Monday, July 26, 2010

SQUASH

FISH EMULSION - ORGANIC FERTILIZER-SO SMELLY!!

ONE OF OUR PEST CONTROL TECHNICIANS BUSY AT WORK

THIS IS IN THE SHADE

MORE PRETTY BUTTERFLIES

ONE OF OUR 3 BLACKBERRY PLANTS


THE CORN GROWING QUICKLY

ANOTHER BUTTERFLY...TINY BLUE ONE

OUR FIRST CROP - PICKLING CUCUMBERS

SQUASH PLANT



This weekend (July 23-25) we did some more watering of the plants since it just refuses to rain. The drip hoses are working great. We also fertilized with the fish emulsion, sheep manure and planted our 3 blackberry plants. Alex and his friend, Alex drove the truck and trailer to our friend's farm and picked up a load of more sheep manure. Cris purchased a scythe online and it works great to cut weeds. It is quite scary looking though and will take your leg off if you are not careful. It looks like the thing the grim reaper carries around.

Saturday night we had dinner with friends at Evergreen Dairy Farm in Middleton, TN. Dinner and conversation was great and it is nice to sample items from our friend's gardens. The dairy farm offers organic raw milk and I must say, it is delicious and their farm and operation is so beautiful and very clean.

Next weekend we hope to purchase the gates finally to put on the barn and we are also meeting with someone to discuss a gravel driveway.

Saturday, July 17, 2010

Butterflies

SOME OF THE BEAUTIFUL BUTTERFLIES WE HAVE SEEN AT THE FARM


Where to put all the water.....

This is the okra from last week - we had to put some organic powder stuff on it to get the aphids and ants off it. This week we saw that that ants were gone and the ladybugs were taking care of the aphids. Good ladybugs. :)

Beans - not sure what kind

My Fall front yard decoration from last year is now working in the garden.


Rain Water Run-Off Hose


TRENCHES BEFORE THEY ARE COVERED BACK UP WITH DIRT

Today we worked on the overflow system for the two rain barrels we have hooked up to the gutters on the barn. For now, we have decided to just dig a trench and run some plastic 6 inch hose to the ditch in the woods to keep the runoff away from the barn. The barrels fill up so fast when it rains. Our goal is to purchase a big water storage tank and fill it with the rain barrel overflow, then use that water for the garden drip hoses.
The garden looks good, did some weeding today and no need to water since it rained like crazy this past week. The 3 row fencing seems to be working to keep the deer out.

Saturday, July 10, 2010

I Would Love To Be Singing in the Rain

3 ROW FENCE LINE TECHNIQUE

Well I guess Mother Nature decided we had way too much rain this past Winter and Spring because she is sure holding back on us now. We see the rain clouds all around but they seem to part like the Red Sea when they get close to the farm and then....no rain.

Thank goodness we have access to water at our pond. With a pump, couple hundred feet of hose and 2 water sprinklers, we have been able to keep our vegetables alive and more importantly, nicely growing. The tomato plants look wonderful as well as the squash and cucs....these we started out as seedlings. The seeds we planted right into the ground are growing nicely but the deer have discovered the garden finally and seem to enjoy the Lima beans. I thought it might be a rabbit but the deer tracks made me think otherwise.

This weekend we are putting up electric fencing around the garden. We are trying the 3 row method of fencing which is suppose to keep the deer out because they can't determine the depth of things. This is suppose to keep them from jumping over the fence. We will have one row of electric fencing and two inner rows of just regular twine type fencing. I will let you know how it works out.

Alex has become a pro at using the tractor and bush hog. He has been clearing out the terrace areas and Cris cleared some paths around the pond. Alex likes the path around the pond; he times himself on the ATV to see how fast he can do the trail.

Cris picked up a cool gadget at Radio Shack this week. It's a weather station that has a part that you hang up outside and its measures the wind, temp, humidity and rainfall. It has a sensor and it will remotely transfer the information to the indoor unit and store up to a week's worth of data. That way we can keep track of any rain that may come along. It was originally over $100 and marked down to about $40. I am sure it will be useful if it ever rains again. (NOTE: We have since found out that it only keeps 24 hours worth if information, not a weeks worth. The week's worth one was over $200.)

I got to thinking today as Cris was hooking up the electric fence and Alex was bush hogging in the field, the dogs were chasing dragon flies and I was on the trailer shoveling sheep manure into the compost pile...... if someone would have told me ten years ago, we would be doing this, I would have laughed in their face and said they were crazy....heck, even 5 years ago. I appreciate all the support and encouragement we have received as we start our new adventure... my dad thinks I am nuts but that is because he worked on a farm from around the age of 10 and knows what hard work it is.

So, why are we doing this? Cris always wanted to have a vegetable garden but the last two houses we have lived in did not have enough sun in the yard to accommodate a garden. After moving to Memphis, we started shopping each Saturday at the Memphis Farmer's Market, something we did not have nearby when we lived in Maryland. I guess what really opened our eyes was watching the film, Food, Inc. and realizing that we needed to know what was really in our food, how our food was grown and how important it is to read labels.

The other factor that made us decide to purchase land was the fact that we lived within the city limits of Memphis and it is just too expensive to live here anymore. We are taxed for everything here and I don't see it getting any better. Crime in the city is high and again, I don't see that getting any better.

So we bought some land, built a barn, started a garden and hopefully next year, we will build a house. We are learning a lot and of course, making mistakes but it has all been worth it.