Saturday, May 29, 2021

May 29th, 2021 A Memorial Day worth remembering.

 This Memorial day weekend is especially memorable for us. It has been a little over four years since we began working toward a few of our early goals. Four years back I was building the frame of our first tiny home out in the driveway of our house and we had cleared enough area on the Farm to put the thing. We had not broken ground for anything like planting and it would be some more months before we moved the tiny home cabin out the Creekside Farm. Needless to say it, but I will anyway, the whole project was still very much an uncertainty. That was Memorial Day 2017.

 We started the project in April of 2015, but didn't start this journal BLOG until October of 2015. On Memorial Day of 2016 we were still learning to build a fire out of scrub trees and had just begun getting electricity to the pole that had so recently been buried under thirty feet of Blackberry brambles. We had started renting tractors and brush cutters, when there was money, to clear the land. Trash was everywhere and it was dangerous to walk the land because of all the broken glass, scrap metal, uneven Terrain, and Blackberry bits. This place wasn't a Farm at all. The Farm didn't even have any name at all until December of 2018.  At Christmas of 2018, once we had a cabin on it, we called this place Camp Creekside. We came out on weekends to clear and clean, earning from many sources, none of the cash  came from here. We couldn't call the place a Farm until we began harvesting food in late July of 2018. There were many goals and milestone reached for this light supper of lettuce, cucumber, and strawberries, eaten at the table of our cabin in 2018. At this point, the Farm was mostly still a gamble. We were putting all of our time and treasure into a place that seemed to fight our every step.

Our first Farm food was grown here less than three years ago. But we were living on the Farm full time then, and eating from it (if only just a little bit). We had taken the leap of faith. Rolled the dice. Gambled everything on the idea that we could live here and make our living here. 

 This Memorial Day weekend we crossed another major milestone on our way to making this place work. We finished the business of selling a litter of puppies which were born here, of dogs which have know little else but the Farm.  And our Farm, as much as it is, is cleared, planted, and growing in a way that looks to recoup much of our longer termed investments of time, labor, and cash. There is a good cash crop out in our fields today.  In past years the tax forms have claimed that we hade made enough money in the past few years to call this place profitable, but the little we got never paid any bills or bought anything significant. This first Farm litter gives us four months to come up with some more cash and pays for quite a bit of building and farming supplies as well. 

 It is not that big of a thing to earn the money we did this month, using the money we earned and spent over the past five or six years. But it does seem that this new income was very significant in a self-sufficiency sort of way. Being able to live on what we can produce means we might just be able to build the big dreams we outlined earlier in the history of this place. (All of which are buried in the archive of this BLOG.)  To us this is major. That's memorable. 


Sunday, May 23, 2021

May 23, 2021 Time Flies

 It has been three week since my last entry, so I figured I'd better write something. But it's not like there is too much difference between the last entry and this. Just more of the same.


We still have fourteen Bassets, six adults and eight babies, living in the tiny home with us. The pups leave us this week for their new homes and Stanley, our visitor, leaves next week. Things are going to seem much quieter around here after that. We will be keeping one of the male puppies this time. His name is Rocketdog Rockford Rhoades, we call him Rocky. Our boy ClarkeBar will retire in a year or two so bringing up his replacement allows us to control the genetics a bit. And having a puppy around will be fun. With our puppies all being sold, and food sales about to rise in Summer, we ought to be able to show a good profit this year. We are hoping for one or two more litters of pups in the second half of the year, but dong things naturally means not knowing for certain. 

Ann has been very busy in the Greenhouse and the Gardens. We have hundreds of sprouts up and more than a few rows planted. There are hundreds of plants in the Greenhouse, mostly sprouted, but there will be thousands more as the Summer draws near. I found a large number of planting benches on Craig's List a few weeks ago. A guy in McMinnville had a Pot grow in his basement and gave up on it.

I got thirty or so nice plastic benches and quite a lot of wall mounted electrical fans to move air in the greenhouse. We've set up two long benches in the Greenhouse and a few of them outside to "harden" off plants making the transition outside. We will find uses for the rest of the benches as time goes on.

True to form, we are adjusting our farming plans to include new information and try to find things that work a bit better. One of the things I am trying is planting fewer rows by scraping the soil together into deeper rows with wider spaces between. This gives the rows better drainage and the plants a deeper bed to grow roots in. It also gives us more room to move around in. The soils here are beginning to develop into fairly good dirt, but the entire farm is still a few years from being where they need to be. We have mostly solved the trash problem. Most of the debris we find now is very small glass shards. The weeds will continue to be a problem for some years going forward, but we are making progress in certain areas. 


This year's potatoes are in two very long rows at the back of the Market Garden and all of them have emerged. This year we have planted the potatoes in a full ten inches of soil with wide margins of good soil on both sides. When the plants reach twelve inches tall we will pull soil up from the edges over the plants, deepening the soil column and allowing more potatoes room to develop. That's the theory anyway.

In the corn rows we are not mounding up the dirt at all, but we are mulching the beds following planting and we are adding a bit of lime, even though our soil tester says we don't really need it. We planted six one-hundred foot rows and will plant another six in a month, then another a month later. Let's see what happens, but it is supposed to get us a whole Summer of corn to sell. Onions, garlics, and herbs are all out in the gardens growing right now, peppers, tomatoes, beans, peas, and lettuces all ought to go in soon.


There is a new row at the front of the Kitchen Garden dedicated to squash, pumpkin, gourds, and watermelons. The thing is a bit over one hundred feet long and about ten feet wide. Again, we made a berm of good soils about twelve inches deep, right down the middle, with four foot wide margins for growth to spill into. It ought to be a riot of interesting stuff growing right where people can see it from the road.  Ann is adding some Sunflowers to the row for color too.


The Strawberry patch is doing super well this year. This is the third year for the rows and Ann finally has the weed problems and excessive growth under control. We mulched the plants about a month ago and right now each plant is covered in young fruit waiting to ripen. We'll pick them in the morning, sell them in the afternoon, hopefully through the month of June. 


The house build is going along just fine. We have ninety percent of the finishing done in the bedroom side of the Farmhouse. I'm hoping to finish in that end of the house either this week or next, leaving only the great space to do. Our son Jack has agreed to help with the exterior siding portion of the house to keep us on track for moving in this year. Following the interior finishing I will be working on the roof for a month, trying to get it done before the heat of Summer sets in. Plenty to do on the house still but we are working on it nearly every day.

We have found and collected enough cabinets and shelf materials to finish the Kitchen and Bathroom. One of our counter-tops is sitting on the floor in the Kitchen right now and I'll likely make the others myself. We're still needing more paint, but we have about half of the flooring already purchased and most of the rest is either bought or easy to get. Lumber prices are ridiculous right now so we may need to hold off on doing the wrap around porch until prices come down. It will be time to find carpet soon so I'll be looking for a deal.


Saturday, May 1, 2021

May 1st, 2021 Busy, Busy, Busy

 Last week we took a couple of days off and the world wanted them back, so we did eight days this past week to make up for the malingering. 

Laffee Taffee's pups all came to life in a big way. Their little puppy personalities began to emerge when their ear canals opened up and they became aware of the world.

We started weening, putting warmed milk in a very large feeding dish a friend of the Farm gave us. We had a dish something like it but it was about a third the size. This one allows the pups to all get around it in one go. At times there's enough room to fit a few inside the dish while the others are eating.

On Monday we started giving them about a cup of milk, by Friday were adding a handful of puppy kibble to three cups of milk. They pups, if added together by weight, would out-weight their mother, so she isn't really able to fill them up anymore. The dish fills them up just fine. We have begun letting people visit the pups. 

The House build is still moving along well. I have been working on finishing the drywall in the low portion of the house. This week I was able to put the final touches on the seams and corners of the Closet and Bedroom, and am getting pretty close in the Hallway and the Water Closet. On Friday I put together the texture gun for the first time and sprayed the Bedroom and Closet, the last step before priming and paint. 

On Wednesday I found a commercial painter on Craig's List who had exactly the paint we need to do much of the interior finishing. He had bought a house-full but the job had fallen through due to Covid and he got tired of waiting for the work to come back. We bought about twenty gallons of primer and paint for under two-hundred dollars and the guy even delivered it to us. I will begin painting on Tuesday next week and we will have two rooms of seven completed (except flooring).

Craig's List is a real resource for the House build. I bought the air compressor, paint sprayer, and texture gun in past months for pennies on the dollar. This week we found a few other things we will need, including one of our Kitchen counter-tops. A lovely ten foot piece of quartz for Ann's Baking counter.

The Farm is beginning to show sure signs of Spring growth. The greenhouse is awash with baby plants of all sorts. We have peppers, tomatoes, squash, watermelons, lettuces, and many others growing out there and we will be putting these into the dirt soon enough. There are also many annual flowers growing too. 


The biggest flower planting we do is Marigolds. Marigolds add a great deal of color to the Farm, but they also provide a chemical barrier to many beetles. We plant rows of Marigolds around the parameters of each garden to protect the leaves of our vegetables but this year we plan to add a few rows just for color. Marigold really encourage pollinators. Bumble Bees love to sleep in the blooms.

We also got a wonderful planting table from a Lutheran Church where it had been a kids sandbox for over two decades. The thing is large enough to mix soil and gives us a great place to put seeds into pots.

Yesterday I found a garden cart on Craig's List  for Ann. She's wanted one for a few years and it finally showed up on the listings. You have to be quick to get the hard to find stuff and I saw this nineteen minutes after the seller put it up for sale. Last year, at Mother's Day, I found a nice little fat-tired planting stool for her, another real find, and she's been using it for weeding. This year she gets the wagon to help in moving  the hundreds of things now growing in the Greenhouse out to the gardens. 

Things are really beginning to move at the Farm this week. Puppies have been born and sold, the Strawberries (in their third year) are thick with young fruit, and our house is about four-fifths finished. Covid relief checks came too. So money, though important, isn't nearly so much of a concern. With any luck our plans will now begin to bear out the promise we already knew was there, but had so far been unable to find.

It is good we got a few days off. There will be few days off in the coming weeks.