Well, it's been rainy and windy for three, four days now -- not much to report. The chickens are settling into the coop fairly nicely and as far as I know our plants in the garden are doing okay -- it's been too muddy to look at them much. I am pleased to report that my cloches are all still where I left them. Our up-potted starts are happy. We won't be able to plant anything new until the ground dries up a little, so we're in a bit of a holding pattern for now. Might as well enjoy the sunset.
Friday, April 30, 2010
Well, it's been rainy and windy for three, four days now -- not much to report. The chickens are settling into the coop fairly nicely and as far as I know our plants in the garden are doing okay -- it's been too muddy to look at them much. I am pleased to report that my cloches are all still where I left them. Our up-potted starts are happy. We won't be able to plant anything new until the ground dries up a little, so we're in a bit of a holding pattern for now. Might as well enjoy the sunset.
Monday, April 26, 2010
Good, cheap or easy -- you can have cheap.
I know that's not the exact quote, but close enough.
We are not shoppers. A has genetic, shading into pathological, cheapness (and a scarily complex understanding of the relative value of everything), whereas I'm more too lazy and have finally developed the realization that NOTHING is as exciting or interesting in your house as it is in the store. I also really enjoy creating makeshift solutions to problems using found materials and trash. Thus, our cloches:

I know making cloches (or hats as we call them here; "hats for plants -- keep plants warm") out of milk jugs is not revolutionary. And I guess in the rest of the world just sort of pushing them into the dirt is sufficient to anchor them down. But we have blowing-over-chicken-coop winds around here.
In our past gardens we had a more-or-less endless supply of bamboo poles about 1/2 an inch thick and four feet long. Those things were dead useful and I wish we still had them. To anchor cloches with them, you just cut a segment about a foot and a half long, pushed it into the ground next to your plant, and threaded the milk jug over it (without the cap). This worked perfectly, and if you have a supply of something similar, I highly recommend it.
Without bamboo stakes or anything similar to hand, I came up with the above solution which, while not nearly as elegant, cost a total of $.99 -- the cost of 208 feet of twine. Two foot-and-a-half lengths of twine are tied together at the ends in such a way to make two long ends with a loop in the middle that tightens when you pull the ends. This goes around the spout of the milk jug. The two long ends are held down with the scrap ends of two-by-fours, which we have an abundant supply of.
By the way, there's broccoli under there. We also set out 60 Spanish onions (the sad fellows from previous posts -- wish them luck) and eight Italian parsley plants, planted two plum trees, one rhubarb plant, some thyme, tarragon and a bunch of peas, and up-potted all the tomatoes, eggplants and peppers this weekend. There's a ton more we were hoping to do -- set out lettuce and cabbage starts, plant more potatoes, beets and spinach, plant some carrot seeds, and other stuff I'm not remembering. There is really a lot to do.
We are not shoppers. A has genetic, shading into pathological, cheapness (and a scarily complex understanding of the relative value of everything), whereas I'm more too lazy and have finally developed the realization that NOTHING is as exciting or interesting in your house as it is in the store. I also really enjoy creating makeshift solutions to problems using found materials and trash. Thus, our cloches:
I know making cloches (or hats as we call them here; "hats for plants -- keep plants warm") out of milk jugs is not revolutionary. And I guess in the rest of the world just sort of pushing them into the dirt is sufficient to anchor them down. But we have blowing-over-chicken-coop winds around here.
In our past gardens we had a more-or-less endless supply of bamboo poles about 1/2 an inch thick and four feet long. Those things were dead useful and I wish we still had them. To anchor cloches with them, you just cut a segment about a foot and a half long, pushed it into the ground next to your plant, and threaded the milk jug over it (without the cap). This worked perfectly, and if you have a supply of something similar, I highly recommend it.
Without bamboo stakes or anything similar to hand, I came up with the above solution which, while not nearly as elegant, cost a total of $.99 -- the cost of 208 feet of twine. Two foot-and-a-half lengths of twine are tied together at the ends in such a way to make two long ends with a loop in the middle that tightens when you pull the ends. This goes around the spout of the milk jug. The two long ends are held down with the scrap ends of two-by-fours, which we have an abundant supply of.
By the way, there's broccoli under there. We also set out 60 Spanish onions (the sad fellows from previous posts -- wish them luck) and eight Italian parsley plants, planted two plum trees, one rhubarb plant, some thyme, tarragon and a bunch of peas, and up-potted all the tomatoes, eggplants and peppers this weekend. There's a ton more we were hoping to do -- set out lettuce and cabbage starts, plant more potatoes, beets and spinach, plant some carrot seeds, and other stuff I'm not remembering. There is really a lot to do.
Friday, April 23, 2010
This blog post is boring.
As I said, we've also planted a lot of stuff outside. On April 11, we planted shelling peas (Maestro), snap peas (Super Sugar Snap), scallions, looseleaf lettuce (Italienescher), spinach (Whale), radishes (Cherry Belle), and sage. Lots of things are poking out of the ground, but so far they're not very interesting -- a couple of leaves. As best as I can tell, nothing is nibbling on them yet but I'm sure that's just a matter of time.
On April 18, we planted strawberries, Nevada looseleaf lettuce, potatoes (Russian Banana), and more peas, radishes, spinach and scallions.

Strawberries. We did not grow these from seed.
I'm pretty anxious to have something going on besides dirt and a few leaves here and there. I know this all takes time, it's only April, blah blah blah. But it's been winter for so long -- I'm ready to be moving on.
On April 18, we planted strawberries, Nevada looseleaf lettuce, potatoes (Russian Banana), and more peas, radishes, spinach and scallions.
I'm pretty anxious to have something going on besides dirt and a few leaves here and there. I know this all takes time, it's only April, blah blah blah. But it's been winter for so long -- I'm ready to be moving on.
Thursday, April 22, 2010
Rainy Day
Well, I was going to talk about the seeds we've started outside, but mud. So instead, I'll talk about nibbling away at the sea of mud, one tiny patch at a time.
I've basically picked an area that needs landscaping at random and begun a garden plan -- the front yard. It recommended itself to me because it's small and reasonably well defined by the house and driveway. Here's what I've got so far:
I an plainly not a professional landscaper. But I think it's pretty good. The "W"s are to indicate plants with winter interest, since we basically have winter for more than half the year. The circles around the herb garden are pavers.
Of course, it's all well and good to draw a picture. Now I just need about $1500 worth of plants.
Do you ever wonder how great-grandmas made their fantastic gardens? Everyone I know has at least one great-grandma who had just a fantastic garden, like an acre of dahlias and hollyhocks and lilac, and the best tomatoes and sweet corn on earth. But these women grew up in the Depression -- there's no way they spent thousands of dollars on seeds and plants. I imagine that they must have shared seeds and divisions with their neighbors. That seems like a completely different universe from what we live in now.
Wednesday, April 21, 2010
Vegetable Starts: Update
Meanwhile, the vegetable starts just keep growing (sort of):

Left: sad lettuce, unthinned oregano, eggplants, peppers
Center Front: Onions
Center Back: Tomatoes
Right Front: Basil, Savory, Marjoram, Lettuce, Cabbage
Right Back: Parsley, Broccoli, Peanuts

Another angle (re-arranged and pre-onion trimming)
The peppers and eggplants are still going gangbusters; they really need to be put into bigger pots. The tomatoes are also doing pretty well, although they're a little leggy for my comfort. Maybe we should have pinched them. Maybe we should pinch them now. Heck if I know. I've heard that you should put a fan on them to develop thick stems; sadly we have no spare fans. Maybe next year.
The rest of our seedlings are in slightly more disarray. It's hard to say how much stems from neglect and how much from ignorance, but hopefully now that our external affairs are in a little more order, we'll have more time to focus on them. I think partly they're out of sight, out of mind on the ledge, but I don't know what we can do about that. The onions in particular look pathetic; I think sets are in our future.
Several starts really need to go outside: the various lettuces, cabbage, possibly broccoli. Hopefully we'll get to that later this week.
We've planted quite a few things outside, too -- details tomorrow.
Center Front: Onions
Center Back: Tomatoes
Right Front: Basil, Savory, Marjoram, Lettuce, Cabbage
Right Back: Parsley, Broccoli, Peanuts
The peppers and eggplants are still going gangbusters; they really need to be put into bigger pots. The tomatoes are also doing pretty well, although they're a little leggy for my comfort. Maybe we should have pinched them. Maybe we should pinch them now. Heck if I know. I've heard that you should put a fan on them to develop thick stems; sadly we have no spare fans. Maybe next year.
The rest of our seedlings are in slightly more disarray. It's hard to say how much stems from neglect and how much from ignorance, but hopefully now that our external affairs are in a little more order, we'll have more time to focus on them. I think partly they're out of sight, out of mind on the ledge, but I don't know what we can do about that. The onions in particular look pathetic; I think sets are in our future.
Several starts really need to go outside: the various lettuces, cabbage, possibly broccoli. Hopefully we'll get to that later this week.
We've planted quite a few things outside, too -- details tomorrow.
Tuesday, April 20, 2010
Wildlife
So, when we were first scouting this site to build our house, A's dad mentioned in passing that he'd seen a moose about 2 miles down the road, near some trees and a permanent pond. 'Sure you did', I thought sagely to myself. Moose, while certainly present in the Palouse, are not so common that you just see them wandering around* -- and A's dad, while a fantastic person, is sometimes more of a storyteller than a scientist.
So, we're sitting on our deck enjoying the evening sun for the first time since we moved in, when who should come sauntering around the corner of our house?

Pictured: A nice lady moose. Like all wildlife photos, she was much closer before I ran to get the camera.
So, egg on my face, huh?
Wildlife has pretty sorely been lacking this winter, or at least right around our house. We've had mice in the woodpile (and -- sigh -- the garage), some Canada geese, some sparrows [? I'm terrible at identifying birds] that were building a nest in our gutter (I don't think it worked out), and various raptors including a bald eagle and some kind of giant hawk that was sitting in a tree not 5 feet from my car when I was driving to work one day. We saw deer almost every day when we were first building the house, but none for a while.
But the variety has really increased in the last couple weeks as the weather has gotten warmer. I hear tons of different bird songs (of course, I can barely tell a duck from a dodo, so I have to work on this). We've heard although not seen coyotes and owls, got a bit of an air show from some bats last night after the moose left, and some swallows [?] seem to be building a nest under our deck. I saw a wild turkey tom about half a mile from here earlier this week -- man, those things are HUGE!
Less delightfully, at least a dozen paper wasps were hanging out in the chicken coop last night, and we found an enormous blister beetle in the yard the other day -- seriously, it was at least an inch and a half long and when I smashed it (I'm generally live and let live with bugs but the internet says that they exude an oil that can cause blisters [hence the name] and their larvae are parasitic on bees) all this glistening orange goo came out... supergross.
Of course, all of these animals are delightful to see -- but every last one of them is potentially an enemy of the farm, out to eat our plants and kill our chickens. Well, maybe not the bats. Being citified, we're hoping that fence and various old-wifey controls will keep them enough at bay, but that isn't always how it works out.
Still, I don't think we'll shoot the moose.
*Actually, this is totally untrue -- they had to lock down the junior high in Moscow a few years ago because a moose was on the property.
So, we're sitting on our deck enjoying the evening sun for the first time since we moved in, when who should come sauntering around the corner of our house?
Pictured: A nice lady moose. Like all wildlife photos, she was much closer before I ran to get the camera.
So, egg on my face, huh?
Wildlife has pretty sorely been lacking this winter, or at least right around our house. We've had mice in the woodpile (and -- sigh -- the garage), some Canada geese, some sparrows [? I'm terrible at identifying birds] that were building a nest in our gutter (I don't think it worked out), and various raptors including a bald eagle and some kind of giant hawk that was sitting in a tree not 5 feet from my car when I was driving to work one day. We saw deer almost every day when we were first building the house, but none for a while.
But the variety has really increased in the last couple weeks as the weather has gotten warmer. I hear tons of different bird songs (of course, I can barely tell a duck from a dodo, so I have to work on this). We've heard although not seen coyotes and owls, got a bit of an air show from some bats last night after the moose left, and some swallows [?] seem to be building a nest under our deck. I saw a wild turkey tom about half a mile from here earlier this week -- man, those things are HUGE!
Less delightfully, at least a dozen paper wasps were hanging out in the chicken coop last night, and we found an enormous blister beetle in the yard the other day -- seriously, it was at least an inch and a half long and when I smashed it (I'm generally live and let live with bugs but the internet says that they exude an oil that can cause blisters [hence the name] and their larvae are parasitic on bees) all this glistening orange goo came out... supergross.
Of course, all of these animals are delightful to see -- but every last one of them is potentially an enemy of the farm, out to eat our plants and kill our chickens. Well, maybe not the bats. Being citified, we're hoping that fence and various old-wifey controls will keep them enough at bay, but that isn't always how it works out.
Still, I don't think we'll shoot the moose.
*Actually, this is totally untrue -- they had to lock down the junior high in Moscow a few years ago because a moose was on the property.
Monday, April 19, 2010
Moving Day
It is time to get the chickens out of the house. They are loud, they smell, and their habitat is a blight on my living room. Also, they are slightly more than three weeks old! How time flies.

Chicken Portrait, The Teenage Years: Prop Joe, Stringer, Avon and Marlo.
The coop still isn't entirely ready, but it's good enough so out they go today.

I think the coop is pretty cool; we'll see if mice gnaw through the floor and then weasels get in, or if owls saunter in through an open door, eat our chickens and then roost there (seriously; this is a major concern of chicken raising. Who knew?). The bump-out is the nest box. It has a hinged lid so theoretically you can just lift up the lid and collect eggs. I'll believe it when I see it. There are also three chicken-sized doors around the other sides, and a larger window on the back. On the inside there are two roosts made of closet rods, and a feeder and waterer that we will hang from the roof with chain. We're also going to give them their heat lamp for another few days. More coop pictures here.
We still haven't fenced in their yard; hopefully we'll get that done next weekend. Since predatory birds of about a dozen different types and neighbor dogs are the main chicken predators around here, the fence is a major issue. In the meantime, they can live inside the coop and get used to that.
The coop still isn't entirely ready, but it's good enough so out they go today.
I think the coop is pretty cool; we'll see if mice gnaw through the floor and then weasels get in, or if owls saunter in through an open door, eat our chickens and then roost there (seriously; this is a major concern of chicken raising. Who knew?). The bump-out is the nest box. It has a hinged lid so theoretically you can just lift up the lid and collect eggs. I'll believe it when I see it. There are also three chicken-sized doors around the other sides, and a larger window on the back. On the inside there are two roosts made of closet rods, and a feeder and waterer that we will hang from the roof with chain. We're also going to give them their heat lamp for another few days. More coop pictures here.
We still haven't fenced in their yard; hopefully we'll get that done next weekend. Since predatory birds of about a dozen different types and neighbor dogs are the main chicken predators around here, the fence is a major issue. In the meantime, they can live inside the coop and get used to that.
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