Recent chatter:
From my paucity of apiary
posts lately, you would be forgiven for thinking that when my bees
absconded, my
beekeeping enthusiasm left with them. However, the truth is that the
package we installed in our Warre hive has been bulking up nicely
--- I've just been following the rules and leaving the hive closed.
Due to the wonders of
modern technology, though, I can refrain from cracking open the hive
and can still get an idea of what's going on inside. Once a week,
I snap a shot through the screened bottom board. The photos are
generally subpar in terms of quality, but do let me keep an eye on the
bees' progress.
We installed the package
on April 27, and the first photo in this post shows what the bees
looked like two days later. They were simply a tight cluster of
bodies enclosing the queen, who was still trapped in her cage.

Eleven days after
installation, my non-intrusive inspection showed a little bit of comb
being built. If I'd opened the hive, I would have been able to
see whether the queen was laying, and on the off-chance she wasn't,
could have ordered a replacement queen. With a Warre hive, you
have to simply hope for the best (and pay attention to the hive's mood,
smell, and sound).
Sixteen days after
installation, I could have discovered a lot by opening the hive.
The presence of eggs would tell me the queen was still alive and well,
and now I could look at the capped brood to determine whether she had
been properly inseminated. (Lots of drone
brood and little
worker brood could be a sign of a queen who didn't have sex with enough
drones during her mating flight.) However, when I received an
improperly mated queen three years ago, I chose to let the workers supersede her and turn one of the eggs
into a queen of their choice, so the truth is I wouldn't have done
anything if I'd seen too much drone brood in the two week old hive
anyway. Of course, since I was working with a Warre hive, I
didn't even have this decision to make --- I could still see comb in my
photos (too blurry to share), and the workers were definitely bringing
pollen in, so I chose to assume all was well.

Twenty-three days after
installation (this past Sunday), I finally saw something within my hive
that required work on my part. The bottom box was starting to
look nearly full up!
Assuming the queen is laying
well, this is about the time the first new workers should pop out of
their cappings, which means the colony could grow even more quickly
from here on out.
Since I started the hive
with two boxes, I can't tell whether the bees have filled the top box
as well, but there's no reason not to hoist the bees up and put another
box underneath (known as nadiring). This process preserves
the hive scent and temperature, and is the least intrusive
method of increasing a bee colony's living area. Looks like it's
time to build another box this week and take our first real peek inside
the hive since we took
out the queen cage!

The golf cart front wheel bearings started making an awful grinding
sound that created a situation where the tire was rubbing against the
corner of the steering thingamajig.
We really wanted to haul in
some more lumber, so I came up with the above garden hose band aid to
protect the tire.
It bought us about 2 miles
worth of hauling before the bearing started giving out in a different
spot.
Before I delve into chapters
5 and 6 of Walden, I want to get a head count
to see who's still reading. I don't mind at all having folks who
haven't read the book comment, but sometimes I can't quite tell if
anyone else is still reading or if we should switch books. So,
please leave a comment if you're still with me! (And, if you're
not, leave a comment to tell me whether you might rejoin the club if we
switched over to something lighter.)
This sentence from near the beginning of chapter 6 sums up much of the
gist of this pair of chapters. The themes included being alone
without being lonely, and at the same time making human interactions
more meaningful. I was especially struck by the first theme since
it's one I've wrestled with throughout my life, and I feel is essential
for a homesteader to conquer.
I hear these same words all the
time, but I seldom come up with as good a reply as Thoreau's:
I think Thoreau and I have two character traits very much in common ---
we're both introverts and neither of us takes friendship lightly.
Although most people don't have the luxury of acres of trees
surrounding their homestead as a buffer, I wish everyone could live the
way we do. I feel like it's much easier to be genuine and kind to
the people I do come in contact with when they're not breathing down my
neck on a regular basis.
Again, I couldn't agree more. We don't get trick-or-treaters,
salesmen, or people trying to convert us to their religion due to our moat, and the mud
definitely separates the wheat from the chaff. In fact, our
choice to keep employing Bradley after he built
our porch was based largely on the fact that he wore quality
waterproof boots and had no problem tromping through the mud.
So, what did you think of chapters 5 and 6? Did different themes
speak to you? Did you find this chapter duo as enjoyable as I did?
Meanwhile, if you're new to the book
club, you might want
to check out the
thought-provoking comments on
chapter
1, chapter
2, and chapters
3 and 4. I'll wait to post a "reading assignment" until
tomorrow, at which point I should have an idea of whether we're all
still getting something out of Walden or would like to move on.
Weekend
Homesteader provides
48 fun and easy projects to guide you on the path to
self-sufficiency. Yes, that means I skip Thoreau-style projects
like hewing logs for your cabin with an ax.
Anticipation is my worst way of being.
I plant impatiens in the ground.
A little more research helped
to guide us towards a system that will allow the angle of the solar
panel tower to change for
different times of the year. More complex systems have a new position
for each month, but we might settle for a new angle for each season to
keep it simple.
What will be more challenging
is changing the position during the day. We've considered using a heavy
duty swivel so it can turn from the East to West.
Once it's all put together we
can either move the swivel by hand at different times of the day or
figure out a motorized option.
Typha they are called,
their Latin botanical taxonomy.
Corn-dog looking plants on long
dried out stalks.
They puff like white dandelions
in the heat.
I am an adult
so I can give myself
permission
to act like a child.
Walking past them,
I break a cattail off,
the seedy mass,
already beginning to send
it's cotton into the wind.
I will correct Wikipedia.
Wind is not the only seed disperser
of the Typha.
The plants co-evolved
in a symbiotic relationship with
childlike humans, young and old.
I carry my cattail up Estill Street
turning my neck sharply
as I watch my seedy friends
drift where they land
on lawns, ditches, sidewalks,
and on the clothes of me --
some in my nose and mouth.
Everything so transient,
of course wilderness is transient.
Typhas are transient because they
clear the usually fogged vision of people.
That and the fluff makes good moccasins.
I felt a call to duty
as I carried the cattail along.
To profligate a plant
that sucks toxins like arsenic out of the water.
A first try doesn't always do justice in poetry.
Often the second poem in a flux of poems is best.
At least that's what I've seen.
Sometimes the best poem of a series comes fourth or tenth.
Often it is the last poem in the group,
a poet's sigh – I have expressed.
The problem of thinking you have no poems in you to write
is regretfully cured in a painful process of
pouring out twin and triplet poems when the water breaks.
The problem with a writing drought
is I would have written every tiny detail each morning
and now I have to make up for it in one sweaty day.

Mom
came over to inaugurate our new boardwalk (and to coo over the porch and eat
chocolate
strawberry shortcake).
While she was at it, she
brought me a t-shirt response to my statement that "I'm
simply a boring person." The quote, attributed to an Amish
farmer, goes:
"I just said, 'We farm.'
"He understood what I meant.
"He was intelligent."
What's your favorite kind of at-home entertainment?
Our chicken waterer lets us leave town for the
weekend without worrying about our flock. Mostly, though, we
prefer to stay home.
The house had its bathroom upstairs. When it was divided, a cubby hole was framed just big enough for a toilet in the bedroom used by me and my sister Joyce. We took our baths in a washtub on the kitchen linoleum in cold weather and on the back porch when it was warm enough. I got the second bath in scummy water.
My third memory of my father is him making me a kite that spring. He made a cross of horse weeds and ran string around the edges, then pasted newspaper on it. Underneath he made a loop of string and tied the line onto its middle. The rag bag provided a long tail. He had to add several tail sections before it stopped spinning in the wind. He did this the week I was recovering from chicken pox and was still itching like crazy.
We lived there in Tin Can hollow long enough that I went out with a bag over my head for Halloween. My Dad's cousin, Earl Brammer, would tease me even up into college over the incident where I went up to him and said “I betcha don't know who I are.” Benny lived in the last house on the left going down hollow, across from Uncle Edgar and Aunt Betty Hess. Grandmother's Brother and a passel of his kids lived a block from us on a side street parallel to ours. Later, his son Bob, the town carpenter, built a house a block away on the main hollow stree, next to his brother Bud. After the Arnold Brown side street the hollow curved sharply to the left, before ending just past Brammers'. At the curve, in a little ramshakle house, lived a great aunt, or maybe great great one, whose name I've forgot. Her unmarried daughter, Rose Frye, and Rose's sons Hallie and Tony lived with her in the early years. I was warned away from playing with my cousins, but that didn't stop me. Years later we visited them near Lorraine, Ohio, and they took me on a joy ride at night in a “borrowed” car, along a stretch of the Ohio Turnpike not yet open.
My spring there was the one before I was to start grade school. It was customary for an older student to take upcoming ones to class before school ended. Arnold Brown's daughter (???), a fifth grader, took a liking to me and took me to her class on the appointed day. Only a year or two later she died in a car with a boy and another couple hit by a train in Sistersville.
I still lived in the hollow when I began first grade. Across the street from the Frye house was a steep, dirt road that ran straight up the hill. It was seldom if ever used except as a short cut by students who lived on top. One sport of those kids was to throw rocks at me as I walked to school. So my mother told me to go the long way around, a block up the hollow, right up the hill between the cemeteries, and right two and a half blocks to the school. On that route, Johhny Kyle and a few of his friends would fight with me. My mother reported this to the principal and he called all of us into the office. He passed around a large wooden paddle and told us if we fought any more he would use the paddle on all of us. I was frightened half to death, though I now realize his wisdom in preventing them from picking on me even more because I told on them.
In third grade I got my first printed book—actually a children's magazine a classmate gave me because I expressed an interest in it and she didn't want it any more. But by then we lived on Morgan Avenue, against the hill and next to Uncle John Fox's (married to one of grandmother's sisters) daughters, and three houses down from his farm—across from which Grandad moved his house the Refinery gave him when they needed him moved off the property to build a truck fueling depot. The move, achieved with a tractor pulling the house on poles for rollers, with the help of my Dad, uncles and their cousins.
Once upon a time 4 or 5 years ago
a man or woman could buy a 13 amp entry level circular saw for 40
dollars.
Those days are over.
12 amp is now the best you
can get at that entry level price.
We got this 40 dollar Skil circular saw last week and it
seems to be just as strong as its 13 amp counter part, but it's sort of
an unfair comparison seeing how the new saw had a fresh and sharp
blade. Time will tell if the downgrade in motor capacity will have a
noticeable effect. Our use will be low to medium, so we won't be the
best gauge, but I plan to update this review in a year or two because
power tools are beautiful and photogenic.
I remember many years earlier, in the same smoky kitchen, staying up late (hoping I wouldn't be noticed) watching my parents and either Uncle Jude and Aunt Nan, or great Uncle George Hess and Aunt Stella, playing a card game they called "setback." In it you bid and lost points if you didn't make your bid. Points were : high (Ace), low (deuce), (big) joker, (little) joker, Jack, Jick (same color suit as the jack) and game (either the ten of trump or total point cards won by a team). Late one night, Stella, who seldom bid, said in her dead pan voice "Shoot the moon." This meant she was sure her team could get all 10 points, and if successful gave 21 points, which automatically won the game, which went to that number of points.
I don't recall how old I was then, but young enough this adult world was a mystery I had, as yet, no judgment about.
My world then was mostly family, with a few nearby neighbors, and one neighbor from when we moved to Tin Can Hollow when Dad wrote from the navy that he would be back home soon because the war was over and he had a job at the oil refinery. That neighbor, Mrs. Simonton, took me in when I was three or 4, fed me cookies and pies, and paid loving attention to me: something my mother was incapable of doing. Mother had a baby, little resources, and knew nobody in St. Marys except my dad's family. The only one of them she respected was my grandfather.
All of Dad's brothers except the youngest, Cub, were in service overseas. Jude, next in age to my father, was flying tailgunner out of England and was shot down over Germany, went on a death march with a broken leg, and ended up in Stailag 19. Wallace was on a PT boat. Edgar was in the infantry in Europe. Cub (John) I remember being woke up for school by Grandmother with a cup of cold water when he wouldn't get out of bed.
Later, when I was in school, Dad and Jullian worked at Quaker State, Wallace got training after service and traveled the country wiring military airplanes. We visited him in Fort Wayne, Indiana. Then he went to Orlando, Florida and later Alaska. he died when I was in perhaps ninth grade from a heart condition resulting from Typhoid fever when a child. Mother met Dad when she came to nurse him in his illness. He was the best loved by everyone--a real charmer. Edgar was jobless with three young children for quite a while. He was an abusive parent. His oldest, Barry, has been in prison since he went to Reform School as a youth. Cub was all state in three sports and went to West Virginia Tech, where he played football and became a high school coach. He married a local Montgomery girl and had three kids. He died in 1960 when his car wrecked into a gasoline truck when he was driving back from officiating a basketball game. My aunt Patricia was born a few months after me. She had downes syndrome and lived at home till Grandmother died, then went to an institution.
Grandad and all his sons except Dad were alcoholics. I remember various brothers drunk and fighting in my grandparents' front yard on Saturday night.
I was close to Uncle Jude's son Gary, the oldest grandchild, a year older than me. I spent a lot of time at his house (with him on night shift asleep in the bedroom) and at Grandmother's. My mother was depressed, always criticizing. I would also visit the Simontons, our former neighbors until my parents could afford to rent a house with facilities. In eighth and ninth grades I spent my evenings sitting pins at the bowling alley, which was part of the theater complex. My last two years of high school I was projectionist six days a week and spent free time hanging out in a workshop behind the theater with the youngest son, Alex Illar, who was in his twenties. For the last three years of high school I also was close to a mother and son, Gene Streitenberger. He was into electronics. I was always welcome in their home. As a high school friend reminded me at our fiftieth reunion, I was always working a lot. He subbed for me in my lawn mowing business when my family went on vacation in DC. I also had paper routes, worked at a peach orchard two summers. I was financially self sufficient from 6th grade on, bought my lunches, clothes, etc.

Even though the gargoyle
was guarding the river, our stream
monitoring session
still turned up results in the Gray Zone. That means our site on
the Clinch River is neither good nor bad, probably due to upstream
straight pipes and cows. Splashing around in the water on a hot
afternoon, on the other hand, was 100% good.
(Photo credits for the
top and bottom right photos go to our movie
star neighbor.)

Those
green
house tables were 10 feet long. We used 4 of the top sections along
with some decking boards to make this new swamp bridge.
It's a huge improvement over
the previous cinder block system.
Sometimes I feel like all I
have to do is tell the farm that I need something, and it
provides. There's really nothing mystical about it --- you just
have to focus on what you want and then keep an open mind so you notice
the solution when it looks you in the face.
You'll recall that I
posted earlier this week about being
low on roma tomato transplants. While weeding asparagus alley Thursday, what did I find
but a big patch of healthy volunteer romas!
There are always lots of
volunteer
tomatoes in our
garden, but it's usually tough to tell which variety they are until
they fruit. Since we fertilize our garden with horse manure to
which kitchen scraps from someone else's household are added, volunteer
tomatoes could be just about anything. One year, I babied a
volunteer tomato, only to find out that it was some kind of grocery
store variety that won't get past the pink, hard stage before the
fruits rot off. So I swore off keeping volunteer tomatoes ---
it's just too much of a gamble in our setting.
However, Thursday's
volunteers were all growing from one spot which just happened to be
where the yellow romas lived last year. I'm 85% sure a fruit fell
there and rotted in the midst of the summer garden frenzy, which would
explain why there are so many tomato plants popping up out of the same
spot but none on either side. So I thanked the farm, then
transplanted those yellow romas into my empty tomato beds. I can
taste those extra sun-dried
tomatoes already!
I have done a lot of repair and some festival-going in the last week and a half. A few beautiful mashup things were sold quickly and I don't have pictures. One was an 80's shaped hardwood desk base that I matched up with a vintage sheet of bird's eye maple veneer plywood for the top. The bottom layer of the bird's eye looked like weathered leather but it may have been a severely distressed finish applied very thick? About 40x22, 7-layer finish ply with a drawer pull (type of thing) cut out along one edge - the most unique piece of scrap I've run into in a long time!
On this Formica table, I painted the legs burgundy.
Then I built Icehouse II bookcase on commission:
Starting with the door (backing), I cut of the bottom to make it even and to clean off a thin layer of woodrot in the endgrain. The worn, graffitied door was beaten apart from the sides of the tool cabinet it once enclosed, so splintered edges were split off with a chisel. I then wire brushed away the loose paint chips and triple-coated it with water-based polyurethane front and back.(4 layers on exposed endgrain) The hinges were busted off to remove this one, but the bent latch is intact and rotates freely. (Icehouse I Bookcase also had hinges)
The side panels are cut from the plywood back of a very strange old stereo cabinet. I may cannibalize the rest and will try to remember to take pictures of it first. I gave bits of the componentry to Susan for the future making of a Bot.
The shelves are the very last of the shelf-stock donated by our neighbor Sam from a library tear-out in the early 90s. (Previously, I guessed they had come from a prior incarnation at 201 Haywood Rd.) I lost the shop countersink for about a week, so I used a flat auger bit in its absence. With a wide pilot, the flat recess created by the auger seems to create a lock-tight effect when the wood screws bite in at the end. So, lesson learned: losing tools leads to innovation. Lose your tools often as long as you are certain to find them again later.
___
] j [
I thought I was taking a vacation from vocation, and then it occurred to me.
For one moment, think of the absolute worst of your character, your most vile trait, your awfullest deed, your worst habit. Don't even say it. I will not send it away in New Age energy work or hypnotize it out of your system. But I will suggest to you that there is no better time to seize what you want to be than now.
I want to read more. I want to write. My secret dream is that someday I could share my love of writing, my inspiration for creative self expression. I don't care who I teach the love of writing. As long as they are people.
I could write a book on writing. I could go into the prisons and volunteer in a literacy program with writing as my twist. I could walk down the street to the nursing home and and help old folks get down their thoughts, past shaky hands and tiredness. I could lead a workshop in the bookstore across town.
And I will have chances, I will make these things happen. I will seize this moment. There is life after English Degree. I am living it.

Our new hired helper went a
few extra miles today by bringing his utility trailer along for some
emergency manure hauling.
"It won't be a problem" was
his reply when we asked him.
I'm thinking it went a bit
smoother loading buckets onto a trailer compared to the higher up truck
bed which is still at
the dealer.
Even though staking up plants
seems absurdly simple, we've gone through a lot of trial and error
before finding techniques that work for us. But first --- why tie
up plants at all?
We stake plants in our
vegetable garden for their own good and to make our lives easier.
Staking tomatoes (combined with pruning) keeps the leaves drier,
which holds off blight in hot, humid climates like ours. After
you stop picking your asparagus, the tall fronds can easily become top
heavy and snap off during windy or wet weather, and I've found the same
is true of plants like kale when you let them fruit in order to collect
the seeds. Then there's the fact that it's annoying to have to
lift up those tall plants sprawling across the aisle every time you
want to push a wheelbarrow or mower through.
We've tried lots of different
materials and methods for staking plants, and my favorite by far uses
light-weight metal fence posts. (These are often called "U-posts"
because they're shaped like a U in cross-section.) Heavy T-posts
are too hard to pound in (and to take back
out when you need to move your stakes), while free materials like
branches and bamboo have a tendency to rot and break at just the wrong
moment. Although fence posts are expensive when bought in large
quantities, they also last a very long time if you're nice to them ---
we expect ours to keep going for a decade or two.
If your soil's soft, you
can push your posts in by jumping on the pegs at the bottom (imagine
the fence post is a pogo stick). Alternatively (especially in
hard soil), you can pound the posts in with a mini sledge hammer.
I usually ask Mark to pound in the posts
very solidly if they're going
to be in place all summer, but I just push them in the easy way for
more temporary applications.
I've written before
about how to make a pea
trellis --- we still
make our trellises exactly the same way three years later because the
method works so well. (Well, we did invest in some taller U-posts
so we don't have to add the stick extensions, and we often put the
posts a bit closer together now.) We use the same kind of trellis
for cucumbers, and would use it for green beans too if we didn't grow
bush varieties.
For
asparagus or other plants that grow in a big mass, I generally put a
post at each corner of the bed and tie a piece of wire, plastic baling
twine, or rope all the way around the plants. For my flowering
kale, I cut corners a bit and just used two posts per bed --- I figure
I can get away with this method since the kale will be done blooming
and will be ready to harvest in a few weeks.
The
only other thing we stake up regularly is tomatoes. For my tall,
indeterminate varieties, I slip an eight foot piece of rebar into the
groove in the U-post, making sure the rebar extends at least a foot
into the ground for stability. Then I simply tie the tomato to
the post (and then rebar) whenever the top of the plant starts wanting
to bend down. A tomato vine in late summer can be very heavy, so
be sure to use heavy-duty ties --- like wire or plastic baling twine
--- rather than organic baling twine, or you'll have a tomato collapse.
My final word of advice
is --- stake early! If you wait until your plants are starting to
bend down into the aisle, you'll risk breaking them off and will take
twice as long erecting stakes. Nowadays, I simply put the the
trellises and stakes in place before planting a single seed or set.
As if the beauty and
maneuverability of a well-staked garden isn't enough, I've discovered
that our fence posts have yet another advantage. Bluebirds and
phoebes love to perch on top of the posts, eating insects while
depositing droppings right where I need the extra fertility.
Thanks, guys!
I went to bed at 10 and woke up screaming at 12:30. I woke up with a terrified shriek half way out of my lungs. My suite-mate, H, was standing over my bed. I told him soon after that I wasn't awake for the full scream and that my adrenalin was already running.
"There was somebody walking upstairs and opening squeaky doors," he told me in a voice much more anxious than his usual calm way. We decided to go upstairs and sweep the house. He kept my back and I his as we turned on all the lights of the expansive upstairs where the professors on sabbatical live. The house was empty of intruders, but I believe H. I am not certain who was in the house, but someone was.
And then there were the phone calls. He mentioned that someone leaves messages of a dial tone on the family phone at the same time every night. I didn't realize they called at the same time, but I was aware that they called repeatedly.
I took to heart the alcoholics motto about accepting things I cannot change. That one statement, even though I am not an alcoholic, leaves me a much more relaxed person than I would have otherwise been. H was regularly terrified when we returned to the basement. I cannot say my blood wasn't pumping. But I am not worried. We will figure it out tomorrow.
So I was on my way to get
some horse manure this morning when the truck all of a sudden stopped
and wouldn't start back up.
The local dealer was just a
short hike down the road...Gulp.
It was only 50 dollars to
have them go back and fetch our truck with the above bigger truck. They
won't look at it till tomorrow.
Dealerships have always made
me nervous. I think I might rather walk down a dangerous dark alley,
but sometimes they're the best mechanical choice. I'll spare you the
wallet munching stories that have helped me to form this opinion. So
far today's experience is working out to change my mind at least a bit.
This dealer is in Castlewood...city for us, but most people
would consider it a country dealership, which feels like an advantage.
Maybe that's why the people working there seem so much friendlier than
the last dealer I was at?
I didn't contact Seed Savers
Exchange about my potentially
bad tomato seeds
because I wasn't 100% sure the problem was their fault. But one
of their employee's --- Tom Wahlberg --- stumbled across my post and
emailed me in concern. He told me that, "like we state on each
packet, we really do mean Satisfaction Guaranteed, and have credited
your account for these two packets."
While the refund was
appreciated, I was more intrigued to hear about how Seed Savers
Exchange grows, processes, and tests seeds. Wahlberg explained:
Depending on the length of time
of fermentation it is possible the Organic would have a higher level of
fungal activity, but also would retain more of the normal fuzzy
exterior which could also be what you are seeing. The
Conventional by contrast will have been processed via acid extraction,
which is not a seed treatment, but rather a method commercial growers use to break down the
gelatinous membrane around the seed without the delay inherent with the
fermentation process. That would also explain the difference in
the shade between the two varieties.As for germination, we utilize Midwest Seed Services for independent analysis, and the most recent results are as follows:
| Variety |
Date of test |
Germination |
Lot# |
| Amish Paste --- Conventional |
01/12 |
96% |
107-1824 |
| Amish Paste --- Conventional |
02/12 |
98% |
107-1911 |
| Martino's Roma --- Organic |
11/11 |
96% | OG259-381 |
Wahlberg went on to
tell me that Seed Savers Exchange has started hundreds of Amish Paste
plants in the greenhouse this year (some of which you can see in this
and the previous photo). "In light of your observations, we will
also start a flat of the Martino's for evaluation."He finished by telling me:
I thought I should set the record straight, and will let you know what Wahlberg finds out about the Martino's Roma seeds.
Garlic will be the first test curing, but that's still weeks away.

I was going to title this
post "Fruitless" and talk about how Blackberry
Winter wiped out all of the tiny fruits on the peaches, apples,
pears, cherries, gooseberries, and plums. The tale wasn't going
to be all doom and gloom since blueberries, raspberries, grapes,
strawberries, and blackberries either missed the frost or bloomed over
a long enough time frame that we should enjoy quite a lot of fruit this
summer. And yet, even that isn't the full picture.
The truth is that I tend
to go in the opposite direction of most folks, telling you about all of
our failures but only focussing on the biggest successes. There
are simply so many garden achievements every year, you'd be bored stiff
if I regaled you with the first snap peas (Sunday), the first real meal
of non-frost-nipped strawberries (last week), and so on ad infinitum.

It occured to me that you
can't walk around our garden --- prettier this year than ever before
--- and see it for yourselves. So here it is in all of its mid
May glory!
The photo above was
taken in our front garden, the oldest vegetable patch on our farm,
where the soil is the best, the sun the worst, and the aisles
in need of streamlining. I set out most of our
garlic there last fall, along with a bed of Egyptian onions, some chives, and our experimental potato
onions, so the area
feels like one big mass of Amaryllidaceae.
The empty beds are
filling up fast with summer crops, many of which have already popped
up. Once we put in our second planting of things like green
beans, corn, and squash this week, the front garden will be pretty much
full.

The back garden (shown
below) is nearly all coated with annual
ryegrass in an
attempt to repair the waterlogged, topsoil-less ground. Mark's
been doing a great job of mowing the
garden beds each time he cuts
the aisles, which maximizes the grass's growth and means lots more
organic matter works its way into the soil. That one bare bed is
coated with tiny basil seedlings, and you'll notice I snuck
strawberries into the back garden despite this being its fallow year.
Meanwhile, the chick
brooder is hidden behind our second oldest peach tree. Even
though we won't be enjoying luscious peaches this year, at least the
tree provides some much-needed shade.
And, at the bottom of
the back garden, our Chicago
hardy fig only died
partway back this past winter. I pruned the bush to three stems,
cut off the dead tops, and am hoping to taste figs for the first time
this fall!

Moving on, I forgot to
take a picture from afar of the forest garden, home to this year's
tomatoes, but the photo below pretty much sums it up.

And then there's the mule
garden, from whence most of our meals are coming at the moment.
I've been putting all of my energy into getting the front garden ready
for summer crops lately, so the mule garden is looking a little ragged
around the edges, but not so much that the crops are suffering.
This week, I'll be starting my next pass through, taking down the last
quick hoops, weeding the seedlings who were too small to work around a
month ago, and adding more mulch.

I'm already thinking
ahead to fall since this sunny garden is the best spot for
overwintering greens. Soon, I'll plan where all the late summer
and autumn crops will go, and will probably set aside a lot of the mule
garden beds to be planted in wave
after wave of buckwheat. That will prevent me
from sneaking summer crops into areas slated for the fall garden, and
will build organic matter at the same time.

Another alternative is
to let some of the spring crops go to seed. Every year, I add one
or two more vegetables to my list of easy to save seeds, and the new
experiments this year are kale and Swiss chard (the latter
of which is shown below on the left.)

I hope you enjoyed your
garden tour! If you were here in person, you would be snacking on
a sugar snap pea and a juicy strawberry by now, but hopefully you'll
get the gist photographically. 2012 is far from fruitless!
We started out with one of
these bags leftover from Anna's
year abroad with a Watson fellowship.
Now we've got 6 of the same
oversized bags.
They mainly get used to carry
out boxed up chicken waterers, but have several other uses including leaf
gathering.
A few weeks ago, Everett asked us what we do during
our weekends
of non-work. I
always look a little shame-faced when people inquire about our leisure
hours because the cultural norm is to fill that time with activities
outside the home --- hiking, going to a movie, or whatever.
In contrast, a blissful
day off in Anna-land starts with gathering a big jar of cicadas
for the tweens, then
morphs into a quiet morning reading on the porch while listening to a catbird
singing from the walnut or watching the three week old chicks learning
to forage in the lawn. I'll probably spend a little extra time
making something fancy for lunch, then will gravitate from non-fiction
to novel-reading in the afternoon. If I'm feeling crazy, I might
have my mother over for tea. I'm simply a boring person.
Which is all a long way
of saying that chapter 4 of Walden really spoke to me.
Thoreau wrote:
I think that one of the major
benefits of living in paradise is that you don't feel the need to spend
much money on expensive leisure pursuits. As Joe Dominguez and
Vicki Robin wrote in Your
Money or Your Life,
the goal of voluntary simplicity is to turn your life into a vacation
so you don't need to take a vacation way from home. It has taken
several years for Mark to bring me around to this way of life, but I'm
now eternally grateful that he invented weekends.
That said, Walden's chapter 3 went right over
my head, and also made me wonder if my rants against TV sounded like Walden's rants
against easy reading. In this day and age, most people think
they're feeding their minds if they crack open a bit of chick lit or
flick on the History Channel, let alone "read Homer or Aeschylus in the
Greek".
So, what did you think of
this week's installment of Walden? Unless I hear some
"no!"s, I'll plan on us all reading chapters 5 and 6 (Solitude and
Visitors) for next Monday. If you're new to the book
club, you might want
to check out the thought-provoking comments on chapter
1 and chapter
2 as well. I
appreciate you all giving me the impetus to spend some time thinking
about this classic!
Want
more reading material? You can peruse my revised rant against
television in The
Weekend Homesteader.
Welcome Abundant Alaska
When I found short bread,
molded from last bits of dough,
raw wabi sabi.
xo Maji

Recently we gave a neighbor a
bag of extra lettuce and he turned around the next day and gave us a
bag of fresh trout.
Anna is not a lover of
seafood like myself, but she didn't hesitate to clean up these three
trout for dinner the other day so I could have a treat.
It was delicious. Makes me
wonder if raising trout in an aquaponic
setting might be possible for
us.
Once
you start playing with cover crops, bare soil jumps right out
at you and begs to be planted. Last fall, we tore
a bit more of the old house down, exposing a big patch of
earth in which all plant life had been shaded out. It was too
late to plant anything else, so I just scattered a bunch of rye seeds
on the ground and proceeded to ignore it.
The rye sprouted and
turned into a lawn-like coating before winter hit. Then, this
spring, the grain shot up and started to bloom.
If I was ready to use
that plot of earth, I'd cut the rye now and let the straw fall as
mulch. But there are still huge floor joists to be moved before
the footprint of the old house can be turned into garden, and we have
no time for projects like that at this time of year.
So I'm allowing the rye
go to seed to give me some more time before I need to make a decision
about that bit of earth. Truly a do-nothing
grain patch, I
haven't tilled, fertilized, or done anything else to the rye.
We'll probably feed any grain we get to the chickens, but what I'm
really salivating over is the hefty stalks for mulch.
Last year I was able to switch tasksel to using metapackages, instead of the weird non-package task things that had been used before Debian supported Recommends fields well.
An unanticipated result of the new task packages is that I have this nice popcon data available for them, so can get graphs like these.
For new installs of testing, KDE and Xfce are neck and neck. With Gnome being the default, it's hard to say which desktop users really prefer. My feeling is that it's probably nearly evenly split now.
(I installed Xfce on my sister's laptop last week, and anticipate moving all my family to it, rather than Gnome 3.)
The above graph also shows a surprisingly large number of ssh server task installs. In fact, it's the most often manually installed task. Probably many of those are server machines, and so I'm considering having tasksel automatically select ssh on systems where it doesn't automatically select a desktop.
Language data is also available. Taskel uses language tasks internally, without exposing an interface, so this will be almost entirely users who did an install of testing localised to their language.
Interesting data can be teased out of this too. For example there seem more installs in Catalan than Chinese ... and at least 10 Esperanto users. (As with any popcon number, this is a lower bound, to be multiplied by the scaling guesstimate of your choice.)
By the way, I've got a new vanity domain for my blog and wiki: http://joeyh.name/
The old http://kitenet.net/~joey/ will continue to work, like it has since 1997. But the new is easier to type. And it let me move my site to Branchable, at last.
Golf cart jousting is a
modern twist on a 15th century popular past time that replaces the
horse with a golf cart and the traditional lance with a couple of 4x4's
bungee strapped together.
"Scythes are cool!" our
readers
admonish us every time we talk about our weedeater.
I used to be in love with the idea of scything once upon a time...and
then I was given a scythe.
At the time, I didn't
know much about the tool, so I wasn't wise enough
to turn down the bulky American scythe and to save my pennies for a
quality Austrian scythe instead. I also trusted my father when he
told me that one size scythe fits all. That may be true if you're
a normal-sized man, but as a short woman, I spent all of my energy just
trying to keep the scythe blade from digging into the earth. I
gave up on the tool in disgust.
But then I stumbled
across Harvey
Ussery's scything page,
and was tempted once more. Ussery
explained that Austrian scythes cut with blades curved in three
dimensions, so they glide over the surface of the ground. In
contrast to the traditional American scythe blade --- which is stamped
out by a drop-forge press and has to be heavy to keep from breaking ---
Austrian blades are hand-forged by a blacksmith, so they are sharp,
light, and dent rather than shatter if you hit a rock. In fact, The
Scythe Book explains
that "over half the [Austrian scythe] blades
which begin the twenty-six stages of manufacture are rejected along the
way", which is why the blades are of such high quality (and cost so
much).
Then there's the handle,
known as a "snath" in scything circles.
Austrian snaths are typically very light, and both types of snath can
be fitted to your unique body. If you're an absolutely raw
beginner like me, you can order a scythe from The Scythe Supply
that's suited exactly to your proportions since you give them your
height, your handedness, the number of inches from ground to hip, and
your cubit (the distance from your elbow to your out-stretched middle
finger). The company will be sure the handles go in the right
places so you're not straining anything as you mow.
While you're making your
decision, you'll also need to choose a kind and length of blade.
Your main choices are between bush/brush blades, which are short and
thick so they won't break when you whack at young saplings, and grass
blades, which are lighter and won't wear you out when you're cutting
softer plants. (A ditch blade is a bit of a hybrid, halfway
between the graceful grass blade and the hefty bush blade.) Grass
blades can be long or short, with longer blades being handy for
harvesting vast fields of wheat and shorter blades being more useful
when mowing small lawns with lots of edges. I think the raw
beginner could do worse than picking a middle of the road grass blade
--- I chose the 24 inch grass blade pictured here.
With all of that in mind, I begged Mark to let me splurge on a hunk of
wood and metal, and he did. I'm here to tell you that the
difference between an American scythe that doesn't fit an an Austrian
scythe that does fit is like night and day. But this post is
already too long, so you'll have to wait to hear more about what
scything feels like and how to maintain a quality scythe blade in later
posts. If you want to learn more now, I highly recommend this
video my mom tracked down, which somehow manages to be inspiring and
hilarious all in a two minute time frame.

The plan is to mount our solar
cell panels on the top
and build drying racks for curing garlic and sweet potatoes towards the
middle area.

I like to save
seeds from my own tomatoes, but last year I got the
idea that perhaps saving seeds is one of the reasons blight always shows up in my
plantings. I think it's more likely that tomato blights simply
thrive during our warm, humid summers, but I figured it wouldn't hurt
to experiment by buying tomato seeds for 2012.
Now I wish I
hadn't. I'm struggling to fill my tomato beds with romas this
year, despite planting two flats and a quick hoop full. Before I
complain about the seeds, though, I have to be fair and say that part
of the problem was my own fault.
I put tomato seeds in
the quick hoops too early since it was so warm in March, and they came
up just before a serious cold spell. The quick hoops weren't
enough to repel frost when the outside temperature dropped into the
teens, so the tomato seedlings got nipped. I replanted the garden
beds in early April, but by then it had gotten so hot that the soil was
bone dry. In retrospect, I should have waited to plant my tomato
seeds in the quick hoops until April 1 no matter what the weather was
doing, and I should have taken the covers off on a warm day to let the
sprinklers hydrate the ground and get the tomatoes up and growing.
Good
thing I decided to hedge my bets by starting some seedlings inside,
right? Unfortunately, this is where problematic seeds came into
play. I figured stock from Seed Savers Exchange would be as good
or better than any seeds I could save on my own, but now I'm not so
sure. The seeds in one packet looked dusty gray when they
arrived, almost as if the seeds were covered in mold, and I had a lot
of germination issues that got worse with each planting (suggesting
that the seeds were already near the end of their energy reserves when
they reached our farm). My second flat showed only 25% healthy
seedlings, and many of the plants came up headless, with cotyledons
seemingly pinched off by a hard seed coat. (This is very
different from damping off, which would have showed up as the stem
withering at the base.)
Steve
Solomon wrote that most seeds sold to home gardeners are of poor quality, but that we blame
ourselves for seeds that don't sprout. I can see his point --- I
can't be confident this year's tomato dilemma is due to bad seeds and
not to some issue on my end. Regardless, I won't be planting as
many tomatoes as I'd hoped (although still more than last year), and
there will be more slicers and tommy-toes than usual since they
sprouted better than the romas.
That said, it's hard to
complain when the first few survivors are already nearly at the bloom
stage. And maybe at least the blight situation will be better
this year?
DEAR BEREA: I want a meaningful job now and a place to stay starting August with minimal pay. I want to work as a social activist/volunteer for organizations and causes like the Fairness Coalition and KFTC and to garden as much as I can. I want to be as active in my Friends Meeting as I can, to spend time with my lovely friends, and to swim and walk until the cows come home. I want to do as much of my purchasing outside of walmart as possible and to limit my purchasing to the minimum. And this is not a lot to ask at all because I am a hard worker (especially now I feel refreshed) and I am a Berea graduate. And with that, my life dream of capital "L" Literature will come.
Right?

Turns out some of the structural
damage to our barn was due to poison ivy vines.
The vines were exposed to
falling water, which got conducted to various spots for what I'm
guessing is decades.
It wasn't a problem for our
new hired hand. He's been immune to the effects of poison ivy since he
was a kid.
Phillip Meeks, an extension agent in
southeast Kentucky who works with a number of beekeepers, emailed me to
share his experiences with packages
of bees. He
wrote:
Because of this, I've begun to steer my own beekeepers away from the packaged swarms, trying to persuade them towards nucs instead. They're a bit more costly, but I've had great luck with the last one I bought, as have many of my beekeepers.
I don't know WHY the performance of packages has gone downhill, but it seems to be a consistent issue.
Anyway, just wanted to toss in my two cents -- not that it's any help to you now. I hope you can at least take it as encouragement that [your absconded package] probably isn't beekeeper error!
I'd be curious to hear
from those of you who have had packages abscond. Has the
experience only begun in the last few years, or did you see the
behavior previously?
We decided to consult our new
porch
builder for some advice on shoring up the water damage in the barn.
He's had some experience with
barns like this and made short work of securing the above 4x4 with a
couple well placed 2x6 scabs.
John
Little is a regular reader who lives in Japan and shared the following
fascinating data about differences between colony collapse disorder
there and in the U.S. I'll let him tell you the story in his own
words.
On a different subject, bees
and CCD [colony
collapse disorder],
I recently came across some local (Japanese) information which seems,
on the face of it, to confirm the neonicotenoid connection. At an
apple growers meeting a couple of weeks back, one of the members
brought along a pre-release version of a documentary on DVD called "A
message from the bees".
Basically, there were
two critical points which differentiate the experience of
CCD here in Japan from
what is generally being seen in Europe and the U.S. The first is
that beekeepers here are
seeing different symptoms. Instead of empty hives, they're
finding piles of dead and incapacitated bees on the bottom boards and
in front of the hives. In the majority of cases, the deaths have
been correlated to local spraying of neonicotenoid-based insecticides
60 days before.
The second piece of
interesting information is that the spray dosage levels in Japan are
much, much higher than
in most of the rest of the world. For the common insecticides
used by fruit growers, the allowable levels (in ppm) are 20 to 300
(yes, three hundred!) times those mandated in Europe or the U.S.,
leading researchers here to the conclusion that they have identified a
"smoking gun".

As one old beekeeper
from the coast of Nagasaki-ken (in southern Japan) put it, "The centre
of Tokyo is now the safest place to raise bees. The air there is
cleaner than any part of the Japanese countryside".
Scary information
(especially for those of us who are involved in agriculture). And
the "message" from the bees? "You're not just killing us (bees),
you're killing
yourselves, too".


Cornish
Cross broilers are usually eaten at 8 weeks. We give our
heirlooms an extra month
since they grow slower, but the deadline is still fast approaching.
We killed the rooster
last week and have four of last year's broilers left in the
freezer. Looks like we'll be eating a lot of chicken dinners in
May.

We left our beloved porch Sunday and Monday to see my
favorite little sister graduate from Berea College.
Congratulations, Maggie!

I
call the photo above "Three Mothers". We were waiting for the
first appearance of our graduate....
Here she comes!
The photo below depicts
Mom's first sighting.


Walking across the
stage....
Her rooters below.

Then cookies and punch
in the quadrangle.

My favorite grand-nephew
seemed more interested in the brownies than in the dry-roasted cicadas I brought just for him.
What are kids coming to these days?

We're so proud of you,
Maggie!
Our chicken
pasture/moat perimeter is coming close to completion.
Sometimes I like to recruit a
tree to function as a fence post, like this small walnut.
It saves time and money, but
it also looks more natural, which in my opinion increases the already
high level of beauty around here.
I thoroughly enjoyed
everyone's thoughts on chapter
1 of Walden, even
though I didn't comment much, so I hope you all had time to read
chapter 2 --- "Where I lived, and what I lived for". I'm going to
write about two themes that caught my eye in this chapter, but, as
usual, feel free to comment on whatever you found the most interesting
instead.
Buying land
What struck me first is
how similar the beginnings of my and Thoreau's journeys were...and how
different the endings. "At a certain season of our life, we are
accustomed to consider every spot as the possible site of a house,"
Thoreau wrote, and went on to tell about all of the properties he
toured, one of which he came within a hair's breadth of buying.
I also went through a
land-yearning stage in which I drew maps of how I'd turn real and
hypothetical properties into vibrant homesteads, and I ended up happily
married to our plot of land. On the other hand, Thoreau decided
that the wiser course is to love and leave the land. "As long as
possible live free and uncommitted," he advises us. "It makes but
little difference whether you are committed to a farm or to the county
jail." Similarly, in the first chapter, he wrote about "young
men, my townsmen, whose misfortune it is to have inherited farms,
houses, barns, cattle, and farming tools; for these are more easily
acquired than got rid of."
This reminds me of Mike's
comment on my
previous Walden post in which he reminds us that no one can be free of
the economy, even if you buy a plot of land outright, grow your own
food, and need nothing else. Thoreau was thinking
more of the upkeep of a farm than he was about property taxes and a
mortgage, but both points have merit. So, my first discussion
question is --- do you think voluntary simplicity can be achieved if
you own land?
The news
The second thing that struck
me in this chapter was more of a side note than a theme. Mark and
I have come to belief this over the last few years, but have had a hard
time articulating the premise, so I'll let Thoreau do it for me:
I've had several people
tell me that that it's somehow ethically imperative to stay up to date
on the world's news, but I've come to consider it all a
distraction. Yes, I do my homework and figure out the issues when
the time comes to vote, but I don't see any point in being emotionally
involved in the day to day running of the world if I can't do anything
about it. Which brings me to my second discussion question --- do
you consider all news gossip, or do you think we're morally obligated
to stay up to date on current events?
Chapters 3 and 4
Unless I hear that it's
a hardship for anyone, let's plan to talk about "Reading" and "Sounds"
next Monday. Now I'm looking forward to hearing what you have to
say about chapter 2!

(As a side note, I might
not be able to pull your comments out of moderation until this evening,
so don't despair if they don't show up as quickly as usual. I
promise I'm not weeding out comments I don't like --- everyone except
clear spam always makes it through moderation.)
My
new paperback includes fun and easy projects for every weekend of
the year to help guide you onto the path to self-sufficiency.
The easy way to catch a chicken is to wait till it gets dark and pick
them up off their roost.
We each got spelunking head
lamps back when our power went out
for 2 weeks, and quickly discovered how awesome a head mounted
light source can be.
My advice is to pay a little
extra for the higher end model that allows you to adjust the angle
where the light shines.
といっても新年はとっくに明けているのですが、
今年もよろしく御願いいたします。
New Year has already started but since this is my first post of the year, I would like to say "Happy New Year" to you all.
Hope this new year will bring Peace, Love and Stability to all of us and smile to all of you.
I've made my New Year's resolution very simple, almost the same as I had a year ago. (oh no.)
I cooked up Soba + Osechi-ish dish on Dec. 31st and shared with my Hickory family. We had present opening (which we had not been done in December just because we did not have time, but it turned out to be like Otoshidama-ish activity.)
The kids are so luck that they had so much Christmas Present this year again. Thank you for all lovely Family Santa-s who is reading this blog, they loved your thoughtful gifts.
So What this 2012 will bring to us???
My top wish for this year is for all of us to stay healthy, and peaceful.
I don't need big giant surprise with fanfare, but rather want to have small, steady, going forward good quality life.
So far I am recovering from my first of the year knock down cold/flu/whatever you call now and appreciate health. The worst part of being sick this time was when I had to go to the store to get Tyl**r when I was sick as a dog. Oh what I need is those "Santa's helper"...

| 無限ネットワークからキミ自身の可能性を診断しよう! |
| 予約制モデルルーム公開中 サザエさん通り至近 オープンレジデンシア桜新町 |
| 3年連続約定力No.1!合計10万円超の口座開設キャンペーン |
No energy to re-do it again, so couple of pics. to share...
K's cub scout - very hard for me to catch up, but of course K loves it.
Boys' club!





S had a cute Christmas concert at her church school - she was a "kitty" singing "hush there is a baby sleeping in a manger~ shout there is a baby sleeping in a manger~".
Her three years old class did good job, it was so cute everyone was still not so conscious about being on the stage.
Only thing I could do even a year after that was to get up and pray at 2:45pm JP time.
So many words has been spoken for this "day" and nothing new I could really say, but still am thinking about it.
This weekend we had a wonderful Spring-like weather. Myself and the kids happened to see Groundhog
twice
at very strange place (one by the highway, one just crossing the back road...) that confirmed that Spring is here. The pear flowers are blooming beautifully, and daffodils and bell flower are all over the garden.Last weekend the kids enjoyed the hot chocolate, this weekend they enjoyed the frozen yogurt!


List of feeds:
- Anna: last checked (25 posts)
- Anna and Mark: Waldeneffect: last checked (42 posts)
- Anna and Mark: Clinch Trails: last checked (10 posts)
- Joey: last checked (1 posts)
- Jay: last checked (25 posts)
- Dani: last checked (21 posts)
- Errol: last checked (27 posts)
- Adrianne: last checked (1 posts)
- Maggie: last checked (17 posts)
- Tomoko: last checked (20 posts)
- Jerry: last checked (20 posts)



