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Monday, June 28, 2010

June 28

After a good weekend home, a new week starts on the farm. Storms came through here Friday and Saturday, as well. Lots of rain, but minimal damage. And, no chicken casualties! Yay! I was almost afraid to ask when I came back!

Today was weeding and seeding again. Seems like the mantra these days. Hard to keep up with both. We also worked on a trellis system, of sorts, for all the tomatoes we planted a few weeks ago. Metal stakes driven into the ground, "cow panels" (large 4' x 8' panels of crossed metal rods) tied in place, and the plants tied to that. We got one row done (took 3 of us all afternoon) and realized we'll run short of petal posts. Something different will have to be done for some of the remaining rows.

Today was also H's birthday. Her folks came over, and we all had I nice chicken dinner together. A good end to the day.

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

June 23

Better day today. Better weather, some inside activities mixed with outside activities, got to drive "into town" and get a cell signal to talk to my honey, etc!!!

The weather looks great for Pizza Night tomorrow, so that should be busy. Busy is always better than bored!

Cranky mood yesterday was just a blip on the radar. No worries, right?!?

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

June 22

A couple rough days for me.

Monday should have been a recovery day after a wedding and lots of family fun, but instead, I was on the road at 5:50 a.m. on my way back to the farm.

After lots and lots of weeding, we did lots and lots of planting. After dinner, and a short bit of reading, I hit the sack early.

Today started better, as it should after nine hours of sleep! Tuesday is CSA packing day. All the produce gets harvested, cleaned, portioned out and boxed up for delivery tomorrow. Green onions (10 for full-size shares, 5 for half-size), radishes (2 bunches/1 bunch), garlic scapes (4/2), salad greens (12 oz/6 oz), kale (2 handfuls/1 handful), turnips (1-1/2 lbs/3/4 lbs.) and their greens (2 large bunches/1 large bunch), and peas to the full-size shares only (about 1-1/4 lbs.). There are 18 full size shares and 50 half-shares.

All that went well, but just as the temps started soaring, we were back out in the field putting seedlings out before more rain comes tonight. Making myself do things like that will be the hardest for me, when I am doing this for ourselves. I can feel the sun beating down on the back of my neck, despite my straw hat. I've long since given up trying to figure out if that tickling down my spine is sweat running down, or a bug crawling on me. There's clumps of dirt and rock in my shoes. The dirt is too dry and hard to kneel on, so I'm bending over and over and over to plant these little buggers. Or, you squat down, plant the three you can reach, get up, move two feet, squat down, plant the three you can reach. The gnats are incessant. The water in my bottle is hot, even though I refilled it right before we came out. I keep asking myself if I'll get used to it by the time August comes.

Hopefully the motivation will come to me even when I know I've already got 2 rows of broccoli growing like gangbusters, but I want another succession of it.

Friday, June 18, 2010

June 18

Terrible night last night.

At the end of pizza night a bad thunderstorm came through here. When the winds kicked up, we think they blew the little meat birds' shelter around. None of them looked like they'd been hit by it, but we think it scared them out of the shelter (understandably!). It sometimes takes chickens a while to figure out how to protect themselves from the weather, and these little guys were pretty young, and very new to the big bad world outside. Plus, if they HAD seen the shelter as, well, shelter, that thought had been scared out of them.

We lost over 70 of them.

H thinks some of them actually drown in the rain. The rest probably had some kind of heart-attack. There was no evidence of any kind of predator. Most of them didn't have any visible wounds and the ones that did were most likely from after they'd died.

It was a horrible thing to see, and has put a bad vibe on the whole day. A couple days at home in the middle of friends, family and parties will feel good.

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

June 17

Beautiful weather today! Started out kinda cloudy and cool, but when the sun came out, it warmed up quickly. C is from Florida, so this was finally feeling warm to her. Me? Well, the Minnesotan in me thought it was getting up there towards hot sometimes... !

The first part of the morning was weeding some of the bulb onions. (As opposed to the green onions.) After that, we loaded the 2nd batch of meat chickens into crates and moved them to a space outside in the grass. They are very happy now;  lots of bugs and weeds to peck at. They arrived on May 19, and most of them now have all their "real" feathers that can withstand the elements. We've got a couple of days with no rain predicted, so this is a good time to get them outside and acclimated a little before they have to deal with bad weather. We also moved the "working girls" to a new section of grass. The recent rain and the fact that they've been in the same spot for a little over a week made their area pretty muddy.

After lunch there was a little more weeding, then, while I was mowing the expansive yard, C got the unpleasant task of "mucking" out the meat birds' room in the barn. Definitely the worst part about chickens. The room will be sprayed down with water, then disinfected in preparation for the baby turkeys that are coming next month! (I guess there's a disease that chickens can pass to turkeys--but not vice versa--that we need to make sure is not present in the room.)

I posted a couple more pictures on Facebook. Here's the link if needed:

Farm Pics



Tuesday, June 15, 2010

June 15

Oh the pressure of knowing people read this!!! Ha ha!

Today, we got the CSA boxes put together. I think I went through the gory details yesterday, but we got the rest of the contents harvested, cleaned, measured out and boxed up. It all went SO smoothly! We were so happy!

Some of the boxes are delivered on Tues, so that fell to yours truly. Just into Alma, about 20 min away. (I can get a cell signal in Alma, so I sneaked in a call to my sweetie, too!!!)

Directing the helpers, overseeing the quality/quantity of the boxes, upholding the farm's reputation, delivering to places unknown.... I spent most of the day outside my comfort zone (at some points I couldn't even SEE my comfort zone), and I lived to tell about it!

Yay for me!

Monday, June 14, 2010

June 14

Today was a harvesting day, despite the virtually constant drizzle/rain. Tomorrow we pack the boxes for the CSA's and we need to do some of it today. Of course, everything is better the later it's harvested, but if you're careful about the way you do it, some things can be picked a little ahead. There's only so many hours in a CSA day, anyway!

We harvested leaf lettuce and sugar snap peas today. We cut the lettuce and collect them into a mesh laundry bag, filling it only about 1/2 way so the greens have plenty of room in there to move around. The warmer it is outside, the faster you have to move. (Today, heat was not a problem.) If it is hot, the lettuce will wilt pretty quickly, and there's no recovery from that. We bring the bags into the barn, and submerge 2-3 of them at a time into cold water in an old steel water trough. It's about 2' wide, 4' long and 3' deep. We swish the bags around to get the dirt off, then, spin the bags in an old washing machine. Seriously. It's like a giant salad spinner. And, it was free from a recycling center. The old owner got rid of it because it was leaking, but we just need the spin cycle to work! After spinning, the lettuce is dumped from the bags onto a towel-lined (very large!) table. There, we fluff it, and sort it, checking for weeds, or other things you wouldn't want to see in your salad. Then it's bagged and weighed. Today, we cut 10 laundry bags, which got us 18 bags at 12 oz each for the full-size shares, 51 bag at 6 oz each for the half-size shares, and 4 bags at 8 oz each for the people that order "extra salad" a la carte. There are 73 bags of salad greens in the walk-in cooler waiting to be put in their CSA boxes tomorrow morning!

Then, we moved onto the peas. She tried something new this year: She planted oats along with the peas. (Forgive me, there's a term for that kind of planting, but I've forgotten it. Overplanting, maybe?) Anyway, the oats grow faster than the peas, so by the time the peas are starting to reach for the sun, lo and behold, there is something right there for them to climb up...an oat plant! The oats seemed pretty thick to me, it was hard to walk through the "rows" of peas, but the peas were really clinging onto and climbing up the oats! They didn't seem to mind having someone else in their "bed" with them! And, with the oats kind of thick in there, there were virtually no weeds. It was just the oats and the pea plants. This bed was already planted when I got here, so I'm not sure about which was planted first, or if it was at the same time. Certainly saved a lot of trouble supporting the peas, or having them just laying on the ground.

We also counted out more of the garlic scapes we'd pulled last week. (4 each for the full shares, 2 each for the half shares.)

Tomorrow, we have to helpers coming. We'll need to harvest green onions (10 ea /5 ea), spinach (2 bunches/1 bunch) and bok choy (4 bunches/2 bunches). The members will also get radishes (2 bunches/1 bunch) but they came from a different farm. Someone she knows, and farms with the same philosophies that she does (low or no spraying of pesticides/herbicides, with an emphasis on maintaining and improving the quality of the soil whenever possible, etc.). There are also 21 members that will be getting a dozen eggs this week.

And, dang it, it's could rain all day tomorrow too! Oh well. Makes me appreciate a nice hot shower at the end of the day!!!