Sunday, March 20, 2022

Garden planning in January 2022

First things first, write down what you want to eat. Salads, chili, spaghetti, stir fry. Then figure out you need to make it. Next search for those seeds. Buy them. Plant them. I use Baker Creek Seeds and MI Gardener as well as our local farm stores.
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So far this is what I have purchased for 2022. I still need to get lettuce, green beans and tomatoes. I have peas left from last year.  I’ve been thinking about doing pinto beans to dry again this year. They take very little of my time and last time they produced great. 
The onions and potatoes I have always gotten from our local farm store. I get a little excited when they get them in. Last year I bought 70 onion bulbs and twenty potatoes. 
From now on after this year, I hope to not buy many seeds.  It only takes a few seeds from each plant to save. Although last year I saved thousands of Pepper seeds and one hundred pumpkin seeds. Pepper seeds are overly plentiful and maybe the easiest to save in my experience. But someone knocked the trays off the shelf and the mice at them before I noticed.  Yes, we have mice in the country. We know how to deal with them. No need to go jumping on the furniture. 
I did save some 2021 calypso beans. They look like a cow pattern.  So that’ll be an experiment to see if they grow the same. They’re heirloom, so they should grow the same bean every time.  I bought a new packet though just Incase. 
The plan is to let one of each plant, of all the heirloom seeds, go to seed. Then attempt to save seeds from them. Over time I will have a collection of seeds that is perfectly acclimated to my growing region. Just for myself. Not to sell. 
Over the year, I randomly buy seeds starting disks and soil. I save all manner of containers and trays to use.  I’ve tried saving money to buy things all at once. But for me, that never works well. So I buy them online throughout the year. You can never have too many seed starting disks or soil in my opinion. It’s very likely that I’ll use a couple hundred starting disks and 75-100 containers.
Last year, I had extra funds so I invested in a larger folding table and some of the bigger grow lights. But the 25 yrs before that, I grew everything on a couple of smaller folding tables infront of my south window. It’s not huge. But it worked. I grew everything we needed for tomatoes, lettuce, peppers, etc. that needed started indoors. I didn’t start them as early as I do now. We had more than enough food from the old way. My living room becomes a greenhouse. I love it every year. 
Thanks for reading this boring stuff about gardening. 😂 

Tuesday, July 14, 2020

Life in the summer

Life on the farm is never dull.  The pool we got this year has some fun pirate windows for the youngest to look out.

This was hard work!  Turns out the neighbor to the east planted beans.  Which means dangerous spray.  More dangerous for my garden than the roundup they spray on the corn.  I saw farmer out with the tractor and sprayer.  So I covered what I could with plastic I had.  His spray only mildly affected some of the plants.  Nothing died this year.  He must have used something different than last years farmer did.



The boys helped dad take down the row of dying trees.  The Lorax was upset I'm sure.  It's a huge, odd change as far as look of the farm goes.  Still not used to them all being gone.  



We had some archery practice even when it was nice out!


Just being kids.

A boy and his mama.  

Sunday, June 21, 2020

Changes to the farm


The borage I planted last year, came back up this year.  In a huge patch.  There is atleast double what I planted last year.  Although it’s not in a nice neat row.  They plants are random and scattered in a larger area.  But that’s ok.  I’m not a fan of perfect rows.


Our south tree line.  Before.  They were mostly dead on the other side and dying all over.  We lost a huge part of one of them back in 2006 when the straight line winds came through.  So they’ve been on the list to just come out for a few years.  This was the year.  We can’t have another dead tree take out the power line again.


The youngest thought he wanted to help pick up some sticks when dad took a break.



After.  Obviously we aren’t done.  I’ll use the chips from the stump grinding in the garden.  The sky decided to open up and pour a little bit ago.  So now I’m just waiting to go back out and haul the wood chips.  It definitely looks weird.  We’ve lived here 20 years.  Those trees have always been there.  
Next spring, we will plant apple trees.  So no fear. We didn’t just tear down trees for nothing.  We want the farm to produce food wherever we can.  


Thursday, June 4, 2020

2020 is half over

I've seriously slacked on my reading goal for 2020.  I started this one back in February I think.  And I just finished it a week ago.  One of the girls had some minor sugery done, so I had time at the hospital to wait.  It's nearly impossible to use the internet or data inside the hospital.  The only other thing was to finish this book.  Since everyone is still on edge with the coronavirus, masks are mandatory.  (unless you work at the hospital of course.  A lot of employees didn't have masks on.  But I had to?)  I'm done and over this virus bit.  I just put it on when a nurse was in our little cubical.  




I see my chives and all I can think is "We are here!  We are here!"  
You must have seen Horton Hears A Who to know.  

2020 is half over.  So far we've been "attacked" by the coronavirus, murder hornets somewhere, locusts somewhere else, riots all over the states, people hoarding toilet paper, and food shortages.  The prices of meat are going up very quickly.  TP and paper products are showing back up in the stores.  Limit of one per purchase.  We never ran out of anything.  We were prepared before it was cool to stock up on tp.  Kids across the States and quite possibly the world lost the last part of their school year.  The seniors didn't get their graduations.  Pools are not open this summer.  Kids can go to camp if they wear a face mask all day long.  The list is endless of things that are frustrating about this year.  But now that it's half over, we look back at what's happened and look forward to how much more we can take.  


Saturday, May 30, 2020

Work = reward

I started most of my plants back in January/February.  Lettuce and Kale were two of those.  Now they've been outside for a couple of weeks and some are ready to eat.  My favorite time of year.  When the food I've grown is starting to be ready.  To know that my salads are completely organic, grown in my own soil.  No middle man.  No price gouging.  No other people sneezing, coughing or touching it.  Just me.  The dressing, well, that's not mine, but I'm ok with that at the moment.  I'll make some when my dill and herbs are ready later in the summer.



Sunday, May 24, 2020

Bringing the chicken mansion home


A couple years ago one of our Pastors needed to get rid of his garage.  So naturally, my husband volunteered to bring it to the farm. The chickens needed a new, larger home. So this makes sense right?  Right. 


We took the back roads mostly.  Trying to avoid traffic.  


Until we had no choice but to go on the highway.  Several miles of crawling down the road, stopping traffic in someone’s driveway until he got past us.  He was as wide as the road almost.  

Home!!  What a slow motion trip.  But we made it without incident. 

It took another year to get it set up.  My husband and kids had to build the front wall and add a door.  


Looking good with the front wall done.  



They love to roost on the rafters.  These are four of the roosters we just sold.  

And then there’s a door that my husband built from scrap wood.  I can’t find a photo of the outside with the door shut.  This was summer 2019 before the ducks died.  The cats, dog, ducks, and chickens all coexsist in peace out here.  The cat (hopefully) does the job of taking care of the mice.  The chickens do a good job with bugs.  The ducks, well, they just make noise.  Which is why they got caught by the coyote.  


The plan is to paint the coop.  Just haven't gotten to it yet.  I can't decide if I want it to be multicolored or more toned down.  I'm sure it'll end up being a fun colored in some way.  

We have room for a few hundred chickens. But we won’t add anymore now until next year.  They sleep in a mansion. This chicken coop is huge.  They have more room than they need.  They spend most of their time outside free ranging the farm and fields around us.  They are the absolute definition of free range.  

Call me the chicken lady

Chickens.  We've had chickens for 8, maybe 9 years now.  Our oldest brought home a couple of chickens that her friend didn't want anymore.  That was the beginning of our journey.  We made a coop out of an old Pepsi delivery truck box.  The next couple of years we added a few chickens from the local farm store in the spring.  We also added some from an Uncle and Aunt to mix up the breads a little.   About 5 years ago, we bought an incubator.  That was the beginning of having lots of chickens.  Two years ago our neighbors dog took out almost all of our flock.  It looked like a war zone.  Horrifying really. They never took any responsibility.  It was spring thankfully, so I went to the farm store and bought a couple dozen chicks.  We added all of the eggs we had to the incubator, twice.  Now we are back to having somehwere around 100 chickens.  Why 100?  I don't know.  We live on a farm, the coop is a mansion, and we can.  They lay the best, brightest yellow yolked eggs.  They are well taken care of.  Good quality feed in the winter, bugs, grass, water, food scraps from the house and garden, sun, fresh air, and all the running room a chicken could possibly ever want.  We've never had the eggs tested, but I'd be willing to bet they are 100% better than the nasty white store eggs.  We clean the coop and make compost out of it that I use in the garden the next year.  If we ever need to, we could butcher some.  But we haven't gone down that road yet.  We are thinking about incubating and selling chicks too.  We've done that in the past.  It really isn't cost effective, but if the economy doesn't do well, and people want more chickens, we will do it again.   

The first and second photos are the oldest chickens.  We recently sold all of the roosters but one.  I think there are 20 hens and 1 rooster.  


These boxes are temporary.  They get all fixed up and more added in June.  The ladies sitting in the boxes at the moment are hatching their own eggs.  They are a couple of weeks out before we know how many they will hatch. They annoy me when they do this. But my husband wants to let them do the hatching work for free and see what happens. After we get the new boxes all done there will be room for broody ladies to sit on their own eggs and not be in the way of hens that just want to lay eggs and run. 



One of these birds is not like the others.....
These guys are about three weeks old I think.  I forgot to mark their hatch date. Their pens are pretty big so they have lots of room.  I tried to count them and got 28? but I think that’s about right.  They got let out this morning to the floor.  Generally they don't go out of the coop for a bit.  They're not big enough to jump the step out the door yet.  They get to know the coop and still get sun and fresh air until they're ready to make that jump over the step.  
There is one random duck.  We've had ducks before but they always get caught by preditors.  One of the girls had a friend who bought a duck and had no where to keep it.  So it came to the farm.  We've always just kept them with the chickens.  So it probably thinks it's a chicken.  Not sure of it's gender yet. I'm hoping it's a girl and will lay eggs.  It will be fall before the duck and these chicks will start to lay eggs.  



These guys are just a little over a week old.  They stay pretty close to the heat lamp still.  They are mail order hens.  It’s good to introduce new, unrelated chickens into the flock every couple of years.  With the coronavirus year, we ordered 25 hens.  One died.  So we have 24 of these gals. 



Well hello....



These guys are in the basement. Just hatched yesterday and today.  These could be hens or roosters.  22 doing good so far.  
*Three more hatched over night.  So we are up to 25 in the tub now.  They'll go out to the coop in the pen next week.  For now they stay warm under a heat lamp in the basement.*

And the eggs left to hatch.  Some have pips so they’ll be hatching   Unless they’re not alive.  Then we just have a bunch of smelly eggs to throw out. Sometimes we get a whole bunch to hatch and then others some don’t. We do the same things every time. So it’s a waiting game to see what each batch does. These would have been after we sold the roosters and only kept one.  He’s an old rooster so these may or may not all be viable. Well know in a couple of days for sure. This year we will keep a couple of younger roosters.