Hunter's Hill Farm

Hunter's Hill Farm Walter Mills

"....we gather blessings from our pets and learn a few things about kindness and patience, the importance of being touched, how to love and grieve and say goodbye."

01/19/2026
The rush is now on for many, last minute runs to the store, getting the final gifts wrapped, fixing the last of the big ...
12/23/2025

The rush is now on for many, last minute runs to the store, getting the final gifts wrapped, fixing the last of the big meal…rush, rush, rush.
SLOW DOWN. The world won’t end if something is left undone. What IS important is to remember the REAL REASON for Christmas. It’s not Santa or how much you pay for the gifts or even if you give gifts for there has never been a greater gift given than the birth of Christ and all He endures to give us eternal life. So slow down, embrace the time with family and friends but don’t let it take you away from the REAL meaning of this season.
🎄 Merry Christmas 🎄

Do you know of anyone who may want Remi, we rescued him when our neighbor's moved. We've tried and tried but he is not g...
11/23/2025

Do you know of anyone who may want Remi, we rescued him when our neighbor's moved. We've tried and tried but he is not getting along with our dogs. Once he started getting attention from us he got possessive mostly of me and has jumped 3 of our dogs several times. I almost got bitten twice just when he jumped one of our spayed female dogs for walking by me when he was sitting beside me. I hate to do it to him but I can't even get around him and one of ours. Its mainly me too, he has done it once with my husband but does it now with me any time I'm around him and our other dogs come over. We've totally had to pull one dog away they got into it bad.
He loves to play fetch and us great with kids. He wants to herd our goats but we only have two and they are older and want no part of him. I think he'd be happy working. He is a tripod but can outrun our border collie. Sweet as can be but I just can't be around him and any others.
Feel free to share.
Thank you.

I miss these days.
10/31/2025

I miss these days.

Chance and Gray

Gray has blue eyes and is $150.00 SOLD.

Chance is $100.00
Located in Monticello, GA

This was Atlanta’s Little Jewel and she was indeed a Jewel. Broke my heart when we lost her 11 yrs ago today.
10/31/2025

This was Atlanta’s Little Jewel and she was indeed a Jewel. Broke my heart when we lost her 11 yrs ago today.

Jewel

The yard crew.
10/18/2025

The yard crew.

10/18/2025

Can't do it as much as I once did but there was a time when all of this was true.

I changed this up a bit to better suit me.

We are livestock people- you don't have to understand us...
We know that all external medicine is either waterproof, blue or yellow and we will use it on ourselves before going to a doctor. We have no problem eating a sandwich directly after mucking stalls. We know why a thermometer has to have a string attached to the end. We are not welcome in Laundromats. We can lower or raise our voice instantly by 5 octaves to shout at the dog who has decided to stalk at heaven only knows what. We can't always bend over or get up and down off the floor but just watch us when we need to assist a goat in labor, show a newborn kid how to nurse or roll a LGD on his/her back to correct, then we can move at lightning speed. We would sooner quit a relationship than our hobby. We talk to our truck to make it up the hill. If we don't have a truck we will load sick or injured animals in our car and not think twice about the blood or liquid seeping into the seats. We buy dog food, grain and hay before buying our own food. It’s common to see us wearing barn clothes in public and smelling just like the barn. We know that mucking a barn is the best cure for depression. We get along better with most animals than people. We know that asking for prayers for an animal is just fine and we don't hesitate to do it. We are quick to lend a hand in a crisis and don't mind being awakened at any time if an animal is in need. A new truck is a luxury car. More written words are scribbled in the dirt than on paper. We will always make time for a friend. A hand shake is our bond.
Re-post if you are one of us!

One of my favorite photos of one of our anatolians we sold years ago.
10/13/2025

One of my favorite photos of one of our anatolians we sold years ago.

07/29/2025

They buried her out by the west fence, just like the others — and this time, he didn't bother to wipe the tears off his weathered face.

The ground was still half-frozen, spring dragging its feet like an old man in snow boots. Earl McKinley had been up since before dawn, same as always. Only today, there wasn’t a bark at the screen door. No excited tapping of paws. No eyes watching him sip his coffee like it was holy.

Sadie was gone.
The last of them.

She’d died sometime in the night, curled under the bench in the barn like they always did, like they all did. She was twelve. He was seventy-eight.

Earl stood with his shovel sunk into the dirt, boots caked in brown slush, the Mississippi wind licking at his spine through the holes in his coat. He hadn’t bought a new one in twenty years. Didn’t see the point. Everything wore out — coats, tractors, knees, even the good years.

He looked down at the blanket-wrapped form and sighed. “You did good, girl. Real good.”

Sadie had come after Millie, who’d come after Buck, who’d come after Daisy, and before that there’d been Red and Shep and Scout and June. Each one a damn Border Collie. Each one smarter than the last, like they were born knowing the rhythm of this land — when to circle the herd, when to sit still, when Earl needed them close without asking.

They were workers. Partners. Family, maybe.

The world had shifted plenty since his first dog. The county paved the gravel roads, built a Dollar General right over the field where he and his brother used to set off bottle rockets on the Fourth of July. Folks stopped waving from their pickups. Kids stopped helping on weekends. And now, most of the farms were dead or sold to outfits with names like “AgriCore” or “GreenFuture.” Hell, even the church closed two summers ago.

But he still had his dogs. At least, he used to.

He came back from the burial stiff and aching, hands raw. His knees clicked with every step. The house was too quiet. One of those silences that buzzes. That reminds you how long it’s been since you heard a voice not coming out of a TV set or a doctor’s office.

He sat at the kitchen table, next to a wood-framed photo of him in his thirties — tall, sinewy, leaning on a fence post with a dog at his side and the whole damn sky behind him.

He remembered Daisy best.

She was his first — a gift from his father the year he turned eighteen and took over the herd. 1965.

She’d run like the wind, tongue flapping, eyes locked in that trance-like focus. Never failed him once, not in twelve seasons. When a tornado touched down in ’73, it was Daisy who herded all twenty-seven sheep into the cellar barn without a single command.

He’d never felt more in awe of an animal. Not even his own kids had that kind of instinct — not that he blamed them. The boy moved out west. Something in computers. The girl married a bank manager and sent Christmas cards from Florida.

“You’re too sentimental,” his late wife Carol used to say, watching him carve the dogs' names into cedar plaques, hammer them gently into the fence post after each one passed.

“Maybe,” he’d answer. “But they stuck around.”

Earl stood slowly and grabbed a bottle of Wild Turkey from the high shelf — not to get drunk, just enough to take the chill out of his chest. He poured a bit into his chipped enamel mug and a little onto the ground outside for Sadie.

He stared at the empty yard. The wind caught the edge of the screen door and creaked it open, then let it slap shut. That sound had once driven Sadie nuts. She’d bark at it like it was an intruder, then look up at him for approval, tail wagging in little hopeful arcs.

A man doesn’t cry when a dog dies. Not out loud. Not where anyone can see.
But he did today. He let it come.

Not because she was the best of them — though she was damn close — but because it felt like the final stitch had come loose.

No more dogs. No more sheep.
No more “Earl and his collie.”
Just Earl.

In the late afternoon, he took the old path out to the barn. The boards were dry and gray now, sun-bleached like old bones. The hinges groaned like they knew him.

Inside, everything waited in silence. The empty feed bins. The halters. The worn leather collar Sadie used to wear when she was still a pup and too scrawny to work the fields.

He sat on the overturned bucket where he’d once taken his coffee breaks. Back when there were lambs bleating and dust in the sunlight and someone to share the day with — even if it was just a dog who didn’t talk back.

Funny how folks thought dogs were the quiet ones.

They had a way of filling space, of keeping you company in the most sacred, invisible kind of way. They didn’t leave notes, didn’t send postcards. But they never left you either.

That night, Earl lit the wood stove for the first time in a while. He wasn’t cold — he just missed the sound. The crackle. The kind of warmth you couldn’t fake.

He pulled a quilt over his lap, poured another inch of bourbon, and opened the notebook he kept in the drawer. He’d written every dog’s name there. Their years. Little notes.

Daisy — 1965–1977
Trusted with newborn lambs. Barked only when needed. Saved my damn life more than once.

Red — 1978–1989
Had a crooked ear. Hated thunder. Wouldn’t let Carol walk to the mailbox alone.

Sadie — 2012–2025
Gentle soul. Understood when to sit still. Waited for me at the gate, every morning.

He stared at the page a long time before adding one more line under Sadie’s name:
The last one.

Then he closed the book, blew out the lamp, and listened to the wind tap against the window.

In the morning, he stood at the back fence, hands in his pockets, eyes on the pasture. Empty now. Still.
And yet, for a moment, just before the sun broke through the mist, he could swear he saw them all — ears perked, eyes bright, tails wagging — waiting at the edge of the field like they used to.
Maybe they were.
Or maybe it was just memory, being kind.
Either way, Earl smiled.
Because he knew one thing for certain:
He never farmed alone.

Credit/Author Unknown

07/28/2025

EASY TO MAKE DOG TREATS!
PEANUT BUTTER DOG TREATS:
1 cup creamy peanut butter
1 egg
½ ripe banana mashed
1 tbsp maple syrup
1 cup whole wheat flour

CARROT DOG TREATS:
2 cups whole wheat flour
2½ tsp baking powder
1½ cups carrots washed
1 cup creamy peanut butter
¼ cup water
2 extra large eggs
2 tbsp honey

PUMPKIN DOG TREATS:
½ cup pumpkin puree
¼ cup applesauce
3 tbsp peanut butter
1 egg
2 cups whole wheat flour
¼ tsp salt
¼ tsp baking soda

WATERMELON DOG TREATS:
1 cup Plain Greek yogurt
1 cup watermelon
2 tbsp creamy peanut butter

MINTY FRESH DOG TREATS:
1 cup Plain Greek yogurt
¼ cup chopped mint
¼ cup chopped curly parsley
½ cup chopped spinach
¼ cup coconut oil
½ cup honey

BLUEBERRY DOG TREATS:
2 packets unflavored gelatin
½ cup coconut oil
¼ cup fresh blueberries
2 tbsp water

Address

Rutledge, GA
30663

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