November 2011

Winter Solstice Bonfire

. . . Nov 16, 2011 | posted by Josephine

The days are still growing short, but soon the Winter Solstice will be here!  We will be celebrating the rebirth of the sun in Tubby Creek Farm fashion with a bonfire.  I always look forward to the turning of the year when the days begin to get longer once again.

Please join us on Thursday, December 22nd starting at 3:00 pm, we'll light the bonfire at 5:00 pm and the celebration will go until it goes out so we'll still be going strong if folks working 9-5ers want to come out after work!

We will have food and drink, and you are welcome to bring some to share!

We realize that late December is already pretty full for most people. It is because of the solstice that other holidays are gathered around this time of year.  Maybe you need to fortify yourself for the holidays, or need a break from holiday craziness, or just looking for an alternative seasonal celebration - we would love to have your company.

Children and dogs are always welcome (as long as you keep the dogs out of the garden!)

Please RSVP to randy@tubbycreekfarm.com so that we'll know how many people to expect.

Proof that we really are growing vegetables

. . . Nov 07, 2011 | posted by Josephine
leeks, just transplanted

I know, you read the blog and you look at the pictures and you think, where are the vegetables?  Seems like all we are doing is tinkering with the tractor and driving it around in circles (I understand, sometimes it feels that way to me, too).  So I wanted to be sure to post a couple pictures of what we have growing that you can actually eat.

leeks with healthy rootsOn Saturday, Peter Gathje and Kathleen Kruczek came out to help us plant some leeks.  Randy and I had started them back in July with the instructions to plant them out in mid-November when they are "pencil sized".  Our leeks were not pencil sized, but we decided it was time to go anyway. These suckers had some ROOTS on them!

We are grateful for friends like Peter and Kathleen whose idea of a fun thing to do on Saturday is go crawl around in the dirt.  It was, in fact, a gorgeous day to crawl around in the dirt, and it was much more fun to do it with friends.

We planted about 200 row feet of leeks, which I figure is about 800 of them.  Leeks are supposed to be able to withstand temperatures down to 5 degrees, so hopefully these ones will be growing strong come spring and ready for our CSA boxes around May.

freshly hoed carrotsNot only do we have photographic proof of the leeks, but carrots, too!  While we were planting leeks, Randy diligently finished hoeing the carrots with his new favorite tool - our 6" stirrup hoe from Johnny's.

(The average reader may not know this, but hoes are as diverse and distinctive as fine wines - are you familiar with the co-linear hoe, diamond hoe, or swan neck hoe?  Many small farmers may take pride in the distinction of being a hoe connoisseur)

So there you have it, we actually are growing vegetables!  Although they haven't had their photo shoot yet, the spinach is up and growing strong, along with mustard and turnips.

Our Halloween weekend at Tubby Creek

. . . Nov 01, 2011 | posted by Josephine
planting garlic

So what have we been up to lately?  In addition to keeping you up to date on all our goings on, this blog also serves as a farm journal for myself and Randy, so we have a record of what we did and when.

This is positively the best time of year for working outdoors.  We were really hoping the cover crops seeds would come in before our weekend trip down to the farm, but of course they didn't.  But our soil test results were in the mailbox when we got there!

Saturday afternoon I raked out beds for garlic while Randy weeded carrots.  The air was warm but the ground was cool.  I took off my shoes and worked barefooted.  

That night was cold.  It was hard to pull ourselves out of from under the covers into the cold air in the trailer the next morning.  Outside a heavy frost blanketed the ground.  

Speaking of early mornings, does anyone have a hot plate or electric tea pot they'd like to loan/give us?  I've been driving into Ashland to get gas station coffee in the mornings - a poor substitute to what we are used to.

We spent Sunday morning raking out the beds for the tomatoes in the big field and breaking up garlic to plant, once the sun was up the air warmed quickly.  We fantasized about where our NRCS funded hoop house and cotton hull compost pile would go.

That afternoon I planted the garlic with a teaspoon of the chicken compost that I got from Van Cheeseman in each hole.  We planted three varieties - Inchelium Red and Early Italian Purple from seed garlic that I had saved, and one identified as "California" from Mr. Yang at the South Memphis Farmers Market.  Randy and I mulched them thickly with straw.  Even though the ground was still damp from rain, we watered the greens (mustard, turnips, chard, and spinach) that we had seeded last week.

Jestel's son Randy was around, so my Randy went to talk with him about using his box blade to scrape a spot for our greenhouse.  He was taking the tractor back home for a halloween hayride, but said he'd be back in a couple weeks.  Jestel also gave us a big bag of tomatoes that she had pulled off the plants in anticipation of freezing nights.

We managed to head back to Memphis before dark, giving us a more relaxing weekend before being thrust again into the work week.  Our seeds came on Monday, so right after work we went back to the farm, stopping to pick up bone meal on the way (our soil test revealed a lack of phosphorus, which is very important for tomato plants).

The light was leaving the sky as we arrived on Monday evening.  Driving by we saw someone at the cotton gin, so stopped by and got the go ahead to take all the cotton hulls we want.  Now all we have to do is find someone who'll haul them over to our place for us.

I set to applying bone meal (about 5 lbs per 20 foot bed) while Randy rolled out and hooked up the hose.  We mixed 5 lbs inoculated hairy vetch with 10 lbs winter ryegrain seed and spread that evenly over 11 100 foot rows.

We got the sprinkler going and drank a beer under a slender moon listening to animal noises in the trees and the sound of the water, trying to remember anything we ever knew about the constellations.  The night was perfectly clear.  It would have been very romantic if we weren't both so cold and tired.  As things were, it was moderately romantic.  

This morning we were up early to finish the watering and then head back to Memphis in time for work.  Until next weekend!