LAU FAMILY FARM, LLC
Grass-Fed and Finished * No Antibiotics * No Hormone Implants
Schedule for the next few weeks:
July 30th Idaho Falls Farmers Market 9-1
Downtown SLC Farmers Market 8-1 @ Pioneer Park
Ogden @ Grounds for Coffee on Harrison and 30th
August 6th Downtown SLC Farmers Market 8-1 @ Pioneer Park
Logan Farmers Market 9-1
August 13th Logan Farmers Market 9-1
Idaho Falls Farmers Market 9-1
August 20th Idaho Falls Farmers Market 9-1
Downtown SLC Farmers Market 8-1 @ Pioneer park
Ogden
· Grass-Fed and Finished quarter Beef available NOW! (additional ones might be available in August). $778 plus tax for about 95 lbs of natural and grass-finished beef. Delivered to central location in Idaho Falls, Pocatello, Logan, Ogden or SLC free of charge. Cuts include tenderloin, new York, rib eye, skirt, flank, top sirloin, petite sirloin, chuck roast, brisket, sirloin tip roast, eye of round, stew, sliced shank (meaty soup bones), steak strips, short ribs and plenty of delicious ground beef. We may not offer more until December.
Many thanks for your business,
John, Lori Anne, Tom and Becca Lau
Lau Family Farm, LLC
Grass Fed Beef, Lamb & Wool...A Natural Choice
PO Box 337
Soda Springs, ID 83276
208-709-4981 (cell)
LAU FAMILY FARM, LLC
Grass-Fed and Finished * No Antibiotics * No Hormone Implants
Schedule for the next few weeks:
July 30th Idaho Falls Farmers Market 9-1
Downtown SLC Farmers Market 8-1 @ Pioneer Park
Ogden @ 4 to 4:30 - Grounds for Coffee on Harrison and 30th
August 6th Downtown SLC Farmers Market 8-1 @ Pioneer Park
Logan Farmers Market 9-1
August 13th Logan Farmers Market 9-1
Idaho Falls Farmers Market 9-1
August 20th Idaho Falls Farmers Market 9-1
Downtown SLC Farmers Market 8-1 @ Pioneer park
Ogden
· Grass-Fed and Finished quarter Beef available NOW! A quarter beef is about 95 lbs of natural and grass-finished beef. Delivered to central location in Idaho Falls, Pocatello, Logan, Ogden or SLC free of charge. Cuts include tenderloin, New York, rib eye, skirt, flank, top sirloin, petite sirloin, chuck roast, brisket, sirloin tip roast, eye of round, stew, sliced shank (meaty soup bones), steak strips, short ribs and plenty of delicious ground beef. We may not offer more until December.
Both my elder and younger brothers were in town for a couple of days so we took the opportunity to go camping with them. It was really nice to get up in the hills, and away from real life, for a while. John and the kids came home after one night, and went back to taking care of the stock while I got to spend a second night with just by brothers and my father. Upon our return to “civilization” my brothers cajoled me into going to see Star Trek with them in Pocatello. I think some of the joy of camping was lost on my brothers, while the joy of watching action movies was lost on me. Never the less we got some sibling time in, and caught up a bit on each other’s lives.
This week is our county fair, and today our County Farm Bureau had a day of activities there for the public. We gave out a lot of milk cartons, ice cream sandwiches, and tons of kids got their face painted. The pedal tractor pull took a full 2 hours to complete. I am so glad that we have an active education committee with a strong chairperson, and that I get to be an “minion” and don’t have to be the “chief” or even “co-chief”.
Becca is away at a cross country running camp this week. Tom is working several shifts with his FFA chapter at the county fair (they are selling raffle tickets). Next week Tom is one of three kids going to yearbook camp in Boise. Football practice begins on the 8th. Cheerleading practice begins next week, and cross country on the 12th. Becca has to drive twice more with the driver’s ed teacher (the dreaded trip to Pocatello), and then she can get her permit and begin driving with us. It will be handy when she can get herself to some of her activities, as Tom can do now.
We’ve decided to cut a bit more hay this summer. It is VERY hard to walk away from hay on the years that it is there. I think both of us are dreading the haying process and the long days, early mornings and late nights that it means for John (and Tom). I dread the other chores that get shifted to my pile while he is occupied with haying. It is also time to make the final decisions about what crops we are going to plant later this summer for fall feed and spring feed. The sheep have just about worked their way thru all the feed here at the house property so we’ll be making the 6-7 trailer load trips to transport them to the Meadow property in the next few days. The state highway department is the process of tearing up, and repaving the road in front of our house making getting into and out of our driveway more challenging and time consuming than normal, but they sheep have to eat so we’ll have to move them soon.
We would benefit greatly from a little moisture. So if you have any rain dancing skills, or a direct line to the big man upstairs, or any other methods please put in a vote for rain in Caribou County in the next couple of weeks.