Went in to work. Got the flu shot (they bring someone in to give it once a year). It snowed 3". Did some work. Overheard a coworker on a hiring panel making mean and kinda prejudicial comments about the applicants. Was given a slice of cake. Learned that since our union didn't negotiate to pay the new higher professional fees (nor cost of living upgrade) I'll be paying $80 this year for the privilege of working, and if I become a full professional it'll be more like $200 per year. Got scent bombed in the supply closet. Got scent bombed in the bathroom. Came home at lunch to work from home through 3" of snow. Stopped and picked up a freezer lasagne I don't have money for because I'll be out in wet snow all evening and don't want to cook. Stopped to pick up a package for Tucker he asked me to pick up, but because he didn't tell them I was coming to pick it up they wouldn't give it to me. Went around the first car of the year that had spun out and was kinda in the ditch in the 50km strip of the highway downtown. Got home, by now there was 4" of snow. Turned up the stove so I can clean out the chimney tonight/tomorrow morning.
Will work from home this afternoon, go out into the wet snow to pick up sticks and do a first manual pass on the driveway at the part that has all the willow twigs, come in and sweep the chimney, eat lasagne, shower, and go to bed.
Will work from home this afternoon, go out into the wet snow to pick up sticks and do a first manual pass on the driveway at the part that has all the willow twigs, come in and sweep the chimney, eat lasagne, shower, and go to bed.
It's coming
Nov. 3rd, 2022 09:18 amWe're supposed to get our first real snow of the year in the next 24 hours: 20-30cm.
Shortly thereafter it's supposed to drop to -23C or lower. It's going to be very hard on the plants; the soil is still dead dry.
Last night I was out with the headlamp and then this morning out with the headlamp again.
I got the tillers under cover, got some roofing on next year's split wood (but there's still maybe 2/3 cord to split, and the splitter is still out there, and I didn't do the aspen yet).
I got all my lumber (2x4s, spare house wood, etc) under cover but not up on racks. I had to pry some of it off the ground, pretty much everything has a couple inches of gravel frozen to it at this point.
I got the garlic covered in straw.
I raked the snowblower path from the house back to get twigs etc out of the way, but I didn't get the front of the driveway done.
I got the animal carriers split, clamshelled, roughly cleaned (there was some frozen stuff I couldn't get off) and put under cover.
I got extra straw to everyone to keep them warm.
I picked up a bit more garbage and organized some things, put all the cardboard in the cardboard pile.
I got the hoses strung up on the deck, but only one got put away (I snaked it through the rafters on the goose shed, which is honestly where I should put some of the 2x4s)
I did not get the far-back straw bales re-covered for a third time after the wind blew the tarps off; my plan was to bridge between the two with some treetrunks and put some roofing over so I can get the pigs back there in the spring. I need to do that tonight, during "at snow; at times heavy".
I did not get the back side of the animal carrier A-frame reattached where it blew off.
I did not get the missing metal panel from the pigpen reattached; I need to cut several metal panels and put them up for that.
(Doing this now) I did not let the fire go out and clean the chimney, but I really should do that before the hard cold comes.
I did not test-start the snowblower or pull the garden textiles off it (they have not been stored in a bin safely).
(Did half of this) I did not get all the flower pots from my deck moved off the lawn out of the snowblower path.
I have not yet wrapped the apple trees and berry bushes to keep voles from eating the bark.
Busy times.
Shortly thereafter it's supposed to drop to -23C or lower. It's going to be very hard on the plants; the soil is still dead dry.
Last night I was out with the headlamp and then this morning out with the headlamp again.
I got the tillers under cover, got some roofing on next year's split wood (but there's still maybe 2/3 cord to split, and the splitter is still out there, and I didn't do the aspen yet).
I got all my lumber (2x4s, spare house wood, etc) under cover but not up on racks. I had to pry some of it off the ground, pretty much everything has a couple inches of gravel frozen to it at this point.
I got the garlic covered in straw.
I raked the snowblower path from the house back to get twigs etc out of the way, but I didn't get the front of the driveway done.
I got the animal carriers split, clamshelled, roughly cleaned (there was some frozen stuff I couldn't get off) and put under cover.
I got extra straw to everyone to keep them warm.
I picked up a bit more garbage and organized some things, put all the cardboard in the cardboard pile.
I got the hoses strung up on the deck, but only one got put away (I snaked it through the rafters on the goose shed, which is honestly where I should put some of the 2x4s)
I did not get the far-back straw bales re-covered for a third time after the wind blew the tarps off; my plan was to bridge between the two with some treetrunks and put some roofing over so I can get the pigs back there in the spring. I need to do that tonight, during "at snow; at times heavy".
I did not get the back side of the animal carrier A-frame reattached where it blew off.
I did not get the missing metal panel from the pigpen reattached; I need to cut several metal panels and put them up for that.
(Doing this now) I did not let the fire go out and clean the chimney, but I really should do that before the hard cold comes.
I did not test-start the snowblower or pull the garden textiles off it (they have not been stored in a bin safely).
(Did half of this) I did not get all the flower pots from my deck moved off the lawn out of the snowblower path.
I have not yet wrapped the apple trees and berry bushes to keep voles from eating the bark.
Busy times.
Processing
Oct. 23rd, 2022 02:08 pmI altered my pork carnitas recipe to try canning a bunch of pork al pastor, to clear out the freezer some. This uses the basic raw pack + spices method. We'll see how it turns out, but I'm hopeful.
While that was going I made some rose soap, fried up some lions mane mushrooms from smithers with a little kimchi, split and brought in some wood, picked out three roosters for canning when the canner is free and searched out more jars for them, fed everyone outside some, processed some of the grocery store food fo the animals (lots of removing elastics and emptying small cartons of cream today), and now I'm trying to decide what to have for dinner.
Given how early I woke up, I should probably feed the animals a little more, give everyone a little more straw (it's cold out now! Hard on my fingers, can't be great for them) and come in and have a bath and go to bed super early or something.
I also pulled some loin & belly chunks from the freezer to try making two soft spread sausages: one nduja-style and one bacon-style. Stuffing the sausage is my least favourite part, and it's the part that often prevents me from starting on the project, but I realized: if it's spreadable sausage I can cook (sous vide) it in vacuum bags, freeze it like that, and then snip a corner and squeeze it out as I need it. If I were smoking it and fermenting it I couldn't do that, but I'm aiming for the easy-but-done end here.
"Nduja" spread will just be fat/meat + calabrian peppers + salt + a couple drops of liquid smoke
"Bacon" spread will be fat/meat + salt + pepper + a touch of maple syrup + liquid smoke
(I could do a corned pork one, a little firmer, to make hash out of?)
That stuff will take a couple days to thaw outside in the cooler though, especially in this weather, so I'll worry about running it through the meat grinder later on.
While that was going I made some rose soap, fried up some lions mane mushrooms from smithers with a little kimchi, split and brought in some wood, picked out three roosters for canning when the canner is free and searched out more jars for them, fed everyone outside some, processed some of the grocery store food fo the animals (lots of removing elastics and emptying small cartons of cream today), and now I'm trying to decide what to have for dinner.
Given how early I woke up, I should probably feed the animals a little more, give everyone a little more straw (it's cold out now! Hard on my fingers, can't be great for them) and come in and have a bath and go to bed super early or something.
I also pulled some loin & belly chunks from the freezer to try making two soft spread sausages: one nduja-style and one bacon-style. Stuffing the sausage is my least favourite part, and it's the part that often prevents me from starting on the project, but I realized: if it's spreadable sausage I can cook (sous vide) it in vacuum bags, freeze it like that, and then snip a corner and squeeze it out as I need it. If I were smoking it and fermenting it I couldn't do that, but I'm aiming for the easy-but-done end here.
"Nduja" spread will just be fat/meat + calabrian peppers + salt + a couple drops of liquid smoke
"Bacon" spread will be fat/meat + salt + pepper + a touch of maple syrup + liquid smoke
(I could do a corned pork one, a little firmer, to make hash out of?)
That stuff will take a couple days to thaw outside in the cooler though, especially in this weather, so I'll worry about running it through the meat grinder later on.
Datapoints
Oct. 23rd, 2022 02:02 pmYesterday was very rough.
Today is really not great.
Is it:
The "gap days" in my birth control pills, so my first "period" on the pills (assuming I actually start bleeding)
The weather turning, the first grey in two months and some cold out
A crash from the super busy lead-up to the abattoir
Sadness at the death of my birds
Seeing the bad job the abattoir did of plucking, especially the two goslings but also a couple of the ducks, so I'll have to work harder to honour those deaths in a fitting and beautiful way
Knowing I need to touch base with them and ask: was it the feathering or fat texture, or did they just have new folks
Looking at the costs from the trip and worrying about this winter
Having neither Tucker nor Josh available to discuss/process any of the above with after the trip, and therefore not being able to put anything into context and regulate
Today is really not great.
Is it:
The "gap days" in my birth control pills, so my first "period" on the pills (assuming I actually start bleeding)
The weather turning, the first grey in two months and some cold out
A crash from the super busy lead-up to the abattoir
Sadness at the death of my birds
Seeing the bad job the abattoir did of plucking, especially the two goslings but also a couple of the ducks, so I'll have to work harder to honour those deaths in a fitting and beautiful way
Knowing I need to touch base with them and ask: was it the feathering or fat texture, or did they just have new folks
Looking at the costs from the trip and worrying about this winter
Having neither Tucker nor Josh available to discuss/process any of the above with after the trip, and therefore not being able to put anything into context and regulate
And what would you change if you could?
Oct. 21st, 2022 02:10 pmdrive through the night:
the feeling of morning;
vision before colour
I got up at 4 in the morning so I could give the stove a bit of a burn on fresh wood before turning it down. The road was dark but not snowy, frosty but not wet. Newly-painted centerlines stood out under my single aging headlight and my high beams had a long reach. Sometimes I had company on the highway, usually in clumps going to the mill, to the pipeline camps, to a town. Often I was alone and that was better.
The Highway of Tears is becoming familiar. The cell signal is much better courtesy of a political push; this is how we deal with missing indigenous women (though to be fair the men die at a pretty high rate too): we put money into a program, in this case into some company's pockets. They put a bus in down here too, though it's not tremendously useful. Meanwhile the folks north of me, in Middle River and Takla, apparently call the ambulence when they are in dire need of a ride to town.
There was a lot of dark this morning. When I woke up, when I pulled out of the driveway with my grow lights shining through the window behind me, the sky was the clear bowl full of stars that dominates our winter landscape. The moon was a sliver superimposed on a sphere, low near the trees, and it took a very long time for the sky to grow pale grey behind me as I headed west.
There's no snow on the fields. The word I associate with this open, windblown, waiting-for-winter feeling is sere, colourless-dun and patient. When the light came up I was in the Bulkley Valley as it opens up, as the mountains rise to shape a valley, as the trees retreat to the hills and leave even the patchwork of the previous valley. With the mountains it feels wilder; with the fields it feels cozier and more settled. I like it here.
When I stopped for gas I could tell it was light because the truck, still for the first time in three hours, started crowing. The ducks were upset, chattering away, and that's always hard on my heart.
Three days of especially hard labour, of angling the vibrating pressure washer to kick up a minimum of bird-shit-spray, stray, and feathers into my eyes and sinuses as the light fled; of rounding up the ducks and pulling out the keepers over and over as they kept running back to rejoin the main group; of hauling and pushing and pulling heavy carriers as gently as possible; of carrying bucket after bucket of grain to every group of animals so they'd have days of food for the day I was gone and for an extra day in case something happened; finally four hours of relentless driving in the dark until the light crept up behind me and a bright spot of sunrise showed in the south (why the colour just in the south? I have no idea).
Unloading was easy, having enough carriers is a blessing that way since the animals don't need to be transferred.
The morning was for errands, but first I passed a sign that said "Alpine World" on the highway. When I stopped, the man who ran the plant shop said he'd forgotten to bring in the sign the other day and gave me a two-for-one deal on winter-bare potted apple trees: a Gloria and a State Fair will join my collection. We chatted about apples for a bit, then I moved on. The feed store was less helpful: $22 for a bag of layer pellets ($48 for organic) and I figure I should just wait till I get home. Then the wholesale place, where I get my yearly bakery-quality flour to mix with my home-ground stuff and where I picked up hedgehog mushrooms grown by a small local company. Since I'm innoculating logs with them I might as well taste them, right? The "taste like crab" thing arouses both my suspicion and my interest.
I'm also somewhere I can replace the headlight that went out the day before, so I picked up one of those and some oil. I think she might be burning a little oil? Too hot to check right now though.
By that time it was 11, and my check-in at the hotel was 1:30. I borrowed their parking lot, right in downtown, and walked to lunch and to more errands and sightseeing: replacing insurance, getting soft pretzels and doughnuts for lunch on the road tomorrow, inhaling and looking for inspiration in the european deli/sausage shop, picking up beer from the local brewery, looking at potter's shops and bookshops.
Halfway through my plate of pierogies and sour cream I noticed a cat come to the front door of the restaurant and sit expectantly in front of the glass. After a nod from the owner I let him in and he stalked meaningfully into the back room; twenty minutes later as I was nearing the bottom of my London Fog he stalked back out and sat by the door again, at which point I let him out. "It's not my cat" the owner said, "but he can come in"
The most delightful part of the town was the little farm/craft hub. It had two walls of fridge and freezer cases, with each little section labelled with a different farm: this one had lamb, this one had pork, this one had frozen meat pies. I was badly tempted by another set of mushrooms, and by a mushroom grow kit, but my strategy of doing a full circle of the place before picking up a shopping basket paid off: I was over budget, but not as much as I could have been.
Beside the fridges and freezers were tables of storage produce, mostly garlic and squash at this time of year. There was a bunch of baking, dried mushroom powder and coffee and jerky, and then the other wing of the building was occupied by arts and crafts. All sorts of paintings were on one wall, glass baubles hung from the ceiling, and a blacksmith's display of hooks and pokers took up the back. Textile arts and cosmetics were displayed in two rows down the center, each arranged by artist as the food had been arranged by farmer. Here was a farmer that raised their own alpacas and spun impossibly soft scarves; there was someone who sewed waterproof canvas diaper covers and bags; on the other wall was jewellery and sweaters and round hats and pointy hats.
Altogether it was perfect: in effect a condensed farmer's market full of lovely displays closely side-by-side. The lovely variety and texture of goods was highlighted by how closely the displays could be spaced: unlike a farmer's market there was no crowd and no one was standing behind their goods watching. Lacking the budget to buy paintings I bought three greeting cards from one artist and four from another which will get clustered in frames in my two bathrooms. I chose three kinds of garlic because of course I did, music and spanish roja and marino, half of each to eat and half to plant. The music was notably bigger than the others. I also brought three chocolate bars out with me, half-sized ones (!) suitable for my way of eating sweets: sour cherry with light and with dark chocolate, and a peanut dark chocolate. The mushroom kit remained behind, as did the soft fingerless driving gloves and the frozen spanakopita and the blacksmith's towel hooks.
With that I checked into the hotel. When I reserved the room I asked for something on the top floor (I don't like people above me) with a bathtub and that's what I got. With a courteous "are you alright with stairs" I was given actual keys and headed down the long corridor, up the stairs, and then back the length of the building to find a big, old, worn, sparkling clean, comfy room facing a quiet back street. One thirty, time to collapse, to touch base with folks, to just enjoy the feeling of...
...there's nothing. My hobbies aren't here (though I brought patterns and books to read) and folks are still at work. These days of working my body hard (I was hobbling last night until I put on my muscle salve) and planning and keeping the pressure on myself let up into this evening of perfect release where I sit in a hotel room and contemplate the options of bath or nap, pizza or sushi, light from a bulb or an open window.
I love this feeling and I also can't get here without the buildup. A lack of demands is in itself a demand, and I can't experience it except when the cliff of necessary work falls out from under me and I'm left in midair, still trying to run and finding that instead I'm flying. In a good world I fly far enough to land on the next, carefully-chosen cliff and dig into another good run followed by another flight, and so on. Pacing those leaps and those runs is everything, is the difference between energy and burnout, is the difference between flying and crashing.
There's room in this space for all of me, for delight in the farm hub and deep sadness as the way the goslings' father called after them as I carried them away, for the texture of locally-raised beef jerky strips and lazy contemplation of dinner and the sideways leap of just sitting and writing instead of any of that. There's room for feeling capable and confident as I look up headlight replacement videos and for relief at being able to go home from a place where civil rights stickers in the windows are all in reference to vaccines and masks and wistfulness and envy and possible future thoughts about living somewhere full of small farmers and a little hub I could contribute to. There's room for my body to be tired and for the bed to come up and support it and for me to stay sitting up, typing, with the silvery feeling of exhaustion in my head and for that to be an ok choice.
Pizza or sushi? Bath or nap? I could install the headlights first, even?
Either way, I made it. I did all of it, on my own, and I am here fully filling up my space.
Vision first, but then: colour.
the feeling of morning;
vision before colour
I got up at 4 in the morning so I could give the stove a bit of a burn on fresh wood before turning it down. The road was dark but not snowy, frosty but not wet. Newly-painted centerlines stood out under my single aging headlight and my high beams had a long reach. Sometimes I had company on the highway, usually in clumps going to the mill, to the pipeline camps, to a town. Often I was alone and that was better.
The Highway of Tears is becoming familiar. The cell signal is much better courtesy of a political push; this is how we deal with missing indigenous women (though to be fair the men die at a pretty high rate too): we put money into a program, in this case into some company's pockets. They put a bus in down here too, though it's not tremendously useful. Meanwhile the folks north of me, in Middle River and Takla, apparently call the ambulence when they are in dire need of a ride to town.
There was a lot of dark this morning. When I woke up, when I pulled out of the driveway with my grow lights shining through the window behind me, the sky was the clear bowl full of stars that dominates our winter landscape. The moon was a sliver superimposed on a sphere, low near the trees, and it took a very long time for the sky to grow pale grey behind me as I headed west.
There's no snow on the fields. The word I associate with this open, windblown, waiting-for-winter feeling is sere, colourless-dun and patient. When the light came up I was in the Bulkley Valley as it opens up, as the mountains rise to shape a valley, as the trees retreat to the hills and leave even the patchwork of the previous valley. With the mountains it feels wilder; with the fields it feels cozier and more settled. I like it here.
When I stopped for gas I could tell it was light because the truck, still for the first time in three hours, started crowing. The ducks were upset, chattering away, and that's always hard on my heart.
Three days of especially hard labour, of angling the vibrating pressure washer to kick up a minimum of bird-shit-spray, stray, and feathers into my eyes and sinuses as the light fled; of rounding up the ducks and pulling out the keepers over and over as they kept running back to rejoin the main group; of hauling and pushing and pulling heavy carriers as gently as possible; of carrying bucket after bucket of grain to every group of animals so they'd have days of food for the day I was gone and for an extra day in case something happened; finally four hours of relentless driving in the dark until the light crept up behind me and a bright spot of sunrise showed in the south (why the colour just in the south? I have no idea).
Unloading was easy, having enough carriers is a blessing that way since the animals don't need to be transferred.
The morning was for errands, but first I passed a sign that said "Alpine World" on the highway. When I stopped, the man who ran the plant shop said he'd forgotten to bring in the sign the other day and gave me a two-for-one deal on winter-bare potted apple trees: a Gloria and a State Fair will join my collection. We chatted about apples for a bit, then I moved on. The feed store was less helpful: $22 for a bag of layer pellets ($48 for organic) and I figure I should just wait till I get home. Then the wholesale place, where I get my yearly bakery-quality flour to mix with my home-ground stuff and where I picked up hedgehog mushrooms grown by a small local company. Since I'm innoculating logs with them I might as well taste them, right? The "taste like crab" thing arouses both my suspicion and my interest.
I'm also somewhere I can replace the headlight that went out the day before, so I picked up one of those and some oil. I think she might be burning a little oil? Too hot to check right now though.
By that time it was 11, and my check-in at the hotel was 1:30. I borrowed their parking lot, right in downtown, and walked to lunch and to more errands and sightseeing: replacing insurance, getting soft pretzels and doughnuts for lunch on the road tomorrow, inhaling and looking for inspiration in the european deli/sausage shop, picking up beer from the local brewery, looking at potter's shops and bookshops.
Halfway through my plate of pierogies and sour cream I noticed a cat come to the front door of the restaurant and sit expectantly in front of the glass. After a nod from the owner I let him in and he stalked meaningfully into the back room; twenty minutes later as I was nearing the bottom of my London Fog he stalked back out and sat by the door again, at which point I let him out. "It's not my cat" the owner said, "but he can come in"
The most delightful part of the town was the little farm/craft hub. It had two walls of fridge and freezer cases, with each little section labelled with a different farm: this one had lamb, this one had pork, this one had frozen meat pies. I was badly tempted by another set of mushrooms, and by a mushroom grow kit, but my strategy of doing a full circle of the place before picking up a shopping basket paid off: I was over budget, but not as much as I could have been.
Beside the fridges and freezers were tables of storage produce, mostly garlic and squash at this time of year. There was a bunch of baking, dried mushroom powder and coffee and jerky, and then the other wing of the building was occupied by arts and crafts. All sorts of paintings were on one wall, glass baubles hung from the ceiling, and a blacksmith's display of hooks and pokers took up the back. Textile arts and cosmetics were displayed in two rows down the center, each arranged by artist as the food had been arranged by farmer. Here was a farmer that raised their own alpacas and spun impossibly soft scarves; there was someone who sewed waterproof canvas diaper covers and bags; on the other wall was jewellery and sweaters and round hats and pointy hats.
Altogether it was perfect: in effect a condensed farmer's market full of lovely displays closely side-by-side. The lovely variety and texture of goods was highlighted by how closely the displays could be spaced: unlike a farmer's market there was no crowd and no one was standing behind their goods watching. Lacking the budget to buy paintings I bought three greeting cards from one artist and four from another which will get clustered in frames in my two bathrooms. I chose three kinds of garlic because of course I did, music and spanish roja and marino, half of each to eat and half to plant. The music was notably bigger than the others. I also brought three chocolate bars out with me, half-sized ones (!) suitable for my way of eating sweets: sour cherry with light and with dark chocolate, and a peanut dark chocolate. The mushroom kit remained behind, as did the soft fingerless driving gloves and the frozen spanakopita and the blacksmith's towel hooks.
With that I checked into the hotel. When I reserved the room I asked for something on the top floor (I don't like people above me) with a bathtub and that's what I got. With a courteous "are you alright with stairs" I was given actual keys and headed down the long corridor, up the stairs, and then back the length of the building to find a big, old, worn, sparkling clean, comfy room facing a quiet back street. One thirty, time to collapse, to touch base with folks, to just enjoy the feeling of...
...there's nothing. My hobbies aren't here (though I brought patterns and books to read) and folks are still at work. These days of working my body hard (I was hobbling last night until I put on my muscle salve) and planning and keeping the pressure on myself let up into this evening of perfect release where I sit in a hotel room and contemplate the options of bath or nap, pizza or sushi, light from a bulb or an open window.
I love this feeling and I also can't get here without the buildup. A lack of demands is in itself a demand, and I can't experience it except when the cliff of necessary work falls out from under me and I'm left in midair, still trying to run and finding that instead I'm flying. In a good world I fly far enough to land on the next, carefully-chosen cliff and dig into another good run followed by another flight, and so on. Pacing those leaps and those runs is everything, is the difference between energy and burnout, is the difference between flying and crashing.
There's room in this space for all of me, for delight in the farm hub and deep sadness as the way the goslings' father called after them as I carried them away, for the texture of locally-raised beef jerky strips and lazy contemplation of dinner and the sideways leap of just sitting and writing instead of any of that. There's room for feeling capable and confident as I look up headlight replacement videos and for relief at being able to go home from a place where civil rights stickers in the windows are all in reference to vaccines and masks and wistfulness and envy and possible future thoughts about living somewhere full of small farmers and a little hub I could contribute to. There's room for my body to be tired and for the bed to come up and support it and for me to stay sitting up, typing, with the silvery feeling of exhaustion in my head and for that to be an ok choice.
Pizza or sushi? Bath or nap? I could install the headlights first, even?
Either way, I made it. I did all of it, on my own, and I am here fully filling up my space.
Vision first, but then: colour.
Seconds to breathe
Oct. 18th, 2022 12:49 pmPrepping for the trip still in odd moments at work. It's going to take a bunch of prepping.
o Talked to the abattoir, I can pick up either around 5pm the day of (fresh) or 2-3pm the day after (frozen). Neither of those really allows me to drive home across full daylight. Processing what I'll do.
o Keeping an eye on the weather. Snow is supposed to hit afternoon/evening of "the day after" (so maybe I should load the fresh birds up in coolers with ice and try driving straight home? But it's a 4 hour drive, and I'll have done the 4 hour drive in at 5am that morning, but I'll maybe avoid snow?)
o Updated BCAA/roadside auto insurance, just in case
o Got grain last night, need to offload a bunch of it still, which means...
o Need to cut and power wash a couple more grain barrels (and need to powerwash carriers and coolers)
o Still researching possible places to stay, there's a nice place (The Creamery Inn) in a small town nearby, but that isn't close to restaurants. There's also a treehouse place in that small town that would be fun if Tucker was coming along. Hotels in the bigger town are an option. Keeping an eye on budget, of course, this will cost me a couple hundred in gas and more than that in butchers' fees.
o Got snow tires put on.
o Slowly acclimatizing the ducks to eating in the goose shed, so I can put them in there Wed night, close the door, and get them in the carriers on Thurs so I can leave at 5am Friday.
o It would be great to get the mat off the truck bed and wash under it.
o I definitely need to put the top on the truck, which I haven't done singlehandedly before. It's several hundred pounds and very awkward, I think I have a system that involves scootching it along 2x4s. I should probably find someone who can be a safety check-in after I do that. I guess that'll happen Wed evening, since I need to unload tires and grain tonight.
o I need to choose which geese are going, I have three selected but need to select the other couple.
o Also need to pull my breeder ducks.
o Need to get lumber and other odds and ends under cover suddenly, since it's supposed to snow and if it sticks then everything is there forever/until May or June.
o Really should cover straw.
o Need to pack, including birth control pills and pads since this of course will be happening over my period.
o Need to make sure the truck has emergency supplies if I need to sleep in it, patch a tire, etc.
o Need to figure out how to get both full carriers and coolers into the truck, this is a lot of items that take up space. Tetrisy.
o Need to load the animals up on food/water on Thurs night.
o I'm tired.
o Talked to the abattoir, I can pick up either around 5pm the day of (fresh) or 2-3pm the day after (frozen). Neither of those really allows me to drive home across full daylight. Processing what I'll do.
o Keeping an eye on the weather. Snow is supposed to hit afternoon/evening of "the day after" (so maybe I should load the fresh birds up in coolers with ice and try driving straight home? But it's a 4 hour drive, and I'll have done the 4 hour drive in at 5am that morning, but I'll maybe avoid snow?)
o Updated BCAA/roadside auto insurance, just in case
o Got grain last night, need to offload a bunch of it still, which means...
o Need to cut and power wash a couple more grain barrels (and need to powerwash carriers and coolers)
o Still researching possible places to stay, there's a nice place (The Creamery Inn) in a small town nearby, but that isn't close to restaurants. There's also a treehouse place in that small town that would be fun if Tucker was coming along. Hotels in the bigger town are an option. Keeping an eye on budget, of course, this will cost me a couple hundred in gas and more than that in butchers' fees.
o Got snow tires put on.
o Slowly acclimatizing the ducks to eating in the goose shed, so I can put them in there Wed night, close the door, and get them in the carriers on Thurs so I can leave at 5am Friday.
o It would be great to get the mat off the truck bed and wash under it.
o I definitely need to put the top on the truck, which I haven't done singlehandedly before. It's several hundred pounds and very awkward, I think I have a system that involves scootching it along 2x4s. I should probably find someone who can be a safety check-in after I do that. I guess that'll happen Wed evening, since I need to unload tires and grain tonight.
o I need to choose which geese are going, I have three selected but need to select the other couple.
o Also need to pull my breeder ducks.
o Need to get lumber and other odds and ends under cover suddenly, since it's supposed to snow and if it sticks then everything is there forever/until May or June.
o Really should cover straw.
o Need to pack, including birth control pills and pads since this of course will be happening over my period.
o Need to make sure the truck has emergency supplies if I need to sleep in it, patch a tire, etc.
o Need to figure out how to get both full carriers and coolers into the truck, this is a lot of items that take up space. Tetrisy.
o Need to load the animals up on food/water on Thurs night.
o I'm tired.
Took a week off from work to play on the farm with Josh. What this looked like:
Chopping and pickling 76 jars (roughly 50L) of hot mixed pickle, a batch of lightly syruped strawberries, and a batch of the "ploughman's pickle" from healthy canning website
Cutting down some aspen trees with the chainsaw for mushrooms
Fixing the deck and adding a window to the carport under it
Hanging pictures on the walls
Splitting some wood
Cleaning the chimney and devising a method for me to do it on my own (last time sucked)
Making shelves in the newly-repaired carport
Borrowing a really big trailer, picking up 6 large square (half-ton) bales of straw, and using his vehicle and a pulley and a rope and some trees to pull them off the trailer and put them in strategic locations where I'll need straw in the next year
Making and eating some chinese noodle dishes Josh has been playing with lately
Looking through the garden for any ripe-enough corn, for seed, and picking it. Hulled a bunch
Petting the cats a lot
Eating lots of roast-and-foget veggies, and biscuits, both of which are my easy-to-make contributions
Making creme brulee in the low-and-slow bake method, which doesn't require twice cooking
Discussing ways to re-roof the greenhouse
Making garden signs for my plants
Cruising past the dump a couple times getting some nice-looking bits of wood and wild sunflower seeds
Sleeping in late, till 8ish, most mornings
What this did not look like:
Talking about relationship stuff
Talking about sex stuff
Trying to do anything when I was less than 100% into it, which meant a lot less physical stuff
A ton of cooking, this time
Dispatching the roosters
Finishing splitting the wood, or coming close
Actually innoculating trees with mushrooms (I'll do that today)
Chopping and pickling 76 jars (roughly 50L) of hot mixed pickle, a batch of lightly syruped strawberries, and a batch of the "ploughman's pickle" from healthy canning website
Cutting down some aspen trees with the chainsaw for mushrooms
Fixing the deck and adding a window to the carport under it
Hanging pictures on the walls
Splitting some wood
Cleaning the chimney and devising a method for me to do it on my own (last time sucked)
Making shelves in the newly-repaired carport
Borrowing a really big trailer, picking up 6 large square (half-ton) bales of straw, and using his vehicle and a pulley and a rope and some trees to pull them off the trailer and put them in strategic locations where I'll need straw in the next year
Making and eating some chinese noodle dishes Josh has been playing with lately
Looking through the garden for any ripe-enough corn, for seed, and picking it. Hulled a bunch
Petting the cats a lot
Eating lots of roast-and-foget veggies, and biscuits, both of which are my easy-to-make contributions
Making creme brulee in the low-and-slow bake method, which doesn't require twice cooking
Discussing ways to re-roof the greenhouse
Making garden signs for my plants
Cruising past the dump a couple times getting some nice-looking bits of wood and wild sunflower seeds
Sleeping in late, till 8ish, most mornings
What this did not look like:
Talking about relationship stuff
Talking about sex stuff
Trying to do anything when I was less than 100% into it, which meant a lot less physical stuff
A ton of cooking, this time
Dispatching the roosters
Finishing splitting the wood, or coming close
Actually innoculating trees with mushrooms (I'll do that today)
Every season is the best season
Sep. 16th, 2022 09:23 amI do not understand how I can have so much trouble with most transitions, but also do so well with seasons. Still, I do well with seasons. I love the seasonality of this place. I'm fully ready for each season in turn to shift my focus and my activities. Maybe it's the predictability, the feeling of processing through familiar sets of activities and so I can improve or alter what I did previously but don't need to start again from nothing. Maybe it's the feeling of building on last season's work so I never feel disconnected from the past, and knowing next season will build on this season's work so I don't feel that abrupt slicing loss of transition.
Either way, gardening is pretty much over and I'm ok with that (!?!!!???? !! ? !). I have turnips, the last of the soup peas, and some beets to bring in. I have the favas to look over, and the beans to see if any pods ripened. It's been too dry for me to plant winter grains, I daren't run the tiller or I'll turn my soil into dust, so I'll till once the rains start and wait to plant grains till spring. Maybe I'll do a test patch of barley. I've dug one hole for next year's as-yet-unordered apple trees, and I'll try and at least half-dig the holes for all of them, so when they arrive in the thick of spring planting I can just bang them in the holes and be done. The freeze/thaw will loosen the soil at the edge of the holes and help prevent circling roots in my clay, too, and I won't have to remeasure my circles of protection.
I do still have a couple roses to put in the ground, and the garlic that isn't yet arrived, too. But still, hoses and nurturing and watching and trying to guess what'll happen-- that's over. I have a half-dozen dairy crates of corn drying in the woodstove room. There is another dairy crate of corn (saskatoon white) waiting to be shucked, and a crate of melons (none ripened on the vine, but I'm going to let them ripen as far as they can and take seeds from those that have fully formed seeds), and maybe 4 flats of green tomatoes (many of which ripened in the last couple days, gotta get on that). I have two shelves of squash, and outside there is half a bucket of beans and a bucket of cucumbers that need to be pickled.
The barley crop is in, a fact that needs its own post to describe how much of a joy and a relief it is. I don't grow barley but the farmers one town over do; that's why I mostly fed my pigs until this year's shortage. Straw is available, $55 per large bale (that's the 3 x 3 x 8' bales) and I'll be getting some the week Josh comes up and we'll figure out how to unload (normally it's tying the bale to a tree and driving the pickup away from the tree, but I'd like to stack them two deep).
With straw comes the ability to lay in my king stropheria mushroom bed for next spring. I need to put it in the shade, somewhere that doesn't flood. Problem is, the shade is what stays frozen till late in the year, I might split the block and try two places.
With the barley harvest comes barley. Rolled barley, or barley and oat chop, is $450/ton this year. The bagged feed I've been using is $1100/ton, and in the last month I went through a ton and a half of feed. So, just financially, this is a relief. I've been running a negative balance on my credit card the last couple months, just absorbing the higher feed costs, because I can't not feed the animals and I couldn't butcher while it was hot.
It's also a relief to have the barley, and soon the barley and oats, because feed makes a big difference to the texture of the animals' fat. Barley and oats make a firmer fat, while the bagged feed make a softer fat. I prefer the firmer fat. I've read a bunch on this, I guess feeding on acorns makes a softer fat which folks like more in prosciutto but which is not so great in bacon, for instance. Acorns also supply tannins, which keep the fat from going rancid as quickly (smoke does the same thing, which is why so much rustically-preserved pork is smoked). Soft fat is hard to manage for slicing thinly, it's hard to butcher with, and I'm not as fond of the texture for eating. I'm of half a mind to give the pigs a full month on barley before I butcher so the fat can convert a little, rather than get the butcher in as soon as possible. Honestly I may not be able to get the butcher up sooner anyhow, it's a busy season. And my mind may change once it starts freezing enough to put the hoses away and I need to carry water by hand for over a dozen pigs.
I also have four little uncastratated suckling pigs I need to slaughter as suckling pigs shortly. Three of the four are living in the lean-to greenhouse and associated enclosure in a life of luxury as of yesterday; I need to catch the last one and put him in there. I do hate catching piglets, they scream at just the wrong frequency for my nervous system and then the whole herd of pigs starts barking and grunting menacingly and following me around trying to rescue the babies. I understand why the bears stay away. I wouldif I could, my heart is always pounding by the end of it and it takes awhile for the adrenaline to dissipate.
I always tell myself I'll set up a big carrier with feed in it just outside the main pigpen so the escapee piglets get used to it, and then I can just close them in and carry them away. Maybe I'll actually do that this time? There is a new set of piglets this week, and one mama sow I'm very impressed with, she'll be a keeper.
So I suppose this is the season where my attention is turning from garden to animals, from harvest to slaughter, and then from there to seed sorting once the seeds are dried.
I'm also feeling the pull towards sewing, towards warm snuggly clothing. It's still a fairly recent revelation that clothing doesn't have to hurt my body as long as it's made of the right materials and tailored right, and I'm looking forward to playing around with that this winter. The gears are in motion for me to approach that activity in a seamless transition, nosing around at patterns, clearing a table for a sewing table, cutting out patterns, making a mock-up for loose leggings and one for a short sweater or wrap dress to wear over leggings, just a little bit of something every week as the snow comes and everything else subsides.
Meanwhile Tucker is here. I had wanted to do a bonfire with him, as I've intended to do every year for the last five or so, but the burning ban is still on despite the frost -- did I mention it's dry out? -- so maybe we'll try to just arrange the pile for his next visit. In the meantime I get snuggles and doubtless a shared brunch of two, which are much-needed.
Either way, gardening is pretty much over and I'm ok with that (!?!!!???? !! ? !). I have turnips, the last of the soup peas, and some beets to bring in. I have the favas to look over, and the beans to see if any pods ripened. It's been too dry for me to plant winter grains, I daren't run the tiller or I'll turn my soil into dust, so I'll till once the rains start and wait to plant grains till spring. Maybe I'll do a test patch of barley. I've dug one hole for next year's as-yet-unordered apple trees, and I'll try and at least half-dig the holes for all of them, so when they arrive in the thick of spring planting I can just bang them in the holes and be done. The freeze/thaw will loosen the soil at the edge of the holes and help prevent circling roots in my clay, too, and I won't have to remeasure my circles of protection.
I do still have a couple roses to put in the ground, and the garlic that isn't yet arrived, too. But still, hoses and nurturing and watching and trying to guess what'll happen-- that's over. I have a half-dozen dairy crates of corn drying in the woodstove room. There is another dairy crate of corn (saskatoon white) waiting to be shucked, and a crate of melons (none ripened on the vine, but I'm going to let them ripen as far as they can and take seeds from those that have fully formed seeds), and maybe 4 flats of green tomatoes (many of which ripened in the last couple days, gotta get on that). I have two shelves of squash, and outside there is half a bucket of beans and a bucket of cucumbers that need to be pickled.
The barley crop is in, a fact that needs its own post to describe how much of a joy and a relief it is. I don't grow barley but the farmers one town over do; that's why I mostly fed my pigs until this year's shortage. Straw is available, $55 per large bale (that's the 3 x 3 x 8' bales) and I'll be getting some the week Josh comes up and we'll figure out how to unload (normally it's tying the bale to a tree and driving the pickup away from the tree, but I'd like to stack them two deep).
With straw comes the ability to lay in my king stropheria mushroom bed for next spring. I need to put it in the shade, somewhere that doesn't flood. Problem is, the shade is what stays frozen till late in the year, I might split the block and try two places.
With the barley harvest comes barley. Rolled barley, or barley and oat chop, is $450/ton this year. The bagged feed I've been using is $1100/ton, and in the last month I went through a ton and a half of feed. So, just financially, this is a relief. I've been running a negative balance on my credit card the last couple months, just absorbing the higher feed costs, because I can't not feed the animals and I couldn't butcher while it was hot.
It's also a relief to have the barley, and soon the barley and oats, because feed makes a big difference to the texture of the animals' fat. Barley and oats make a firmer fat, while the bagged feed make a softer fat. I prefer the firmer fat. I've read a bunch on this, I guess feeding on acorns makes a softer fat which folks like more in prosciutto but which is not so great in bacon, for instance. Acorns also supply tannins, which keep the fat from going rancid as quickly (smoke does the same thing, which is why so much rustically-preserved pork is smoked). Soft fat is hard to manage for slicing thinly, it's hard to butcher with, and I'm not as fond of the texture for eating. I'm of half a mind to give the pigs a full month on barley before I butcher so the fat can convert a little, rather than get the butcher in as soon as possible. Honestly I may not be able to get the butcher up sooner anyhow, it's a busy season. And my mind may change once it starts freezing enough to put the hoses away and I need to carry water by hand for over a dozen pigs.
I also have four little uncastratated suckling pigs I need to slaughter as suckling pigs shortly. Three of the four are living in the lean-to greenhouse and associated enclosure in a life of luxury as of yesterday; I need to catch the last one and put him in there. I do hate catching piglets, they scream at just the wrong frequency for my nervous system and then the whole herd of pigs starts barking and grunting menacingly and following me around trying to rescue the babies. I understand why the bears stay away. I wouldif I could, my heart is always pounding by the end of it and it takes awhile for the adrenaline to dissipate.
I always tell myself I'll set up a big carrier with feed in it just outside the main pigpen so the escapee piglets get used to it, and then I can just close them in and carry them away. Maybe I'll actually do that this time? There is a new set of piglets this week, and one mama sow I'm very impressed with, she'll be a keeper.
So I suppose this is the season where my attention is turning from garden to animals, from harvest to slaughter, and then from there to seed sorting once the seeds are dried.
I'm also feeling the pull towards sewing, towards warm snuggly clothing. It's still a fairly recent revelation that clothing doesn't have to hurt my body as long as it's made of the right materials and tailored right, and I'm looking forward to playing around with that this winter. The gears are in motion for me to approach that activity in a seamless transition, nosing around at patterns, clearing a table for a sewing table, cutting out patterns, making a mock-up for loose leggings and one for a short sweater or wrap dress to wear over leggings, just a little bit of something every week as the snow comes and everything else subsides.
Meanwhile Tucker is here. I had wanted to do a bonfire with him, as I've intended to do every year for the last five or so, but the burning ban is still on despite the frost -- did I mention it's dry out? -- so maybe we'll try to just arrange the pile for his next visit. In the meantime I get snuggles and doubtless a shared brunch of two, which are much-needed.
Food: an exotic piece and a next piece
Sep. 5th, 2022 01:17 pmThe apples are a perfect template for how I think about the food I make.
I have an abundance of something, in this case apples. I want to use it to make a portion of my diet, across the year if possible, so more than just standing outside and eating apples after I get home from work and tossing the cores to the geese (which I also do).
Drying apples would be perfect, I could snack on them easily while doing other things, but it's too fiddly: my apples are small, and I don't have time to core and slice them, I only have one dehydrator, it's a low return for the amount of work.
Applesauce is easy: cut the apples in half (for a more efficient fit, and to see if there are huge worms in them or anything) and toss them in a pair of slow cookers. Eight to twelve hours later, come back and pour the pulp from the slow cookers into the chinois (does this thing have another name yet?) directly into my stewpot. Heat to boiling, with or without sugar or another flavouring, pour into jars, boil the jars 20 minutes, done.
But wait, this is kind of boring applesauce, I can't eat it that much. Does adding a couple vanilla beans make it into more of a dessert thing? So then I can eat it more? Or burning some sugar into caramel? Why yes, so I'll do that with some.
And adding more sugar and simmering makes it into jam, which I can then flavour with things I either don't have enough to make jam (the last saskatoons, a couple of limes) or that don't make good jam on their own (spruce tips).
But if I make jam, the next step is: can I eat it on anything I've made or obtained locally? Applesauce is good on my pork, or with my goose. Actually, the jam probably is too.
But if I make cornbread or some sort of hoecake from my corn, putting jam on that is a more satisfying experience. Then if I serve that with homemade breakfast sausage, that's even better.
So I'm always kind of thinking, is there an exotic flavouring I can buy to increase the value of what I have, like limes or vanilla? And then, where's the next piece down the chain where I can add something I grew or harvested to make this meal more completely from this place?
That's the basic philosophy underpinning the thought of raising 75% of my calories myself.
I have an abundance of something, in this case apples. I want to use it to make a portion of my diet, across the year if possible, so more than just standing outside and eating apples after I get home from work and tossing the cores to the geese (which I also do).
Drying apples would be perfect, I could snack on them easily while doing other things, but it's too fiddly: my apples are small, and I don't have time to core and slice them, I only have one dehydrator, it's a low return for the amount of work.
Applesauce is easy: cut the apples in half (for a more efficient fit, and to see if there are huge worms in them or anything) and toss them in a pair of slow cookers. Eight to twelve hours later, come back and pour the pulp from the slow cookers into the chinois (does this thing have another name yet?) directly into my stewpot. Heat to boiling, with or without sugar or another flavouring, pour into jars, boil the jars 20 minutes, done.
But wait, this is kind of boring applesauce, I can't eat it that much. Does adding a couple vanilla beans make it into more of a dessert thing? So then I can eat it more? Or burning some sugar into caramel? Why yes, so I'll do that with some.
And adding more sugar and simmering makes it into jam, which I can then flavour with things I either don't have enough to make jam (the last saskatoons, a couple of limes) or that don't make good jam on their own (spruce tips).
But if I make jam, the next step is: can I eat it on anything I've made or obtained locally? Applesauce is good on my pork, or with my goose. Actually, the jam probably is too.
But if I make cornbread or some sort of hoecake from my corn, putting jam on that is a more satisfying experience. Then if I serve that with homemade breakfast sausage, that's even better.
So I'm always kind of thinking, is there an exotic flavouring I can buy to increase the value of what I have, like limes or vanilla? And then, where's the next piece down the chain where I can add something I grew or harvested to make this meal more completely from this place?
That's the basic philosophy underpinning the thought of raising 75% of my calories myself.
Breakfast menu
Sep. 3rd, 2022 01:40 pmThis morning I woke up from a dream about the end of all things and cleaned out the quail house. This meant moving all the cardboard from the front yard to the side yard, where I broke down the boxes and lay it down between berry bushes in the haskap and sour cherry patch) the next strip up the hill is planted this year with apples, roses, and ribes).
To do that I had to cut down a bunch of aspen suckers.
Then I shovelled the bedding out of the quail house on top of the cardboard, a nice light dusting of duck-poop-soaked straw and woodchips that hopefully aren't too much nitrogen and can age into the cardboard's carbon over the fall.
Cut aspen stems went on top of that, to keep the rain from washing the bedding downslope atop the slippery cardboard.
Then I hauled fresh woodchips into the quail house, just in time for it to recieve 9 extra roosters from a friend of mine, they'll get butchered and canned over the next month or so.
I went back around to the front and broke down some more cardboard boxes, clearing out my A-frame that had been holding them; I'll use it for my tillers and the snowblower this winter. I need to do more lasagna bedding in the front, around the burr oak, apple, and couple berries in the lawn. Bedding from the goose shed can go there.
But really all this is prep for wanting to build another shed, a feed shed, either down in the thistle patch between the muscovy shed and the chicken slaughter station or in the angle of the unsafe cabin with the wood foundation.
Instead, since my neighbour spotted a sow (bear) with two cubs in her yard, I'll probably work on apples.
To do that I had to cut down a bunch of aspen suckers.
Then I shovelled the bedding out of the quail house on top of the cardboard, a nice light dusting of duck-poop-soaked straw and woodchips that hopefully aren't too much nitrogen and can age into the cardboard's carbon over the fall.
Cut aspen stems went on top of that, to keep the rain from washing the bedding downslope atop the slippery cardboard.
Then I hauled fresh woodchips into the quail house, just in time for it to recieve 9 extra roosters from a friend of mine, they'll get butchered and canned over the next month or so.
I went back around to the front and broke down some more cardboard boxes, clearing out my A-frame that had been holding them; I'll use it for my tillers and the snowblower this winter. I need to do more lasagna bedding in the front, around the burr oak, apple, and couple berries in the lawn. Bedding from the goose shed can go there.
But really all this is prep for wanting to build another shed, a feed shed, either down in the thistle patch between the muscovy shed and the chicken slaughter station or in the angle of the unsafe cabin with the wood foundation.
Instead, since my neighbour spotted a sow (bear) with two cubs in her yard, I'll probably work on apples.
Labour Day Menu
Sep. 1st, 2022 09:44 pmD Order shampoo
1/2 Order spring bulbs and garlic
O Map new circle planting
O Plant last roses
O Make soap
O Render lard
O Freeze and remove soap from molds
O Till south slope by house and plant fall grains & put on row cover
O Pickle squash/beans
1/2 Pick apples
1/2 Sauce apples (caramel?)
O Juice apples (?)
O Apple jam (lime, cardamom, or vanilla?)
O Lots of water bath canning the above
O Cook a duck
O Can pork from freezer
O Pork belly into salt pork
D Rearrange storage
O Wash floors
O Make biscuits
D Clean sheets
D Clean quail house for roosters
O Feed old eggs to pigs
O Build feed storage shed on aspens?
O Empty big trailer
O Remove sides on small trailer
O Get straw
O Sort locations for large straw balls
O Empty gooseshed bedding to prep for small straw
O Sort pig straw storage
D Walk through garden
O Sort pork chops for Monday
D Cardboard on south slope
D Prep A-frame for winter
O Bonfire pile
1/2 Order spring bulbs and garlic
O Map new circle planting
O Plant last roses
O Make soap
O Render lard
O Freeze and remove soap from molds
O Till south slope by house and plant fall grains & put on row cover
O Pickle squash/beans
1/2 Pick apples
1/2 Sauce apples (caramel?)
O Juice apples (?)
O Apple jam (lime, cardamom, or vanilla?)
O Lots of water bath canning the above
O Cook a duck
O Can pork from freezer
O Pork belly into salt pork
D Rearrange storage
O Wash floors
O Make biscuits
D Clean sheets
D Clean quail house for roosters
O Feed old eggs to pigs
O Build feed storage shed on aspens?
O Empty big trailer
O Remove sides on small trailer
O Get straw
O Sort locations for large straw balls
O Empty gooseshed bedding to prep for small straw
O Sort pig straw storage
D Walk through garden
O Sort pork chops for Monday
D Cardboard on south slope
D Prep A-frame for winter
O Bonfire pile
I did quite enjoy yesterday's field day. It was a bit of a mess for everyone involved - my colleague's first day this year doing his particular stream sampling, waiting for the guy from the Nation (I suspect this will be a normal part of having him come along), everyone forgetting a measuring tape (luckily I carry 6 measuring devices, so I could loan a couple even though I forgot one), losing a measuring tape and tromping all over the block to try and find it (and it was a steep block), bleeding all over the place, all that jazz.
But the bugs are almost gone for the year, I found the measuring tape I lost (it was in one of my cruiser vest pockets, the only place the very large orange measuring device could have been camouflaged, in a pocket I never use but clearly visible) and while looking for the measuring tape I had a very nice couple km hike. It wasn't too hot, it isn't yet cold, someone else drove us to the block. Very nice.
And today my legs are sore and I'm just doing a small bit of fieldwork. The barley and oats may be in from the field which would mean that my feed costs will be down; this is the fattening period for the animals, when everyone (especially the waterfowl) start eating twice as much to prepare for winter.
But the bugs are almost gone for the year, I found the measuring tape I lost (it was in one of my cruiser vest pockets, the only place the very large orange measuring device could have been camouflaged, in a pocket I never use but clearly visible) and while looking for the measuring tape I had a very nice couple km hike. It wasn't too hot, it isn't yet cold, someone else drove us to the block. Very nice.
And today my legs are sore and I'm just doing a small bit of fieldwork. The barley and oats may be in from the field which would mean that my feed costs will be down; this is the fattening period for the animals, when everyone (especially the waterfowl) start eating twice as much to prepare for winter.
Fertile Endings
Aug. 28th, 2022 03:12 pmPermaculture says "the problem is the solution" and "produce no waste" and honestly, even though these aspen trees on the south side of my house are a problem (shading the garden, getting into the septic line) they can be the solution to many things. Turned into woodchips, they'd be very useful for mulching etc. And.
I ordered a bunch of mushroom spawn, so when Josh comes up this fall we'll take down the ones we can without hitting the house or the power lines, and we'll innoculate them with shiitake and oyster mushrooms. This is another multi-year project, they won't fruit for a couple years, but since I'm here I'm going to do it. I also got a small amount of lion's mane and bear's head plug spawn, which will need to go into a conifer, and I do have some spare spruce.
The plan is to put the logs behind the goose shed, in the dip between the bird shed and the pig field. Water runs through there in spring and it tends to stay humid, it's shaded, it holds snow for insulation, and mom and I recently cleared it out so it's a space waiting for a use. It does have a bunch of coppiced/polarded willows, some very nice wild roses, and some saskatoon berries. All of those should be fine growing around the logs and keeping humidity up while the mycelia colonize their food source.
The logs should take a couple years to produce (shiitakes take longer, oyster shorter) and then should produce for a number of years. By the time they're a couple years from done, I should have a new crop of aspen trees looking to be taken down. So that's nice.
I'm also getting some winecap/king stropheria/garden giants to sow in a woodchip mulch in my garden bed.
As a plant person I've tried very hard to find hardiness ratings for the various fungi but haven't been able to. It seems like it might just not be an issue other than the tropical pink oysters, which I'm staying away from. I know the lion's mane and many oysters grow wild here. So, fingers crossed, but it is an experiment as is everything I do (I'm trying two kinds of shiitake, and two kinds of oyster mushrooms, too).
Incidentally, what I'm pretty sure are button mushrooms have sown themselves in the main pigpen and a little in the back field, colonizing the straw spillover from the pighouse in the main pigpen. At least, white mushrooms come up and grow there in spring and fall. It makes sense they'd have come from the expired grocery store produce; I only wish I had a clear ID on them so I could eat them.
I ordered a bunch of mushroom spawn, so when Josh comes up this fall we'll take down the ones we can without hitting the house or the power lines, and we'll innoculate them with shiitake and oyster mushrooms. This is another multi-year project, they won't fruit for a couple years, but since I'm here I'm going to do it. I also got a small amount of lion's mane and bear's head plug spawn, which will need to go into a conifer, and I do have some spare spruce.
The plan is to put the logs behind the goose shed, in the dip between the bird shed and the pig field. Water runs through there in spring and it tends to stay humid, it's shaded, it holds snow for insulation, and mom and I recently cleared it out so it's a space waiting for a use. It does have a bunch of coppiced/polarded willows, some very nice wild roses, and some saskatoon berries. All of those should be fine growing around the logs and keeping humidity up while the mycelia colonize their food source.
The logs should take a couple years to produce (shiitakes take longer, oyster shorter) and then should produce for a number of years. By the time they're a couple years from done, I should have a new crop of aspen trees looking to be taken down. So that's nice.
I'm also getting some winecap/king stropheria/garden giants to sow in a woodchip mulch in my garden bed.
As a plant person I've tried very hard to find hardiness ratings for the various fungi but haven't been able to. It seems like it might just not be an issue other than the tropical pink oysters, which I'm staying away from. I know the lion's mane and many oysters grow wild here. So, fingers crossed, but it is an experiment as is everything I do (I'm trying two kinds of shiitake, and two kinds of oyster mushrooms, too).
Incidentally, what I'm pretty sure are button mushrooms have sown themselves in the main pigpen and a little in the back field, colonizing the straw spillover from the pighouse in the main pigpen. At least, white mushrooms come up and grow there in spring and fall. It makes sense they'd have come from the expired grocery store produce; I only wish I had a clear ID on them so I could eat them.
Corn Update
Aug. 26th, 2022 12:30 pmI wrote this up for the short-season corn group, posting it for reference:
The crows left me some plants this spring, though not nearly as many as I planned to trial. It's been a late year, a cold spring, and I got everything planted very late in roughly mid-June, though the end of August has been warmer than is typical. Here are my thoughts so far, I haven't harvested anything yet:
Gaspe has been more-or-less reliable for me for three years now. This year the plants ended up relatively large, in the past transplanting them has stunted them, and some had as many as 4 ears that look well-shaped. It's more prone to weird hormonal things, like an ear that sticks out the top where the tassel goes, but even those were well-shaped. Planted June 10th, tassels showed up roughly July 18. I'm anticipating maturity shortly. My seed is from Great Lakes Staple Seeds, John Sherck, and Heritage Harvest Seed.
Saskatchewan rainbow is a hair taller than gaspe, and it is less than a week behind it. It also has the multi-ear form and looks happy and healthy. I'm anticipating a harvest before frost from this one. Seed from Heritage Harvest Seeds, does anyone have more information on this one?
Atomic orange & Saskatoon White are in the mid-range, maybe 5' tall. 1-2 ears per plant. Both tasseled in early August. My Saskatoon White is the only one the crows left alone; it ended up being quite densely spaced, comparatively, while the Atomic Orange was hit hard and thus very widely spaced but it did fill in some. These might squeak in to seed viability for next year but it'll be touch and go. My atomic orange was from two sources, Baker Creek and a friend in California; Saskatoon White is from Adaptive Seeds.
Painted mountain and what I understand to be selections from it, Montana Morado and Magic Manna/Starburst Manna, will squeak in under the line in most cases or at least some ears from each planting will. Starburst Manna is the earliest of the bunch, Painted Mountain is uneven as expected in such a diverse mix, Montana Morado is last and may not quite make it. My Painted Mountain was sourced from 4 locations and there was a significant difference in germination and emergence speed between all 4, then the crows ate all but two types. The Glorious Organics source came in earlier than the Sweet Rock did. Magic Manna is from Adaptive and self-saved, Starburst Manna is from Snake River seeds and self-saved, Montana Morado is from Siskiyou Seeds and I expect would have done well if planted early into cool ground.
Cascade Ruby Gold Flint (Adaptive?) is going to be just too late for me, and Open Oak Party (Adaptive) will be a hair after that.
Early Riser (Yonder Hill), New York Red and Homestead Yellow (Great Lakes Staple Seeds) are only now starting to tassel. They have maybe three weeks till frost. So, the trial weeds them out for future plantings.
The crows left me some plants this spring, though not nearly as many as I planned to trial. It's been a late year, a cold spring, and I got everything planted very late in roughly mid-June, though the end of August has been warmer than is typical. Here are my thoughts so far, I haven't harvested anything yet:
Gaspe has been more-or-less reliable for me for three years now. This year the plants ended up relatively large, in the past transplanting them has stunted them, and some had as many as 4 ears that look well-shaped. It's more prone to weird hormonal things, like an ear that sticks out the top where the tassel goes, but even those were well-shaped. Planted June 10th, tassels showed up roughly July 18. I'm anticipating maturity shortly. My seed is from Great Lakes Staple Seeds, John Sherck, and Heritage Harvest Seed.
Saskatchewan rainbow is a hair taller than gaspe, and it is less than a week behind it. It also has the multi-ear form and looks happy and healthy. I'm anticipating a harvest before frost from this one. Seed from Heritage Harvest Seeds, does anyone have more information on this one?
Atomic orange & Saskatoon White are in the mid-range, maybe 5' tall. 1-2 ears per plant. Both tasseled in early August. My Saskatoon White is the only one the crows left alone; it ended up being quite densely spaced, comparatively, while the Atomic Orange was hit hard and thus very widely spaced but it did fill in some. These might squeak in to seed viability for next year but it'll be touch and go. My atomic orange was from two sources, Baker Creek and a friend in California; Saskatoon White is from Adaptive Seeds.
Painted mountain and what I understand to be selections from it, Montana Morado and Magic Manna/Starburst Manna, will squeak in under the line in most cases or at least some ears from each planting will. Starburst Manna is the earliest of the bunch, Painted Mountain is uneven as expected in such a diverse mix, Montana Morado is last and may not quite make it. My Painted Mountain was sourced from 4 locations and there was a significant difference in germination and emergence speed between all 4, then the crows ate all but two types. The Glorious Organics source came in earlier than the Sweet Rock did. Magic Manna is from Adaptive and self-saved, Starburst Manna is from Snake River seeds and self-saved, Montana Morado is from Siskiyou Seeds and I expect would have done well if planted early into cool ground.
Cascade Ruby Gold Flint (Adaptive?) is going to be just too late for me, and Open Oak Party (Adaptive) will be a hair after that.
Early Riser (Yonder Hill), New York Red and Homestead Yellow (Great Lakes Staple Seeds) are only now starting to tassel. They have maybe three weeks till frost. So, the trial weeds them out for future plantings.
Activity Menu
Jul. 8th, 2022 08:09 amBottle mead
Rack mead
Dig fruit out of the freezer to start mead/fruit wine
Start kit wine
Plant (napa cabbage, diakon, brassica mix, late heading cabbage, lettuce mix, late peas, salsify)
Plant (peppers into pots)
Rescue tiny ducklings and switch them into the quail house; turn bigger ducklings out
Couch/storange thing (Put shelf-stuff into dairy crates, Put shelves into storage container, Take couch out of storage container and put into basement, Put dairy crates on shelves)
Cut thistles
Make soap
Get mail
Get wood glue and glue dresser drawer?
Plant roses?
Get string trimmer ("motor scythe") working
Look longingly at actual scythe page
Make salt pork
Make momofuku soy eggs
Rack mead
Dig fruit out of the freezer to start mead/fruit wine
Start kit wine
Plant (napa cabbage, diakon, brassica mix, late heading cabbage, lettuce mix, late peas, salsify)
Plant (peppers into pots)
Rescue tiny ducklings and switch them into the quail house; turn bigger ducklings out
Couch/storange thing (Put shelf-stuff into dairy crates, Put shelves into storage container, Take couch out of storage container and put into basement, Put dairy crates on shelves)
Cut thistles
Make soap
Get mail
Get wood glue and glue dresser drawer?
Plant roses?
Get string trimmer ("motor scythe") working
Look longingly at actual scythe page
Make salt pork
Make momofuku soy eggs
Very Late Potatoes
Jul. 2nd, 2022 01:43 pmPut some potatoes up in the far field under straw, in some cases in the empty corn beds. Put in the last row of tomatoes, mostly green-when-ripe ones (I think) that the labels had rubbed off -- seems like I had one marker that wasn't colourfast for the labels.
I have no idea whether they'll produce much, maybe I'll just get baby potatoes, but I had the space and the extra straw and the potatoes sitting around. If I turn up a little more straw I'll put in some russets. I know some potatoes had some level of daylength sensitivity that's been mostly bred out of them, but I'm hoping that in addition to food I get some nice small ones I can bright-store over winter to grow next year. Granted, I still need to order for next year because I have no Amarosa.
The corn issue really threw me off this spring, the rototiller coming late put me behind, busy at work put me more behind, and then I spent much more time trying to sort out corn stuff than getting tomatoes and potatoes into the ground.
Potatoes that went in:
Bellanita (early)
Alta Blush (early)
Arizona (mid)
Irish Cobbler (late)
All Blue (late)
French Fingerling (late)
German butterball (late)
Pink fir apple (late)
I have no idea whether they'll produce much, maybe I'll just get baby potatoes, but I had the space and the extra straw and the potatoes sitting around. If I turn up a little more straw I'll put in some russets. I know some potatoes had some level of daylength sensitivity that's been mostly bred out of them, but I'm hoping that in addition to food I get some nice small ones I can bright-store over winter to grow next year. Granted, I still need to order for next year because I have no Amarosa.
The corn issue really threw me off this spring, the rototiller coming late put me behind, busy at work put me more behind, and then I spent much more time trying to sort out corn stuff than getting tomatoes and potatoes into the ground.
Potatoes that went in:
Bellanita (early)
Alta Blush (early)
Arizona (mid)
Irish Cobbler (late)
All Blue (late)
French Fingerling (late)
German butterball (late)
Pink fir apple (late)
Wheel of the year: animals
Jun. 28th, 2022 11:31 amFeb: pigs usually farrow
Feb 1: goose eggs begin. Geese into breeding pens.
Feb 15: duck eggs increase
March 1: chicken eggs increase, goose egg max production. Ducks into breeding pens.
April 1: geese out for spring maybe
April 6: bring out hoses, will need to disconnect and drain at night for awhile
April 10: let geese sit for max grass for gosling
April 15-30: move pigs to rear pasture
April 20-30: let ducks sit
May 1: last chance for cool butchering weather for pigs
June 1: goose eggs mostly done
June 15: geese start into back pasture as babies get big enough
Sept 15-Oct 15: butcher ducks and geese, good pig butchering weather
Sept 20: pigs into cornfields
Oct 1: hoses in, birds in from summer pasture
Oct 10: pigs into brassica fields
Nov 15: ducks and geese indoors for winter
Nov 15: pigs into winter pen when ground freezes
Feb 1: goose eggs begin. Geese into breeding pens.
Feb 15: duck eggs increase
March 1: chicken eggs increase, goose egg max production. Ducks into breeding pens.
April 1: geese out for spring maybe
April 6: bring out hoses, will need to disconnect and drain at night for awhile
April 10: let geese sit for max grass for gosling
April 15-30: move pigs to rear pasture
April 20-30: let ducks sit
May 1: last chance for cool butchering weather for pigs
June 1: goose eggs mostly done
June 15: geese start into back pasture as babies get big enough
Sept 15-Oct 15: butcher ducks and geese, good pig butchering weather
Sept 20: pigs into cornfields
Oct 1: hoses in, birds in from summer pasture
Oct 10: pigs into brassica fields
Nov 15: ducks and geese indoors for winter
Nov 15: pigs into winter pen when ground freezes