Not too surprisingly, Fall landed on Creekside Farm on time and completely within one week's time. The rains started about mid-October, just as the leaves began falling , and it hasn't stopped since. We've had three days of relative dryness, but even those three days had rain in the darkness of late night. And about ten days ago, just as October ended, the trees all turned Golden-red as leaves began raining down and covering everything like snow. So while the place is a real mess, it's a beautiful mess.
Our Pirate Organic Flag So far nobody has noticed it |
Part of our farm plan is to do something called "Chop and Drop". This is where we use the plants to feed the soil by composting in place. The idea is to chop the plants off at ground level and leave the roots in place. Any of the nutrients not used in making fruit is recycled back into the soil. We haven't been out in the muddy gardens to do much of the chopping, but the frost did quite a lot of making the stuff lay down so it will rake up nicely when we do get out there to work. Following the chopping, our plan is to layer on a few inches of leaf compost to protect the soil from rain and ice erosion. Something we still need to do.
We have taken in four or five truck loads of leaf debris this year, about a hundred yards. Last year we took in four hundred yards and used most of it to build garden rows and we don't need as much. But even if we needed a lot more we wouldn't really have room for it. After we moved the tiny home to behind the Farmhouse we don't have much room for piles of compost back there. So we are putting the leaf piles out front of the house this year and there isn't nearly as much space. It makes it much easier to bring the truckloads in, and much easier to take the stuff into the gardens too.
Moving the tiny home into the back and splitting it into two parts has really improved how they are being used. After the move we sealed up the eight foot hole which served as a pass-through between the two halves with a sliding glass door making it a nice, but tiny, apartment where our son is living. We put another sliding door in the similar hole in the second half and now it has become the "Dog House". After the move I built stairs onto both halves and we painted the exteriors before the rains started last month.
The New Dog Bed in the new Dog House |
We are still harvesting potatoes. On one slightly less wet day a few weeks ago we pulled two hundred pounds from four rows. A month or so back we took another hundred pounds. Now there are five rows remaining and we are running out of space to store spuds. But the quality and size of our potato crop is very good. No-till gardening is high in micro-nutrients and so our potatoes have excellent flavor and texture. They are a delight.
In between rain storms, we have finally begun pouring concrete steps and decking under the porch surrounding the Farmhouse. So far we have two steps and about eight linear feet of decking. Pouring concrete is hard work, but we ought to have a full set of entry steps in a week or two. What there is now is so much nicer than the ad hoc wooden sets we built to satisfy the building inspector last year. We had bought a large amount of bagged concrete then, but hadn't found the time to mix and form the stuff until now. I'll put up a picture when the thing is finished, until then it is sort of a mess.
The New DIY Rocketdog Coat Kit |
In other news we thought our girl hound Laffee Taffee was having a litter of pups near Halloween, but it turned out to be a dud. Only one puppy took, and it did not thrive, so Taffee and Clarke will get another try in Spring. Our Rocketdog Winter Coat has sold relatively well this year. Our hounds love theirs and orders for the coats are up quite a bit from last year. We are adding a sew-it-yourself kit to the line-up this as we work to increase sales without increasing labor. We are using a pretty good set of marketing tools that Square.com offers and will even have gift cards for sale there this year. Time will tell, but gifts and other products are a part of our longer termed growth plans.
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