Saturday, December 25, 2021

December 25th, 2021 Doing the Impossible: Christmas in the Impossible New Farmhouse

  


I'll try to be brief . . .

This post is a retrospective on Creekside Farm since its beginnings. The sort of thing I like to do when we hit a major milestone. Finding the property was one such posting and I included all that had gone before it in that post.  Another such opportunity to read an abridged version of that story was in Redefining the Plan. Plans changed when the former plans stopped making sense.  When we Moved from the City and into the tiny home cabin I wrote the story again. There may have been a few more moment when reflection seemed a good idea, but the point stands that occasionally the story needs retold and refined. 

This post is another brief restating of our experiences here since we began. I cannot possibly write the whole story in a simple post so I'll keep the details simple. You can read this entire story using the links of our blog's Histories section (to the right of this). 
In the beginning . . .

Ann and I went to Las Vegas to have a second wedding. 

Our slate of life goals had been achieved and we needed a plan for the second half of our lives. So we took long driving trip to decide what and where we wanted to be when we retired. It took four days to decide on a direction, landing on the idea that owning a wedding venue would be a happy business (and one that we might be able to do). Soon after we decided that a farm themed venue sounded the most achievable so we began making what would some day be called The Plan

We were actually planning to do the impossible. We needed a two million dollar farm themed wedding venue to grow from a dead standing start and nearly no cash to begin the project. 

To fund our initial efforts we decided to leverage our experience in dog breeding. The idea at this point was to use small chunks of available cash (to buy dogs) to make medium sized chunks of cash (from raising puppies), then use the medium chunks of cash to buy a Farm (with a house and barn). We bought some dogs and got started right away. But things didn't go as planned -a continuing theme for the bigger project . . . 

Early on in our search for a farm it became apparent that any property suitable for our early plans was going to be financially out of reach. Any farm with ten acres, a house, and a barn, was going to be too expensive to move forward in anything but a fully fledged farming business and we didn't have that sort of experience. So we began looking for a "stepping stone" farm. 

It took some wildly optimistic searching but eventually we found a derelict piece of abandoned land, with dubious ownership, under tax foreclosure, without a house, and having no barn, that might become a "stepping stone" toward buying a bigger place. 

The idea of a "stepping stone" farm seemed one possible way to get to where we wished to go, while learning how to farm while we built up enough money to buy what we needed. Though seemingly impossible to do, we found a place and bought it on owner contract. For our next impossible trick we somehow found a way to pay off the tax lien. The project could then begin in earnest and we began to clear away the trash. Simply finding land suitable for homesteading was just one of the impossible hurdles we would need to jump over. It took a year to clear the trash. We still needed to develop the empty lot into a farm, build a house, and the project was just getting started. 

We had decided early on in The Plan to buy some land and leverage a combination of the land value and the equity our house (in town) to get a building loan and develop the Farm quickly. But following the Real Estate Crash of 2007-8 the banks had decided only to fund larger development projects and small building loans were not being made to single family developments. So we changed the plan once more. 

Deciding the best way to move forward we built a tiny home to live in while we built a Farmhouse. It took almost a year to build our temporary tiny home and the entire story of that period can be found in the Histories section of the BLOG. We moved the tiny home to the farm under cover of darkness, no knowing if it would survive the trip to the Farm (which at that point was simply a piece of cleared land). And once we were settled in we began remodeling our house in town so that we could get top dollar for it. We sold the house quickly and began our Farm building efforts in earnest. But things took a lot longer that we thought they should.

It took two years to get the required architectural and engineering drawings and secure the necessary permits so that we could go ahead with building the Farmhouse.  We made many mis-steps and a few minor changes, but we actually achieved the impossible this year and moved into the new Farmhouse three days ago. Our Plan contained many points where failure might become an issue and stop us from doing as we wished.  But the Plan also had many points where failure could become a success. The Farmhouse completion was one such point in the plan.

Step one of the larger Plan was always to build a house because if we completed a house the Farm would become a  residence and not a simple plot of somewhat valuable land to home buyers who are looking for a two acre plot with a house. In the larger scheme, building a house creates a safe stopping point. So, our moving into the Farmhouse three days ago is a significant step forward that allows us to move the project forward much more readily. If we never make the next part of the plan a reality, our investment is fairly safe and the return significant enough to think things through into a change in our Plan.

Bearing in mind that Creekside Farm was, at first, intended only to be a stepping stone farm; something that we would build up and sell, so that we might buy a property more suited to our ultimate goals. We have been planning since we found the land to continue with our initial plan here on this Farm, but most things have their own dynamic. It may or may not be possible to do what we wish to do. It may be actually impossible to complete our bigger plans here. In the case of our Farm, the future of the Farm may be two (or more) things at once. We may become a farm which makes enough money to continue; The Farm might become another family's residence (if we decide to move our plans where they might come to fruition); The Farm might continue to grow into the complicated plan containing hospitality and wedding venues we dreamed up eight years ago. The end is still not certain.

But building our House (with our own hands), buying our Farm, both from a dead stand-still, with no cash on hand, both of these were mere possibilities most people would simply not begin with. Both would had seemed impractical or impossible, depending on your personal optimism. We once said we were rolling the dice with all of our future on the line.

Only time will tell how things will work out. But if you've been following our progress so far, you will know that we have done the impossible more often than not. 

Friday, November 26, 2021

November 26th, 2021 Thanksgiving

 Thanksgiving at Creekside Farm is a simple thing. We sit for dinner, as most do, and contemplate our good fortunes. This post will be a retrospective on our year and not a recounting of the month as is usual. Occasionally I like to recount an entire history of the Farm and this is a possibility as I begin to write, but I will try to be brief and keep things relatively on point. To this end I must say the generally this year has been very good to us, but not without a some spill over of drama from outside, both good and bad. We began the year with our world in a pandemic lockdown, a newly elected President, a horrific  revolt against the government.

Our world seemed in turmoil and I wondered how far Trump, the traitorous ex-president, would take it. I wondered how much war I make at my age. But things never went that far. Political things have slackened off, but not without qualifications, which I will not go into since it really is not Farm related. 

The year has been a financial success even though Farm production was not really involved. We had two litters of Basset pups, both litters sold within days of birth and all of the new parents are ecstatic with their new fur babies. The financial gains from these two litters allowed bills to be paid, but there was other income as well. We decided to take our Social Security retirement at sixty-two because the numbers were right and full retirement had been raised to sixty-seven. And there were a number of large chunks of cash, doled out by the government, intended to stimulate the economy and assuage the negatives of the pandemic. We had a barrel of cash when moving to the Farm three years ago, but our long ranged planning included income to keep things level. The year brought us good fortune and we became self sufficient this year. But our long ranged planning requires farm production income to succeed and we made some large moves in that direction this year.

Since we are not yet settled on the sort of farming we will do in order to be successful farmers, but not knowing what this means in action, we continued to experiment with the sorts of plans and practices that might make our farm work successfully. As this past year began we continued to work withing the bounds conventional organic farm practices. Tilling the soil,  making compost, bringing compost in, and pushing the dirt into rows before planting seeds and starts, all seemed the right way to do things. And we had some success, but it was our crop of peppers that proved the only worthwhile thing we did. Once more we didn't reach the point where we could open a roadside produce stand or take things to a Farmer's Market, so we took what we did grow to local food banks.  In July we decided to get some outside advice to move things forward.

A nice woman from the USDA came out to survey our farm and discuss USDA subsidies to build infrastructure. She gave us some wonderful advice and described how we might go about things, but none of this advice seemed right for the level of development we have. One of the things that came of this visit was an invitation for Ann to go to a class on cover cropping in the off season. I had been spending some time learning how to make good compost, but reading a book Ann received at this class opened some new possibilities to explore. In the end we decided to begin building a "no-till" farm and this led into procuring hundreds of yards of hardwood leaves to make into leaf compost, leaf mulch, and leaf mold. The Farm looks a bit of a mess today because hauling the leaves around is a messy and muddy affair. And I won't go into how these things work together to make soil until it works, or does not, but the system sounds about right and we look forward to our attempt at farming in the coming year. Farming is the second business we had planned, the first being our dog breeding business as described above. So, while we are able to stay on the Farm even without farm income, production of sellable farm produce is our chief concern, second only to finishing the farmhouse in immediate importance.

We have nearly finished the Farmhouse we began to build two years ago. At the beginning of the year we had raised the frame, put a temporary roof and siding on, and wrapped the whole place in a weather resistant layer. During the year we wired, insulated, and finished the interior walls. We also put the exterior siding and finished the roof. There is still the exterior porch to build and the exterior of the house still needs painted, but plans are in place and we hope to get all but the painting done in Winter. We will move from our tiny home to the new Farmhouse in the next few weeks and celebrate Christmas in warmth there. One thing we are very thankful for is a long hot shower, but there was much more that happened, and did not happen, this past year. Things are generally going forward fairly well. Objects will come up to block our plans, but as in the past we will find a way around whatever we find. The Farm has a schedule which our careful plans fit into, but only in a general way. 

In the coming year we will attempt once more to make a profit on farm produce, finish the house, birth two more litters, move our new kennel into place, and begin producing things to sell in service of our long termed goals. All of these plans will be guided by the weather and the world's need for what we can make of the gifts we have and we look forward to finding out how we did when Thanksgiving comes around once more. But this past year showed us much and gave us much more than we expected, even if less than we hoped for. The thanks we give is for the help we received in making our plans work and not to plans that failed. We have had, now have, and will have, much to be thankful for as time marched forward.

Sunday, October 31, 2021

October 31, 2021 Fall is in Full Effect

Fall came in with rain and it has continued up right up until yesterday with nearly daily deluges. There never was drought at Creekside Farm this year. Nearly as I can tell there has been no water shortages here ever. But the world at large has been complaining of drought and the rains this Fall have brought a lot of that to a halt. The rains have made the grounds here horribly wet and when we drive the tractor around the muddy ruts can get pretty horrible. Normally we buy ten, or so, bales of straw from a farmer nearby and put the stuff out on the tractor paths, but this year we are doing something completely different. Sometimes the simple things we are doing take a lot of explaining. This past few weeks was a simple idea, but really very large and complex in the doing of it. 

Following on Ann attending a group class on cover cropping at a neighboring farm, one of the things she took away was a book on soil building and maintenance. This book sat on the dining table and I read it at meals, or while waiting for meals, and got through quite a lot of it in rapid fashion. The information became immediately useful, but the whole affair has led us in a different direction.

We have committed to a new path to soils health based upon a film called "Back to Eden" (see it on YouTube). In this a the author noticed that Nature, as such, is generally very messy and not well controlled and tidy like most farms. The forest floor, being for him nature in its basic form, is usually very deeply covered in debris which is decaying over time. He noticed that this debris slowly feeds the soil while protecting the soils from damage. Each year's layer of Fall debris adds new materials that nature slowly breaks down into the nutrients the trees use to make new growth, while sheltering the microbes and other crawly things from rain, snow, and sun damage. A perfect system.

This man brought this insight out of the forest and onto his farm. He began importing large amounts of leaf debris (usually waste) and spreading it out in thick layers on his planting beds. After a few years and false starts he found that he no longer needed to weed his beds because the sun could not reach the weed seeds; he no longer needed to till the soils because the soils never compacted; and he no longer needed to water the garden because all that organic material held the water down where the plants could get it (even in the heat of Summer).  As an example of this in action: the man has an apple orchard which has so much debris laid down that the apples are always perfect, He has no insect damage to deal with using pesticides because the microbes and things in the leafy debris eat pests, the trees need no fertilizers of treatments, and as time goes by the ground rises to meet the tree growth in equal proportions (so no ladder work as time goes on). He never needs to replace old trees which have grown out of a useful size at all. But he still has to prune to keep things even. 

Once the biology (of the many sorts of creatures which feed on leaf debris) does it's thing, the nutrients locked up in the debris itself is converted into the stuff which garden plants use to grow plants. So no fertilizing needed unless a soils test tells of some nutrient deficiency. 

This "no-till" farming practice has caught on in the Organic farming community in many forms. If you have a lot of straw, you use straw, have access to yard debris, it works even better. So we have begun bringing in hundreds of yards of leaf debris, grass clippings, and the like. But there have been a few false starts of our own to deal with.

One is that the company we sought free debris deliveries from gave us a first batch of stuff which contained what we wanted, but also a whole lot of tree trimmings and larger branches that made everything more difficult. We had to sort the whole load out and it took nearly a week. Eventually we found there was a large pile of roots and branches we could not use and it took two days to burn it down to nothing. The first five or six truck loads of debris are better suited to composting into loom (stuff put down onto new beds to give plants the lighter stuff they need to put roots down. As we go forward through the Fall we will be receiving much "cleaner" loads of mostly hardwood leaf (the stuff put on top of the beds to protect the soils and slowly be converted into plant food). I put the first truck loads into long composting piles to begin breaking it down into a usable form.  The piles were so large I am having to move them to bigger places to cook down. Since we have a hundred foot driveway, and two loads of debris is sixty feet long, it takes a while to move it all into their appropriate places before more can arrive. 

Part of our Farming philosophy is to re-use and re-cycle. If we had to pay for the compost we are creating right now  the hundreds of yards  of compost would cost many thousands of dollars we do not have. But processing of yard waste will give us a great many healthy new planting beds in the Spring with very little cash outlay except diesel for the tractor. I will continue to make compost for at least a few more truck loads, but as the debris becomes more of the cleaner and lighter Fall leaves I will begin covering the existing beds with leaf and then pile it up for later use. We are also covering all of our tractor path s with the pure leaf debris as well, saving of the cost of straw and the need to pick it all back up in late Spring for composting.

Another part of this new soil building plan is returning the unused portions of garden plants directly to the soil. So this Fall, as we break down the gardens, we are mulching the tops of the plants, and leaving the roots in the ground, to rot where they are. In past years we have been composting all of the plants and roots in a pile and this has been the stuff we used to make the good soils we have today. But composting removes some of the nutrients which could have been useful for growing things and that are lost in the heat of composting. Cutting the plants off at the ground and leaving them to break down where they fall will return the leafy nutrients. And the root systems will rot where they are to return nutrients and provide water channels for next Spring's plantings to use. We will move the tops of the plants to new beds so that they don't infect the soils with longer termed problems, but the whole thing becomes a circular system;  a system which increased soils vitality, while decreasing costs, and greatly reduces the labor of weeding, fertilizing, tilling, and watering. 

The best potential outcome of all this of this is the weeding. Composting creates a heat which destroys plant diseases and weed seeds. So the compost we will make for use at the bottom of the plants will no longer have so many weeds to deal with in Spring. Another benefits is that, since we are covering the native soils entirely, the hundreds of years of thistle and grass seed already in the ground will be denied sunshine to sprout themselves in Spring.  Perhaps the best part of this best part is that the newly made soils will no longer be so easily compacted after tilling lightens it up, allowing any weeds that do develop to be taken out with far less effort. The only weeding problem remaining will be the longer termed problems of deep thistle and blackberry roots. These bigger roots will have to be individually dug out, but the lack of pulling new weeds ought to show us where to dig and the new beds will soften the native clay and allow us deeper digging with less effort. 

That's pretty much the tale of the past two weeks in action. Our new soils plan is now being implemented and might give us the Farm we need.

There are still many other things going on. We moved the shop as planned, making it taller and narrower to try to keep the snows of Winter from breaking it once more. And we still have the five of Bit O'Honey's pups, which are mostly slated to go to their new homes beginning Thursday. The Farmhouse build hasn't seen much action in the past two weeks, but I have been doing the finish work in the Bath room and we have many projects ready to go now that we have the leaf debris sorted out.

Things are going forward every day. But the days themselves are becoming much shorter too and  many things have to be done to get us ready for the Winter freezing that will eventually come to our little Creekside Farm.

Saturday, October 2, 2021

October 2nd, 2021 Things that Happened

 Things are happening on Creekside Farm. 

Fall arrived and the change on seasons was immediate. In my mid-September post the rains had started. We've had rain every few days since then. This is great for the cover crop seeds we had put in and the new plants jumped from the ground soon after planting. But the rains also brought up the weeds too. At least there was some progress.

I finished putting the finish roofing on the new Farmhouse. There is still the need for adding ridge tiles and putting in some zinc strips to keep the moss from growing in the coming years. But one hard day and the roof is ready for Winter.

We took the last week off from roofing to get a few more things for the Farmhouse. We found a really nice carpet remnant in Vancouver and began cutting it to fit. We're only using carpet in the living room area, hallway, the Office, and the Closet. These are small rooms so we are laying the carpet ourselves. 

Ann painted two accent walls in the main room. We have a fairly bright terra cotta on the t-wall that separates the Kitchen from the Pantry. And there's a nice subdued olive paint on the large wall of the living room area. As I go on I am beginning to dislike the dolphin grey paint in the Bedroom section of the house. Re-painting will commence later on. We want to live in the place and paint choices are of lesser importance.

We will begin painting the exterior of the Farmhouse this week, hopefully we'll have a good coat of paint on before the Winter rains settle in. We still have to build the wrap-around porch so we extended our building permit six months to allow for the extra time COVID 19 added to the project. There is time to finish the house and we will spend Christmas night living there.

We harvested our pepper crop, with a great deal of satisfaction in the result. We had planted two thirty foot rows in the Spring, all of the plants sprouted from seed in the new Greenhouse. We decided to put the plants down under a ground cover of landscape fabric this year to help keep weeding down, but also to retain heat and water in the soils. (Peppers like warm soil.) We planted four types of peppers: Poblano, Anaheim, mild Jalapeño, and a wonderful new pepper called a "Fooled You" Jalapeño. We only put  in a few of the traditional peppers, about a third of the space. The bulk of our plants were of the new Cool Jalapeño type. 

This new pepper is a bit larger, a bunch more flavorful, and has absolutely no heat to it. It is a wonderful thing to eat and to cook with. 


All in all we took about eight bushel baskets of peppers from the Market Garden. Half a bushel of Poblano, Anaheim, and traditional hot Jalapeño, and six bushels of the new Fooled You variety. We harvested the plants by pruning off all of the branches and then stripping out the fruit. Pepper plants are perennials, so this year we will be pulling the mature plant stumps and potting them to over-Winter in the greenhouse. We hope this will give us a jump on the growing season next year. 

We made contact with a small Portland green grocer chain who seems interested in putting our Fooled You pepper crop in their stores, but as of today we haven't got a deal yet. 

Ann has decided that she would be perfectly happy if we only grew peppers, since it was relatively easy to grow and very effective as a cash crop. But I'm pretty sure she'll be happier with the other crops once we figure out how to do them as well as we have done the peppers. We will be adding more rows and varieties of peppers in coming seasons, they seem to like growing here. Half the fight in farming is finding out what the ground wants to grow.

We have decided to begin using another farming strategy going forward which involved layering copious amounts of un-composted materials onto our rows of crops. I read the Soils book Ann received as a door prize at the Cover Crop class she took early last month and this led me to find a very interesting no-till method for vegetable farming. Ann went to a local garden materials center (one we used for twenty years while in the landscaping business) and she was able to convince them to drop their yard debris into a large pile on our Farm. This saves them a bunch of dumping fees and provides us with enough materials, for free, to cover all of our gardens for free. Since we had already made a large amount of really good planting dirt, the addition of four inches of leaf and grass debris will add a super slow release of nutrients into the soil, decrease water loss due to heat, and protect the soil and from rain and sun damage and erosion. It will also give the biome of good little garden creatures a wonderful source of food which they will slowly turn into plant food.

Our flock of Runner Ducks had grown to a whopping sixteen birds by hatching eggs. We re-homed ten of them, keeping the best two females to add to our egg producers. We will not miss having so many ducks here. A large flock is smelly, noisy, and expensive to feed. 

Bit O'Honey's pups are now three weeks old. They have begun walking, playing, and having a good time. People have begun coming to visit, as. the decide which one to take home in five more weeks. Today's visitors was a family which had taken one of Cinnamon Bear's litter a few years ago and it was nice seeing one of our puppies again. It always is.


The mornings have taken on a bit of a chill around here. The days are getting shorter and the nights much longer too. But the change in seasons is awfully nice to see and feel. And the work a bit less sweaty, if also a bit wetter.  Things are going very well

Sunday, September 19, 2021

September 19, 2021 Rain and a Few Days Off

 It's been a while since we had rain at Creekside Farm, seems like five months since, but this weekend the wet stuff came back in force. I'm starting out with the rain because it is so important to us. Life happens where water is. Certainly, we have a good well and have been watering the crop plants and flowers all Summer long, but the rain is something more than just well water. This weekend promises nearly two inches of rain. On two acres this amount of rain just could never be sprayed through a garden hose. The rain stopped all work here this weekend and we needed the break. We were very busy before the rain stopped us.

My last post was one month ago. We had just put the paint on the interior walls of the new Farmhouse and were putting siding on the exterior. The plants were beginning to perform as they should, but we were not getting fruit yet. And the animals were spending their days panting in the sunshine. It seems more like a few months longer when I look backward. It amazes me all that took place since August 9th.

Our Greengage Plum tree gave us about ten pounds of wonderful medium sized plums in the recent three weeks. We have been eating every day since they ripened. The Greengage is a good little eating plum, but firm enough to cook with. We didn't get enough fruit in the first year to practice baking with them and we haven't the space to can them yet, but each plum is about eight small bites of wonderful. We'll finish the lot tomorrow some time.

The Peaches and Herbs Garden inside the Kitchen Garden needs a new name since we put the plum tree in thinking that the Peach Tree tag was accurate. 

The Market Garden started providing a huge amount of produce this past month. Peppers, corn, beans, squash, cucumbers, and quite a few little other things suddenly rushed into production.

We grow a wonderful Jalapeno pepper here that has zero heat to it and Ann began making a Pico de Gallo as soon as she could find ripe fruit. This Pico is so good you can practically improve oatmeal with its addition find a more wonderful thing to eat. We put this Pico on everything, adding a green crunch and balanced flavor to everything. 

Ann also created a new sort of Chili Relleno (picture above) using Anaheim Chillis from the garden. I'll eat it any time it is put down in front of me. 

The corn, though planted only for our own consumption, was sweet and tender. And our potato crop came in about eighty pounds, enough to take us through the Winter. In the next month, or so, Ann will begin taking up the pepper plants and potting them to Winter over in the Greenhouse. (As it turns out the peppers are perennials.) With any luck we'll get a jump on the pepper crop next Spring by putting the mature plants out instead of growing from seed.

We had a nice woman from the USDA out to survey our Farm. She gave us some good ideas as to how to improve things economically. Since she came we have changed the way we sprout seed and paid to have a soil test done. As it turns out our soils are pretty good and need few amendments. Ann took an invitation to spend a day learning about cover crops at a farm nearby. Aside from the practical knowledge, they gave her a wonderful book on soils and about ten pounds of Red Clover seed. The stuff we learned this past month have been leveraged into the roots of next year's Farm planning. We are headed toward a no-till, no watering system of growth and soil. If you have the desire, look for a YouTube video called Return to Eden and you'll see where we are heading in the next few years. 

I spread out my enormous compost pile over the area where we will put a new Strawberry patch next year and then seeded it heavily in Daikon Radish to break the clays under the six inches of compost. This sort of Radish puts down a twelve to eighteen inch root and dies in the mid-winter, leaving root space and bringing up some nutrients. The area is about fifty by sixty feet, so it will make a good Strawberry Field which we will plant all in one sort of berry in the early Spring.

All of the Flowering plants have finished. Ann put in a whole lot of sunflowers all over everywhere this year. They performed very well and so did all of the Cosmos, Marigolds, Coneflowers, Dahlias, and many others. Most of the flowers are getting leggy and out of hand so it is time to start tearing them out. Ann is making seed this year for all of the plants we usually buy seeds for. Next year we will begin buying only seed that makes plants that produce viable seed. At some point we will be able to stop spending money on planting.

The Farmhouse is still coming along. We finished the siding shortly after the last post and I began putting the finish roofing on. The roofing is a difficult thing to do. The pitch is very steep and the roofing is very heavy. Coupled with the heat and my aged knees, along with having to climb fourteen feet up the scaffolding carrying roofing, the process takes a lot of time and energy. I can get about three bundles of roofing nailed down most days. As of this writing I have the entire front of the house complete and am about a third of the way across the back. I should finish this by the end of the month. The it will be a race against the rain to paint the house and seal it against Winter. But things are looking very good.


The interior of the house is somewhat on hold while I spend my days on the roof, but some things are still moving ahead. We put in the flooring of the Water Closet and half of the Pantry, then put a working toilet in. We also rolled one of the Pantry shelf units out and began moving some of the pantry items out of the Tiny House. Soon enough we will move the chest freezer to the new Farmhouse, finish the Pantry flooring, and pick up some carpet for the three areas of the house that get carpet. We have the closet furnishings picked out, and the Kitchen Shelving hardware found but not purchased yet. And the door hardware is in hand. SO there's plenty going on.  About mid-October our new couch will arrive and we'd like to put it down on finished flooring. We want to spend Christmas in the new house, but there's a lot to do still.

We laid out the Kitchen cabinets. As it turns out we measured correctly and the used cabinets we bought, that will need to refinish, fit the space near perfectly. We will have a very large kitchen considering the size of the house. Plenty of cultured granite counter space to work on. The lighting scheme is also very good with plenty of natural light, sufficient general lighting, and great counter lighting to work under. The cabinets will be painted in a deep blue, the interiors and shelving in a deep brown. Its sounds dark, but will be striking to look at.


In other news, our Bit O'Honey gave us five wonderful little pups about ten days ago. People were a bit more reluctant to reserve a puppy this litter due to economic fears, but all of the pups are taken by families as of today. The pups are all very healthy but have yet to open their eyes. Bit O'Honey has recovered very well and is now spending some of her time away from the pups and hunting Chipmunks with the other dogs. The pups will go to their new homes in early November. We're still looking for a new home for the Cinnamon Bear. She was spayed a few weeks ago and has made a full recovery. We rehome our girls once they are no longer in our breeding program, the people who take them are happy to get a nice Basset Hound for free.

Our flock of Runner ducks increased by twelve nice little ducklings. Daphne Duck sat on the eggs and has been tirelessly guarding the new Ducklings since then.

One of the ducklings hatched after Daphne had led her brood off of the nest. Ann found it peeping away and brought the little thing inside for about a week. She raised it until it could join the flock. Today the ducklings are beginning to fledge out their adult feathers and they look ratty. Since all of them are mixed types of Runners, all having Sonjay as the sire, they are all a bit differently colored than the mothers. Some carry white plumage like our Malaysians, some black like our Balinese, and more than a few mixed browns from two types of Indian Runner. All of them are standing tall like Indian Runners do. They look like self propelled bowling pins.

We're selling off ten of the twelve for $5 a piece. They eat regular chicken food, slugs, snails, larvae in the soil, and house flies. And mostly they are fun to have around.

We continue to have luck finding things we need from Craig's List. We got an entire truckload of very usable lumber for free and it will do nicely in forming the concrete work of our wrap around porch next Spring.  And a few days back found a large load of garden carts, tools, and miscellaneous hardware. Love that free stuff!

It will likely dry out near immediately. We had a lot of rain and this will bring up a lot of weeds, so there's work ahead. 


Wednesday, September 1, 2021

Another Weird Anniversary: The Bucket Hen

We have some anniversaries we like to keep, even if they are not all too important. Today is the third anniversary of another weird event at Creekside Farm. I originally posted this text to Facebook. . . 

Yesterday I found a young Rhode Island Red hen had somehow squeezed herself up under a five gallon bucket, which was turned upside down on top of the chicken food container. I found her when I went out to put new food into the container. She was stuck for some period of time, I'm guessing days.

I immediately picked her up and took her to the automatically filled water dish and put a container of food next to her as she drank. She had her fill and walked out to the sun to dry herself out.

Poor thing looks a little bit bent, but she made it through the night and will likely be okay as time goes on. We hope that she makes a full recovery, but for now she looks a little bent and is being called the Bucket Hen.

Now - this was a  few years ago. The Bucket Hen didn't make it through one of our flock culls, when we gift the chickens to the Vietnamese, so she's no longer here. We often call our older hens Collete, but that's a different story entirely. "Bucket" was my favorite hen for a few years but I doubt she ever gave us an egg.

The Bucket Hen story is one that might never get a mention. 

Sunday, August 22, 2021

August 22, 2021 New Satellite Picture

 

We simply love it when Google buys new images for Google Maps. These images really let us know what has happened since we came to this place and give us ideas about what to do next. I usually have Adobe's Photoshop on my computer so that I can enhance the image but the laptop I was using died and I can't find the install disk to put it on my new laptop, so we're posting the raw picture.

If you click on the picture it will set up something of a slide show.
 

The new image shows what we have done in the past year. So far we've cleared most of the ground but have yet to take down the big trees which are shading valuable sun from the Farm  We think this image was taken around February since there is  a layer of straw covering the slick mud of the tractor paths, the new Farmhouse is clearly visible, the ground has been tilled clean for Spring planting, and the new Greenhouse can be seen near the left side of the picture.  If you contrast these images with previous versions it gives you a good idea of how far we have come.


This is where we started in 2015

By the middle of 2015 we had cleared a lot of the brambles, structures, and some of the trash which was strewn everywhere under the brush.


This was how the place appeared in 2020.

There is a bit of difference between  2013 and 2021. Click on the pictures to  see them larger. 

This is the West end of the front fence in 2013
In 2021 things looked a bit differently.


This is the East end of the front fence in 2013


By 2021 we had the jungle cut back a bit.

This is the front gate area we found the very first time we saw the property that would become our Farm. I saw the real estate sign out of the corner of my eye from the Highway and circled back to see whatever it was that had caught my eye. It was raining, the sign had fallen down into the ditch by the time we found it, but somehow I saw the sign laying in the ditch (from 100 yards, while traveling sixty-five miles per hour, in the rain). Bing maps still has the pictures online from at least 2013.

In April of 2015, day one of the Farm project, we cut a hole in the jungle and got down to clearing the land.

The Front Gate in Winter 2021. This is not the best picture taken of the Farm, but it does make the point pretty well.

There is so much more we will do to this place before it takes its final form. We bought it for a reason, something you can find by reading the earlier articles in the Archive to the right of this article. Today we are nearing completion of the Farmhouse build and can't wait for Google to show everyone what comes next. With any luck, and a bit of hustle, the next picture will show the world something spectacular.








Saturday, July 24, 2021

July 24th, 2021 Light at the End of the Tunnel

So much has happened that I had little time or energy to write it all down in the past month. At the last posting I was working on the drywall (image to the left) in the front room and had just finished the paint in the bedroom section. Since then I have finished the main room and it has been painted but needs another coat (image on the right). We used recycled paint and a airless painting gun that did a bit of an uneven coat, so I'm painting it all with a roller to even things out. Still and all it looks very good and the drywall doesn't show seams. With the interior being very close to finished I have begun working on the exterior siding and roofing.

As the rains were approaching in the Fall of 2020 we were racing to get the house "dried in". I figured we'd spend the late Fall, Winter, and early Spring working on the interior where it was a bit warmer and a whole lot drier. So as October approached I spent all of my time putting tar paper on the roof and securing it against the heavy winds of Winter. The roof did its job and even held out the heavy snow that came in January. Once down from the roof, and having had all of the framing and sheathing inspected, we wrapped the entirety of the vertical surfaces with Tyvek, a sort of plasticized paper product that provides a mostly waterproof layer of protection for the sheathing which underlies the siding. With the house secured against the Winter (mostly) we spent the time between then and now working on the interior. I wrote all of this up as it happened. If you want to know more just look in the archive to the left of this page.


The drywall was a heavy project, but we got through the main part of hanging these heavy panels around the beginning of April. Ann had to go to work on the Farm in April so I have spent nearly every day since then applying drywall "mud", smoothing it all out, and then applying texture and paint. The whole process took nearly eight months. Today we have nearly all the rooms finished and awaiting flooring. I have moved on to (once again) racing against time to put the final exterior siding and roofing on before the rains return in October. 

The get the siding done and put the final roofing on we needed a plan. There are many parts to the project. The siding itself, flashing to help direct water away from joints and seams, trim boards, and sealants around the windows and doors.   Our son Jackson spent the past few month of his free time putting the lowest course of siding on the house and this will save a great deal of time. The siding treatment we decided on is a simple Board and Batt treatment. To get the job done Ann and I put up three courses of scaffolding with a final platform at the top. If I stand on a six foot ladder on top of all the scaffolding I can reach the top of the gables. As I go along the wall I am nailing up the siding and applying the 1x2 cedar batts as well as sealing things up and installing lighting. There are eight small LED exterior lights under the porch roof to light the porch area and three high intensity LED security light fixtures high up under the gables which will light the entire farm from edge to edge. As I move the scaffolding along the wall I am finishing every job I can while on the scaffolding. These projects include the first course of roofing and the drip edge as well as the siding elements and lights.

It will take another three weeks or so to get all siding parts in place, then it is on to putting the finish roofing on. All of this needs to be done by the end of September and the heat of Summer is just now coming on. So I will spend my mornings on the scaffold, or the roof, and the afternoons working on the final interior projects.

We have much of what we need to finish the house and can see a day when we can actually move into the house. So for the past few weeks we have been thinking about furniture. We kept so little of the furniture from our house in North Plains, some key pieces are out in the Shipping Container, and we have been acquiring things along the way, but a new couch was a special thing we were going to need.

Back in 2015, once we had found the property which would become the Farm, we spent a lot of time dreaming up things we would want once the place was built. One of the things we decided we wanted was a chaise sofa we found at Macy's. This bright blue couch sat at the entrance to the Macy's Furniture Store at Clackamas Town Center, a small peacock blue sofa with a chaise at one end. The sofa was much smaller than most house would use but it was large enough for two people who like each other to spend some time on. We journeyed across town to visit our couch at least nine times as our plans were formed and put into place. And I designed the living room area around the eventual presence of this one particular couch. But in 2018 the company quit making our bright blue couch and we had no time to address the problem. We began building the house about the time the World went into lockdown for fifteen months. About a week ago we began looking for something that would fill the place of our long lost dream "chofa". We shopped the city and found a few things that might have worked, but nothing as good as our dreamy blue couch.

This morning we went out to shop for a replacement and had a plan for ten more stores. But on the first stop we  ran into a saleswoman that remembered admiring our couch. She also had the perfect replacement in mind. It was about the same size and came in the same color and fabric, so we bought it without hesitation. The sofa will come in October. Another important piece of a house project that is about to become our home.

Through all of this Ann has been keeping up on the Farm. We built a new greenhouse and she planted hundreds of plants in early Spring. Then, as late Spring came along, we worked hard to make new planting places for the new plants. Little happened to show progress through May, but things started to happen around the beginning of June. Today most of what we put in is growing by leaps and bounds. Most of Ann's flowers are in bloom and we have pumpkins and gourds beginning to show up.
We have some guest farmers using some of our extra spaces to plant food for themselves and they came in June to plant their seeds. The plants sprung right up. The plants we put in a month earlier did nothing until those planted directly began to grow. Today we have a respectable amount of growing happening. Not enough to make a profit, but enough to learn how a profit might someday be made.

Since this place is not just about food, much of what Ann is doing involves planting flowers and arranging plants and vegetables in a more interesting way. All of this takes time and learning how to put things together, but some of the new ideas are really beginning to come together.

The Market Garden is showing explosive growth.
We'll be harvesting potatoes this coming week.

Putting down the landscape fabric has give the peppers the heat they need.
We'll have a lot of peppers this year. We'll add compost to it next year.


The beans are all working very well.
We've even got some lettuces to show for all the work.

Stuff growing just about everywhere.

This is the only part of the squash and gourd row that is behaving so far.

Pumpkins all over the place.

Autumn Sunflowers. Behind these are some of the scrub Apricot plums still hanging around.

Though I am mostly employed building the new Farmhouse, I have been improving how I make soil for planting and have spent quite a few days working toward turning the sterile or weedy clays into something that will grow plants. 

About a month ago I spent a day building a new compost pile from the piles of stuff I had around the Farm. This new effort is something with some real size to it. The "wind ridge" pile in the picture to the right will eventually become the planting spaces for our new Strawberry patch next Spring. The current pile is perhaps eight times the size of my largest earlier pile and the soils it is creating appear to be great quality.  I will need to duplicate this pile eight more times to finish building the planting spaces of the Farm, but the effort will be rewarded for many years to come. 

Before I started learning to make dirt the problem with our soils was drainage. The heavy clay simply didn't drain water away and the roots rotted out. Then when the heat came the clays dried into hard pan which was horrible to dig through. My later attempts at soil making was are doing pretty well, but the soil didn't hold enough water and we have to add water frequently. With any luck the new dirt will do the job. 

To keep this posting a manageable read I'll let it go here. The only thing I had left to write about is that we have another litter of puppies on the way. Bit O'Honey and ClarkeBar got together about ten days ago so we expect a litter in September. But there's still plenty to do between then and now. Dogs were always the first business we needed to succeed in for this project to work. And so far the plan  seems to be working.

Sunday, June 13, 2021

June 13, 2021 Passing for Progress

 The level of effort we have put into Creekside Farm has been tremendous over the past three years. We haven't done anything like a maximum effort because we are not really capable of sustaining that sort of effort for very long. But both of us have worked hard most of our lives, so our normal might seem like a lot of work to people less accustomed to manual labor. For all of this effort, it is a rare day when we can look at what is happening and see the work pay off. This was such a week.

The Farmhouse build finished another phase of work. With the Bedroom section walls and ceilings all painted we are ready for flooring to go in. We are in our fifteenth month of building the house and up until this week there was little we could call completed.

The bedroom section is a suite of rooms which include a large bedroom (we only have the one), a water closet room, a separate bathroom with a shower and large jacuzzi tub, and office, and a large walk-in closet. This section of the house has eight foot ceilings to keep things cozy. All of the electrical fixtures are in and working, but the plumbing parts still need finished and this should happen fairly soon.

  Above this section is the attic. The attic is a completely open floor plan with seven foot ceilings and heavy duty floor. Designed for storage, but also for the possibility of putting together some sort of future production space. 

There are no moldings in this house build. My intention in this was to save money using the 85% rule. This being the idea that eighty-five percent of what we desire can be bought for fifty percent of the resource money. We still have to pinch every penny (twice) if we hope to actually live in the house some day, moldings are an un-necessary expense. No moldings has turned out to be a very clean look around windows and doorways.




While I waited for the drywall textures to dry in the bedroom section, prior to paint, I began the finishing work on the Great Room space. This space is about twenty-five feet square and fourteen feet high. It is ringed above by sixteen two by two foot windows to give it an expansive feel. The idea is to bring the outside sky into the house. Our house will eventually have an eight foot porch on three sides, so even with the four foot windows in the lower spaces there will be little direct sunlight. Without moldings the trick is to finish each window and standing on a ten foot scaffold this is a whole lot of work.

The Great Room is our living room. It will contain the kitchen, a very large pantry, the laundry room, and some couch space. The couch space will be minimal. Where in most houses the couch space is rather large. Our focus is on food in this house. We will have a reasonably large kitchen, but more than this we will have an enormous pantry. The Pantry, at first, will be about sixteen feet of Costco chrome rolling shelf units, totaling about eighty feet of sixteen inch depth shelf.

 
We will be using this area to store value added produce from the Farm outside. Soups and preserved fruit initially. I was able to find a two foot wide entry bench on Craig's List for free. It will take up the last few feet of Pantry wall and give us a place to put shoes on before going outside and off before soiling the house.

I hope to have the walls of the Great Room finished by the end of June. Sometimes I hit my lofty goals. Mostly they land when they do.

Our Farm is looking more like a farm every day. June is the beginning of the growing season at the bottom of the Apple Valley. Walls of this narrow valley rise five to eight hundred feet on the North and South sides, so the sun needs to be pretty high in the sky to get heat down to the valley floor. We are committed to growing things here and selling enough to be able to stay, so we have been learning how to work with the land for three years.

We built a new Greenhouse this year, complete with growing benches, heat, water, and grow lights. Ann has been sprouting plants in there since April. (We hope to get things growing earlier next year.) Much of what she had planted in the Greenhouse is now outside in the dirt, but the Sun has only just started to come in hot enough, for long enough, to make things grow properly. 

A few years ago we built some chicken wire row covers to protect the plants rabbits and squirrels find most attractive. This year Ann stapled greenhouse film over the row covers and made little greenhouses for our pepper plants to grow in until the Summer heat arrives and it looks to be working. The Pepper plants are planted in newly made rows which we covered in landscape fabric. I found a good resource for landscape fabric on Craig's list and we hope to begin cutting down on the amount of weeding we need to do by covering the ground where we can.

We also planted Carrots in a bed I have been working on for two years. This bed is sixteen feet long, three wide,  and filled with two feet of extra-light growing medium poured into a ditch lined with chicken wire to keep the gophers and moles out. 

The corn we planted in the Kitchen garden did nothing at all. We planted six, seventy foot rows but not one seed came up. So we are trying a new place for the corn in the Market Garden. We covered the space with fabric and cut slits into it to plant seeds. Time will tell if we get corn this year, but corn is a sunshine plant.

At the back of the Market Garden Ann put in two enormous rows of potatoes in newly made beds designed especially for spuds. She really planted the potatoes close, much closer than we hear is recommended. But there's a madness in her method. As the potatoes grow below ground, the tops above, she will pull the sides of these wide beds up to cover half of the greenery, making room for more spuds and controlling weeds at the same time. Her plants are just about a foot high today, so she'll be covering them this week. Potatoes usually do well here, if given half a chance, and the varieties we grow are both unusual and delicious.

Strawberry production here has really done well this year. We pick twice a week and get about a bushel and a half every time we pick. So far we have taken over ten bushels out of the Strawberry Patch, every one of them a gem. These are all picked ripe so the shelf life is short but sweet. I am putting in a new Strawberry Patch next year and have it tilled and mulched the new space. In Spring I will buy five-hundred new plants to grow in the new patch, this time of all one type. Five years ago we bought four varieties of Strawberries to see what would do the best, now we know and our next field will be devoted to the winner.

Our Basset Hound kennel has done well for us this year. We birthed and sold one litter of puppies and the income from this is sufficient to keeping the Farm alive even if we never make a dime on farming. We hope to have another litter this year, perhaps Christmas puppies. 

We kept one male from Laffee Taffee's litter to replace our male in a few years. He is doing wonderfully. We have also been boarding a few dogs for pay as well. Not much money in it, but it proves the concept we stated at the onset of this project. Between pups and boarding we should be able to support farming until we figure it all out. All part of the plans we made eight years ago when this whole thing started.

So much more has been happening since I made my last BLOG post. Our son Jack has begun to put the exterior siding on the house for us. The chickens and ducks are doing okay, but not great. And the friends and neighbors of our Farm are coming and going daily. The Pandemic is beginning to become endemic, so life for everyone will now beginning to return to whatever normal it should become. 

Our world is busy. But really good busy.