New server, new design, new blogging tools.
Don’t you fret your pretty little head…
We’ll be back in a day or so to our old selves.
Tags: Farming

And unfortunately, there isn’t a whole lot of strong around here this year.
Apparently thanks to some tropical patterns playing out in the world of weather, continuous cold air has been pushed into the Northeast and made everything cold and wet for the month of June.

Today my dad called to tell me that about 70% of the pepper plants have perished. Hopefully it is early enough in the season to buy more seedlings and replant. Sadly, the plants that died were grown from the seeds I had saved from my prize winners of last year. (NOTE TO SELF: Start seeds earlier so that plants are stronger by transplant time.)

This is the parsley in the main garden. Can you see the yellowing of the bottom leaves? Can you hear the sobs of the people who planted them?

So this is a picture of me weeding out radishes around the cucumber plants. (NOTE TO READERS: Yes, I understand that there are a lot of pictures of my hands and feet on this blog. I am the photographer. These are my best features.
) Last year our cucumber plants were decimated by the striped cucumber beetle. As you might recall, we treated everything with Rotenone (which is a poison derived from a root, so somewhat natural, right?) which worked but unfortunately fried the melon plants when an overeager farmer decided that frequent doses of the stuff was the best medicine. (No names Dad, I promised.) Spend upwards of $400 on a new bee colony and this pretty much insures that you won’t be using pesticides. So, this year we planted radishes around the cukes, squash, melons and zukes in hopes that this organic approach would slow the little buggers down.
It did, but not fast enough.

Then Dad, in a move that smelled like redemption, decided to place screening around the bases of the plants and halted the foraging marauders. Yay Dad!

The good news is that the beetles are staying away, and the squash, cukes and others are starting to flourish. Even in my own gardens at my house the visit to Yellow Town has ended and everyone is charging up green thanks to some sun and fertilizer. There is hope. Sweet, sweet hope.
Remember my fig tree? It was a gift from someone and another new experiment into farming. Since fig trees aren’t native to this climate, I had to bury it in November and hope that it survived the harsh winter and came back to life in the spring.
And it did come back. And it was alive and healthy and beautiful. And then some members of The Accidental Farm plowed the field that it was in. And it didn’t strike them as odd that there was a metal pipe sticking out of the ground next to a twig. They just yanked out the pipe and continued to plow.
But, where there is loss, there is rebirth. My sister was also given a fig tree. My sister forgot her fig tree for the entire winter and never buried it, nay never even released it from its original pot. By complete accident my sister’s fig tree was planted into the garden this spring.
This is my sister’s fig tree:

It is as if we are destined to succeed in spite of ourselves.

Tags: Farming, fig tree, main garden, pepper plants, rain, strong
New server, new design, new blogging tools.
Don’t you fret your pretty little head…
We’ll be back in a day or so to our old selves.
Tags: Farming
It is raining, raining, raining. A good time to chronicle the birth of the gardens for this year.

Last year, all produce was grown at my parent’s house where the main gardens are kept. Great space, water access, etc., however this also meant that every time I wanted to make a salad I had to drive a mile down the road to stock up. So, this year the plan is to maintain main gardens at 1219 (the folks’ pad) for canning, freezing, possibly even selling, but each sibling house starts their own house garden.
On May 2nd, thanks to the sweat and labor of Annie, Joe, LJ, Brian, myself and even Parker… the raised bed gardens of 1605 were born.

We began the work of transforming this:

To this:



This involved cutting, laying out and affixing landscaping fabric to the bottom of the bed, cutting and wiring the cedar pieces together, then filling with compost, topsoil and finally mulch. Let’s just say that our out-of-shape early spring limbs were quite sore.
The following weekend, we were off to the farmer’s market to start buying the plants. First to go in, the herbs.

I had to take the girls to a birthday party, so Brian coaxed Mom and Dad into helping him plant the herbs. Later, mom apologized for taking the pleasure of planting the herbs away from me. Clearly she was unaware of just how much was going to have to be planted.
Now remember, this is the northeast. Even though we’d had temperatures in the lower 90’s the last week of April, and the National Weather Service had declared the last frost date as no longer valid, Mother Nature had other plans.

On 5/19, evening temperatures dropped to 33 degrees. We covered everything with tarps, sheets and buckets and thanked the heavens that we hadn’t started planting the tomatoes. Everything survived. Friends who own a farm in Berne were not so lucky and ended up replanting entire vegetable gardens.
With the last frost out of the way (hopefully) it was time to return to the farmer’s market for the big buy. This is where we purchase flats of seedlings to start the main vegetable gardens as well as our house gardens.

Oh, that’s right, we ALL go to the market. Even the 93 year old grandmother (check the sweet ride wheelchair) wants to get her say in on what will be planted this year. My sister watches the girls while breastfeeding the baby, and my mother peruses the perennials and flowers. I bark out orders from the list while the boys march about hunting down the best flats and my dad wanders around trying to sneak in extra plants that he wants but hasn’t told anyone.

Perhaps now would be the appropriate time to point out that we’re part Italian.



After the big acquisition, it is all hands on deck to plant, plant, plant. What’s that? You have to breast feed your baby? Slap on that sling and suit up Holly Hobby, we’re going Amish.

We didn’t get it all in before the rains came. We never do. Sometimes we end up planting in the rain and sometimes we have flats of stuff just waiting for some direction in their life, wanting to grow but not knowing what path to take. Reminds me of some of my relatives.
Attention ends up switching to water: the preservation and the importance.


After collecting water (for the chickens and the gardens) in three 32 gallon rain barrels, Brian bumped up our system to catch into a 100 gallon watering trough, which overflows into another 100 gallon watering trough, which flows into several containers. Let’s not forget the trash barrels that we still catch water in. All are filled with goldfish and now, our latest pet, a Koi. With all of this water you would think that we’d be able to catch up on laundry and dishes during our dry spells… but we can’t. Don’t think I haven’t thought about bathing with the Koi when our well gets low.

In between planting, we put up our high tech pest deterrent systems: pinwheels and string fences with pie plates and blowing plastic garbage bags. And we had some fun…





This is one of my estate sale pillowcases that was too worn to be of any indoor use, so I’ve turned it into a manure tea bag. I fill it with chicken manure, soak it overnight in one of the garbage cans of water and voila! Manure tea!
I owe a whole post about my chickens. For now, I’ll just regale you with their ability to poop something that is tea-riffic and the incredible amount of dust that they kick up. We raise our littles on the back porch in a brood box. When they are tiny yellow peepers, they don’t contribute too much air pollution. However, leave them until they get all their feathers and… well… one day you wake up and a room of your house is suffocating under a straw yellow haze.

It took 6 hours of pulling every single thing off of my porch, washing it down, sorting through it and then putting it back.

You would think that after the third hour of hauling my crap back and forth that I would take the hint and start purging my world of material goods.

Nope. It was a call to hit another estate sale.



While Brian was building up the chicken pens to include the Easter flock and a grand aviary for HeyZeus, there was one particular casualty: a hen that got stuck under foot and perished. So, we did what any good farm would do. We called some friends and had a chicken BBQ.





Now that we’d settled into the rainy season, we needed something to keep our mind off of the drowning tomato plants. If you haven’t figured out by now, we love to live by the motto, “If a little is good, then more should be mandatory.” So, with weeks of storms riding in on the horizon, Brian cooked up a new catchwater scheme.


Yes, that is my husband hammering into his private stock, if you will.
SOLSTICE UPDATE
Today is the Summer Solstice, as well as Father’s Day. We have spent the day eating and ignoring the gardens, the chickens, and unfortunately the dogs who, incidentally, ate an entire pizza when no one was looking.

The gardens about the farm continue to upkeep the idea that we are not exactly in control. Check out these plants lined up OUTSIDE of the garden’s wall…

We have sunflowers growing up all over the yard, thanks to the sloppy chipmunks and squirrels. I liken them to the sparkly fairy stickers that have appeared on the clothes dryer or the tropical fish stickers that are now permanent fixtures on the bathroom countertop. Wasn’t exactly something I wanted to happen, but now that they are there, they offer surprising beauty and have become my favorite parts about my living space.




The gardens are not exactly flourishing in the ways that I would like, but alternatively exploding in other areas that make me proud. A bunch of my stuff has taken a turn towards Yellow Town and are not growing but surviving. I suspect a lack of nutrients in my soil and a lack of sun in the sky. I have fertilized and now cross my fingers and hold my breath.
My seedbed is a runaway train of arugula. After I planted all of my seeds in a very well planned and orderly fashion, I failed to cover the area with straw. A nice steady, hard rain was kind enough to wash my seeds into another planting plan of Mother Nature’s liking.

Lately I’ve been weighing whether or not I want to start selling stuff at a farmer’s market, or dig out the farm stand. Neither idea really appeals to me as I would have to spend hours on set-up, labeling and even standing post. I’m not exactly sure how to manage my 2 little kids and find time to stand around for hours on a Saturday. I can barely update my blog, which I know connects me to all of the friends of The Accidental Farm.


So, I end up batting the ideas back and forth, usually at 4AM, and hope that some solution comes walking down my driveway. Fear of failure is an painful thing, but fear of success is downright paralyzing.

Like everything else on the farm, I know that, at some point, we’ll just hold our noses and jump in with both feet. This is how we ended up with our beautiful best friend of a dog, how we ran away to Ireland once upon a time and why we now have 2 children. Don’t think about it. Thinking is the death of every great idea.

Don’t wait for the clouds to pass because you can never guarantee what is on the other side.