Tag Archives: permaculture

It’s just Winter

Okay, so I’ve been taking pictures of food, snow, chickens, and such, to accompany the blogs I’ve been planning to post.  Well, the best laid plans go awry, don’t they?

This morning IS the morning to dig through the miscelleous photos and notes and make sense, of it all.

The temp outside is

IMG_0005

Can you read that?  It’s -1.5!  Brrrrrr!  I put extra shavings in the doggie houses last night and hung a towel over their door openings to keep out cold air (they aren’t housebroken).

This morning I thought I’d be nice and let them in to warm up and visit for a little while.  Well, they came in very willingly, ran to the woodstove, and Hattie laid down like a good girl.  Blue kept pacing all around the house, rubbed on the rug in the living room, went through the bedroom, foyer, kitchen, into the dining room….I reached down to pet him and YUK!  He had blood all over his face, neck, front legs……his ear was cut on the very tip and I got to tracing his steps back through the house and I sure am glad there isn’t any carpet in the house!

I took a towel, wet it, and cleaned him up as best as I could without putting him in the shower–they went back outside at this point.  The next half hour was spent mopping up blood specs from ALL OVER the house.  3 throw rugs have been washed and the big rug in the living room has been spot-cleaned.  So much for being a considerate dog mommy!  I’m not looking forward to seeing how many spots are on the porches of the house 😦  His ear will be fine.  Seems like those tip-of-the-ear cuts always bleed profusely.

The chickens HATE snow!  I don’t blame them.  Their little hairless feet and legs look really frigid on the frozen ground.  Yesterday I made the morning trek to feed them and provide them some unfrozen water–they finished off the feed, grabbed a drink of water, and headed back inside the coop.

chickens1-2015

I snapped a couple of photos of the frozen farm along the way to the Empire of the Happy Hens……

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This is a shot of the arbor (top not done yet) with the beginnings of the blue bottle “trees” at the upper entrance.  This arbor has rosa rugosa, raspberries, hardy kiwi, muscadines, and one grape vine planted along the length.  Just to the left is the beginning of an herb bed.  So far, catnip and borage have been planted there, but rosemary, lavender, and other perennial herbs will be planted there when warmer weather comes around.

frozenfirepit2015

Here is a shot of the virgin fire pit–still waiting on a load of some type of pretty gravel to drop out of the sky to cover the weed barrier!  I’ve wanted a place to have campfires AND am trying to get rid of the grass in the yard.  Meanwhile, the fire pit covered about a 20 foot circle of grass and I like the way it looks too!

This past fall I planted 9 butternut trees, 70 raspberry bushes, 8 hazelnuts, 2 persimmons, 4 Chinese chestnuts, and 6 rhubarb plants in areas of the front yard that had been previously smothered and killed with leaves.  Seems to be working great so far!  I’ve got lots of leaves to play with, so the smothering shall continue when the weather warms a little.

Meanwhile, lots of projects going in the house…more to come later!

 

Winter is hanging on……..

Okay, so March 20 was officially the first day of Spring. There were a few days of nice, sunny, spring-like weather BUT winter has not quite let go yet. With nighttime temps at 24 degrees last night, about the same tonight and even colder tomorrow night, I’m sure getting a workout with the row covers and high tunnels in this sort of weather.

Today I transplanted 5 flats of Broccoli Raab into individual cells for replanting outside, really soon!

broccoliraabwebthe chives outside the high tunnel are happy, happy….

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One of the projects on the wintertime funky weather list was to install a dry creek bed at the back of the house to drain the roof (no gutters yet) and a spring that is under the house.  Here’s a start….

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It will evolve over the course of the season, but at least the landscape fabric is down and the outline of rocks is in place.

I’ve been planting comfrey around the farm for the bees and the mulch.  Comfrey is a perennial that will produce lots of organic matter over the course of a season.  Several plants were planted in the orchard and at various places around the farm….

comfreyweb

Two weeks ago a new puppy arrived at the farm.  His name is “Blue”.  His father is a Cur dog and his mother is a Catahoula.  I call him a “Curtahoula”.  It’s been awhile since a new puppy was here at the farm, and it is a constant battle to teach them not to kill chickens, cats, and not poop on the porch.  So far he hasn’t threatened a chicken, hasn’t caught a cat, but, hmmmm, has pooped on the porch several times…

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In this photo he is really fascinated by a bunch of acorns he found on the ground–I could not get him to look at the camera.  He’s a good dog so far 🙂

I dug a clump of daffodils from my Nanny’s house in Newport about 25 years ago, and moved them to my place in Lenoir City.  After that they moved to Crossville, to Crab Orchard, then to Wild Things Farm.  In spite of being relocated several times, they still remind me of my Nanny and I smile when they bloom.

daffodilsfromnannyweb

 

In the photo below you’ll see the “Front Bluff” gardens planted in Swiss Chard, lettuce, kale, onions, mixed greens, and spinach—all covered up with row cover.  Maybe I can fool Mother Nature long enough to get a few things under way a little early!

The area nearest the camera is the newly established berry bed.  I killed the grass in this area last year, mulched with chicken manure, and will mulch with leaves before the raspberries, tayberries, blackberries, and hazelnuts are planted.

 

backyardberrypatchwebI’ll go throw another log on the fire and dream of warmer days……

 

 

Permaculture

I’m sure that some of you have heard this term by now.  In a nutshell, it’s recycling, reducing waste, organic gardening, and being frugal.  Pretty much the way our grandparents lived and the way we should be living.  That’s the concept I’ve been living by here on the farm, and I’ve been encouraging others to live this way as well.

We all need to know more about life and how everything is intertwined.  The more we know, the better off we’ll be, because the more we know, the more we will want to be in tune with nature.  The more in tune with nature that we are, the better off everyone will be.

The other day I received an e-mail from a permaculture site that I subscribe to and I’ve listened to this song–oh maybe 75 times in the last two weeks!  It’s my new favorite song.  It’s really good….listen…and the video that goes with it is pretty good too, but I REALLY love the song.  Hope you enjoy it too!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=EU8sxOmRQbY

Peace.