<![CDATA[FLG Farms - Semi-Daily Chatter]]>Fri, 01 Mar 2024 20:26:01 -0500Weebly<![CDATA[Gearing up for Fall - worms? ew.]]>Tue, 05 Aug 2014 13:56:20 GMThttps://flgfarms.com/semi-daily-chatter/gearing-up-for-fall-worms-ewPicture
We have been so fortunate this year here in North Carolina. The weather, for ONCE, has been relatively kind to our animals and to us. Granted, it wasn't hot enough for my tomatoes to do much (and don't even get me started on my failed crop of green beans) but the mild temperatures has made it easier on the health of our goats, rabbits, chickens, and turkeys. The rain has been fallen in reasonable amounts to keep the pastures green but not create superfluous mud puddles - which means that our goat's hooves have been in excellent shape this year (especially when compared to last year's problems that resulted in chasing goats around to soak hooves in Koppertox). And so now, here we are in the month of August with the temperature averaging at about 85 degrees in the afternoon. Will is warm up to the triple digits we were expecting, maybe? But, the reality is that we are probably going to slide quickly into a cool fall and with that we start to prepare for those other issues with weather that can complicate goat health. 

So here is my proclamation -  I'm a WORM-A-PHOBE. I don't like them in my goats, I do not like them in my chickens, I do not like them in my rabbits, dogs, or cats. I do not like them Sam-I-AM! Coming to understand effective worm management sort of reminds me of obtaining my graduate degree. I like learning about worms, antihelminthics, FECRT, BSCI, assays, etc just about as much as I enjoyed nearly failing bio-statistics (read as NOT enjoyable for me). However, I have come to realize that ignorance, in this case, is not bliss. In this case, when it comes to our goats, ignorance can be deadly. Over- or under-use of worming medications can create more problems, long term, for both the health of a herd AND for the efficacy of the worming medication. I'm not going to get too much on the soap box here - that's not my goal. My goal is to invite new goat farmers to gain new information that may help them feel more empowered and less frustrated. So, thanks to my friend and extremely knowledgeable goat mentor, Ken Brown, DVM - I'm posting a very helpful, scientific data link (done for those like me who do not want to learn a new scientific language) that will help walk my fellow goat friends through the various ways of understanding and controlling those little worm buggers. 

American Consortium for small ruminant parasite control 
Many great articles and free powerpoint slide shows to help get the basics.
http://www.acsrpc.org/index.html

By the way - I mentioned my friend, Ken Brown, DVM. I'd just like to take a short paragraph to tell you about this incredible advocate for goat health. Ken Brown went back to college to become a veterinarian later in life. He served our country prior to becoming a veterinarian and now, serves the needs of many of my favorite types of quadrupeds! Dr. Brown's mission is to continue the development a mobile practice that serves the needs of the rural areas in Florida. He has formed a non-profit organization to do so, but is in need of support. So, many may wonder  - why support someone in another state who may never actually lay hands on my animals? It's a good question. The answer is - because Dr. Brown is an active resource on Facebook and he welcomes calls and texts from those, like myself, that have sometimes found ourselves without an ally in an emergency situation. Dr. Brown has helped me, by phone, save 2 of my goats who developed sudden fevers and lethargy. I am his biggest fan.

So...the point of this paragraph - Dr. Brown has set up a  "GOFUNDME" campaign. Even if you can contribute $5.00 to his mission, please PLEASE do so? Thank you!


So... Help a vet help animals. And goats.
http://www.gofundme.com/awrn7w

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<![CDATA[Summer 2014]]>Mon, 28 Jul 2014 03:21:38 GMThttps://flgfarms.com/semi-daily-chatter/summer-2014Picture
'Tis the season of Farmer's Markets and Festivals! We have had so much fun bringing our soap and lotions out the masses! There is nothing more rewarding than meeting new customers and seeing our repeat customers! 

The summer temperatures have been so pleasant. The animals are all thriving. Currently, our animal inventory includes 21 Nigerian Dwarf goats, 19 rabbits, 32 chickens, 4 turkeys, 3 dogs, 2 cats, and a spotted leopard gecko lizard. Feeding time is always labor intense.

We are excited to have our products at The Green Sheep in Hickory, Devine Farms in Newton, Buffalo Creek Creamery in Germanton, and Good Food Grower's Market in Kernersville. We are set up in Taylorsville, NC at the Saturday morning Farmer's Market in the old hospital parking lot (HWY 16 just past Walmart) from 8-12 almost every week. Come see us! We are busy trying to keep the website as up to date as possible! 

Our next major festival will be in September. We are currently debating which event we will be at but we will post our announcement soon. 

We currently have 2 goats for sale, one doe and one buck. See our sales page for pictures. We are downsizing our rabbitry and would love to rehome at least half of our stock. For questions and pricing, please email us at info@flgfarms.com. We are expecting babies in October. FLG Farms La Luna Creciente is getting PLUMP so we hope that she and Oakmoon FLG Drift had a successful date and that she's not just fat! Dahlia was also bred for the same date but she's been tough to get bred and we don't think she took this time either. She has yet to have her first freshening and we are starting to feel a weeeeeeeeeee bit impatient.

I will try to get another blog up here soon! New addition to the website made today includes an update to our soap and lotions and the inclusion of our stud service agreement memo. 

Happy days to you and yours! Thank you for reading!

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<![CDATA[I'm SO BEHIND in my updates!]]>Sat, 22 Mar 2014 04:01:29 GMThttps://flgfarms.com/semi-daily-chatter/im-so-behind-in-my-updatesPicture
Yes...yes we have been completely BAD about updating our blog. Life gets busy! However - I thought I'd share some of our new babies with you! Meet (from left to right) Hershey's new babies: Katydid, SnickerDoodle, and Hiccup. Two does and one buck that joined us early EARLY Sunday morning, March the 16th. Hiccup is tiny but hanging in there, getting strong every day. His sisters are active and so much fun!

In December, we got to meet Bellatryx (pictured lower left with mom Bonnet) who is just a dream baby. She is sweet and curious and will let me love all over her. I see her being as great of a milker as her mom!  

We have suffered TOO many chicken losses to predators here and decided to finally add a Livestock Guardian Dog. "Winter" came to us from Buttermilk Acres in Trade, Tennessee. She is the BIGGEST puppy I think we've ever seen, let alone adopted but she is incredibly sweet and very smart. She is learning her job quickly.

In February, we welcomed Tudor Rose's first freshening and a sweet little girl we named Tatyana (Tatters for short). The winter has been LONG and Mother Nature needs some serious mood stabilizers but we are eager for spring to begin. We have some wonderful things planned for this year. Sadly, Old Man Winter took one of our beehives out. The one beehive we have remaining is struggling. It may be a project we put on hold until 2015. We've been adding to our orchard and now have 8 apple trees, 16 blueberries, 12 raspberries and 3 fig trees. It's my hope that we'll be generating lots of pollen which may help new bees forage a bit closer to home when we do rebuild the hives.

The soap business is amazing, fulfilling, and a lot of work! I'm excited to see new stores interested in our products! Tomorrow, Saturday, I will be dropping off a new order to a wonderful organic farm store that just opened outside of Kernersville. Check out Good Food Growers Market on facebook! We've loaded up Buffalo Creek Farm & Creamery in Germanton, NC with lots of soaps as well! By the way - BEST Dates & Honey Chevre EVER. 

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<![CDATA[Not an easy lesson learned....]]>Sun, 22 Dec 2013 18:50:02 GMThttps://flgfarms.com/semi-daily-chatter/not-an-easy-lesson-learnedPicture
As much as we tried - Polly did not recover. Throughout the week, her back legs continued to fail her. She could not keep her balance, and by Thursday night (12/19/13) she was unable to eliminate. On Friday morning, she had no gut sounds and appeared terribly bloated. We knew she had had enough and that our efforts to save her were only becoming selfish at that point. The vet agreed that she should have responded to all of our various efforts and this was, simply put, the right choice to make. Polly made the trip to Elkin, NC for a necropsy shortly after she was put down. We NEEDED to know what we had fought against, and lost.


Polly died on our daughter's 8th birthday. It's amazing how hard it is to mourn such a loss and celebrate such a wonderful event at the same time. Just as we sat down for her special birthday dinner, I got a call from Dr. Barlow at the lab. I never thought you could really get "good news" from the person who just performed a necropsy on one of your favorite goats...but it seems you can. In his professional opinion, Dr. Barlow had ruled out any contagious disease that may be a risk to the rest of our herd. He said that upon investigation, our 8 month old doeling was filled with tumors - in her liver, lungs, and abdomen. Strangely enough - this looks like it was cancer. 


We await the full necropsy report, which of course will be delayed because of the holidays. We will post them here when they arrive. We believe in full disclosure - if for any other reason, may it be for the person who is scrambling around googling terms like "back leg paralysis in goats" or "goat cancer" or even "meningeal worm". Dr. Barlow told us that we were right to suspect Meningeal Worm - that the symptoms would have been exactly the same BUT that Polly should have responded to the worming treatments and the dexamethasone (steroids). He mentioned that in the past year he has only had ONE confirmed case of P. Tenuis (Meningeal Worm) and that it is QUITE rare as a reason for goat deaths. He also said we were right to rule out listeriosis and that he was confident Polly succumbed to these tumors. 


We will always have a place in our hearts for Polly and we still find ourselves mourning her loss. She was such a bright spot in the herd - with her big blue eyes and her funny and distinctive voice. I go out and just sit in the middle of my other babies, hugging, petting and loving on anyone who will let me. I guess we heal through the living, right? 


Going forward...(back to cute little babies, soaps, and hopefully MUCH happier future posts).


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<![CDATA[And then we go backwards]]>Wed, 18 Dec 2013 19:11:27 GMThttps://flgfarms.com/semi-daily-chatter/and-then-we-go-backwardsMonday, December 16 was a day of joy. Polly was going to be FINE, or so I had myself convinced. 


Tuesday, December 17 - we are back to square one. In fact, Polly is in poorer condition than she has been since this all started. Her back legs are completely useless to her and she is shivering and grinding her teeth. The dexamethasone we had been giving her was only for three days - she did not get a dose last night before bed AND, due to a lot of contradictory opinion, we hadn't given the ivermectin either. In hindsight - I should have.
Here we go again...call to the vet and


Banamine...check
Thiamine....check
Vitamin B complex...check
Ivomec Plus...check
Fenbendazole...check
Probios.....check


Dr. Hull pulls up right at noon. I carry Polly up to the driveway and the exam begins. Again, fear is abundant. What is the right thing to do? Quality of life? Quantity of life? How much more of this is just selfish of me and unfair for Polly. Dr. Hull watches me boo hoo a bit and says - "We aren't giving up yet".  I had pulled up an exceptional bit of information from Cornell University on P. Tenuis (Meningeal Worm), which I shared with the good doctor:


http://www.ansci.cornell.edu/goats/CSGSymposium/deer-worm_revised.pdf

We talked over the differential diagnosis (many of which we had already eliminated) and recommended treatment. Dr. Hull helped me understand how to calculate the correct dosage of medicine by determining Kilogram weight. 

That calculation is:
weight in pounds divided by 2.2 = kilogram weight.
Then, depending on which medication one is wishing to give, the proper dosage can be translated! (very helpful!)


Ivermectin in, fenbendazole in (which is, by the way, either safeguard or panacur) and dexamethasone back on board.


Everyone at the farm took turns getting Polly up and moving her back legs to keep them from getting stiff and atrophied. She was calling out to the goats so we moved her into a small pen just on the other side of the herd. Her goat partner, Zoey, went into the pen with her as a companion. Both seemed content and Prissy at her weight in hay and drank lots of water....but never really moved.


And so, that brings us up to today - Wednesday, December 18.


We have little new news to report. The outlook is so guarded. Polly had a good night. Ate lots, pooped lots, peed lots, but she is still only getting up on her front feet. If we get her up on all four of her feet she IS able to hold her own weight and she WILL resist me when I try to move her back legs too much. The best sign of the day was that she is actually stepping down flat on her back hooves. Yesterday, her back legs would not straighten out and her hooves were rolling inwards. So, this is what I will take as progress. She is bright eyed and HUNGRY. It's too cold to go outside but maybe a bit later we will take her to see her sisters.


I am concerned...of course...that this might not be meningeal worm. Maybe it's something in her spine, maybe its a brain issue. This is scary stuff. We have been so fortunate here at the farm to have healthy animals and have faced only one potential fatal illness (bloat) that our doctor fixed. It's hard to think about what we may face tomorrow with Polly but we are her BIGGEST cheerleaders and not ready to throw in the towel yet. Many fellow goat friends have relayed similar stories that end with partial or full recoveries. That's my goal - followed by my second aim, which is to write every second of it down so that someone needing the information may be able to find it in the case that this SHITTY (it's appropriate to use expletives in this case) experience may ever befall them.


Thanks for reading. I really hope to have GREAT news to post in the days that follow. 


:)

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<![CDATA[Meningeal Worm....P. Tenuis Infection and Ms. Prissy Polly]]>Wed, 18 Dec 2013 18:44:38 GMThttps://flgfarms.com/semi-daily-chatter/meningeal-wormp-tenuis-infection-and-ms-prissy-polly Thursday - December 12, 2013 - something is WRONG with Prissy Polly. She is standing by herself at feeding time and she is shivering. It's chilly out (45 degrees) but noone else is shivering. Out comes my trusted thermometer and Polly's temperature is 99.6 degrees. Sooooooo, I've heard nothing good comes to goats when there core temperatures go below 100 degrees. ODD. FAMACHA check -she's pinkish, not too red not too pale. CRAP...what's going on here. Joanna Wilcox has mentioned something called Meningeal Worm (and me in my optimistic protective coating of denial) has hoped she was just overthinking things because THAT sounded really awful to me.

Polly goes into the kidding barn to be near the heat lamps. She's moving ok and she seems just simply irritated for me to be even poking her in undignified places. I apologize, get her settled and carry on with nightly chores. 

The next day - Polly looks to be about the same but she's got a weird stiff gate in her back legs. I put her up on a goat house to check her temperature. She's at 100 degrees today (slight cheer of success from me at this point) but then, she gets out of my grasp and jumps off the surface. It was then I realized something was very wrong with Polly as her back legs collapsed underneath her and she struggled to get them to straighten them out. CRAP...this can't be good.  Joanna Wilcox, a great friend and fellow goat enthusiast, had mentioned "MENINGEAL WORM" to me during a trek to see Apple Hill Farm today. That sounded a bit to scary for me to contemplate at the time. Another night in the goat barn - cydectin wormer in, probios in, and some serious finger crossing that this is all just my imagination. 

WRONG.

Saturday morning, December 14. Polly pulls herself out of the kidding barn with only her front legs working. She is dragging her back legs under her. CRAP. Off to the vet's house we go (on a very rainy, cold morning to boot). Vet is puzzled. I am freaked out (and yes, there are tears when I'm freaked out). Polly is wheezing with raspy breath sounds. Pneumonia? Sure...why not. Fecal check - YES, let's add some strongyle type worms on top of it all. Great - so now we have a salad bowl of symptoms with no clear idea. Is it Polio? Is it Listeriosis? Is it a spinal injury with pneumonia plus worms. UGH. Is it this meningeal worm??

Thiamine....check
Vitamin B complex...check
Dexamethasone (steroid)...check
Nuflor Gold....check
Exede...check
Ivomec Plus...check
Fenbendazole...check
Probios.....check
One pissed off goat...ohhhhhhh yeah you betcha.

That night...more dexamethosone. I'm pretty sure, at this point, my goat feels like a voodoo doll.

Longest blog ever...but as I've been a bit busy with high maintenance Prissy Polly I have a lot to catch my readers  up on!  Ok...where was I....oh right, busy pumping the goat FULL of anything and everything to try and get her back up. and sooooooooo one long night of Polly on our sunporch in a crate with a heater keeping her comfy and the next morning we find Polly able to support some weight on her hind legs but not so great.

AM Ritual: Repeat
Thiamine....check
Vitamin B complex...check
Dexamethasone (steroiod)...check
Fenbendazole...check
Eating, yes...peeing, yes....pooping, oh yes - mostly all over us when we are doing physical therapy with her.

No real change throughout the day - Polly continues to be able to stand but doesn't really want to without some help.

Dexamethasone that night before bed

AND THEN...Monday, December 16 - here she is and we are DELIGHTED. We let her go wander all day after (of course) the AM ritual:Thiamine....check
Vitamin B complex...check
Dexamethasone (steroiod)...check
Nuflor Gold....check second dose
Fenbendazole...check
Probios.....check

She had a great day wandering out everywhere - very few falls and we feel on top of cloud nine. She's going to be FINE.  RIGHT??!

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<![CDATA[CAE NEGATIVE...TEST RESULTS.]]>Fri, 29 Nov 2013 04:06:10 GMThttps://flgfarms.com/semi-daily-chatter/cae-negativetest-resultsThe great news! Dr. Jennifer Hull called us about 2 weeks ago and confirmed that we are CAE free! I have the FULL report but this website builder does not let me upload .pdf files and I wasn't comfortable giving out our address (or my vet's for that matter!) Should anyone need more evidence about our CAE status, I'm happy to share that information on a one-to-one basis. There are animals here (Queenie) who came to us from Five-Points farms with test results AND we do have babies still under the age of 6 months who haven't been tested yet (based on our vet's recommendation, we wait until they reach their first birthdays). Dr. Hull had also run a number of fecals and said she felt that our egg counts were all quite low and that we have VERY HEALTHY goats. Being that I'm a completely neurotic goat mom, this was GREAT NEWS!  Pregnancy tests were run on four of our girls - Dahlia, Hershey, MeToo and Tudor Rose. Tudor Rose is knocked up! The other girls have some work to do! 

Surprisingly, we have noticed that Bonnet is getting rounder and rounder and ROUNDER. We did not think that her breeding to Royal Warrant had worked BUT it seems we might be quite wrong. Now it's just a game of wait. Her official due date wouldn't be until March 23rd. If she goes sooner than that...then THISTLE (who JUST turned 4 months old) has got sum SPLAININ to do! Course...he is Indigo "THE SUPER STUD" 's son, so it wouldn't surprise me!


Last but not least - tis the season for holiday gift shopping. Consider buying from your local small businesses. I'm happy to help you get your shopping lists crossed off as well! I have a great quantity of various scents in stock now and even more on the curing rack. My body butters are always available and custom scents can be created for you at no additional charge. Don't forget my lip balms keep that winter weather locked out!!! :)  Thanks again to all of you who have made me feel so wonderful about what I do by supporting me! 


May many blessings find you, your family, and your friends during this holiday season!
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<![CDATA[New Products and Planning for Spring Babies!]]>Sun, 20 Oct 2013 03:38:40 GMThttps://flgfarms.com/semi-daily-chatter/new-products-and-planning-for-spring-babiesPicture
First - THANK YOU to anyone and everyone who has purchased our soaps. We have received such incredible feedback and simply put, it just keeps me wanting to make more soaps!  This past month we rolled out a number of new products including our beer soaps, our lip balms, and our body butters. FUN! See our FLG Bath & Body Products website to see all of the soaps off the curing wrap and ready for purchase!

The holiday season is coming up and we are in GIFT BASKET mode! Let us know if you'd like us to come up with something special for your loved ones! I have some great ideas and I promise I will post them here as they come to fruition!

We are in breeding mode! We hope to welcome in LOTS of babies in the spring. Our vet, Dr. Jennifer Hull, was here last week doing our annual herd testing for CAE. We live in a Johne's & Brucellosis free state, and we have never seen any CL here at FLG. We look forward to hearing our results but in the meantime we did get the great news that TUDOR ROSE will be a MOMMA. She and Mortimer were bred last month, which makes her due to deliver (hopefully ONLY girls) in February. We are so excited! 

Thanks for reading and keep checking back with us! I keep getting an itch to add ALPACAS to the farm...hmmmmm


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<![CDATA[A much needed update!]]>Tue, 27 Aug 2013 04:48:22 GMThttps://flgfarms.com/semi-daily-chatter/a-much-needed-updatePicture
May I help you??? This truly has been the theme over the summer with the incredible response to our FLG Farms soaps. WHAT A THRILL to be able to create a product we love and THEN find out that others love the soaps as much as we do. This summer has been kinda crazy working out the details and goals for the future of our soaping business but we sure don't mind and we love that our soaps have now been shipped to Minnesota, Arkansas, Illinois, Florida, and Michigan! Our store here on the website is now up and running and our soaps are ready to be sent anywhere in the US!  We are also SO PLEASED to be in partnership with THE GREEN SHEEP SHOP in Hickory, North Carolina! What a great eco-friendly store with amazing natural parenting supplies AND Blue Ridge Woodworkings beautifully made pieces. Go check them out!

We are also now in partnership with THREE FORKS CAKES who uses our free-range chickens' eggs in their AMAZING cakes. All in all, the summer has brought us many things for which we are grateful.

On another note - the goats are doing great. We've had a lot of changes in our herd over the summer. Having had a SEVERELY buck heavy kid year this year - we had to move some out. Goodbye to Diego, Capone, Buckshot, Stratus and Cirrus. Mortimer will go to Avynat Farms in December and in his place, we welcomed in Chocolate Kiss who reminds me of a dalmation and is just as sweet as a little puppy.  We also acquired some new doelings from Pinnacle Hills Goat Farm (Mary Colman and her husband are the NICEST people) and got to see how another wondeful soap maker works her craft while we were there! 

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Yes...we've had some downers this summer as well. Dacia broke her leg - I mean REALLY broke her leg. All the bones in the lower part of her right leg were shattered. What a lesson we have learned about Houdini goats who slip under fences, climb up on barbecue grills and then get their foot caught in the BBQ's lid handle on her way down. Who would have ever guessed...but all is well. 3 weeks in her cast and a follow up xray reveals that her bones have healed. 

The rain has been NONSTOP. Goat maintenance has been constant and at times, a bit exhausting. The pastures haven't been dry for more than a day and it is one big squishy mudpit. At the same time, our barn has been on the final days of construction so we have had no choice but to leave the goats in the current wet soggy swamp of a pasture. Feet trimming and koppertox treatments for unhappy hoofs has been a constant around here. We are thrilled that our garden did so well...but what makes you happy makes you sad I suppose! Happy for the produce, sad for goat feet. I think we will make it out of summer intact and WAY SMARTER than we were prior!

My goal for the fall is to continue to pump out creative soaps for the upcoming season and to write a blog MORE than once every 4 months! Thanks for reading and please be sure to LIKE US on FACEBOOK!

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<![CDATA[Spring is here...and many changes at the farm!]]>Sat, 18 May 2013 01:13:21 GMThttps://flgfarms.com/semi-daily-chatter/spring-is-hereand-many-changes-at-the-farmPicture
What a few weeks we have had!
As you can tell, the website has a new look. We needed to "spring" things up a bit! So, here's a brief recap (ha! Like I'm capable of being brief) of the last few weeks:
1) Both Danica AND Carmel finally delievered the "goods". We have FIVE baby goats kicking, squealing, and bolting around the backyard. FOUR BOYS and ONE GIRL. Danica had triplets, Carmel had twins. They are now on the our Nigerian Dwarf Herd page and our facebook page is filled to the brim with baby pictures. They are FUN, the are HEALTHY, and the mom's are doing a great job.
2) We are a foster home! Eggbert and Tooters joined us temporarily from Five Points Farm North. We are happy to have them and as you can tell be the picture above, Tooter has found a friend in Audrey!
3) In approximately 6 weeks, we have had 35 baby New Zealand/California babies born. Actually, we had quite a bit more than that born but as I've mentioned before - baby rabbits and bad moms do not mix. We are weaning them and hope to have them posted for sale very shortly.
4) Our soap business has taken off! 56 bars of soap sold in one week with customers coming back wanting more! So, we've worked to make it happen and there is now a new link on our website called the FLG Farm Store. Here's where soap can be purchased, by the bar or in multiples for a discount. I can make local deliveries and also ship! Direct link is: http://flgfarms.com/flg-farm-store.html

We are going to keep a few of our basic but awesome recipes throughout the year (Nurture Your Nuzzler Facial Soap, Oats, Milk & Honey Emollient soap, Simplicity soap, and the Café Latte Soap will remain on the menu. Seasonal soaps will be added! We currently have (FOR SALE ON THE SITE yeahhhhhhh!!!) our Cocoa Mint Kiss Goat's Milk Soap. On the curing rack are mint soap, choco-nilla soap, an improved version of our CocoBanaNut soap, our bug-b-gone dog soap (shaped in dog bones and paw prints but humans can use fido's soap too!), and yes, Nurture your Nuzzler will be ready in about a week's time! This weekend: Lemon Poppyseed Loaf soap and Lavender Rain soap!
5) We have a new farm logo that will be making an appearance on our farm store and when we go to shows. Obviously, this website has a bit of a "feminine" nature to it, so to balance out the anima with the animus, our logo is bold and quite simple!

So, a busy few weeks we have had!!!

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Cocoa Mint Kiss Goat's Milk Soap!
Buy one bar: $4.00
or buy three bars for $10.00!

This soap smells incredible and it is a BIG bar that will last you through lots of washes! Come check out the rest of our FLG Farms website!

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Coming soon to a T-shirt near you!!!!

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