I am a dreadful procrastinator...and one of my favourite sayings is of course, 'yes, I am going to do it...' while all evidence is that I have got sidetracked onto something else.
Perpetual farmstay garden is doing nothing but sitting there.With a great big pile of building materials around it. It is cold and the fire is so inviting to sit near instead of going outside .I need to get out there and do something.
Solution is to go and plant the seedlings for it!! Now I have to by the end of the long weekend , have the bed ready.
I have some different types of brassicas to plant and
winter lettuces as well. They will need have at least two weeks growing time and then in they will go. This will give the new bed time to settle and be ready for planting too.
The perpetual garden will be different from my other beds as it is really a traditional garden bed . I normally use raised beds or chicken tractor beds. It is important for us to have lots of different gardening styles going here because different styles suit different people. The aim is to get as many people gardening as we can.
This is the chicken tractor that David built for me. I might be a marvel in the garden, but this is the reason... I am married to this incredible person who can basically build anything and is happy to do it.
This chicken tractor is 'mark 3 ' of david's designs , since he always has to improve on things. It is really great , but it is also really heavy. He is thinking about doing a dome design in a lightweight aluminium frame (many years ago we did try poly pipe but it gets pretty windy on our hill and it just kept blowing away much to the consternation of the chickens ) . The bed shown here is just ready for planting.... these chickens are my best scratchers ever, but I am finding they are going faster than I can grow seedlings in the preparation of beds.
This is my other chicken tractor (mark 1 of david's designs) . It is the easiest to move but not quite the standard of mark 2. . We have a very old breed of bantam in this one. ....silver duckwing leghorn bantams ( bred in the 1800s ) . We bought them just to keep an old breed going..just have to find a duck wing rooster now.Also want lots of eggs to feed farmstay guests and make pasta!
They are at point of lay at the moment. We check for eggs everyday.
They are a bit flighty , perhaps something to do with the older breeding. We love watching them roost at night because there is always one chicken who MUST be at the very top of the roost ...and they flutter and fuss till the pecking order is all set out in roosting order.
Today we are going to let them run around ...this will be their first outing in the yard. We are going to do it close to sunset , so that their roosting instinct sets in and they are happy to go back in the pen. Considering how flighty they are, I hope they go back in okay. I can just see myself at dusk lifting roosting chickens out of the mulberry tree or something.
We believe it is important to let our chicken tractor chickens have time outside. We have found that with set routines you can train them to be herded back to the pen on sunset. But...we always have to supervise. There is nothing more tempting to a chicken than a freshly mulched garden bed with seedlings in it. It is worth the time to see them racing around the yard excitedly telling each other when they have found something delicious like a snail!
Saturday, June 11, 2011
Friday, June 3, 2011
More Beds!
So ... i'm putting in three more beds this weekend. <g> more broad beans to be sure! i've got my diggers order ready to go .... can't believe it's about time to start thinking about the seedlings that need to get planted for the spring planting! makes a heart hope!
anyone know much about bush tucker? i'm thinking about dedicating a small area of my front yard to that ... it could be very fun, and a great learning experience for us and the kids! let me know if you guys know anything about that!
anyone know much about bush tucker? i'm thinking about dedicating a small area of my front yard to that ... it could be very fun, and a great learning experience for us and the kids! let me know if you guys know anything about that!
Saturday, May 28, 2011
to choko or no go?
Listening to a little jazz by the fire with a glass of vino, and the feel of dry sandpaper hands after a good day in the garden. Last week we had a family shin dig for Dad's 70th. Mike and Mandy drove down from the Nimbin Hinterland, bringing with them some lovely bohemian pumpkins, bell chillies and choko's a plenty. One of the choko's had sprouted a shoot with some leaves, so this week we decided to be frivolous and plant it by our front fence, despite chilling choko stories taking over peoples gardens and destroying their lives.
Surely they cant be that bad... right? Well I guess we are about to find out. If they are as rambunctious as rumoured, hopefully we will not be condemned and outcast by our neighbourhood. The kids and I chomped on one this evening, and we were all pleasantly surprised at their mild flavor and apple like crunch. Perhaps its the name....choko... if they were titled with something more exotic, like Brazilian bongo fruit, or the forbidden bobacko fruit of desire, perhaps they would not suffer such an unfair stigma.
With the successful planting of the community orchard in our nearby nature strip, we have been in the mood for planting a few more things in our own garden. this afternoon we purchased two Kiwi fruit vines (male and female), and some more rosemary for the front garden.
we also set about building a chook tractor, slash, possum force field, using chook wire and some conduit. We aim to finish it this weekend and hope to introduce the chooks to it by day, then use it to cover seedlings by night to ward off our "big fat eat everything and make your garden a barren wasteland" possums.
We too successfully grew sweet potatoes last season.. they are a very rewarding veg to grow. they are a great crop. no diseases, fast growing and easy on the eye. the heart shaped leaves are also edible. this year we had less success, as we did not have them covered and the possums ate the leaves off every stem. consequently we are considering a walk in enclosure to cover the garden beds.
Very interested in the talk about Aquaponics. We are very keen to give it a try also. Maggie, please let us know how the course on fish (and fungi) goes. Sounds very exciting. Wouldn't it be great to hold a fishing and bbq party in your own backyard!
Enjoy the garden.
Surely they cant be that bad... right? Well I guess we are about to find out. If they are as rambunctious as rumoured, hopefully we will not be condemned and outcast by our neighbourhood. The kids and I chomped on one this evening, and we were all pleasantly surprised at their mild flavor and apple like crunch. Perhaps its the name....choko... if they were titled with something more exotic, like Brazilian bongo fruit, or the forbidden bobacko fruit of desire, perhaps they would not suffer such an unfair stigma.
With the successful planting of the community orchard in our nearby nature strip, we have been in the mood for planting a few more things in our own garden. this afternoon we purchased two Kiwi fruit vines (male and female), and some more rosemary for the front garden.
we also set about building a chook tractor, slash, possum force field, using chook wire and some conduit. We aim to finish it this weekend and hope to introduce the chooks to it by day, then use it to cover seedlings by night to ward off our "big fat eat everything and make your garden a barren wasteland" possums.
We too successfully grew sweet potatoes last season.. they are a very rewarding veg to grow. they are a great crop. no diseases, fast growing and easy on the eye. the heart shaped leaves are also edible. this year we had less success, as we did not have them covered and the possums ate the leaves off every stem. consequently we are considering a walk in enclosure to cover the garden beds.
Very interested in the talk about Aquaponics. We are very keen to give it a try also. Maggie, please let us know how the course on fish (and fungi) goes. Sounds very exciting. Wouldn't it be great to hold a fishing and bbq party in your own backyard!
Enjoy the garden.
Wednesday, May 25, 2011
How To Grow Sweet Potatoes And Farmstay News
Maggie asked me about sweet potatoes. These are photos I took last Spring, but as we are currently harvesting the last of our sweet potatoes, I felt a bit nostalgic for spring...so will tell you a little bit about them.
Supermarket sweetpotatoes rarely sprout...I suspect they are sprayed with something . I bought my sweet potatoes from our local organic shop 'Organic Feast'(great shop!!) in Maitland.
I cut them up into pieces and placed them in the soil.
There was little effort to it all. Although I did find at the end of season, the bigger pieces were the ones that did the best. I guess the plant had more to use as nutrients.
I used all sorts of pieces (orange, white and purple). I discovered the orange ones did the best and supplied the most produce. The purple were more slow growing and the white ones did not seem to like my climate at all. So, in a temperate climate, I would suggest the orange kumera to begin with.
It was so exciting seeing them all sprout.
And this is what we have been eating for the past few weeks. I haven't been near the grocery shop for 3 weeks now, these are just delicious!!
Of course , you can't grow them now...too cold. All the plants have just been zapped by frost. But the little tubers left in the soil untouched will shoot again in spring. So it is a great plant that you have to do little work for, and it just keeps providing -you must find a permanent designated area for it though.
In other news we are listening to builders hammer and drill as the new bathrooms go in the farmstay rooms. I can't get near the perpetual garden with all these utes parked up along the house. Still, it is a good sound, the sound of progress .
I have both fires going today and am looking out on a very dry landscape, as the frost has burnt off the last of the kikiyu grass . There has been some rain today , and fingers crossed we will get some winter grasses coming through soon. ...just need a bit more rain. I have planted clover around my orchard to create a natural mulch and am attempting to never run out of broccoli (as it always seems to be the one thing that I have to dash to the supermarket to buy) by planting 17 plants and more to come.Also, as I snuggle up in front of the fire, I have created the farmstay blog :
http://thelittleblackcowblog.blogspot.com/ ....so feel free to visit whenever you like and tell alllllllllllllllllllll your friend as well!
Can't wait to hear more about what has been happening in your garden Maggie.
Supermarket sweetpotatoes rarely sprout...I suspect they are sprayed with something . I bought my sweet potatoes from our local organic shop 'Organic Feast'(great shop!!) in Maitland.
I cut them up into pieces and placed them in the soil.
There was little effort to it all. Although I did find at the end of season, the bigger pieces were the ones that did the best. I guess the plant had more to use as nutrients.
I used all sorts of pieces (orange, white and purple). I discovered the orange ones did the best and supplied the most produce. The purple were more slow growing and the white ones did not seem to like my climate at all. So, in a temperate climate, I would suggest the orange kumera to begin with.
It was so exciting seeing them all sprout.
And this is what we have been eating for the past few weeks. I haven't been near the grocery shop for 3 weeks now, these are just delicious!!
Of course , you can't grow them now...too cold. All the plants have just been zapped by frost. But the little tubers left in the soil untouched will shoot again in spring. So it is a great plant that you have to do little work for, and it just keeps providing -you must find a permanent designated area for it though.
In other news we are listening to builders hammer and drill as the new bathrooms go in the farmstay rooms. I can't get near the perpetual garden with all these utes parked up along the house. Still, it is a good sound, the sound of progress .
I have both fires going today and am looking out on a very dry landscape, as the frost has burnt off the last of the kikiyu grass . There has been some rain today , and fingers crossed we will get some winter grasses coming through soon. ...just need a bit more rain. I have planted clover around my orchard to create a natural mulch and am attempting to never run out of broccoli (as it always seems to be the one thing that I have to dash to the supermarket to buy) by planting 17 plants and more to come.Also, as I snuggle up in front of the fire, I have created the farmstay blog :
http://thelittleblackcowblog.blogspot.com/ ....so feel free to visit whenever you like and tell alllllllllllllllllllll your friend as well!
Can't wait to hear more about what has been happening in your garden Maggie.
Monday, May 2, 2011
Living In the Present ..... Living In The Future ....All At The Same Time.
Whilst I said our challenge was building a tourist establishment by Christmas...the real challenge is making sure that everything is home made and self sufficient by the time our first guests arrive. We want to create a place with very few store bought goods and most things provided by the farm.
We often can go almost a week without shopping with our vegetable garden at the moment and most of our groceries consist of fruit , flour , sugar and eggs.But we do get tired sometimes and then out come the bought biscuits , etc . It is okay to do that too , because true self suffiency can be exhausting if you over do it and it should always be fun.
For our farmstay guests , though we aim for a weekend of everything out of our oven or our garden for the time they are here. Just to get in touch with the idea of self suffiency and try it for themselves.
This weekend we bought a tangello tree, a blood orange tree , a navello orange tree and a emperor mandarine tree . We planted them in the back yard which is at the top of a hill. Our soil is good but the house area is over a rock and gravel shelf , so you can get caught with planting trees when the roots hit a rock shelf and go, 'hey there is no more dirt here!' and the tree up and dies.Every planting is a risk in the citrus area as no matter how deep you dig you wonder if there is a giant rock just under the tree. But it is okay to take risks, that is what life is all about. My back is sore though from pulling all these big rocks out !
At the same time , it is best to follow permaculture principles where everything is planted centrally and you can keep an eye on your crops. Our garden is near the clothes line because it means you are visually connecting with the plants at least once a day. Although, sadly the clothes don't always get hung out on time if you are like me and get distracted by dropping the basket in the middle of the yard so that you can weed or plant!
We also considered planting an orchard down near the creek as that would make more sense waterwise and soil wise . We thought about our visitors though would be mainly from urban areas, so decided to create something that will go in a backyard instead.Hopefully all we do would be doable in some way in a suburban backyard.
The citrus orchard now consists of eight trees, all of different types to stagger fruiting periods. They do well on this side of the yard and appreciate the gravelly texture of the soil to a point because it allows good drainage.
This is also where we have our chicken tractor . Chicken the rooster(scaredy cat rooster ) and his four wives create a new garden bed for me in the citrus area every 4-6 weeks . This is working well for crops that don't do well in my raised beds.I also let them out on afternoons when I am working in the yard ...in no way can they be trusted on their own though.
Our lemon tree is full of fruit at the moment due to all this lovely rain.This Eureka lemon wasn't fruiting well previously until I realised that it simply wasn't getting enough water.
This was a lime tree and I have been telling everyone it is a lime tree. It is now a lemon tree....it used to be a lime tree but the graft got away on me and I didn't notice the other part died. I actually needed a lemon tree that fruits at a different time to the Eureka , so mistakes can often work out well.
Never be afraid of mistakes in the garden.
Our raised beds are going well. There is nothing like the Autumn flush to get such lush growth.
It also fools gardeners into thinking they can get away with a summer crop going (which is why I planted corn last weekend just as an experiement ...crazy I know).
The passionfruit vine and the sweetpotato vines are going well and it is prime time for picking our sweetpotatoes.
Every gardener has one thing they grow really really well for some reason. For us it seems to be sweet potato.
We went to Tocal field day on the weekend and bought some heritage Italian seeds. Planted Kale yesterday and some red lettuce which will look gorgeous in winter salads.
We often can go almost a week without shopping with our vegetable garden at the moment and most of our groceries consist of fruit , flour , sugar and eggs.But we do get tired sometimes and then out come the bought biscuits , etc . It is okay to do that too , because true self suffiency can be exhausting if you over do it and it should always be fun.
For our farmstay guests , though we aim for a weekend of everything out of our oven or our garden for the time they are here. Just to get in touch with the idea of self suffiency and try it for themselves.
This weekend we bought a tangello tree, a blood orange tree , a navello orange tree and a emperor mandarine tree . We planted them in the back yard which is at the top of a hill. Our soil is good but the house area is over a rock and gravel shelf , so you can get caught with planting trees when the roots hit a rock shelf and go, 'hey there is no more dirt here!' and the tree up and dies.Every planting is a risk in the citrus area as no matter how deep you dig you wonder if there is a giant rock just under the tree. But it is okay to take risks, that is what life is all about. My back is sore though from pulling all these big rocks out !
At the same time , it is best to follow permaculture principles where everything is planted centrally and you can keep an eye on your crops. Our garden is near the clothes line because it means you are visually connecting with the plants at least once a day. Although, sadly the clothes don't always get hung out on time if you are like me and get distracted by dropping the basket in the middle of the yard so that you can weed or plant!
We also considered planting an orchard down near the creek as that would make more sense waterwise and soil wise . We thought about our visitors though would be mainly from urban areas, so decided to create something that will go in a backyard instead.Hopefully all we do would be doable in some way in a suburban backyard.
The citrus orchard now consists of eight trees, all of different types to stagger fruiting periods. They do well on this side of the yard and appreciate the gravelly texture of the soil to a point because it allows good drainage.
This is also where we have our chicken tractor . Chicken the rooster(scaredy cat rooster ) and his four wives create a new garden bed for me in the citrus area every 4-6 weeks . This is working well for crops that don't do well in my raised beds.I also let them out on afternoons when I am working in the yard ...in no way can they be trusted on their own though.
Our lemon tree is full of fruit at the moment due to all this lovely rain.This Eureka lemon wasn't fruiting well previously until I realised that it simply wasn't getting enough water.
This was a lime tree and I have been telling everyone it is a lime tree. It is now a lemon tree....it used to be a lime tree but the graft got away on me and I didn't notice the other part died. I actually needed a lemon tree that fruits at a different time to the Eureka , so mistakes can often work out well.
Never be afraid of mistakes in the garden.
Our raised beds are going well. There is nothing like the Autumn flush to get such lush growth.
It also fools gardeners into thinking they can get away with a summer crop going (which is why I planted corn last weekend just as an experiement ...crazy I know).
The passionfruit vine and the sweetpotato vines are going well and it is prime time for picking our sweetpotatoes.
Every gardener has one thing they grow really really well for some reason. For us it seems to be sweet potato.
We went to Tocal field day on the weekend and bought some heritage Italian seeds. Planted Kale yesterday and some red lettuce which will look gorgeous in winter salads.
And lastly this half dead area here is the place for the perpetual farmstay garden.Oh dear, it doesn't look so good ! It doesn't look like much now,but it will . One thing about gardening is the promise for the future. You cannot not be sad when you look at a bare patch of soil like this and wonder' what work of art can I create with this?'
The perpetual garden is a garden purely for the farmstay guests. It is a place where each guest gives a future guest a gift by planting a punnet of lettuces , or kale or snow peas so that the following family can enjoy them. We will provide the seedlings , but for the guests it is a way of getting them to understand that growing your own food is about living in the present by holding the soil in your hands and enjoying the moment , and the future at the same time ..knowing that planting corn now might result in a fun family barbecue with corn on the cob in a few months time.There will be a guest book for families to write in and each family will write what they planted . They will also be able to check online how their plants went when the farmstay blog starts.
Hopefully when I post next there will be some progress on the perpetual garden. There may also be a spa bath in the main farmstay bedroom fingers crossed!
Thursday, April 28, 2011
leeks n things
have done a seedling tray of leeks. have always been scared of them .... always fail. but love them and the taste that they add to everything so have to give it another go. did some research and when they are ready to transplant will put them in a broad bed where i can just leave them .... and forget them for a while in hopes that the ignoring will allow them to bloom where they are planted .... <g>.
on the other hand my snow peas, broad beans and potato's are coming up a treat right now. comfrey is trying (for the compost) and the parsnips have shown their little heads now too. and am about to plant out seedlings of cauliflower and brocolli. looking forward to what stewy wintery soupy dishes i can put together with this stuff!
now if i could just get my husband to get his head around keeping chooks for eating as well as eggs .... then i could start thinking about completely home grown soups for dinner! <g>
on the other hand my snow peas, broad beans and potato's are coming up a treat right now. comfrey is trying (for the compost) and the parsnips have shown their little heads now too. and am about to plant out seedlings of cauliflower and brocolli. looking forward to what stewy wintery soupy dishes i can put together with this stuff!
now if i could just get my husband to get his head around keeping chooks for eating as well as eggs .... then i could start thinking about completely home grown soups for dinner! <g>
Friday, April 15, 2011
The Challenge-Build A Tourist Establishment By Christmas !!!!
Last year I read about the funky frontyard farmer's friends challenge for themselve to survive a week on their own produce. While a week might seem a small time, it is not when it comes to producing all your own food! Of course the frontyard farmers succeeded , and in style ,by the looks of the photos. This family's journey appealed to me because they were doing something special, just changing the world a little at a time. They were also doing what I like calling 'throwing your hat over the fence' ... meaning that by throwing your hat over the fence even though you can't walk any further , you push yourself to go further anyway because you must get to your hat.
For our family , we have set up our challenge over a course of many years, starting on our honeymoon 15 years ago where we said to each other , 'Let's have a bed and breakfast on our farm...' , we have been building ever since,with breaks when things like babies were born and cattle prices were low. We never gave up though because we had published our decision in our hearts and it was all we ever talked about with family and friends as this dream developed.
As time has gone on , our idea has changed as we have changed .Our 'bed and breakfast 'idea evolved to become a place where people could learn to be self sufficient,where the stress of day to day living vanished, where children could find the joy in nature and maybe ,just maybe..... a place to change the world a little bit at a time.
The thing is though , once you get to the finish line of something like this , it starts to get a little scary . You start wondering how it will go , will people like it , what if we burn the breakfast etc...? We needed a challenge to get us to the homestretch . And now we have one , we have asked Jo and Joe to come and be our very first guests at 'The Little Black Cow Farmstay' in the beautiful Hunter Valley. So our challenge is to have our farmstay ready (we hope!! ) by the Christmas holidays and not burn their breakfast.So in our posts over the rest of the year, you will see the last parts of the building, the creation of a perpetual vegetable garden , and little ideas that we might toss around and ask our funky frontyard farmer's friends to comment on to see if they would work. For instance , I keep telling my husband we should really get a duck....but he thinks 10 sheep,a pet cow, a goat, 2 ponies ,2 dogs ,4 chickens and a rooster and 2 rabbits are really enough for a farmstay.Don't you think we should get a duck???
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