Saturday, March 20, 2010

Tommy plowing the cover crop yesterday.....
This morning, Tommy repaired the nesting boxes in the chicken tractor because so many hens are laying eggs that we were running short of setting spaces. We are getting about 20 eggs per day and we sure can't eat all of that, so I sell them. I cleaned up the bee equipment while Tommy moved firewood into the shed for the summer. I spent the last half of the morning roughing up the dirt in the herb bed and the potato bed so the tiny weeds wouldn't take hold.


This afternoon, I finished transplanting the broccoli, mulched them all with compost and ran the irrigation. Next, I started excavating #12 bed for the carrot planting. In the middle of that, Daingerfield came over to borrow the turn plow. We had to strap it onto the tractor scoop and lift it into bed of his pick-up truck....whew, dodgey! I took him over to Pat Cart's property (which we almost own now) for a tour. After he left I sat down in the strawberry bed and weeded until 5:30 when my stomach started growling. Productive day!

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

I got all the pepper plants in their individual cells much earlier in their progress because I started them with Johnny's tiny soil blocks (see the farthest flat). I hope they do OK with only the dicot leaves. They are going into the greenhouse on sunny days and back in the house at night.

Tuesday, March 16, 2010







Today was tomato seed planting day....in one flat about 240 tomato seeds....13 different kinds. Spending a cool spring day in the greenhouse is just heaven for me, even with the tedium of dealing with tiny seeds one at a time! The peppers are all up and in their own cells, but it is still to cold to let them spend the night in the greenhouse, so I keep the truck on the driveway and take them back and forth until it is above 50 at night.






When I went out after supper to close up the barn, I noticed a beautiful light around coloring the mountains through the bare trees. The mountains will be hidden soon when the trees leaf out. I went up to the shed roof and stepped out the window to take a few photos at sunset.

Friday, March 12, 2010

spring continues





The garlic bed is beginning to show signs of faster growth in the first photo. The plumcot tree is almost in bloom and the Nanking cherry bushes are busting out. But this is at least a week later than the usual year because of the cold winter and spring.

Thursday, March 4, 2010

Peas




Spring begins

March 4, 2010...When I went out to pour hot water in the chicken waterers, I was happy to hear spring bird song, but the weather is still cold and windy! We just can't seem to warm up in NW SC this year. The snow of 3/2 has melted and I am hoping that is the last one this year. Because of this cold spring I am late planting my spring seeds, so maybe I will skip spring and go straight to summer plantings....not a chance! Who could wait?

I have planted English peas by the fenceling and potatoes in the winter carrot bed that the deer demolished a few weeks ago. They think they will still find carrots there, so they are tearing that up looking for them, even though I covered it with light row cover. That's OK, those potato seeds were old leftovers from last year and I planted them too early because they were sprouting all over the place. I'll take my chances and plant over again if they don't make it.

We moved the greenhouse to a new location with a perfect orientation to the sun and against the wind: facing the southwest with woods on the northeast side. The ends aren't closed up yet, so working is a cold affair in there. I have many seeds to get planted very soon.

This afternoon I will plant the pepper seeds, but they will stay inside with the water heater and the geothermal mechanics until they sprout. Then they can go in the greenhouse. Tomato seeds go into flats next.