Sunday, June 26, 2016
Strawberry beds built. I'll plant this evening when it cools off.
Next up: grapes. I'm going to put them just below the strawberries. Grapes love rocky slopes, which is just fine with me; I have those in spades. So they won't be nearly as much work. Then I'll turn the area inside the retaing wall at the bottom of this section into another planter for the blueberries and cranberries. They both need acid soil (they're related) and have shallow roots, so for them I won't have to dig as deep: just clear out the rocks around where each bush is going, then fill the hole with good soil, compost, and peat moss.
After all the planting is done, I'll build a square frame around each tree, bush, and vine and lay down mulch. Then I'm going to clear out the big rocks from the entire area to create a relatively smooth surface, and let the grass, clover, and wood sorrel grow back over it, and add some lavender. Then fence it in and plant marigolds and crysanthemums along the fenceline: those two and lavender and clover repel pests and attract bees and butterflies.
Next project will be to bring in some more fill dirt and topsoil, and get the grass planted behind the house. Need to do that before working the vegetable garden so I can get the dump truck back here. Then, probably this fall, I'll have the guy in with the tractor to clear the rocks and plow up the subsoil in the garden, then bring in the topsoil and compost for that, and let it sit over the winter, during which time I'll put up fences for the garden and yard, and use some of this rock to build retaining walls where they're needed around those areas.
I've added a native plants area off to the side of the orchard. I've got hazelnuts, chinkapins (American dwarf chestnuts), and mulberries in now, and have wild plums and wild strawberries on the way. I'll also let the wild grapes, wineberries, and blackberries come back in there. I'm not going to fence that part. The idea is: a) have the wild fruit and nuts growing in a convenient location where I can get some; b) create a diversion for the wildlife to help keep them from my garden and orchard; c) share with them, because I like them; and d) let the native species spread and re-establish themselves in this forest. I'm also going to sow some deer feed mix down in the meadow below my orchard. I'm thinking I'll keep the taller trees cut back in that area to keep it as a meadow rather than letting it go back to forest.
Yesterday evening as I was out watering my trees, a yearling buck came out into the clearing and just browsed around, casual as could be, about twenty paces from me. I talked to him, and he looked up at me then just went about his business, completely unalarmed.
Wednesday, June 22, 2016
Sunday, June 19, 2016
Recalculating
I'm thinking that it may be best not to try and plant the vegetable garden this summer. Getting an idea of the amount of work and expense it's going to be to get it ready, it may just be impractical at this point to try and force it--it's almost too late to plant summer vegetables already. Judging by yesterday's labors, doing the entire vegetable garden by hand is going to be next to impossible--the strawberry plants only need 8-12 inches for their roots, but the garden needs to be worked to about 2 feet. So I'm looking at options, like hiring a guy with a tractor to come and drag the plot with a rock rake and/or bringing in some quality topsoil to put down. Parts of the garden have been cut down to the clay anyway in leveling it out, so they're going to need some good soil added back in.
Also, I need to bring in some topsoil to finish the yard area and plant the grass, and if I've already got the garden in, it's going to block access for the truck, and I'll have to cart the soil from the driveway one wheelbarrow full at a time.
Probably the best thing is to be patient, get it done right, and plant next spring. I may get some cool-weather fall vegetables in, in August--lettuces and broccoli and such. And I think I'll put some tomatoes in the large pots I've got the grapevines in now, once they're planted in the ground, and time them so that they'll be ready at the same time as the lettuce; at least get a few salads out of it this year. The key to a good plan is flexibility. I'd rather take longer and do it right than rush and do it poorly.
This will probably work out best anyway. It's looking like it will be at least August before I'm ready to start eating again, maybe later. I never know when I'm going to hit a plateau in my weight loss, and I don't really know exactly at what weight I'll be when I've reached my goal of proper bodyfat percentage; I'm judging by visual appearance more than scale weight.
A little disappointing, but the rewards will be worth it next year. I'm not going to get any fruit off my trees and vines this year anyway, so I'll just treat this as a preparatory year and next year it will begin paying off.
Also, I need to bring in some topsoil to finish the yard area and plant the grass, and if I've already got the garden in, it's going to block access for the truck, and I'll have to cart the soil from the driveway one wheelbarrow full at a time.
Probably the best thing is to be patient, get it done right, and plant next spring. I may get some cool-weather fall vegetables in, in August--lettuces and broccoli and such. And I think I'll put some tomatoes in the large pots I've got the grapevines in now, once they're planted in the ground, and time them so that they'll be ready at the same time as the lettuce; at least get a few salads out of it this year. The key to a good plan is flexibility. I'd rather take longer and do it right than rush and do it poorly.
This will probably work out best anyway. It's looking like it will be at least August before I'm ready to start eating again, maybe later. I never know when I'm going to hit a plateau in my weight loss, and I don't really know exactly at what weight I'll be when I've reached my goal of proper bodyfat percentage; I'm judging by visual appearance more than scale weight.
A little disappointing, but the rewards will be worth it next year. I'm not going to get any fruit off my trees and vines this year anyway, so I'll just treat this as a preparatory year and next year it will begin paying off.
Saturday, June 18, 2016
Rocks
Only managed to get the strawberry bed mostly done today. Spent all day digging up rocks...mostly pick and mattock work; my soil seems to be about 50% rock. I'm tired.
Some of the rocks I dug up today.
The rest of them. I'm going to use the rock to reinforce this bank.
Oh, and roots. That's the other thing I"ve been digging up.
Friday, June 17, 2016
Planting!
Today I finally got to go out and start digging and planting. There's nothing like working the land. It was man's first occupation, and still carries a resonance in the soul that brings one closer to God, nature, and one's self.
Today's work: got all my trees planted (except the two that haven't been delivered yet).
Tomorrow's work: gotta move all these rocks and prepare the beds for the grapes and berries.
My nosy neighbor came by to see what was going on around here.
It doesnt look like much yet--still a lot of work to be done. I'll make it look nice later. First things first.
Mike's rules for successful gardening:
1. Plan what you're going to grow, how much space you'll need, and where you're going to put it.
2. Purchase quality seeds and plants of the best varieties for your soil, space, and climate.
3. Prepare the soil. Can't stress this enough: it's what makes the difference between success and failure.
4. Plant. Do it right, and then water, water, water.
5. Protect your plants from animals, bugs, weeds, weather, and disease.
6. Then make it Pretty, if you have time.
7. Last but not least: my super-secret practice for healthy, abundant gardens--I Pray over my crops and bless them in Jesus' name.
Wednesday, June 15, 2016
Shakespeare: Original Pronunciation
THIS is what they should be doing at the American Shakespeare Center here in Staunton. Not these bastardized, modernized, dumbed-down, pandering, abstract-costuming things they're doing now: as the gentleman in the video so aptly puts it, "trying to drag Shakespeare into the 21st century".
Monday, June 13, 2016
This Is What a $45 Million Viola Sounds Like
People endlessly debate whether there's a real difference. They've tried to do "scientific" testing, and all sorts of things, and the naysayers insist it's all in people's heads.
There is a difference. But, a) It takes a true master to bring it out; and b) The difference is not in the ear, but in the heart.
Wednesday, June 8, 2016
"He had perhaps been bruised too often. The peace of the vast aloof scrub had drawn him with the beneficence of its silence. Something in him was raw and tender. The touch of men was hurtful upon it, but the touch of the pines was healing. Making a living came harder there, distances were troublesome in the buying of supplies and the marketing of crops. But the clearing was peculiarly his own. The wild animals seemed less predatory to him than people he had known. The forays of bear and wolf and wildcat and panther on stock was understandable, which was more than he could say for human cruelties." -- Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings, The Yearling
Sunday, June 5, 2016
Waiting....
Seems to be the predominant theme in my life right now.
The grading work has been held up by the constant rain. So I've planted all my live plants in pots so they'll survive a couple more weeks until I can get them in the ground.
The grading work has been held up by the constant rain. So I've planted all my live plants in pots so they'll survive a couple more weeks until I can get them in the ground.
Today was a nice cool, rainy, low-stress day for them to transition. I'll keep them on the porch in partial sun for a while, then move them out onto the sunny part of the deck.
I'm probably not going to have time to build the raised planters this year. If we're delayed much more, I may not get the vegetables in at all. But right now the plan is to do the vegetable garden in regular mounded rows this year, then build the frames over the winter and next spring. I'll have to do one for the strawberries, because they're perrenials, and once they're in, they're in. The most urgent thing is to get these trees, vines, and bushes in the ground before summer really hits.
Saturday, June 4, 2016
Forestry
I've been exploring my forest, and discovering what a wonder and a blessing God has given me in this land. This is genuine old-growth forest, with an intact ecosystem--not the barren band of trees and undergrowth you find between suburban housing developments. I've only begun to uncover its secrets and treasures, and have probably only explored one or two of the six acres I own. Things I've found so far:
Shellbark Hickory, aka Kingnut. Because it has the best nuts of all the hickories.
White Walnut, aka Butternut.
Chestnuts! In case you don't know, the chestnut used to be the predominant tree in all the eastern hardwood forests in North America, until they were all killed by Chinese Chestnut Blight in the early 20th century. These are all seedlings and saplings, and may not grow to bearing age. But there have been recent finds of naturally blight-resistant trees, so they seem to be fighting back. Most significantly, a stand of around 500 healthy ones, including mature, bearing trees, was found very near here, down near Staunton. I'm going to transplant a couple of these into my clearing, and see if I can nurse them through to maturity.
Hazelnut
Wild Black Cherry
Blueberry
Mulberry (I think)
Wild Grapes
Witch Hazel. Not edible, but you can extract an excellent astringent from it--my grandmother swore by it. She put Sea Breeze on everything.
Hornbeam, aka Ironwood. If you can manage to work it, you can fashion very hard tools of this. I'm going to make myself a new walking stick.
King of the Oaks
Lord of the Maples
Gnome Home
Things I'm still hoping to find:
Black Walnut
Beechnut
Wild Plum
Wild Strawberries
A cave with a hidden cache of Confederate gold. Or a trove of silver dollars buried in mason jars by an old mountaineer. :)
Friday, June 3, 2016
My First Crop!
This little guy isn't even waiting to be transplanted to bear fruit. I may have to make exception from my diet for a single blueberry.
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