormous distances or live in thick brush, dodging among twigs and spines, wear more rapidly than those of birds resident in one place or live in open country. The former tend to molt twice a year, and the latter only once.

Monday, June 25, 2007

New Friends to Our Family!




Even though we had a really sad week and lost some of our feathered friends...we gained a couple more to add to our family! Dana, our horse camp instructor, brought over her little pygmy goat and her super cute donkey, Picante. My brother saved three lives on teh dairy by helping a momma holstein cow deliver her twins! That's right...she had a male and a female, one is black and white and the other is brown and white!

Friday, June 22, 2007

Losing Parts of Our Family


This has been a very sad week for us here on the farm. We have lost a lot of our animals who we loved so much. We had nine of the cutest and sweetest baby ducks....we found four of them dead in our yard and three of them we never found. We now have two left. We believe this was from a dog that strayed onto the farm. A few days later I noticed two of the three roosters were missing along with one of our adult ducks. We have not a clue what happened to these three. Last night we lost one of our beautiful Buff Orpington hens. She was acting "depressed" yesterday so we brought her into the house and my brother gave her penicillin. The poor girl didnt last through the night. All we can hope is that we gave these animals the best life that they could possibly have. We miss them all very much.