Sponkin628
Lurker
What I mean by asking this is it hard to balance your lifestyle & zoo life & farmer life all in one plate? I hope to someday own a small personal farm one day but just thinking about how my life would be sounds exhausting
It is. It’s hard to get away for anything more than a few hours. Good farm sitters are very hard to come by. Overnight trips? Nope!
It’s also very rewarding. Farm life is very different than city life. Peace and quiet, beautiful scenery, loving animals.
It’s also expensive. A new truck and basic horse trailer can push $150k. Tractors another $50k. Good amount of land is also pricey depending where you are. Vet care can add up especially if you’re not able to do some of it yourself. I figure we spend about $300-400 a month per horse when you factor in hay, vet, farrier, etc.
selfmade too?exhale and take a sip of the most delicious beer in the world.![]()
Unfortunately no, but I'm dreaming of buying equipment for brewing at home.)selfmade too?![]()
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I've found no issue, other then exhausted from the constant work, but still plenty of time to enjoy it, I just railed the whether ram tonight and had a good shower, before that I walked with them and pulled down branches so they could eat the leafs on them, the lambs finally got brave enough to join in the feeding frenzyWhat I mean by asking this is it hard to balance your lifestyle & zoo life & farmer life all in one plate? I hope to someday own a small personal farm one day but just thinking about how my life would be sounds exhausting
Having any kind of life gone? CheckIt is. It’s hard to get away for anything more than a few hours. Good farm sitters are very hard to come by. Overnight trips? Nope!
It’s also very rewarding. Farm life is very different than city life. Peace and quiet, beautiful scenery, loving animals.
It’s also expensive. A new truck and basic horse trailer can push $150k. Tractors another $50k. Good amount of land is also pricey depending where you are. Vet care can add up especially if you’re not able to do some of it yourself. I figure we spend about $300-400 a month per horse when you factor in hay, vet, farrier, etc.
I did white sparkling sweet wine, well worth it.Unfortunately no, but I'm dreaming of buying equipment for brewing at home.)
Well, I make homemade wine, but not sparklingI did white sparkling sweet wine, well worth it.
So reflux still time?Well, I make homemade wine, but not sparkling(using good old methods).
And I want to try myself in something more complex, so I look at different ready-made brewing stations.
It was legendaryit is in the middle of butt fuck no where squared
I don't understand, what reflux?So reflux still time?
this was all old school as well.Well, I make homemade wine, but not sparkling(using good old methods).
And I want to try myself in something more complex, so I look at different ready-made brewing stations.
I call it solvent and lab reagent, most my alcohol starts at 195 proof to 200proof (Yes 200, it is chemically pure and anhydrous)does anyone of u make his own moonshine?![]()
Got it, we use this for making moonshine, not wine.look up the term, same in chemistry
You can take it right up to 190 proof in one pass with a very well tuned unit.
I need to make another one, my main column was 4 feet long, and packed with copper scrubbers for the column packing.
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do all that, but last step in you add a tiny charge of fresh sugar and seal it. I add just enough to make it a bit sweet and the yeast makes it nice and bubbly! some times you need to add some yeast corpses back in (or as you call it sediment)Got it, we use this for making moonshine, not wine.
I can describe my wine-making procedure: I squeeze the juice out of the grapes, mix different varieties in different proportions, and leave it to ferment in barrels on natural yeast. It stays like this for about 2-3 days.
Then I drain it from the barrels (to remove the sediment) and pour it into vessels with a water seal and leave it like this for about a month (a couple of days in a dark place, then in the cellar), then I remove it from the sediment again and leave it for another month, then make a final removal from the sediment.
After that, you will also need to remove it from the sediment, but much less often. In about half a year, wine will be ready.
I don't add sugar (only right before drinking), because the wine is already very strong (such grape varieties), and if I add sugar, it will "come alive" and turn it into excess alcohol.)do all that, but last step in you add a tiny charge of fresh sugar and seal it. I add just enough to make it a bit sweet and the yeast makes it nice and bubbly! some times you need to add some yeast corpses back in (or as you call it sediment)
for the distilled (rectified) spirits, if it has sugar it goes into the fermentator!
well coming alive is the point, this is what makes your co2 to make it sparkle, and not much alcohol is made as it is all ready toxic to the yeast they just perk up enough to make some gas then die off.I don't add sugar (only right before drinking), because the wine is already very strong (such grape varieties), and if I add sugar, it will "come alive" and turn it into excess alcohol.)