Thursday, July 19, 2012

State of the Fields (July 18th)

 I am sure its much like most people, I have troubles drawing the lines between my work and the rest of my life.  I even tell people my job isn't a career its a lifestyle.  Even when I get a the occasional day of from the farm, if I don't leave town I'll end up there a couple times that day.  With the best intentions to focus on me and the things I would like to get accomplished in my yard, work beckons. 
Yesterday, started as a rain day, which can truly be glorious.  We received some much needed rain and I got a chance to sleep in.  Goals for the day were simple... write, garden and take some pictures in the yard.  Time allowing, go to the gym (didn't happen) and then dinner in the Cities.  I needed to tend to my tomato plants, they look the best that they've ever looked in my backyard.  Is it appropriate to look to plants with pride?  They've all been caged but needed some additional tomato clips to reign in some stray branches (this required a drive to the farm for supplies).  I also had to work on a "new" grape arbor that I just added to the yard (will share more details another time).  And through this process I brought along my stills camera to document the Joy in the Garden. 

Indigo Rose Tomato: Purple on the outside, will be red on the inside.
Bred for having the highest concentration of anthocyanins which have great antioxidant capabilities.


 
Red Zebra Tomatoes: Still green but looking pretty.

Striped Caverns: When the show some red, I'll be ready to stuff them for a delicious dinner.
More fruit to come.
 

    
Redbor Kale: Tasty and Beautiful.

Alma Paprika: I started growing this one for an appetizer dish involving cream cheese and bacon bits.... mmm.

Garlic: Hung out to dry, in a good way.












 This is where my walk around my back yard came to an end, and work blurs with play.  When your backyard over looks this, its hard not to take a stroll.  Through the deer gates, I continued my photo survey and decided to document it as a State of the Fields: July 18th.

Through the gates we can see low ground fields, a place mother spent most of her childhood summers and where we grow the best cucumbers for pickles around.


Kohlrabi: a tasty treat.  Hard to believe that his sister is a cabbage. 

There is dill in many stages timed out for season long pickling.

Bees can be found all throughout the farm, with thirty-six hives we know someone is always tending the crops.

One of our apiaries overlooking the a wildflower meadow and a cucumber patch,
I sure hope all that clover doesn't distract them from those cucumber blossoms.
 

Pumpkins growing for fall.

This one seems to be running a bit early?!
There is wagon-fulls of pumpkins out there!  Just beneath the green canopies.

Seems the 10 foot fence wasn't enough, this six inch one should keep them out. 
Electrified to keep the raccoons from harvesting the sweet corn before we can.

Four varieties of corn to ripen throughout the summer and fall.... I could eat it for every meal.
The rain has transitioned to overcast leaving a moist breeze in the air and lasting droplets on most everything. 

Squash.  Squash leaves, hope there's tasties beneath those.

This is a good sign, the curly-q marks the ripening melon.  Three dry pig tails and the right vibrations after a tap will let us know when to pick them.

Red hot chilli peppers: I hear they're hot and red.


Banana peppers can be both hot and sweet, both tasty.

Eggplant; blossoms present, and fruit coming along nicely.

A sea of peppers. 
Tomatoes. Staked and growing nicely.


Looks like a field of corn... but the Corn Maze is taking shape and is taller than me in places.

There is red and ripe tomatoes at the stand from the High Tunnel providing us all with delicious tomatoes. 
Many beautiful plants throughout the Garden Center.
Foliage plants can bring some of the tropics right to our Northern part of the world. 





















The fresh rain has left it's mark in the soil.  And my day.

This concludes my State of the Fields walk, apparently the pull of the fields drew me out of my own yard once again.





Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Shiitake over the World

A man can never have too many hobbies..... especially when some of them are slow paced yet don't consume much time.  After discussions with an Arborist friend, the cultivation of mushrooms came up.  In theory all of the work is upfront and then you sit back and wait to collect the fungi.
It sounded so pleasant and simple.  Take and inoculate a few logs, place outside in the forest and 6 months to a year you begin gathering mushrooms. 
This is where it went an bit wrong, a few logs became 11 with a thousand 1" dowel pegs of Shiitake spores that needed to be drilled, pounded, and then sealed with wax into each of the four foot long red oak logs of 4"-7" in diameter.  All of this needed to be done in May, my busiest retail time at work...

Needless to say this simple additional yard hobby ended up being 5 1/2 hours of the most grueling 'off duty' time I have ever spent.  With gathering the logs and sealing all the fresh cuts with wax happening a week or two earlier, this was no simple free time activity.
Dowels come with swirls cut into them for the Shiitake spores to grow on.
After each log was drilled and inoculated the each had to be sealed with wax.
But I will be able to reap the benefits of this lonely time spent in the barn drilling 5/16" holes every six inches across and around my red oak logs.  Hopefully if everything went right, and there's no way to know until something happens, I shall have more mushrooms than I'll know what to do with. As of now they are just logs stacked in the backyard.

Logs of Shiitake mushrooms sit under the canopy of a Norway Maple.
  The patience game is what follows, and I that is one game I am good at.