The rain comes on Tuesdays as if I set the timer myself on one of the robots. Then it warms up and dries out for the weekend. It’s been like that for a month. I can’t believe it.
The last couple weeks we’ve been working on a number of things, both in infrastructure and planting. Some of the work we’ve been doing over the winter has been making the off-grid operation able to sustain human life and even field a few off-farm job emails. Most of the insulation is installed in the field shed. The radiant barrier needs to go in before the summer kicks in. It’s like an Easy Bake Oven without it. (Okay, kids, there was this toy when Dan and Drew were kids. It was a metal and plastic toy oven with a lightbulb inside that cooked these awful cakes. No, really. It was for girls, but boys wanted them too. At least farmer boys did.). I’m working on getting a better signal so that I can deal with the off-farm job without running down to McDonald’s for the wifi. You will be glad to know that coffee and music are fully operational.
But in the field it’s the rabbit fence and deer fence. Deer fence we’ve covered. The rabbit fence is simple and went in quickly too. We just had to make sure we did it when the soil felt like being dug.
We used 4’ chicken wire on t-posts. We tied the wire to the posts with recycled wire from when we screwed up our well pump installation. The most important part of putting in a rabbit fence is making sure the rabbits don’t go under it. To avoid this, we dug a trench about 6” deep. We put the chicken wire on the posts and bent the bottom edge of the fence into a ‘J’ with the curve facing out. Then we filled the trench back in. This will keep the rabbits from coming under at the edge. We also have no gate. Not yet. The fence is short enough for Dan to step over. I, on the other hand, am built like Charlie Brown, so I’ll use a box or step ladder. This is a bit inconvenient, but it keeps us from having to put in a gate right away that could provide a weak point for rabbits to get in. Rabbit are like hackers, but with longer ears and fluffy tails. And they are a little smaller. And don’t talk as much. But other than that, they are just like hackers.
I gave Dan a scythe for Christmas. I am a romantic devil. She nearly lopped her thumb off sharpening it. I dressed it and she kept working. Dan is tough. Tougher than our dirt in August. That is tough.
We also planted 200 basil plants in between the rows of trees in the orchard. The rabbits won’t eat the basil so we don’t need it to have the fence. We’re going to put tomatoes inside the rabbit fence and intersew with basil for the pest control properties. We might even add some carrots since tomatoes and carrots get along so well.
The hoop house is a great idea that is almost there. The size is perfect for keeping the plants warm and moist in our climate, but the irrigation system needs more work. The robots are great once you get them tuned. These are not tuned, and the seedling window has closed. I’m going to go out to Peaceful Valley this coming weekend and get a bunch of seedlings to plant. We’ll keep at the hoop house and robots, but there is planting to do.
Actually, I did. I had been looking forward to our annual inspection and it was worth it. Debbie was our inspector and she went through our operation. I got to talk about our farm for an hour to someone who really likes this sort of thing. She looked at our labels and my farm records. Some days I can have trouble digging a hole, but by golly can I file records! We had a great talk and Coyote House Farm got the thumbs up for another year.
During our walk around the place I was realizing for the fifteenth time that our cover cropping approach was not making it. We need to get a lot more aggressive with the manure and gypsum. It’s too late for this season so we get to play in the clay for another summer (Yay.), but come fall we’ll have our amendments in a row. Neighbor Dave has several cubic yards of manure we can have when Neighbor Kevin comes out with his Kubota and moves it to our place. The thing about free manure is that you don’t get to complain when it’s late.
This is not vegetable country. Debbie had other inspections to do in the area, and they were all for cattle. Our best move, as we have already figured out, is to focus on our trees and grow some veggies as we amend at a sustainable rate. We get EVo rates of .25 and .30 for extended periods in the late spring and summer, and all the water has to be pumped. The veggies are here to amuse us until our trees produce, and to fill in between fruit harvests for some product line breadth.
Aside from the inspection, it was about the fences this week. While I planned to do the rabbit fence for the vegetable field, I noticed that the deer had been into the fruit trees. I cannibalized the t-posts I planned to use for the rabbit fence to set up the deer fence. Last year we tied 80 pound test fishing line between posts around the vegetable field and it kept the deer out. They can’t see the fishing line and it freaks them out. It does nothing for rabbits, though, so it’s fencing for the veggie field. The soil is good now for pounding t-posts, and the deer fence went up fast. I was on my own since Dan was with Robin at 4H Sectionals Presentation Day at UC Davis.
I also got to see another failed method for irrigating seedlings on a timer. I went and got a bunch of micro-sprayers and mounted them upside down on a section of PVC pipe above the seedlings. I increased the frequency and duration of the watering. We’ll have to see how it goes. We might have to go with organic seedlings from Peaceful Valley this year, but I WILL SOLVE THIS PROBLEM.
Ahem.
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.
| Freshman: | |
| New Farms Coming Soon! | |
| Sophomores: | |
![]() | Daily Grace Farms Crescent City, CA |
![]() | Freestone Family Farm Vernal, UT |
![]() | Wise Moon Farm Redding, CA |
| Graduates: | |
![]() | Coyote House Farm Palermo, 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 |
![]() | 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 |
| 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 |
| Willow Springs Farm Penn Valley, CA |
| Wise Moon Farm Redding, CA |