"Email me at jenna@itsafarwalk.com if you want to grab the last season pass, on sale for $250 for any workshop you want to attend (that isn't full!) for an entire year."
So a season pass is only good for workshops that aren't already sold out or for workshops that don't sell out?
Wonder how many season passes have been sold? What would happen if everyone signed up for every workshop?
Shouldn't season pass holders get first priority!!!???
ReplyDeleteBetween hawking workshops and selling ads there isn't much farming going on at CAF.
That's the first thing I thought of, too. OF COURSE the pass holders should get first dibs into the workshops. Sheesh. "Here, let me just take your hundreds and MAYBE you'll get to attend something..."
DeleteDid you see her "treat pigs the way you want to be treated" comment? Ha.
ReplyDeleteSelling wool cloaks made me laugh out loud. What else can she invent to sell?
ReplyDeleteApparently she is passing herself off as a prepping expert. Did y'all see the post about the podcast?
ReplyDeleteHad to laugh because she is everything a prepper is not. She's in debt, under stocked in the pantry and in livestock feed, can't really feed herself, has no self control to stay away from frivolous purchases.
Seriously, who is she to advise about prepping for anything!
OMG anon Nov. 2 you are so on the money. I had to laugh, too re the prepping thing. The only thing she is prepped for is bankruptcy.
ReplyDeleteAnd the cloak thing? I could wrap a blanket around me......
LOL
$125 for a "cloak" that stops at your waist..and you have to sew in your own pockts! Ha!
ReplyDeleteWow I just noticed this re: the cloaks: "I have sold 8 and plan on making as many as I can handle." So that statement REALLY means: "I have collected the money for 8 cloaks, which I have NO intention of ever finishing."
DeleteHeh.
P.S. That's a thousand dollars, which I'm SURE was collected "up-front."
DeleteI always buy garments that I in turn have to finish at home. (total sarcasm here) OMG...there is a sucker born every day. And, she is sewing them with needle and thread. Wonder how long before it falls apart.
ReplyDeleteA one year old ram in the HOUSE!!! What's up with that?
ReplyDeleteThe mystery sickness is baaack. Or is that malnutrition?
Anon Nov 4, you are spot on. Malnutrition, coccidiosis, probably a host of other things. Bringing the ram in? Ugh. Just throw some antibiotics at it...that'll fix it. *shaking head* And she's still throwing her hay on the ground...the muddy, no-grass-at-all ground.
ReplyDeleteWhat I find interesting is that while her fences and barns are falling apart with a New England winter coming on she's out riding ponies and playing board games.
ReplyDeleteNo REAL farmer or rancher or homesteader would endanger their livestock for such fantasy pursuits.
I hate when people feed on the ground!!! Would you want to eat a meal after it's been stepped, peed on and sh!t on?
ReplyDeleteBuy a feeder. You can probably get a used one for the price if one of those stupid kilts.
She's done so much damage to that place! And, did she seriously attach that hawk pen to the house? Rolling eyes shaking head.
Did you see the new video of her trying to catch a sheep? See how bad the field is? And you can make out a lamb off to the side- it looks very bad. Coccidia, worms, then it moves onto pneumonia. It continues to be a spit hole there. As to feeding on the ground, as long as you are not over stocked, and move the piles, it is not a bad thing- I do it. The feeders I have don't allow for the lambs to get in and eat. I also have the benefit of having my land re-seeded every fall. I should put video up of how it is done..er... properly.
ReplyDelete