Wednesday, July 8, 2009

The End of June

Okay, I've been remiss to report in the last two weeks of June (and maybe into July). My Mother always said, "If you can't say something nice, don't say anything at all." But, you have to report the good with the not so good. We have had a record breaking amount of rain in the past five weeks (over 10 inches). In the beginning year here, with not a lot of fertility and HEAVY CLAY soils many things were lost. Spinach turned yellow in the field and died. Turnips, arugula, mustard greens, radishes, lettuce mix were all in the soggiest field and some underwater, some still underwater. I'm thinking pond perhaps here. Onions are small and not very happy either. Needless to say, I have not been to market yet. Everything in the greenhouse looks wonderful. My transplants are gorgeous. Just the issue of getting them into some soil they can breathe in.

The frogs are very happy... they've never had such a long season like this. It's amazing that such a loud noise can come from a small hidden creature.

Many things run through my mind... because I can't even think about getting into these fields before 5-7 days of just plain sunshine. So far, the longest we've gotten is 3 days before we got another 1/2" of rain. What's a farmer to do? Carry on, look towards the fall, and next year. Read a lot about soil fertility, compost, LOTS of greensand? Cover crops, subsoiling? Search out the wise and experienced and go work for them for a few days... since not much happening here until some major drying out happens. And, all the wise and experience have their hands very full at the moment. Short term memory and blinding optimism help in these situations. Thanks goodness for that.


Squash fields after 10 inches of rain. The mulch is still a good idea, but would have worked better had it not rained so much. Some of the "high ground" squash looks great. Raised beds are a must here going forward. I'll be looking into a bedding system that will incorporate that idea.














Lots of standing water... get your mosquito netting out!

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

A New Look.

Bear with me as my designer past noodles around blogger templates. Hope it doesn't throw any of you off.

Monday, June 15, 2009

June -2nd week



Winter Squash Planting
This past week was perfect weather for setting out young squash plants. The irrigation was in place and working well, the weather was cloudy and overcast, but not raining... good conditions to set out finicky squash transplants. The greenhouse was full. There were 38 trays in the greenhouse with 98 plants each. That's a total of 3,724 plants to get into the field. So the challenge was to see if I could plant them all in one day. With this kind of work ahead of you there is only one way to approach. Keep your head down and keep moving! As one is slogging away in the field planting, planting, planting I tend to start to calculate things. 

Farm Math. I was averaging 2 beds/hour, so let's see, they are 300 foot beds with 18" spacing between plants, that means that I was able to drop and plant 200 plants per a row, 2 beds is 400 plants per/hour, yet there was 2 plants in each drop so that doubles the number to 800 plants/hour. And so one's mind rambles on... as you have your head down and keep moving.

Squash on the left ready to go to the field.










2 beds done, nicely irrigated while planting, just what squash want.














Head down, keep moving.










This is an apple tree root in the field. Of the 18 trees that we took out some roots are bound to reappear as the field gets cultivated.















OK, I made it to 9 beds out of 11 planted in a day.
The Farmer is done for the day.










Drip taping the tomatoes... This is model #2 in action. 
The drip tape deployment tool.














Onion planting... these are 80ft. rows.... thank goodness.





























Mulching
And to end the week we mulched the squash with the bedding chopper from the neighbor's dairy farm. This was exciting. I mulched the first 2 beds in the other field by hand (200 ft. beds). It took the 3 hours... and 1.25 bales of straw (farmer math coming up). The bales were each about 450lbs... not something I could just throw around myself. I had another 11 beds to do that were 300 ft. long, I had 9 3/4 bales left to do the rest. Would I have enough straw to do them all, how long would it take me to complete the other 11 beds?

Answer: (I didn't really want to do that calculation.) Bring in the straw chopper and get it done in 2 hours.

Two beds done by "hand" and tractor











The straw chopper, ready for take off. Pulling the bales out from under the shed.










The straw chopper: IN ACTION.











Mulched squash... a beautiful thing. Some might say this is cheating, but the idea is to work smart, not hard.

























Finally, nature is always amazing.
This is a a Killdeer with it's nest site. Killdeers are in the plover family and they are a noisy bird of the rural farm country. They like gravely areas and will feign an injury to avoid having you come near the nest. There were six of us walking by her nest and she set up the alarms and started dragging her wing to protect her nest with it's one egg in it. I now give her some distance and am watching to see when the baby will hatch.

Mama Killdeer and her egg. 











Robin's nest in our small front tree. They have the most beautiful turquoise eggs

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

June - 1st week

Irrigation
The winter squash field will get irrigation first. They are tender little plants ready to go out... cucurbits like their water so we plan on giving them a happy home to transition to from the greenhouse.


Here's the PLAN:
Fields A, B, C, D, and E this year.















Here's the Supplies. I really do know where everything goes.









Step One: Plumbers Tape on everything. This is the beginning of the feed. You can't underestimate the value of putting plumber's tape on everything.















The Single Farmer's Drip Tape Dispensing Tool: This is model number one. After using it on two 300' beds, which worked wonderfully, the structural integrity was compromised. I was too excited to get that drip tape on the field. Back to construction and I reinforced model number 2. That one did fine for another nine beds. That took me to the end of the day. More pics on model 2 to come. We'll be giving the tomatoes some drip too.












Water in the Lines! That was the goal.


June - 1st week

Spring flowers continue to abound. Peonies are in bloom right now. It's a real treat to see what comes up next, a seasonal surprise as we go through this first year here.





June - 1st week


The beginning of a small orchard reside in these pots... a wedding present. These are all apple trees. We'll be adding peach and cherry too. We've also planted the beginning of our berry patch, 100 strawberry plants and 20 raspberries. The strawberries will bear next year and the raspberries will begin next year but really come in to fruit in the second year. This is what they look like as bare root starts... not much to begin with, but the investment, ooh, makes me think of all kinds of recipes. Strawberry shortcake, raspberry crumble, apple pie, homemade apple sauce. MMMM!






Friday, May 29, 2009

There really is gold at the end of a rainbow!