Sunday, June 3, 2012
Ano ba yien!!!
Monday, May 28, 2012
Cold Spell This Week
Sunday, May 20, 2012
Time Flies When Your in the Sun!
Sunday, May 6, 2012
PVC Princess
Sunday, April 15, 2012
“Working of the Land”
April 15,2012
This week started off okay, a little soggy, then it got a lot soggy, then the week ended with a spectacular workshop in the sparkling sunshine.
First we started off with a great sneezing task of mulching the garlic rows, then more hoeing. Funny thing hoeing, it’s a rather steady task as you watch the hoe move up-down, up-down, as your arms ache your mind slips into empty thoughts, or too many thoughts off in the distance and yet your arms still move up-down, up-down. Your breath quickens, though your mind is far your eyes are keen to finding all the unwanted grass clumps and your fingertips feel the slightest unwanted muddy dirt clod as though the hoe is an extension of your person. Still up-down, up-down. The aching passes into a kind of trance and before you know it the field bed is completed your task is done and you are waking as if from a dream.
After our hoeing task we started transplanting broccoli and cabbage. we had to beat the rain that was promised so we transplanted 11rows in just a few hours. We walked away with soar backs and blistered fingers, but we finished.
The next day we received the promised rain. we were able to squeeze in a transplanting of a bed of lettuce before it got too muddy, then we cut potato starts.
On Friday, us apprentices, took a journey to Grass Valley area for a BDANC quarterly meeting and workshop. (BDANC= Bio-Dynamic Association of Northern California) Where we met several other bio-dynamic (BD) farmers. We learned about something called ‘preparations’ which is a sort of food for your compost, or field soil. It’s a technique of using certain herbs to ‘heal’ or balance the soil or compost. This workshop was a fun weekend endevor, but I slipped into church right in time for the opening prayer!
I can’t wait to see what next week has to offer!
“It’s hot then it’s cold…”
“It’s hot then it’s cold…”
For April 8, 2012-04-15
So either the hay bails are getting Fighter or I’m getting stronger cuz they just don’t seem as difficult to lift anymore…
The weather has been weird. One day it will be bitter cold, the next a cozy warm, then it will hail and blast of blistering cold wind will come through, then it will drizzle then warm up again to the point where I was walking around shoeless. don’t know what to wear some days.
The days here are starting to meld together into a blur of feeling, herding, mucking, racking, hoeing, weeding, eating, wheel-barrowing, milking, and somewhere in there is sleeping. We’ve sowed bell peppers, eggplant, peas, tomatoes, carrots, choy, and lettuce. Some were sown in seedling flats for the green house, some straight into the field.
We hope that each little seed turns to a plant, and that each plant will give fruit (or root) that can be given to our supporting families as food!
… Community Supported Agriculture (farm) …
Sunday, April 1, 2012
Rain, rain go away!
Rain, rain, go away!
So this week started off good, we had some sunshine so we sowed peas, tomatoes, parsnips, beets, and chard. Our fourth apprentice arrived as well, so now we are two girls and two boys (Sarah and I, Gabe and Josh). But then it started to rain. It rained for five days straight! I had to start doing evening chores, so I lift bails of hay, fill feeders the drive the animals group by group to the barn. So I often am trotting in mud after the animals.
Most of this week we dug a ditch, fixed seed flats, fixed sieves, wheeled barrows, cleaned out the out-house, built compost, fixed pvc irrigation pipes and lots of organizing of this and that.
Friday we sheared four and a half sheep by hand! We wrestled them down, used the hand-shears to clip down the middle (the belly) then slowly clip around to the back then to the front, it was great! One sheep was left as a half because it got dark on us.
On Saturday we studied more about bio-dynamics and the cycles of seasons and plants. It was great to have a nice discussion about it and study. I hate school but I love the farm and studying this work.
This week was a low-key week all in all not much going on because of the rain. I was wet and cold most of the week, then a church member friend here let me use her washer and dryer! So thankfully at the end of a wet, muddy week all my clothes are now clean, dry, and fresh!
Cheers to the invention of dryers!
Sunday, March 25, 2012
Whose idea was it to run around in steel-toed muck boots!?!
So this week started off with a good Monday Meeting, I got assigned evening animal chores for the next month or two, consisting of bringing them out of the pastures to the barn and feeding them, and milking the cows of chores. We the got busy working on our muscles and tans by hoeing 3 beds for vegetables to be transplanted in to, but then it rained…
We had a class of 25 kids came to stay for 3 days. We did activities with them, like milk the cows, herd the animals, split fire wood, feed animals, dig a ditch, and build compost piles. Somehow in-between all that, we still prepared potting soil for flats and sowed broccoli. I pulled my shoulder on Wednesday that really hurt! It was my right shoulder but Gloria gave me a cream called, Arnica Ointment, and it fixed me up pretty good!
We also sprayed micro-organisms on the soil to prepare it for the best production/transplanting success. We transplanted lettuce and choy, and sowed spinach and brassica greens (mustard, kale, and arugula) it got really windy while we were working out in the field and I got a little wind burned, so we were all rosy-cheeked and sore muscles.
Then Saturday after all our chores (milking 3 cows) we went to Willits to watch ‘Hunger Games’!!!! it felt weird going out to the city and to the theater. We are pretty isolated in Covelo and on the Farm, so this social interaction was a rare treat. (I loved the Hunger Games!!!! Must get the DVD!!!)
My travels to church was an adventure today… so, I hydroplaned and spun out into the mountain side. Miraculously I didn’t launch myself off the cliff, and didn’t flip my truck over but somehow I ended up the side of a soft muddy embankment, five feet from a turn-off. I waved dawn the next car. It was a nice man and his young son, who gave me a ride to the chapel in Willits. The Priesthood men quickly got a team together to pull my truck out of the mud and cart it away to Covelo to repair it. Luckily there was minimal damage to my truck and no damage to me at all. God has granted me another day, a humble reminder to depend on Him always, be grateful, and make everyday count. (No matter how much it pains me to run across the Farm in steel-toed mud boots!)
Sunday, March 18, 2012
The Farm
Then the next day was filled with weeding tiny little weeds out of the seedling flats. Then we were all called into the barn to dock and vaccinate the lambs. I let my two compadres, Sarah and Gabe, get into that, and mostly watched. They have little to no experience with animals, so I thought it would be good for them. They each did 2 lambs, and then Steve tells me to do the last lamb. So I confidently gave it a Sub-Q shot, then deftly placed the “little green-cheerio” (rubber band) on the tail at the 2nd digit, while making jokes, and taa-daa!!! No problems! I still got it! Thank you, mom, for teaching me all this stuff when I was 12. Now I just need to know the difference between a weed and a seedling… :D
I also got a good kick from a cow. This milk-cow named, Maxine, has just “freshened” (given birth) and has “edema”… I’m not sure what that means but her udder is all swollen and hard and she won’t let her milk down. So we started hot compresses, and I had the idea of using eucalyptus oil to help her relax, and it seemed to work. But in the process of all that and trying to milk her, I got a good kick to the thigh that has left a big bruise. But our efforts were rewarded with the incredible recovery of the cow!
I really like being here except that it’s COLD!!! I’m talking snow! But it’s great cuz I get to do what I love, learn more about my talents, and help others obtain good healthy food!!! :D
Friday, February 17, 2012
Ajusting to America
I'm really excited to go to this school to further my education, expand my talents, and someday make a difference. There is nothing more wonderful to me then to cultivate good rich pure soil, plant a seed, watch it grow, harvest the fruit, and then hand over this wonderful product and know that it6 is feeding a family, and helping children grow healthy! it's so awesome!!!
Well I'll keep every one updated on the hard work and fun! :)