Posts Tagged ‘march’

WA Weather - Wet

lincoln-no-snow1bed prep for onions/leeks

lincoln-with-leeks-intransplants under agribond (notice the plastic is blown off our row cover)

lincoln-snowsnow in March

Farming in the wonderful Pacific Northwest is a good way to become mental.  We love it; the weather really keeps things interesting and your “plans” ever changing.  Here in Washington State it rains in spring.   We are hunters and hopefuls for a mildly sunny, dry day.  Last season in a single day we experienced sun, rain, sleet, and snow.  This year back in February we experienced some great sunny weather.  I and other farmers in my area thought we might actually get an early spring.  I heard some talk of farmers turning over their soil and beds, but I also heard some other advice to wait.  If we actually owned a machine to turn over soil I probably would have, but because I have to hire local labor to come work our rented ground we decided to wait.  We feared that if we tilled the ground now we would be throwing away our cover crop and allow the ground to become saturated with spring rains.  As we waited, we were able to do our first direct seeding of the year over at the Lincoln property.

The date was February 16, the sun blessed our lives and we planted a very successful seeding of a 100’ of Heirloom Mesclun Mix with our terrific tool, the Five Row Seeder (an Eliot Coleman design I believe).  We didn’t have full trust in this tool due to lack of experience with it, but now after seeing the Mesclun mix pop up in perfect uniformity, we are sold and excited about it’s use.

A few days later Sara took advantage again of the dry weather and direct seeded, by hand (testing hand seeding vs. the five row seeder), another 100’ row; oriental greens, different salad mix packets, arugula, spinach, and beet greens. We watched our home grounds dry up real nice in that stunning span of two weeks.

On the last day of the two weeks we made the decision to jump on this dry spell and we got our new farming area over at the Lincoln Property roto-tilled by our tractor friend Roger who calls himself “Green Machines Farming”. We decided to leave our cover crop at Home to grow and protect our soil.  The new area over at Lincoln which Roger rototilled for three hours, on the very last day of our dry spell, is a plot around 100’ x 60’.  It was used for flowers by the last farmers on the property but had gone unkempt.  Roger tilled in the grass and we had a nice new dry area.  Some clumps remained and the soil looked average at best but now we had some dry space to work up and plant.

Our dry ground lasted 10 hours and the rains that had gone missing for the last two weeks arrived.   I was upset with the rains and therefore tried to show his strong hand and purchased the largest tarp I could lay my hands on. In a matter of three hours I laid a 85’ x 50’ tarp down and erected a double row, row cover.  The tarp is big, and blue, so I apologized to the owners of the land and promised it would only be on the grounds for two weeks.  It’s been three.

Oh well, that’s farming.  The row cover went over the two strips of direct seeded crops.   We call our bed’s strips and the rows in the beds, rows.  I created this row cover by pounding in 50 3’ lengths of rebar. One rebar on each side of the bed spaced every four feet.  Covered the 1’ of rebar that was left sticking out of the ground by bending 10’ lengths of 3/4” electrical conduit over the bed, and then covered it with 4mil painters plastic.

We have heavy winds so I planned on burying the edges of the plastic but as I went to dig my trench I discovered a fault in my quick idea and actions of creating this row cover.  I didn’t plan out for the proper width of the plastic.  When I purchased my roll of painters plastic I had limited choices a 10’ wide or 20’.  I got a 10’ and in pouring rain I discovered that I lacked the proper width to bury the edges like I had planned.  I had enough, barely enough, to bury the edges at all.   I only got this length by crawling on my hands and knees under the plastic, at this point held on by spring clips, and shoving the PVC pipes as deep into the ground as possible.  Hurray I gained a few inches and then in the wind, by myself, I buried one side of the row cover very well and then the other. Too bad it’s the windy side, I buried just enough.

Due to not having any help to secure plastic in a wind and rain storm I lost the windy side to the wind as I was just about finished and had to make a retry.  I was too proud of our work of direct seeding the rows to let them get saturated by soaking rains and I managed to bury the edge with success on my second attempt.  I lasted two weeks before a mighty windy storm ripped the plastic from under the soil.

We re-did it and it remains ok!

I am aware that my low quality painter’s plastic will break down into gross little flakes over time but I plan on that not happening in our fields.

(Side note: Sara is a wonderful cook and I’m now enjoying a delicious piece of pumpkin cheese pie, made from our pumpkins last season.  The pumpkin is an Heirloom, as we focus on saving, supporting, growing, and selling Heirloom varieties.  Open Pollinated and Heirloom seeds are the only seeds we will ever considering buying.  More on that later…)

So back to the story, we have lots going on right now.  Mainly waiting for the rains to stop and the sun to show its lost face, as we have around 35 flats of crops started and ready for transplanting.   I have hope that we can till our home grounds soon but the rains keep on pouring down.

Lincoln is pretty much filled with new transplants, thanks to our work of covering our beds with straw we provided an area for early spring plantings.  So much for an early start, this year is now behind last season which every farmer in town complained about last year. Despite the weather we have lots of wonderful things going on.  Here’s the break down of the major actions taken so far this year:

•  We built our very first Seed Starting Greenhouse 32’ long and 12’ wide

•  Built a seed germination table the length of the greenhouse on one side

•  Built a post germination table the length of the greenhouse on the other side

•  Fenced our growing area at Lincoln, darn bunnies!

•  Seeded up lots of trays of Heirloom variety seeds

•  Tore down an old and broken PVC/wood frame greenhouse at Lincoln.  Lasted 8 years!

•  Started seeding up our large selection of Heirloom Tomato starts.  This is our second year with Tomatoes.  Last year we seeded around five thousand plants to sell as starts and planted and harvested another 300.  (We ended up winning in our Farmers Market Tomato taste off, proud of that!!)

•  Worked up raised beds and planted:  Onions, Leeks, Garlic, Kales, Salad Greens, Lettuce, Peas, Pac Choy, Tatsoi,  Bok Choy, Cabbage, Spinach, Arugula, Broccoli Raab and radishes.

Ok time to work.  Our work days right now are from 8am till around 10pm.  Long days out in the cold/rain followed by nights in the tomato propagation  potting up our Heirloom Tomatoes for this season.  It’s a challenge to say the least to pot up five thousand tomato plants and not have them become too overgrown in their flats!


Ducklings!

We got ducklings on march 9th, they are so cute! I’m terrified that the dog is going to eat them… We ordered them from Lazy 54, 10 Indian Runners, and 10 Khaki Campbells. We got them for the eggs, and I can’t wait for fresh duck eggs! 6 months!  Right now they are all greyish-brown except one is yellow. They were very timid at first, but now they’ll come over to us when we change their water or food and peck at our shoes or hands. They are also starting to venture out of the brooder more often, although they mostly come out just to let us know if they want something!

Except for our farm dog, Abbey(6mo old Border Collie) these ducks are the first animals to join us on our farm.  We learned of this brooder design by our local farming friend Harley Bob.  Jared first met Harley at a Joel Salatin talk last last year and has plagued him with questions about raising chickens ever since.  So now we have our ducks and our chickens will arrive in April, from Sand Hill Preservation We’re Freshman Farmers but we need this farm biodiversity! Both the ducks and the chickens will provide us with eggs that we can make available to our CSA, and the chickens we will also use for broilers, which means we will more than likely be brooding our own chickens next year.


Onions!

September 5th, 2008
Four Frog Farm | Blog
It’s getting to be that time of year, to transplant onions.  I am going to do it during the later part of October here (zone 8).  I have already started thousands of the little guys in flats (although germination was erratic due to high temps).  I started the first flats around the 15th of August, and plan to give them a couple of months to grow out before transplanting.  The rule is, transplant before they’re the diameter of a pencil or larger.  These transplants will mature to… Read the rest of this article »

Out Like a Juvenile Sheep

March 31st, 2008
Four Frog Farm | Blog
March is leaving.  Abundant growth, longer days, and warmer temperatures are upon us.  I hope your fields are ready.  Mine are.  They’re just waiting to be planted.  They’re all asking me to sow summer upon their skin. Okay, that’s as poetic as it gets. Tomatoes go in tomorrow.  Bridgeport is a different world.  The forecast calls for nothing but highs in the mid sixties to seventies, and lows in the mid-forties…yeehaw! Gophers are getting a little out of line.  Once… Read the rest of this article »

Two farms are starting from scratch.

They are turning the dirt and hoping to be successful enough to turn a profit, and to become a valuable part of their communities as suppliers of organically grown food.

Peaceful Valley is giving them a head start by offering them special pricing as part of this Freshman Farmer program.

The Farm Blogs

Freshman:
New Farms Coming Soon!
Sophomores:
Laughing Duck Farm
Newcastle, CA
Starbright Acres
12575 Polaris Dr, Grass Valley, CA
Graduates:
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
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
Willow Springs Farm
Penn Valley, CA
Wise Moon Farm
Redding, CA

Blog Topics

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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Stories From Peaceful Valley

Getting Rid of Gophers May 23, 2013
GrowOrganic
How to poison a gopher May 13, 2013
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Green Manure April 30, 2013
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Mulch April 30, 2013
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Mulch in your vegetable garden—beyond the basics April 29, 2013
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Grow cover crops and green manure in the summer April 29, 2013
Charlotte from Peaceful Valley
Beekeeping for Beginners—Adding Bees April 25, 2013
GrowOrganic
Beekeeping for Beginners—Hive Set Up April 19, 2013
GrowOrganic
Meet the three kinds of honey bees in a hive April 18, 2013
Charlotte from Peaceful Valley

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