Coyote House Farm

Drew & Dan’s Story: We live and work in the San Francisco Bay Area. We have two kids, who are just about ready to go off to college.
We bought our 20 acres of unimproved… Read Coyote House Farm's full profile here.

What I Want to Be If I Grow Up

December 29th, 2010
Coyote House Farm | Blog

I took the week between Christmas and New Year’s off from my Joe job so we could do some mud wrestling at the farm.  Dan took Monday and Tuesday off and was up at 5:30 am to go back to work.  All in all, we got a lot done in a short amount of time, which is our habit of necessity.

Yesterday we woke up at the farm to finish off the tree planting.  Then we drove the 160 miles home and did some field planning for 2011.  I went to band rehearsal and came home again at 11:30 pm to do the seed purchase with Dan.  This is all part of my training to grow up to be an astronaut-doctor-veterinarian-horse-riding-faery-princess.   Consciousness is a terrible thing to waste.

Camera+ recipe?<br />
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? effect: Magic Hour

Rewind<<

After giving each other thoughtful and romantic in our own way farm-related Christmas presents (Dan gave me a weather station and I gave her a compound bow.  I know.  It’s so sweet it makes your teeth crack), we collected and planted 43 fruit trees.  This was about 4 weeks ahead of plan, but a good move given a.) our son Dave is home from school to help out, and b.) it will rain continuously from now until the sun turns to dust.  We sprayed the trees with neem oil concentrate to protect from shot hole fungus and leaf curl before it gets a chance to start.  We’ll hit them again later in the winter to keep safe.

Each tree represents a significant investment with the tree itself, gopher basket, tree guard, 6’ring of deer fence, and irrigation line.  Losing trees to fungus or anything else is a real heart breaker.  The deer are so intent on eating them in the summer that it plays like a scene from the movie Zombieland.

A few weeks back we put up a PVC hoop house in the veggie field.  We pounded re-bar into the soil as anchors and reused the stucco lath tomato cages we made for sides.  This will keep out the rabbits and deer and provide a frame for shade cloth in the summer to cover the larger tomatoes that don’t like all the direct sun the cherry tomatoes like.  While we plan to put in 5 more this year, I am concerned that they won’t scale.  They are cheap and should be very effective, but will not cover very large areas.  This is actually a tomorrow problem since we have some time to spend yet figuring out our crop plan in the smaller area and 6 hoop houses will do just fine for now.  First we’ll get good with 2,400 square feet, then expand if it makes sense.

Our veggie plan covers four seasons but cuts way back in the summer when there’s no rain and we have to share the water with the trees.  Dan and I found a cool application to help us with our vegetable plan called the Vegetable Garden Planner from Mother Earth News.  It helps with crop layout, succession, rotation, plant/harvest calendaring, companions, and a bunch of other things.  One of the pictures going by shows what our field will look like in February.

So while I was at rehearsal last night, Dan was finishing the plan and making the seed shopping list.  Still sore from the long day, she says, “You need to go back up.  We have to get started right away.”  So I get to mess around today, then go back up for another couple days to get things ready for the late January planting.  Poor me.


Hey farmers…

November 7th, 2010
Coyote House Farm | Blog

We’re wrapping up our 2010 season and getting ready to build a new hoop house for the veggie field.  We have some of our new trees on order and will be finishing up the rest pretty soon.  We built a second solar panel and are feeling so fat that we might leave the cell phone booster on ALL NIGHT!  Yep!  Party at our hut!

In other news (ION)I was just in the Comments section and approved a bunch of backlogged comments and marked some spam, too.  When y’all post you might want to see if there are any pending comments.  Ones from people that have websites and seem a little generic, or target a specific product are most likely spam and you can mark them that way (Just click on the Spam link).  So go look at some of your older posts and you might find some comments from August and September.

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That Was the Year that Was

October 23rd, 2010
Coyote House Farm | Blog
It’s been a while since we’ve written, and perhaps the only reason it’s happening today is because it is raining. My pickup truck has a shell on it, so it’s not good for hauling compost.  We have the tiny John Deere for cutting grass for compost and the 18 cubic foot trailer it tows for hauling manure.  While Dan picked out the last of the starthistle, I brought down load after load of manure (each to their talent) into the 2400 square foot veggie area.  Our neighbor has a… Read the rest of this article »

What We Have Learned

August 22nd, 2010
Coyote House Farm | Blog
We learned last year that rabbits do not eat basil.  What we learned this year is that rabbits will eat basil if there is nothing else to eat. We learned that our corner of the world likes to grow tomatoes of these varieties:  Sungold, Super Sweet, Black Cherry, and Stupice.  It is not kind to many of the larger varieties and hates Romas.  Their performance could be ameliorated by experience and education on our part.  Growing a new vegetable is like learning a second or… Read the rest of this article »

Ode

July 28th, 2010
Coyote House Farm | Blog
Yellow starthistle, Centaurea solstitialis L. (Asteraceae) Haikus 1-11 1. Foreigner, you’re green With a pale exotic gleam— Like bleached army men. 2. Blending with midday, You’re betrayed by dawn and dusk, Whereupon you gleam. 3. Dry survivor, you Dig your taproot down ten times Your apparent height. 4. All around you dies, Parched, surrenders, yet you gleam, Dull-bright, leather husked. 5. You can tower up, Unmolested reach my height, Or mature bonsai. 6. Wicked trickster gives Up his… Read the rest of this article »

But it’s a dry heat…

July 27th, 2010
Coyote House Farm | Blog
The tomatoes are starting to provide a return on the ridiculous amount of water they demand.  In successive weeks we saw “harvests” of ½ lb, 1 lb, 1 lb, 4 ½ lbs, and 5 lbs.  They’re coming in, and in the right order (we have about 7 varieties), but just slowly.  We can see that soon we’ll be in full swing. We’ve seen some splits but not too many.  The Romas get a little mushy on the end, but that’s expected with that species.  The heirloom breeds we have coming… Read the rest of this article »

Water Tanks Are Like Hard Drives

July 4th, 2010
Coyote House Farm | Blog
The tomato plants are on their own.  They started coming in last week and gave us some Sungold cherries and Stupices.  The Romas, Black Krim, Brandywines, Beefsteaks, Purple Cherokees, and Black Cherries are right behind them.  There’s an abomination of an heirloom tomato forming on one of the plants that frightens children and makes the sun dim.  I’m going to bring it to work when it’s ripe. Water tanks are like hard drives, which are like closets.  No matter how much… Read the rest of this article »

Wait, what?!

June 5th, 2010
Coyote House Farm | Blog
This is incredible. It used to be that eating organic vs. conventional was good for taste, lower carbon footprint, support of local economies, and encapsulating the total cost of ownership in the purchase. But conventional agriculture is vulnerable to weak regulation and can very dangerous to eat. Methyl iodide is s…o nasty it is used to cause cancer in laboratory animals. If you have cancer in your family, you want to stay far back from this. What are the$e people thinking? Click here. Read the rest of this article »

I Think Fudd Had Something There…

May 31st, 2010
Coyote House Farm | Blog
Apparently we managed to fence in one of the rabbit holes.  We came out a couple weeks ago to find about 8 of our ~60 tomato plants chewed on by the soft, cuddly vermin.  The regular work plan was blown for the day and I hopped in the truck to get replacement plants.  Dan and I ran through options via cell phone about how to foil this latest plot as I drove.  Hands free, of course.  I only risk my life on ladders, not in trucks. The final plan was to create smaller tomato… Read the rest of this article »

Can I Keep Him?

May 8th, 2010
Coyote House Farm | Blog
It was an interesting day at the farm today.  I was working in the fields cutting green matter for our compost when a meteor came out of the sky!  It crashed into the wooded area behind the field shed.  I went down to take a look and in the middle of the crater I found a baby.  I named him Skippy. Read the rest of this article »
Coyote House Farm
Drew & Dan Hogan
Coyote House Farm
Palermo, CA

Farm Acreage: 20
Website: Coyote House Farm

The Farm Blogs

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About the Farms

Coyote House Farm
Palermo, CA
Daily Grace Farms
Crescent City, CA
DeepSeeded Community Farm
Arcata, CA
Driftwood Farm
Fort Bragg, CA
EarthDance Farm
St. Louis, MO
Ellwood Canyon Farms
Goleta, CA
Four Frog Farm
Penn Valley, CA
Freestone Family Farm
Vernal, UT
Hand Sown Homegrown Heritage Farm
Poulsbo, WA
Home Plate Organic Farm
Orleans, CA
Honey in the Heart Farm
Nevada City, CA
Laughing Duck Farm
Newcastle, CA
Starbright Acres
12575 Polaris Dr, Grass Valley, CA
Willow Springs Farm
Penn Valley, CA
Wise Moon Farm
Redding, CA

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