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 collection of horses, steers, and llamas that kept us well supplied as long as we could move the stuff. It would have been simple except for a particularly steep and canted section of the road that had me doing controlled slides on the later trips in the day. Yeah. Don’t tell my dad.
Lovely rain. Weekend after weekend of 95+ degree heat was great for the cherry tomatoes, but bad for the larger heirlooms. Now the cherries are backing off a bit and the heirlooms are coming out. They’d better hurry because we’re going to cut down the vines in a week or two so we can compost that area too. Along with 3-5 inches of compost went 350 pounds of gypsum to battle the clay. Next year’s soil is going to be a huge change from this red hardpan!
We’ve learned the lesson about gopher cages. Of the 16 trees we planted in our first year, 9 of them died from a long frost. They would have been alright, but we planted them in an area where the cold air pooled and did not run off. The other 6 that were planted on a slope did better. However we did not use gopher baskets. They did okay the first year, but half of them died this year. All the trees we planted the second year went in with gopher baskets, and they are doing fine. This winter we will be planting 40 new trees and each one will get a basket. Cheap insurance.
The deer figured out my fishing line fence trick. Next year it’s going to be electrical fence. If that doesn’t work, I’ll be hiring lawyers.
Today I built a second solar panel. The field shed is all set for the winter and all the basic facilities are in place. Dave, our son, is planning to live on the farm next Fall as part of a university exchange program. He will definitely be factored into the 2011/12 farm plan.
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 third instrument.
We learned that rabbits will run ahead of your car at night in the headlights not because they are too dumb to go left or right, but because they can watch for predators when they do that. You are acting like a bus for them.
We learned that making solar panels is easy, even if they come out heavy as furniture.
We learned that “Pop – smoke” does not appear in the troubleshooting guide for the brand new solar regulator. Neither does the number for Customer Service. Fortunately the third party vendor is very helpful and likes to geek on solar stuff too.
We learned that finishing the inside stucco in the 105 degree heat is better than hauling manure in the same.
We learned that if we had the same biological makeup of yellow starthistle we would never, ever die.
We learned that building an outdoor shower with a tankless water heater (we get dirty in the winter too) will cost about $460.
We learned that building a composting toilet outhouse will cost about $415.
We learned that we are way too excited about the prospect of having a shower and potty on the farm.
We have learned that bigger tanks mean more system pressure and checking the tank before you leave is a good idea in case, oh, I don’t know, the main line popped off and blows 2500 gallons of water down the hill and you now have no water for your tomatoes and trees, but since you checked you can fix the problem and not kill your crop. Yep. Learned that.
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: | |
![]() | 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 |
| 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 |