Showing posts with label Garden 2012. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Garden 2012. Show all posts

Saturday, July 28, 2012

I Guess I'm Done... This Is The End...

Scared ya, didn't I?

I'm just talking about my garden  :)   It's over and done with for the summer!  I'm always sad and always GLAD!  So much fun, but so much work.  This was a great garden year for us.  Alas, my volunteer pumpkins did not make it.  Well, they matured and I had some fine specimens, but just too early for fall decorating... they started rotting and then got attacked by squash bugs.  Yuck.. oh well...


Tony's tractor made small work of the remains of the garden.  Still needs a little care, but all the vines and everything have been piled up to burn after a good rain. Wonder when that'll be?  I thought for SURE we'd get in on the tail-end of that storm that went through far northeast Texas yesterday, but it dried up before it got here.


The last of my fresh tomatoes... Boy howdy, I hated to pull up those tomato vines.  But it was time.  Yes, there were still a very few small 'maters on them, but the heat is in the 100's again, and it was just a matter of time.  It's been hot and they were beginning to get spots on them that would rot before they got good and ripe.  So these were the last of the lucky ones... Maybe a big salad with chunks of tomatoes in it for supper. Maybe hamburgers with a couple of big slices.  Maybe I'll just stand over the sink and sprinkle a little salt on 'em and eat 'em and let the juice run down my arm and savor every last summer bite!

My freezer is full to overflowing, the top, the bottom, the door, AND my fridge freezer - not to mention all the canned goods from this year's harvest.  The good Lord has really blessed us here on this little piece of land this year!  Just look at the hay up there in the top picture!  It's been lush and green and abundant, too!


New Topic ---  I can't walk outside or open the back door unless THIS happens...


Of all the cluckin' and fussin' and pushin' and shovin' - you just wouldn't believe.  I'd like to think they love me for me, but NOOOO.  They only love me for what treats I bring!  Or they wanna get out and roam and look for bugs.  They fall all over themselves at the door to the pen.  When I open it, they jump and try to see what I'm bringing.  Lately (and you may have seen it in the freezer) I've been giving them watermelon - FROZEN watermelon in the hot afternoons.  They love it - it's cold, it gives them something to do, and I'm hoping it helps keep them cool.  They also love when I spray water into a corner and make some puddles.  They get in that mud and pick around and I guess it cools them off, too.

Well, my dear ones - gotta run - one last thing...  here's what's on my easel... just a sneak peak - I'll be posting over at my art blog, South Light, in a short.  Have a great weekend! 


Oh yeah - and keep yer dress down...

Monday, June 18, 2012

Goin's On...

Continuing the canning and putting things in the freezer around here on Sand Flat Farm.  My freezer is about full.  I guess I need to learn to can veggies.  I've been a bit leery about it.  I need a pressure cooker, for sure.
Not much else is happening around here.  We've been blessed with several rain showers this spring and the temps have not reached the 100's yet, so my garden has done the best it's ever done since we've been here. How nice!
We've been enjoying plum jelly on homemade bread AND blackberry.  I can't ever decide which is my favorite!

Back up... I'm so sorry I haven't been around much.  I have been SO busy.  It's been a couple of weeks since I've blogged.  I've read a few of your posts, but not commented much.  I miss you all!  Surely this will let up soon!  Also, this summer has been the summer for weddings that we have to attend. Friends at church whose kids are getting married, friends of my kids, and of course we have to go.  A funeral, a birthday party for an 80 year old mother of my dear friend, baby showers, wedding showers - it's been non-stop since the beginning of May.

In other news, my Kiwi Kids - Josh & Lindsey - have made the decision to come home to Texas from New Zealand!  Lindsey's mom and I are elated!  We have missed them SO much.  They moved over their way back at the beginning of November. I don't know what their plans are - I'm not sure THEY know yet - but they are coming home! I think they are a little bit homesick...   Can't wait to see them.  They will be home in July!  Their church is going to miss them I know.  I'm sure they were hoping Josh & Lindsey were going to stay there in Wellington for a long time.  They were becoming a vital part of that congregation.

Kathy over at Spot on Cedar Pond raises Jacob Sheep.  Most of you who are my friends know her.  Well, let me show you what she sent me in the mail...


FOUR of these felted balls that she made from her sheep wool - you throw them in the dryer and they keep the clothes from getting all wadded up.  A cute chicken candle (she knows what I like) and another little fuzzy chick!  Wasn't that the nicest thing!  I love these felted balls - she said you could use them for a kitty toy, too, but since I don't have a cat right now, guess they'll just have to go in the dryer.  I'd hate to give them to a cat anyway!  OR, you could put them in a bowl for decoration, too! Thank you again, Kathy!  SO nice of you!  I love them - I actually have something that an artisan shepherd made from her wool!


We had an attack of horn worms on the tomatoes, but the chickens helped us end that little problem.  They fought over those nasty things.  Last year, Tony picked them off the bushes and let them stay in a metal pan in the sun.  He said, "There, take that!"  Worm cruelty I guess...  You think worms would rather have a sun tan or get eaten by the chickens and pulled apart into different sections?
 
BUT the tomatoes have managed to survive!



Below, I got my first eggs from my young pullets that I've had since they were 3 mos old.  They were small - I think the New Hampshire Red laid both of them and I missed the first one.  See the one with the crack?  It was very thin-shelled.  They were laying on the floor of the coop and I only looked in the egg boxes yesterday, so probably one yesterday and one today.  YEA!  Anyway, don't know exactly when they were laid, so I cooked them and gave them to Gypsy.  She smiled and said Thank You...  :)  I will be watching tomorrow to see if I can spy who is now laying.  By the process of elimination, I think the NHR is the one.

Speaking of the chickens - I think I may have a rooster or two.  My Buff Orp has little spur nubs and has been exhibiting rooster behavior.  Hasn't crowed yet.  But she's big and heavy and has very thick legs.  My hubby and I both saw "Hazel" doing the rooster thing this evening when I let them out.  Also, my Brahma, BB, is acting weird, too.  They are both approaching 6 months.  Nobody's crowing.  Do hens act like this, too?  Hmmmm.... OK, you chicken people, look at this Buff and tell me what you think?
You may not remember, but I posted previously that we had some rogue volunteer pumpkin vines come up this year amongst the corn and in other random places.  Well, they have pumpkins on them, now - those ghostly white ones!  Do you think they'll last til September?  I'll bet we have 6 or 8 of those things right now. It would be cool if they lasted and I could use them this fall!  I'm just going to leave them on the ground and let them continue to grow.  One of the vines has attached itself to many of the corn stalks, so I guess I'll just leave them.  I'm scared that I'll break the vines if I try to take them off - they tend to put down new roots wherever they touch the ground.  Wish there were some orange ones, too, but I think they are all white...  I'll have to buy a couple of orange ones.

There are several watermelons, too - still small but they're there.  I hope Gypsy will keep the coyotes away so we can enjoy them!  In the past years, the coyotes seem to know when they get ripe, and they drag them off and eat them before we can get to them.  I hope Gypsy doesn't like watermelon!
Well, I guess that's about all right now.  Just gardening and chickens and such.   I hope things are going well for you all this summer.  I miss you!  I'll be back when I can.  Hopefully, things will slow down before too long - I know of 3 other weddings that will have to be attended.  Young folks are still falling in love!

*Speaking of falling in love - Josh &  Lindsey have 3 new posts over at their blog... See their button link on my left sidebar if you're interested!  They spent their first anniversary trip in Auckland and at in the Sky Tower, went to a volcano, through lava caves, went to a multi-cultural event!  Lindsey is an amazing story-teller - I love all her little nuances into their sweet married life!  She's a peach!


Saturday, June 2, 2012

Gardening, Canning, etc.....

Sunday morning early - about 6:00 a.m. last weekend....  It was beautiful.... I was outside with my camera before breakfast, before getting ready for church...


What's been going on on the farm this week?  Well, the garden is progressing and moving forward quickly.  I think EVERYTHING is going to be ready to pick and put up, freeze or can THIS week.  Good grief - poor planning on my part?  I don't know, but it's always this way it seems.  We have tons of tomatoes this year as opposed to last year.  We've had  a few good rains and no blossom end rot to deal with - just hornworms, but the chickens got to eat all of those!  Salsa is going to be a MUST this summer!


I've been saving up cucumbers and put a dozen of Mamaw's spicy sweet dills, I guess you'd call 'em. They are THE BEST pickles I've ever eaten!  That's about all we make.  Tony doesn't want anything else.  I probably will do some relish with some of the too-big cucumbers.  I imagine we'll put up at least 5-6 dozen quarts of pickles for the family and close friends.  Thanks, Mamaw, for teaching me to can and for leaving me this recipe!!  My sister is coming Friday and we are going to can pickles and plum jelly all day.  

This past Friday, my dear sweet young friend, K, came over and spent the day with me.  We always do jelly together and this year was no exception.  She went home with 2 dozen 1/2-pint jars of beautiful plum jelly.  I think she REALLY enjoyed it  and we just had a great time, had lunch and then she wanted to sit out in the backyard with our lime-ade and watch the chickens!  I think we covered just about every subject under the sun!  AND solved several world problems, too!


Tony and I worked outside in the garden most of today.  We picked four quarts of pintos, seen here in the freezer. I think the rest of the plants I'm going to leave until they dry up so I can store the pintos in the pantry instead of taking up room in the freezer.  Don't you think?


We picked a second batch of green beans and they wound up filling three quart bags for the freezer after I blanched them.  We LOVE green beans.  I found some from Ferry*Morse that do really good, and claim to be stringless.  I've used them about 3 years in a row.  Of course, if you leave them on the bush too long, they'll get tough, but so far, we've been able to pick them at the right time...


  A mild winter, more rain and an earlier planting season has put us a bit ahead this year.  Kinda nice.  I'm liking my raised bed garden boxes.  They've done well, I've got watermelons in one, tomatoes in another, purple hulls peas and more green beans.  I put my onions in one, too, but I think they prefer the sandy hot soil that they're used to around here.  

Hey, what's going on at your place?  How's your garden growing?  

Hay cutting season, too... Another foggy morning that I was out early.  You know, I always heard older people can't or don't sleep later.  I wake up at daybreak - 'round here it's beginning to get light around 5:30. I'm usually up and at'em by 6.  It's so nice outside early so I usually head outside with Bug, and we let the chickens out, I check the garden, water a few flowers, and let Bug get her business done.  Sometimes, I carry my camera with me.  Gypsy meets up with us - she's usually covered with burrs in her fur OR she's soaking wet after taking a dip in the pond.  We stroll around the yard and the garden and I mentally make a note of what needs to be done.  


Couple more shots for you and I guess I'll close.  Tomorrow's Sunday and we'll be worshiping with the saints at our church.  I hope you all have a wonderful Lord's day and let's all remember to keep it holy and reverent...and ALWAYS be thankful!  May He bless you richly with His grace!


Thursday, May 24, 2012

Down On The Farm...


Lots going on around Sand Flat Farm right now. I sure do miss y'all!  Canning season is here!  I have two 5 gallon buckets of plums and four 2 gallon buckets of plums, two more buckets full of cucumbers.  And these don't even make a dent in what's still left on the trees and vines!  I put a bunch of squash in the freezer, too.  I juiced plums all day Wednesday and came out with 5 1/2 gallons of juice. And that was only HALF of the plums!  But K's coming to do jelly and so is my sister and my dad, so we'll have plenty for everyone - AND THEN SOME, I do believe!


What is it?  I mean, one year we have very little rain, or too much rain, or it's too hot, or there's a late freeze, or there's not one.  I guess all the conditions were just right this year.  It's been about 4 or 5 years since we've had such a nice growing season.  I know it's not over yet, and it's getting a bit hot and dry already, but with our mild winter and early spring, it seems that most of the gardens here are well on their way to bringing forth a bounty of goodies!  We do our best on the garden each year, but God sends the rain and the sunshine and makes the conditions just right so our gardens will grow and flourish.


Here's what I did with part of the squash...  I divided it up into the big ones and the smaller skinnier ones.  The smaller ones I chopped up  and put in quart sized freezer bags for boiling or making casseroles. They freeze well.  The bigger squash I cut the necks off and saved the wider parts to slice up for making fried squash.  I'll keep these in a gallon bag and just take out what I need for Tony and I.  There's LOTS of squash and flowers on the vines, so I'm sure I'll be putting up some more of that.

We've got pintos about ready, the green beans are making, the purple hull peas are coming on, too.  The tomato vines are loaded with big green tomatoes - best I've seen in several years - and up to now, no blossom end rot, just hornworms (which the chickens are enjoying!)  Only thing that didn't do as well is my onions.  I decided to plant them in my raised garden boxes, but I believe they prefer the sandy hot soil in the main garden.  They stay too moist in the raised beds. That's the only thing I can figure... You learn something new every year.  Sometimes, the hard way!  Good thing Daddy has gobs of great onions in his garden!

Here's a few current pictures of the garden... if you're interested...
My raised beds below...


Can you see this rogue pumpkin (I think) vine that is growing right in the middle of the corn?  Last year we threw our fall pumpkin remains in the compost and a few of those seeds came up in different spots in the garden.  Think I'll leave those and see if we get any pumpkins this fall!  I hope they're not stealing moisture from the corn, but from the looks of the corn, it seems to be okay!


Gypsy is going around the yard and garden areas digging huge holes to lay in and cool off.  I don't know why she can't use just ONE hole - she's got to have several.  What she does is run down to the pond, go swimming and then come back to the house or garden and dig her a hole to lay in.  She drug up a big ole snapping turtle carcass that stunk to high heaven the other day.  We also found a goat skull that she's been chewing on - thank goodness it was already bleached white.  Now, the turtle - it was another matter.   It still had bones in it... Why do dogs like to roll in stinky stuff?  Then, they wonder why we don't wanna pet 'em. And since Gypsy is a "leaner" and has to be touching us all the time, we could possibly smell like turtle carcass, too!

Even Bug, the chihuahua, has decided that she likes chicken poop - either eat it or roll in it.  I started banning her from coming outside when the chickies are out of their pen. Yuck.  Speaking of chickies...


I liked the light in this picture.  Most of my chicken pictures have one or two blurry chickens. They are always moving, flapping, bobbing, strutting around - (note to self - figure out the correct setting on the camera to prevent blurry chickens.) 

All's well on Sand Flat Farm.  Just busy.  Jelly  season is upon us as well as pickle season, pea pickin', bean pickin', tomato cannin', salsa makin', corn shuckin', puttin'-stuff-up-in-the-freezer season.  That's what's goin' on down here on the farm.  How 'bout you???   ;-)

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

I'm A WINNER!

Lucky, lucky ME!  I entered a give-a-way over at Dawn's Comfy Corner (she's a fairly new blogger and buddy) and she sent me the news that I won!  And what a nice gift - it came in the mail yesterday and I'm so anxious to give them a try...  Seeeee?????


They are thick and absorbent and she made them very generous to scrub and wash all my dishes and pans!  Can't wait to use them.  I imagine I'll be gettin' to that shortly cuz I've got NO dishwasher other than myself and a sinkful of dirty dishes from breakfast!  Thanks so much, Dawn!  (Just noticed my "Butt Rub" seasoning for BBQ back there behind...  oops! - Promise that wasn't staged.)

In other news, my oldest son, Adam, is home for a few days to enjoy the farm, the tractor, AND most importantly - Fishing with his Pop (my daddy).  He said the rest of the spring is going to be very busy in the music industry and he probably won't be able to come home anytime soon after this.  EVEN THO it's supposed to rain torrents later this week/weekend.  He and Pop may have to find other things to do besides fish!  My middle son, the Kiwi son Josh, is a photographer, and he did some publicity shots of Adam last time they were home together...

 Josh is doing a great job, I think!  They took these photos down at the old train depot here in our town...

New topic...  about 3 years ago, a friend of mine gave me several starts of her white iris.  I spread them out in one of my flower beds behind the deck, and planted them and they've done really well at spreading and filling in and making new leaves.  They lived through our drought last summer, too.  I was about ready to pull them up and move them because in 3 years, they hadn't bloomed.  I thought maybe they weren't getting enough sun in their locale.  I even threatened them out loud that they were about to get yanked out of the ground if they didn't bloom this year.  Well, lo and behold...



THEY BLOOMED!!!
Think it was just time?  or think it was the threat???  Who knows, but I'm glad they decided to show their pretty faces!  Yes, they're all white, but I think I'll add some more colors to them.  I had intermixed them with some blue hydrangeas, but they died during the drought even tho I really babied them to no end.  So, iris it shall be!

Fruit trees are blooming their little hearts out...

My lovely onions.... Do you see some bare spots?  Well, my sweet little Gypsy decided to do some digging in the boxes.  I repaired as best as I could, but will have to get another bunch or so and fill in.  I can see some fencing in the near future around the garden, but that's okay.  The last 3 years, the coyotes ate most of my watermelons. Drat.  I've been asking for fencing since the first year, but THIS is the year for a garden fence!!!  Gypsy is one of those puppy dogs that buries her treats, her bones, her chewies, and goes back later when no one's looking to dig 'em up and eat 'em.  Another lesson from being a stray I suppose.

Kathy, you know what this means, doncha?  WAR ON GOPHERS!!!

Gypsy tries to dig them up, and if she finds one on a trap, she pulls the trap out of the ground and carries it off to eat the gopher.  Yuck.  (note to self - get worm medicine from vet...)  So... I've lost several gopher traps and at $6-$7 apiece can't afford that.  We've taken to driving a piece of rebar into the ground and wrapping a wire connected to the trap around the rebar to save our traps!  Works pretty good...
I've already caught two, and possibly 3 more that were eaten off the traps.

Ok, my peeps - love you all and I wish you the very best of weeks!  We have beauty outside right now, but rain is promised.  Only thing to deal with today is 30 mph winds!

Keep yer dress down!

Monday, March 5, 2012

Time for Gardening!

At LAST!  It's officially time for gardening!  At least here in East Texas, altho I wouldn't doubt that we might have one more bout of nasty cold before it's all over with!  Usually Easter weekend, but it's in April this year so I think we're safe.  I've been bustin' a gusset to start my garden.  I'm doing something different this year - Square Foot Gardening - at least on part of it.  I'll still do my row crops like peas and beans in rows, but other things are going in raised beds.  I've been reading Mel Bartholomew's book "Square Foot Gardening" and it really makes alot of sense.  So...

Who do ya call?  Why, Daddy, of course!  Oh, hubby could do my bidding, too, but he's working, and Daddy needs something to do.  He's my partner in crime (or whatever else) and my go-to guy for all my little projects.  He built me some garden boxes from some old oak 2x8's and 2x6's, and I'm working on getting my planting mixture all ready for the beds.  Below is our new compost bin that Tony and Dad built last fall and we've got some super composting going on over here.

Here's my mixture of products - compost, vermiculate and peat moss.  I have to mix it all up barrow by barrow and put it into my raised beds...

Below, two of my beds all filled with the growing mix.  I've already got my onion starts planted in them but I haven't gotten their picture taken yet... I put out about 250-300 onions.  I know it sounds like alot, but we eat alot of green onions and that'll start in a few weeks, and then we'll leave some of them to grow to full size.  That'll take us through the summer, fall and part of winter (if I put them in the fridge).
Here's me, below, with my trusty Deere.  Our compost is pretty big so we turn it with the bucket.  Lots easier...
After all the gardening going on, these beautiful almost spring days call for a trip to the lake to do a little fishin'.  The bass were hungry and we caught about 20 each.  Unfortunately, Dad caught the only two big ones.  The rest were under about 10".  Oh well, we both had fish in the freezer, so it was fun catching them and letting them go - plus - no cleaning!  The bass are beginning to move up into the shallows to spawn.  Give them a couple more weeks or three, and we'll be able to just sit in the boat and watch them big lunkers jump in with us!  Just kidding, but the prospects for BIG bass will improve significantly!
My oldest son may be coming home from Nashville for a week or so, so I may be out of pocket for a bit.  Plus, WE (me & Dad) ARE FINALIZING OUR PLANS FOR BUILDING MY CHICKEN COOP!!!  At long last!  Hoping to get Adam in on that little project  - unless it rains.  They are predicting rain for 4 days this week, so we'll see how that goes!

PS -  For all you gals that commented about my last post on my husband's family's farmstead, I really appreciate your comments.  Unfortunately, we can't buy it as much as I'd like.  It does belong right now to one of the cousins and their family wants to possibly sell it - not sure yet.  He has Alzheimers disease and cannot really tell us anything about it.  We know very little about the early history of the property - only what's on the family records at the courthouse.  But thanks so much for your comments - it's a neat place and I'm sure it would have been SO interesting to know more about it!

Keep yer dress down!