Huge beef order comes in, better get yours soon

Empty shelves and shoppers
This is what it’s starting to look like in our freezers.

A few days ago I posted that we had plenty of beef for sale, and that we would most assuredly last through December with our supply. What’s that about the best laid schemes o’ mice an’ men?

Yesterday I received a telephone order for 500 pounds of beef! To put that in perspective, we only received 1500 pounds total from all four cows. Considering we’ve already sold a goodly bit of beef, and I know we have a large order still to fill, that’s a pretty dramatic swing to inventory. However, the order is from a friend who is in a bind and needs an emergency order so I’ve agreed to sell her the beef. We still have plenty to meet your needs, but my estimate for how much longer just shrank dramatically.

For those of you who already have some beef, please don’t forget to let me know what you think of it. SWMBO cooked some NY strips this weekend. I’m not a fan of strip steak, preferring ribeye as it’s more tender and flavorful but I have to say the strips were surprisingly good. As in I’m looking forward to having them again good. We cut our steaks 1.5″ (rather than 1″) this time and having that thick cut really seems to make for a more preferable steak. Because it’s so lean, grass-fed steak dries out quickly anyway. Add in a thinner cut and the heat reaches the center too quickly resulting in a dry steak. Of course, I’m a bit biased on how my steaks taste, but honestly, I’m my worst critic and these steaks are mighty fine.

Tilapia is worse for you than bacon?!

Tilapia
The offending critter.

What kind of headline is that? Implying there is something wrong with bacon and that gasp! Something could actually be worse than bacon?! I love bacon. Bacon is a physical manifestation of all that is right with the world. No matter what deviltry greet me each day, I know that bacon is going to be there for me each morning and will make me happy. Bacon never lets me down, unless I’m fool enough to run out of bacon which if getting closer every day. I need to process a pig on farm soon so I can smoke some more bacon. Mmmm, home smoked and cured bacon………

What was I talking about. I got lost in bacon. Oh yeah, tilapia. Here is a web post on tilapia and why it’s actually bad for you. It’s from the folks who brought us the book, Eat this, not that. I have one of their books around here somewhere and it was interesting back when I was learning nutrition and still drinking Cokes and eating cereal. Now, it’s not really applicable to my food choices.

A proper funeral for Benjamin M. Deniro

Today we celebrated the life of Benjamin Mucho Deniro, beloved father and husband. After only 7 short years of life, Benjamin passed from our lives after a short bout with pneumonia. Known as a gentle giant, Benjamin never had a harsh word or aggressive action towards anyone. Well, except that time I tried to get him to leave a huge pile of fresh food behind, but that was my fault.

Benjamin was truly a gentle soul who would eat directly from your hand. He often ate directly from small children’s hands when they came on tours and was always patient with them, as long as they kept the food coming.

Benjamin’s moo sounded a lot like Mike Tyson’s voice. It was hard to believe that wimpy sound came from something that could kill you by accident and not even realize he’d done it. However it was rare to hear Benjamin moo at all. He was always very quiet, no matter what was going on. It’s possible that being married to 14 women, he never had the chance to get a word in anyway.

Benjamin was a devoted and prolific husband. He looked after his many ladies and was always last to eat and last to leave the pasture making sure everyone was ahead of him. Also, Benjamin tended to amble or perhaps if he was feeling frisky, he might step it up to mosey. That may explain some of his trailing tendencies.

Benjamin was preceded in death by his wife Maggie, whom he killed with love. Benjamin is survived by his innumerable children and his 14 wives.

Dead bull and John Deere backhoe
Benjamin at the beginning of the service.

Ben was laid to rest after a short service in the shade of an oak tree overlooking his favorite pasture.

Cows and backhoe
Family and friends attending the funeral service of Benjamin M. Deniro

In lieu of flowers, the family asks that you please cook your wife a chicken dinner. Or pork, or some vegetables if you want. Just as long as it’s not beef for once (the opinions of the family do not necessarily reflect the opinions of management).

Cows and John Deere backhoe
It was a beautiful day and attendance at the funeral was strong

Hauss, a very distant relative, will be taking over the family business till Benjamin’s son Boyd comes of age. Hauss will be arriving this week and all inquires should be directed directly to him.

New WordPress theme for the website

Wordpress logo
The basis for our site, WordPress content management

Today I finally fixed a problem we’ve had since the inception of our website. You have probably noticed that often times the pictures on our site are stretched oddly making people look fat or tall, depending on the way the picture is stretched. I’ve tried everything I knew to figure out what was going on, to no avail. For a while I was posting the pictures to Instagram thinking maybe that was a better solution however I disliked having to go to another site and link back. Plus all the resolution of the picture was lost as Instagram only uploaded medium quality pictures.

Finally yesterday our IT savant at work, Ray, pointed out our picture problem and noted that it was probably our theme causing the problem. Now this was unwelcome news for a few reasons.

One, I was reluctant to change themes as the one I used was very clean and very customized. I didn’t want to change the look of the site, plus I didn’t want to redo all the customization.

Two, I introduced Ray to WordPress. Talked him into it you might say. And I used our farm website as an example of what he might do if he’d spend some time working on it. A couple of months later he’s built his own site and is now helping me with mine, which means he’s smarter than me. That’s something I already knew, but I can’t say I like having it so painfully obvious.

Thanks to Ray and a bit of not sleeping this evening, we now have a new theme for Ninja Cow Farm.com. There were two main things I wanted to accomplish with this theme change. One, I wanted the pictures to display normally. It appears that they now do. If you scroll through the old links you’ll see what everyone actually looks like. Two, I wanted a sticky menu. That means when you scroll down to read our posts, the menu stays on your screen vs. scrolling off the screen as it was before. I get a lot of emails with questions from people that are answered right there in the menu. I think people are scrolling, reading a bit, then not able to find a menu to take the next step. Hopefully this them will help with that.

If you see anything broken or missing, please let me know. I’ll slowly be customizing this new theme and working on things that might have gone poof with the theme change.

Benjamin didn’t make it

Benjamin's, dead bull.
Benjamin’s final disposition

This afternoon when I gave Benjamin the two injections of medicine, he looked pretty bad. Much worse than all the previous check ins. I told Miguel that he would either get better in 24 hours, or he would not make it. Unfortunately I was right, but on the not making it part.

Thank you to everyone for the well wishes for Benjamin. He was a great bull and will be missed. Ben will be buried here on the farm where he lived.

We are fully stocked up on beef, all cuts.

Beef loaded up for delivery
Beef loaded for a delivery to one of our favorite customers

Friday we brought back another truck load of beef to the farm. We now have plenty of hamburger, plus all the regular cuts like steaks and roasts. You can see what we have, and the pricing per pound, on our beef page on our website.

I felt like, and I’ve told some of you, that we would have beef for months. However at the rate beef is leaving the farm I’m not sure we’ll have beef till spring. We will definitely have it for December though so don’t feel like you’re missing out if you can’t get over here in the next week or two. If you haven’t bought from us before, know that we only sell off farm directly to you. We can deliver for orders over $100 and within 15 miles.

As a reminder, and for those of you that are new to our farm, our cows are grass raised, and grass finished. They have NEVER had commercial feed. They are born and raised here till finish. They are free of pretty much anything you can inquire about and it’s easier to just say what they do get. They get grass, hay, produce, water, and sunshine. That’s it.

We plan on having pork back in stock in a few weeks as well, for those of you waiting on Ninja pork.

More drugs for Benjamin

IMG_2986.JPG
The vet thinks these more powerful anti-biotics may help Benjamin recover. It’s a subcutaneous injection which is easy, but it’s 30ml which isn’t. Hopefully Benjamin won’t mind too much.

Bad news for Benjamin

Springfield bull
Benjamin, our bull

Yesterday we had the vet out again to look at Benjamin. 3 minutes in, he said I needed to look at getting another bull. I wasn’t too pleased to hear that and wanted to know what the options were. Basically we can try some medicine, and we can try giving him attention, but there isn’t really much to do for him. He has pneumonia for sure, and also may have cancer although that is just a guess. There is a real possibility we will be burying Benjamin in the near future.

We’ve worked really hard on having Benjamin be a nice and gentle bull and he really is. Even when he’s in all this distress, he’s been very gentle and easy-going. Even when we put him in the head gate he just stands there and lets us work, and he patiently waits to exit via the escape door (he’s too big to go through the head gate opening like other cows).

We gave Benjamin 25ml of Bantomine yesterday, and I’ll give him 20ml more today. Last time that helped him perk up and eat some. If we can get him eating, we have some more medicine that has to be given orally that we can give him but per the vet his bull days are over.

Not a good day on the farm yesterday.

Final weights for 28 and 40, and some insight on carcass quality from an expert

The other two cows we took a few weeks ago to finish were:

#28 hanging weight of 323 pounds.

#40 hanging weight of 369 pounds.

Both cows had belted Galloway fathers, hence the desire to cull them. They were both culled at about one year of age, making them about half way to finished. #28 has been a trouble maker his whole life so he was selected way earlier in the year. #40 was a pretty good cow temperament wise, but he wasn’t doing well in our management system and was selected to be culled since we were already going.

Both cows were picked up on Friday from the processor. I had an interesting conversation with the processor when I was picking these up. He said that I grass-fed and finished by cows. I replied that yes I did then asked him how he knew. He said he could look at the carcass and tell how the farmer fed them.

He said that my cows had yellow fat, and were relatively lean compared to corn-fed cows. He said they had good fat for grass-fed but nowhere the fat of a corn-fed cow. All good news to me.

He said that corn-fed cows had pure white fat, and lots of it.

He said that cows that were grass-fed, then fed corn for the last month or two had yellow fat with a big fat layer covering the whole carcass where they put on a bunch of fat when given all that corn. He said that the fat on these cows was pretty weird feeling. That something was definitely different.

He said that he can really tell how a cow was handled by the carcass. This is something I’ve always heard but it was pretty neat to confirm it from the expert.

Benjamin is still sick

Benjamin in the barn, not exactly pleased to be kept away from his girls.
Benjamin in the barn, not exactly pleased to be kept away from his girls.

 

I wrote a few weeks ago about Benjamin being sick. Unfortunately he still is. It seems he has pneumonia or something similar. He’s alert but very lethargic. Miguel and I spent an hour or so on Monday getting Ben into the head gate so that we could treat him with NuFlor. It sounds easy when I write it, but getting Benjamin to do anything he doesn’t want to is nigh on impossible. He’s a gentle bull, but he goes where he wants. To get him into the paddock, we have to bring all the cows, then herd them back out leaving him behind. Turning the cows into the barn paddock, where we store all the hay and produce, is like turning a kindergarten class into a candy store that doesn’t have lids on open containers of candy.

The anti-biotic we are treating Benjamin with.
The anti-biotic we are treating Benjamin with.

People do ask if we give our cows antibiotics. The answer is yes, in cases like this and only in cases like this. Benjamin was given an injection of Nuflor in the original post I mentioned above, and then he was given 30cc on Monday of this week, followed by 30cc on Thanksgiving. Benjamin is sick and he’s being treated with all things we think will help him get better. If Benjamin was a cow we were planning on eating at some point (he’s not) then we would follow the advised withdrawal period, plus a good safety factor. We only process cows a few times per year, so if he was remotely close on his scheduled time, we’d simply wait till the next time we process cows which would be months later. We do not give antibiotics as a general course of treatment, like in their food, or when they first arrive on farm. These are the things that people are generally worried about, the preventative usage of antibiotics. This we do not do.