All posts by wendylee

Homesteader turned Gardener, Landscaper, Horticulturalist, Arborist and Greenhouse Manager. Writer,Potter and Artist. Mom, Grandma, and other half. Rider of bikes, horses and kayaks. Hiker, Swimmer and Storyteller.

Sweet Corn, Blueberries, and Taters

I planted corn this spring in my little greenhouse to get the earliest start I could in hopes of beating the expected mid July stinkbug invasion of my garden. I left some in the greenhouse, hoping that if all else failed, I could close it up and foil the bugs that way. The corn transplanted quite well into the garden rows, without any setback at all, and grew better out there than what I left under plastic. We have had so much rain this season that it could not help but grow well. We put cardboard down between the rows to keep the weeds down and covered it with the chicken yard and horse barn cleanings for mulch and fertilizer. We ate our first corn June 28th and it got better and

Corn on the young side
Corn on the young side

better. It was a little on the young side the first night. We had to leave for the family vacation on July 4th and I spent the evening of July 3rd, steaming, cutting and freezing all that was ready, which amounted to only 5 quart size freezer bags. Lots of ears were still coming on out in the garden though and I really hated to leave it. Who plans vacations in the middle of summer harvest? Luckily, after 6 days away, the corn was still good. It had been cool the whole time and slowed it down some. So we got to eat corn every night for dinner from the 11th through the 18th and I gave a few dozen ears to friends too.

Fresh Corn Ready to Eat
Fresh Corn Ready to Eat

Our tomatoes are still not ready since I did not push them, but I got some tasty homegrown ones from a stand on the way home from work. You have to have fresh tomatoes with fresh sweet corn. There is nothing better. Our yellow squash is ready now too , along with peppers and green beans. The last two years I have not been able to get enough green beans to can because the stinkbugs got to them first. Yesterday, I put up 14 quarts and there is a big bag in the fridge to eat fresh. Perfect, unmarred, long straight green beans. Yum.
The potatoes I planted in the pallet bins grew way too fast for me to keep up with burying them every time they poked through the soil and I was worried it might not work at all, considering how close I planted them, so I also planted some rows in the garden. I used the left over Yukon Golds from last year that had sprouts about a foot long and planted them whole. They were mostly small ones. I always use the biggest prettiest first. They are so much easier to make a meal with. I am going to step out there right now and see if we have any taters yet. Even though I am clean and cool and it is really hot and humid out there. Just a quick check. Be right back…
OK, so the taters in the garden rows seemed to have done really well. I just pulled up the remains of one plant and brought in 2 good sized ones and left the other 3 that I could see poking up down in there. The bins aren’t looking too good. I found some small red ones in bin number 3, but when I poked into bins 1 and 2 where the Yukon Golds were, I came up empty. I will check back later since I was not wanting to mess with the wet soil much and it is miserable out there right now. They may have rotted with all this rain.
The blueberries have been producing pretty well but are about done

Blueberries
Blueberries

now. We froze 8 gallon bags and have been eating a lot of fresh ones for breakfast. I lost a couple of plants, maybe to the rough winter we had, maybe to the Ph getting too high. I need to check it again and will probably need to add some sulphur to bring it back down. They are under planted with strawberries and we were able to freeze a lot of them. I have not counted the bags but the freezer down in the basement is very full. I freeze them on cookie trays and then bag them into gallon bags so they don’t stick together and you can pour out what you need each time. We use them for breakfast smoothies every morning. I also made a batch of low sugar jam.

Strawberry Jam, Low sugar
Strawberry Jam, Low sugar

The blueberries mostly get dropped in hotcakes and local Maple syrup for French toast.
Our sugar snaps did well this year too and are also all gone. I don’t like them frozen or canned so we eat them all fresh and gave away the extras. I dip them in Humus for lunch and that along with a hardboiled homegrown egg makes a pretty good meal. Sometimes I add some cheese and crackers or some nuts.
The chickens are laying about a dozen eggs a day (that I find, anyway). They should be laying more but it does not bother me. We have plenty and I sell the extras to folks nearby. It looks like there may be a few hens missing and some of them are getting a few years on them. I only count them when they are roosting and there are at least a few that roost up on the wire under the main roof. It is possible that a fox has picked off a few (without my wonderful, useful dogs noticing) but as long as we have enough I will not worry too much. We have chicken fed fox around here sometimes. Just doing my part for the wildlife. Usually, when I clean out the freezer at the end of each winter (which I have neglected to do so far this year) I will throw any freezer burned old venison out by the fox holes in the fence line. They have plenty of dens nearby and usually need extra food for the kits in early spring. I know one woman who used to put wormer in her fox feedings to help them that way. One of my dogs got in a tussle with a fox a few years ago and caught sarcophagal mange from it. The poor dog had to be dipped in a smelly lime sulphur mixture weekly for 6 weeks. No one would go near him, he smelled so bad, and he got depressed. Eventually it wore off and it did cure the mange. Maybe that is why he doesn’t do all that great of a job keeping the foxes away these days.

Growing
Growing

July always makes me remember how impossible it is for me to keep up with the rampant growth of my gardens and pastures. In the spring it seems like it might be possible to keep it all weed free and under control, but by mid July, I can no longer pretend. The good thing is that no matter how weedy it gets, I always seem to get what I need out of it. And then there is next year, when I will undoubtedly try again.

-Wendy lee

Writing at https://www.edgewisewoods.com

Planting Potatoes in a New Way -March 22, 2015

I have decided to try, once again, to make gardening a little easier on us this year.

Wheelbarrow and Bins
Wheelbarrow and Bins

I hope it works. I have given over more space to the blueberry/strawberry patch the last couple of years and space is getting tight in the garden, which is already plenty big enough, in terms of taking care of it. We always try to grow enough potatoes for the entire year and they take up a lot of room grown in the 10-12 single rows.  It is also a lot of hard work to keep them weeded and hilled up and then digging them up

Last Years Potato Patch
Last Years Potato Patch

at the end of the season. I have been using cardboard between the rows as mulch and covering that with barn cleanings and we had a great crop in 2014.
I have been reading about growing various vegetables vertically instead, which seems like a great idea because it will make them easier to dig and also less prone to being smothered with weeds, besides taking up less space in the garden. So today, I hauled out some old pallets from the front barn and tied them together with bailing twine to form two bins out in the garden. I loaded each bin with a wheelbarrow load of composted barn cleanings and dropped hay and set the already sprouted taters on top, rather thickly.

Sprouted Taters Laid Out
Sprouted Taters Laid Out

Then I covered them with another load of fairly dry chicken bedding. The plan is to keep adding soil, compost to cover the potatoes as they grow, so that they grow a very long stem with space for the tubers all along it. We should be able to harvest a lot of potatoes in a much smaller space by going up instead of each plant only making a few in the shallow space of the rows.

We always plant Yukon Golds, they are the best tasting potato I have found and we had enough left from last year so we don’t have to buy any. However, from what I have been reading it looks like Yukons are not the best choice for growing vertically, as they are “determinate” and won’t produce spuds the entire length of the buried plant

Potato Bins Ready
Potato Bins Ready

stem as I had hoped. So, it looks like I will have to buy some seed potatoes of another variety after all and plant a third bin, just in case. They will

still take up far less room than usual and we will just have to see how it goes.

-Wendy lee,  writing at:     https://www.edgewisewoods.com

Some useful links:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yukon_Gold_potato
www.motherearthnews.com/diy/no-space-potato-barrel-

Edgewise woods this Winter -and the Bees

Edgewisewoods This Winter

East Edge Snow
East Edge Snow

It has been a rough winter here, starting out with a good size snow right after Thanksgiving, morphing into a “What happened? I thought Winter had arrived super early and now we’ve got nothing. No snow, temps hovering above freezing…What gives?” Then Winter came back with a vengeance and it got really cold and stayed there for days on end, dipping below zero degrees a couple of times and into the single digits on numerous mornings. I put my long johns on and kept them on for the duration. My tall waterproof leather Keen boots and beautiful, thick Smart Wool socks got a serious workout every day and have more than justified their cost. I had good traction and warm feet even in 13 inches of snow. I wore them to the barn to do chores, to work, and hiking as well.

This winter I finally managed to get a heated waterer for the chickens, actually a dog bowl, but they don’t care.  It keeps us from having to haul the galvanized waterer in to the house and thaw it on the woodstove. It doesn’t hold as much, but it is so easy to refill with the freezeproof hydrant out in the barn.

Chickens with their heated dog waterer
Chickens with their heated dog waterer

I installed that after the winter of 96 when we had FEET of snow and we got tired of digging a path to the barn everyday to water haul buckets to the horses. Sometimes I wonder why it takes me so long to figure these things out. I tried, once again, to put a tank de-icer in the horse trough but she will have not drink with anything floating around in her water. Maybe next year I will figure that one out. I broke the trough busting the ice out of it this winter and had to improvise with a plastic tub.

The chickens and horse came through the winter fine, laying well and staying healthy.

Mara in the Snow-Fat and HAppy
Mara in the Snow-Fat and Happy

The dogs spent a lot of time in the house, even though I bought them winter jackets from a friend who makes really nice ones. They were great when it was snowing. I didn’t have to dry the dogs off each time I let them in, just shook off the coats and hung them near the stove. It was too cold to leave them outside all day when I was at work and they turned into couch potatoes quite willingly with very few accidents. They have enjoyed being outside here lately though and now lay exhausted on the couch. It was amazing how close they managed to get to the woodstove when it was seriously cold outside. The cat, Frieda, didn’t go out her cat door any more than she absolutely had to all winter. She loves her heated mudroom, as do we. It is so nice to leave all the snow and mud out there instead of traipsing it through the house. The covered porch/ woodshed was one of our better additions too.

Unfortunately, we did not get our skis out at all. I have been having issues with my shoulder and cross country with poles was not an option. Plus, it was really cold…

 

Bees -March 2015

Hives in Snow
Hives in Snow

My poor Italians did not make it through the Winter. They were alive in January. I could hear them quietly humming when I knocked on the hive. But when I opened the hive up on that warm Sunday March 8th, they were all dead. There was plenty of honey left, so at least they didn’t starve, but I think maybe there were not enough of them to keep each other warm. It was very sad. The Russians were buzzing all over the place the same day, acting kind of frantic (which made me nervous) so I left them alone and did not open them until this Monday evening the 16th. They were a mess. They had built comb bridging between some of the frames, there was almost no honey left, I saw no brood and I could not find the queen. I have never found a queen so it is possible she is on one of the two frames I did not move. I put a screened bottom board on to help with mite control, switched the bottom deep with the upper deep, and scraped out all the dead bees. There were way more fatalities than I

Dead Bees
Dead Bees

expected and now I am worried they won’t make it either. I disturbed them so much that I figured I would leave the one large mass huddled together alone and just feed them and let them rest. I will feed them again in a few days and look for the queen and some evidence of eggs again then.

I have ordered a nuc to replace the Italians and a 3# package for my new hive and I may have to buy a new queen for the Russians. A nuc is an already started mini- hive with a laying queen, some honey, some pollen stores, and a bunch of bees ready to go. There is so much to learn. I have been to two beekeeping classes the last two Saturdays and have joined the Eastern Panhandle Beekeepers group and been to one meeting so far. I was surprised at how many people were there. We filled to overflowing the meeting room at the WVU Fruit Reseach Station over in Kearneysville, WV. I’ll bet there were 150 members present for the monthly meeting. The weather was a major topic. A lot of folks lost some of their bees this winter. The bloom time of some plants the bees rely on has been delayed too. There was discussion about feeding pollen patties, sugar syrup, IPM (Integrated Pest Management) that will need to be carried out. It seems to be a helpful group. They set new folks up with mentors so they would have local support in their new projects. Three speakers talked about rearing queens, splitting hives, feeding and pest control. Like I said, there is a lot to learn when it comes to bee keeping. I have a long way to go but they are fascinating creatures worth learning about.

Wendy lee, writing at Edgewisewoods.com

 

Passing the Keeper Test-Finding the Right Life Partner

Passing the Keeper Test

A Keeper
A Keeper

It is vitally important that a potential life partner be able to pass a few basic skills tests before you decide to embark on a long term serious relationship. Unfortunately there is a steep learning curve involved that took me awhile to grasp. My partners have had to pass muster in skills that have gotten progressively more difficult as I’ve matured. The guy I ended up keeping has had it the worst, of course. There was never an initial decision on my part that he must do this or that a certain way or get tossed back. No. It was more of an ongoing list of challenges as the options presented themselves over time.

Partner number one managed to get away with just being extremely sexy, gentle, and willing to take me away to our dream of a West Virginia homesteading adventure. This lasted about six years. My plans were to help him build our own off grid house, grow and store the food we needed, sew our clothes on my foot powered sewing machine, and in the end, make pottery for a living. Lots of things got in the way. Life does that. The house building turned out to be a lot harder than we thought, for one. Of all my brothers’ friends, the one I chose was the only one not a carpenter. He drove a truck, and made good money doing it, so he didn’t have to work away all the time. We lived on about $3000 a year for quite awhile back in the 70’s. Building a house is not easy without electric tools and only a chainsaw for sawing and it takes at least two people. It is really helpful if one of them has actual experience. Using hand tools slows the whole process down considerably and the long hike up our steep hill to the house site did not help. Porch sitting was way too inviting. And then there was hay to cut, weeds to pull, water to haul, goats to milk, clothes to wash, a million chores to do. As time wore on and trials got harder we started to fail. He had a hard time accepting help from others and then, with a new baby, I was way too busy. House building is not a one person job, heavy lifting requires help. All the responsibility of the new baby fell to me and the house building progress slowed down with no one seeming to be driving. We eventually gave up.

My second partner was proficient in building with stone and wood and could even do electrical work so he seemed promising, at first. I fell for him in a big way when he presented me with a porch full of milk crates neatly filled with dry kindling for the woodstove. Unfortunately, it was all downhill from there. We never managed to get further than the first few courses of foundation block on our house building venture. We grew and sold organic produce and worked ourselves to death for very little pay. Luckily we had free rent on an old log house next door and only small bills. We borrowed money for a drilled well but it ended up being needed for a lawyer when he got busted selling pot. Two more babies entered the picture and hot running water was still a dream of mine. We hauled water from the pond and heated it on the stove for baths and used the wringer washer on the porch for laundry. I washed all the diapers this way and it was a step up from the wash tubs and scrub boards I had used before. Then we had to borrow money against the land. He didn’t work steady enough to keep us going and didn’t want me to earn more than he did. I was finally learning how to make my opinions heard and that did not go over so well. I managed to land a job as a cook at a conference center making decent money. When he got ugly, I called it quits.

My third partner is finally a keeper. We started off a lot slower. He led

Keeper In the Woods
Keeper In the Woods

me through my first caving adventure, and being somewhat claustrophobic, that was a feat in itself. He bought me my own mountain bike so we could ride together. We long distance dated for two years with him driving 165 miles down to my place in Virginia two or three times a month. He would get up really early on those Monday mornings and drive all the way to D.C. for work.  He has managed to hold the same good paying job for over twenty five years, which is amazing to me. I get bored and have to change jobs every few years. While staying over one weekend he opened my chest freezer to fetch out the ice cream and came face to face with an entire pig head, unwrapped. It didn’t faze him- much anyway. I was keeping it for making scrapple with later. This was a good sign he might be keeper material. The, in the early morning hours of one Monday he poured himself a bowl of cereal and after eating it for awhile, and his eyes finally focusing, realized there were things moving in there. Meal worms had hatched and were eating their way through. It was an old box of something that the kids didn’t like and had been hanging around way too long. Long expired. He took that pretty well too, although he was careful to check his food from then on.

As time wore on and chores needed to be done around my place I managed to get him to help out some. He had never really had animals, except a cat, and I have always had plenty. Horses, dogs, chickens, milk goats, a cow, veggie and fruit gardens, geese, rabbits, ducks, you name it. At this stage I had three horses and the kids were learning to ride so I was building a riding ring. I had over a hundred fence posts and all the oak boards I needed from a fence moving project at the farm where I had worked for three years. Otherwise, there was no way I could have afforded to build it. We had to hand-dig 90 holes, set and tamp all the posts, and nail in two rows of oak boards.  It was not a quick project. Digging the holes with post hole diggers requires upper body strength and causes blisters until you get used to it. There are only so many holes you can do per day or weekend so it went on for awhile. We managed to also have fun caving and hiking in, between too. This was a pretty major test of his willingness to help me do a big job though, and he passed with a good attitude, even though he was not even into horses.

Partners that are destined for the long haul will be able to pass these basic skills tests. They will be open to new ideas and new directions. They will be supportive when you decide to suddenly change course and go back to school. They will try and understand when you feel the need to change careers or start a new business.  They will forgive you for making them get off the couch. They will help you with your self inflicted chores. They will be willing to play when you get those chores done. They will take you places you might not have gone alone. We now live in a real house that we changed to suit us, we garden and keep a horse and chickens and some bees. We both work hard but we play harder. The kids have their own families and are doing fine. Live is good.

The Keeper at Sunset
The Keeper at Sunset

When you find a partner who is willing to help you in your projects, who has an open mind and will support you and your changing plans for your life, grab him (or her) and hold them tight. Third time was a charm for me but I hope others learn faster than I did. It is great to finally have a supportive, ambitious and forgiving partner.

Wendy lee- writing at  https://www.edgewisewoods.com