Glorious, Busy, Summer

 

enough_and_more_to_spare_by_frederick_morgan

This summer has turned out to the busiest in my life.

And I didn’t even have a baby this summer.

Between vacations, visitors, general summer playing there was the farm.
The farm.
My wonderful farm.
The first part of the summer there was a lot of cultivating, planting, watering, waiting and weeding. Then in mid-July we turned the corner to a lot of harvesting, preserving, noxious weed control, weeding and weeding and more weeding.  The best part of it was that harvesting. While at this point I will say our harvest has been minimal, there is quite the learning curve out here in the desert, there have been bounties.  The green beans have been plentiful, I stopped counting at 80 pounds, and we have bottled about 70 quarts.  Beets did wonderfully, as did carrots, chard, onions and of course zucchini!  All of which have been carefully put away for future use.

My larder is filling up
and that makes me happy.

I struggled with tomatoes this year, the harvest is going to be minimal at best, I will have to buy tomatoes this year to bottle, and I was hoping not to.  The heirloom tomatoes, so lovingly grown from seed, have been a huge disappointment, only a handful of tomatoes set; I think the combination of them being heirloom and the record hot summer spelled disaster for them.  I will try again next year.  I did plant some hybrid roma tomatoes, and while they did a tad better it’s still not enough for what I need.

Cucumbers are ok, I am waiting for cooler weather in hopes they pick up more, and Sassy is set on making pickles this fall.  They were planted in an area that has pretty barren soil; it is going to take a lot of work and time to get our garden soil richer and therefore more productive.

It’s been a wonderful summer.

Summertime on the Farm

 

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Summertime has proved to be very busy here on Quail Run Farm.  I thought I would jump on here and give a quick update.

We went on a week long vacation to South Dakota to visit my sister and her family.  We had a great time seeing the sights, including Mt Rushmore, so busy in fact we forgot to take the camera and the only pictures we got were on our phones. By the time the weeks was over I was completely exhausted, but refreshed and ready to dig into some of those lingering projects

While we were away our garden burst forth and we have fruits, and weeds, lots of tall weeds.  I think it going to take a full week to clean it all up. Our first beans are ready to pick, and zuchinni too, the tomatoes are getting big and will be ready to pick soon.  Beets and carrots are ready as well.

Ruger has decided that chickens are fun to play with, this isn’t a good thing, we’ve got some training to do.

Tonight I want to sit down and design some labels for our farm, my dream would be to produce enough produce to sell and a local farmers market someday, and I want a cute logo and some labels.

Going to start working on the craft/school room.  All it needs is a fresh coat of paint and shelves in the closet.  Soon it will all be set up for school this fall.  I am going to homeschool my elementary kiddos (Sassy, Lou and Little Man) I am excited and nervous, mostly excited.

Big things are on the horizion for our little family and farm, its exciting to see  everything happen!

Home

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There is still much to be done
mostly everything needs to be done on the inside of this old house.
Despite the lack of fresh paint, new floors and general decorating,
things are starting to feel like home. IMG_4196

Another Chicken Post

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Chocolate is my chicken gal,
she is doing a great job, and has done a lot of research and could probably tell you everything you would ever need to know about raising chickens.

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I thought I would share some pictures of our little flock
they are getting big IMG_4168

Living in the coop IMG_4169

Scratching around the chicken yard IMG_4170

Dodging the cat IMG_4172

Teasing the dog IMG_4173

Running for cover when birds fly over
(caution is good, we have hawks out here) IMG_4175

Chasing lizards IMG_4177

Squeezing through the fence IMG_4178Eating the kitchen scraps  IMG_4157

This guy above is a rooster,
and my favorite.
I want to get some hens of his variety next year, I love the coloring.

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Taking dust baths  IMG_4159

Practicing flight

IMG_4160running from the kids, especially Monkey, who loves to chase them  IMG_4162

Growing big and strong, turning into egg laying machines!

(I had to post the below picture again of my little chicken whisperer, I love this picture!)

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Landscaping the Wild

 Being that we aren’t in a typical neighborhood, things like manicured lawns and flower beds aren’t what we are putting our effort into.

Our land will always be a bit on the wild side
and I don’t mind one bit

However,
being who I am, I have to do a little something here and there.  We have a U shaped drive way, leaving a U shaped patch of land in the front of the house.  It is a great spot for a little wild landscaping.  I am a little enamored with some of the nature pastures and meadows around and my plan is to mimic that.

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The bare, U shaped area in front of the house.  The only landscaping that has ever been done, as far as we can tell, was a load of driveway gravel dumped and spread about.
(blek) IMG_3976

We got the kids to work, raking out old tumble weeds and other garbage and setting out some drought tolerant plants I purchased. IMG_3977 IMG_3970 IMG_3978 IMG_3973 IMG_3979 IMG_3967 IMG_3980 IMG_3968 IMG_3969 IMG_3984

The key, for landscaping a natural looking meadow, it to not do too much.  We added a couple grasses, yarrow and a bush or two.
The biggest thing in achieving our meadow look was to add water.

Liquid gold.

After about three weeks, this is what our little meadow looks like:

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It is lush and green, mostly natural grasses that just needed a little coaxing. IMG_4191

I never knew there were so many different grasses, and so many colors of green. IMG_4189

Pretty wild flowers. IMG_4188 IMG_4186 IMG_4185

All in all, I am pretty satisfied how it has turned it.
It is wild
and natural
green and pretty.

I plan on adding other meadow/pasture areas as things on the farm progress.
The next spot will be the orchard.