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

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