February 2012

Want to have a bonfire party at our farm?

. . . Feb 28, 2012 | posted by Josephine
Want to have a bonfire party at our farm?

So here's the deal.  We've got this old barn that fell down at some unknown point in the past.  Mrs. Wilson got all the good stuff out of it (t-posts and the like) and had someone come for all the scrap metal.  We are left with a big mess that is 95% wood, 5% trash.  Not much of the wood it salvagable due to termites and rot.

We've got the field, we've got the wood.  It's the makings of a pretty good party.

We don't really have the time to deal with it ourselves.  So if you want to bring a few friends, spend a few hours making a woodpile, and then burn it we would be more than happy.  You can bring your tents and camp out. 

Let us know if you are interested.  We'd really like to do it some time this spring when the rains are keeping everything wet and safe for burning, and before the field grows up too much.

The chicks are here!

. . . Feb 23, 2012 | posted by Josephine
little fluffballs in the brooder

THE CHICKS ARE HERE!  This morning the post office called at 7:00 am to let us know our chicks had arrived.  Randy said he could here them peeping in the background.

Our chicks are here?!?!?! After being anxious all day yesterday I was surprised to find I wasn't ready!  I ran back and forth -- plug in the brooder lights!  mix some suger water!  oh wait, I need socks! 

I drove to the post office with the heat blasting to warm up the truck for the chicks.  The man at the post office handed me a peeping box, which I opened up to find four compartments of little hopping fluffballs eager to jump right out. 

When I got to the house Randy and Rookie were waiting at the brooder.  I took out each of the chicks, dipping their beaks in water to introduce them to the concept of drinking.  They huddled under the heat lamp and pecked at the paper towels we had laid down over the bedding.

The guineas were smaller, with chipmunk like coloring, and easy to spot, even though some of them had jumped their compartments during transit and were mixed in with the yellow cornish crosses.  We recognized the coloring of the Barred Rocks from the ones we hatched, and I think we can assume the chestnut ones are the Rhode Island Reds, but others are a mystery! 

80 in total, it occurs to me now that I should have counted them as I took them out of the box, because now it is simply impossible as they are all running around, pecking at feed, falling into the waterer, and otherwise being chicks.  And this is about as long as I can stand it without going to check on them!  I don't think I will be getting a lot of work done today.

Planting, planting and more planting

. . . Feb 21, 2012 | posted by Josephine
creative reuse chick brooder

I figured I was long over due in giving an update on the Big Freeze of a week or so ago.  The good news is that plants can be surprisingly resilient!  We had some burned cabbage leaves in the greenhouse, loss of some of our overwintered carrots (that haven't been doing so hot anyway) and a planting of just-coming-up carrots and beets that seem to have suffered the worst, but all the whole all is well.  The entire farm didn't up and die, so I am happy.

What have we been up to in the past week?  We planted out 600 row feet of onions - that's about 1800 plants - 60 pounds of potatoes, 200 broccoli plants, 75 cabbages, 150 buttercrunch lettuces, 200 da cheong chae (bok choi/tat soi cross), 150 red russian kale, 150 Georgia southern collards, and 150 rhubarb chard.  It's been slow going as all the bed preparation has been done by hand since the field is too wet for the tractor. 

Randy is taking advantage of the wet weather to do a major spring tune up on Rosie (the tractor) - changing oil, cleaning and changing filters, checking spark plugs, cleaning fuel lines, and a host of other things that I don't pretend to understand.

It might still be winter in the field, but it's time to gear up for summer in the greenhouse.  Yesterday we seeded peppers and eggplant in the greenhouse - they prefer temperatures over 80 degrees to germinate, so they have their own little hothouse inside the greenhouse to keep them warmer than the cool weather loving cabbage and broccoli still growing in there.  We seeded six varieties of eggplant - in colors ranging from white to almost black to striped in round, teardrop, and long thin sizes, four sweet peppers, and six different hot peppers.   Hopefully it'll stay warm enough in there for them to pop up and start growing!

We are also anxiously awaiting the arrival of our chicks!!  We finished builing the brooder out of a cattle supliment feeder that was sitting out in the field.  We cleaned it out and cut out doors for access and screened windows for air circulation, and have outfitted it with pine shaving, two heat lamps and food and water dispensers.  At night it glows a curious orange and gives the shed the appearance of being visited by extra-terrestrials.

Our 80 chicks (35 layers of assorted varieties, 20 cornish-rock broilers, 5 guineas, and 20 layers we are brooding for a friend) should be here by the end of the week.  I am beside myself with nerves!

A lot happened this January

. . . Feb 17, 2012 | posted by randy
The shop/garage/storage/walk-in/washing area about half completed

 

I cannot believe it has been almost two months since I last wrote a blog. Holy Cow, we have had a lot going on!

Well for starters for those that don’t know Jo and I moved out of Memphis and on to the farm January 1st.  Here it is mid February and we still only have a space heater in the house but we are happy there haven’t been to many bitterly cold nights. 

A lots been happening on the farm too, especially building different things.  Like today I’m working on a chicken brooder, we’ve got 60 chicks coming next week.  If you’ve had the time I’m sure you have seen the pics of the greenhouse we built it turned out great.  

Greenhouse under construction

The big project has been the shop/shed/cool room/wash-pack building.  First off, yeah to so many friends that have been helping us out like Ace, Hope, Rachel, Leslie and most of all Adrian.  Hey if you need something built Adrian is the man! He really is a first rate craftsman.

Helpers helping build the shop

This is our first big project on the farm, and like most it grew over time and so did the budget.  On one end will be a small shop area with room to park Rosie (our tractor) and store a bunch of stuff.  In the middle we built a 8’X10’ walk in cooler to keep the veggies cool.  It really should be amazing, we should be able to keep it at 45 degrees with a a/c window unit and a Cool Bot form Store it Cold.  On the far end from the shop will be a patio like area where we are building wash tables, installing tubs etc for washing the produce. 

The whole project grew bigger than first planned but I’m glad it did.  It will make a big difference in the daily routine and make work much easier.  Ok, enough gabbing I need to get out here and start working on the chicken brooder, till next time…

Trok Lom

Punxsutawney Phil was right!

. . . Feb 12, 2012 | posted by Josephine

Greetings from the farm!  How are we doing?  It's cold.   

The dog's water bowl had a thin layer of ice on it in the house this morning, so I guess it's around 32 degrees in here.  The space heater in the bedroom is thankfully keeping it about 15 degrees warmer in there, but I have ventured out to post this blog with a winter weather update.  It never dried out enough for the city to put our gasline in, so we are (obviously) still without heat.

But things in the house are less important to us than things in the field, and it's even colder out there.  It got down to 21 last night, made worse by the fact that it was cold all day yesterday, and the duration of the low temperatures is equally important as the temps themselves.  It's not supposed to break freezing until almost noon today, which wont give things much time to thaw out before another night in the twenties.

Friday we battened down the hatches - covering almost everything in the field with one, two, or three layers of frost cloth.  All the seed trays were wisked out of the cold frame and back into the greenhouse, covered with frost cloth and another layer of plastic.  My mistake was in putting them on the tables - the flats on the ground appear to have fared better.

It is still too early to tell what made it and what didn't, and form a contingency plan based on the damage.  We will continue to hunker down in the bedroom with hot tea and read to each other about hot peppers from the Baker Creek seed catalogue in an effort to stay warm, and worry about our plants.  All I can say is Punxsutawney Phil (the groundhog) was right, spring is certainly not here yet.