Monday, August 31, 2015

August

We limed the back field.


Started reassembling a walk in cooler, (Thanks Ian!)  With help from the hardworking crew that got the big parts moved into place.  (Thanks Rob & Fernando!)






The compressor and fans, which are the heaviest part are attached through the top roof panel which is made of polystyrene sandwiched in tinfoil.  It's very heavy, bulky and fragile.  Arg!





But a homemade crane made slow work of it...
Those are two come-alongs on 2x6 frames that lift up each side.  Then we slid it over the walls.



Meanwhile, tomatoes are rockin.


I managed to get out for a walk in the woods and found a cool variety of orchid


Tilled stale seedbed. (Nicely cultivated, watered, let the weed seeds germinate, and then tilled again)


Same place, buckwheat germinating


Future home of raspberries after rollling in buckwheat.



Charlie's tractor set up with discs and a 'new' seed roller.  After I've spread the cover crop seed I drive this contraption around with the discs set to a very light amount of tillage, which effectively rakes in the seed, then the giant heavy tube packs the soil around the seeds.  Good seed-soil contact means good germination.  The long line of squeaky metal being pulled behind makes it feel like I'm driving a train.


A nice overview of the south field

Friday, July 31, 2015

July

Hey we grew sugar snap peas & head lettuce
(alright, so lettuce and peas were early june, not July, but I'm posting this in December, so whatever, it's a season recap)


Lots of mesclun salad mix:


There's now a farmstand at the end of the driveway!  It's a quiet road, so I don't expect this to become the next Whole Foods, but it's nice to have a storefront for the farm instead of "I wonder who lives down there?"  Welcome neighbors!


Corn.  Knee high by the 4th of July?
 check.

Sunday, June 28, 2015

Save California. Buy local

This graphic by the NY Times is great.

http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2015/05/21/us/your-contribution-to-the-california-drought.html

Food takes lots of water to produce.  Buy it where it rains.

And now a pretty farm picture.


Wednesday, June 10, 2015

Organic! To Market!

Hooray!  The farm is now officially certified Organic.
 I'm still growing the same great veggies, but my methods have now all been reviewed by MOFGA and I can proudly hang up this fine banner.

We're going to the Bowdoinham Farmers Market!  Saturdays 8:30AM to 12:30 at the town waterfront.  See you there!
We'll have these lovely greens and more!


Meanwhile, potatoes have been planted. (4 tasty varieties, stay tuned to find out which ones grew)


A bed of asparagus is in (hoping for a light harvest next year)


We planted some lavender with a little help.



took a few glamour shots of Charlie's tractor after a fine job cultivating.


And survived a really spooky cloud.  (remember in Ghostbusters, when they're on top of that building and Sigourney Weaver is possed by Zuul, and Bill Murray saves the day?....  )


Thursday, April 23, 2015

Endless Winter Ends

At the end of March, there was still plenty of snow.  I dug out the water line to irrigate the hoop house.

The tractor is thinking about spring.


Freeloader

Eventually the snow did melt and I was able to see what the cover crop of Peas, Vetch and Oats looked like after a few feet of snow.   Pretty flat.  Nice mat of organic matter though.  Thats mostly pea vines you see, some flatted oat stalks.  Can't see much vetch.


Then it snowed again.  (this is April 9)  And packs of deer moved in.  The deer of the apocalypse?


But the daffodils were steadily working their way up.


Alright, mid april.  Snow is almost all gone except for a few patches in the dark woods.  I got a rusty old seed roller to aid in better cover crop management this year.  It's crazy heavy and had to be winched sideways out of the truck.


Hey, it's a porcupine in the elm tree.  (this is like 20 feet from the house)  This is the 4th or 5th one I've seen this spring.  They're everywhere right now.


Mostly onions in the seedling house, ready to get outside soon!



Saturday, March 21, 2015

2014 Wrapup

So here's what happened in 2014: We grew lots of awesome veggies, made some great friends and really started to tune in the farm systems.  Hey look, it's a double rainbow over a nice buckwheat cover crop.  Ahh, nice day.

Then winter came in...


No wait, back to the rest of summer!  We planted an acre of peas/vetch/oats cover crop.


I was thoroughly startled by a cecropia moth caterpillar.  (I think that's what it was)


We grew a nice array of tomatoes in all sizes and colors


Admitted to ourselves why you shell out more $$ for UV stable plastic.  To be fair, it was the 3rd season on this cheap big box store plastic for the door.  So maybe the cost is a wash, but the cleanup and repair is no fun.  But, what did I fix it with?  The cheap stuff.  


Mulched the heck out of the cane fruits


Eleanor inspected the carrots


And then we pulled em out.  Still enjoying them well into March


Winter Rye cover crop germinated after all the peppers, onions and summer greens were tilled in.


Grew some great fall salad greens!


The rosemary kept cranking along.


The Farmall hydraulics stopped working and we ended up replacing the hydraulic pump.  Darn!


Beavers moved into Baker Brook...


And Turkeys invaded the front field...


and voles.


Once winter socked us in, and nothing was growing anymore, the wind blew some great drifts




Just last week we made our trip up to Fedco to get supplies to do it all over again in 2015!