Archive for the ‘Garden’ Category

Onion Braids

Thursday, April 10th, 2008

The kikuyu grass is really getting ahead of us at the moment. We have just finished untangling our poor lemon tree from its creeping advance. Our garden is still a mess, but there are plenty of good things among the weeds. The Jerusalem artichoke flowers have been beautiful, and we are looking forward to our first crop of artichokes. The onions have been another triumph.


Onion Braids

Kevin and I have never tried to grow onions before, and we are delighted with the success of our first crop. We planted seed for two varieties:

Pukekohe Long Keeper (This was a special strain developed at Koanga Gardens to do well here in Northland, as we are supposed to be a marginal area for growing onions.)

Stuttgart Long Keeper (I bought these from King’s Seeds.)

Both varieties did really well. I plan to replant the best of our onion crop in the spring, so that it will run to seed. In this way, I hope we will end up saving a line of onion seed that performs reliably in our bio-region.

Since harvesting the onions, we have enjoyed French onion soup, onions sauteed with zucchini and garlic (also from the garden), and onions sauteed with carrots (from the garden) and a few dried apricots. All delicious! These onions are wonderfully flavoursome and pungent. Our eyes smart as we cut them.

I have dried out all the onions and braided most of them into six big braids. This way, the onions can decorate our kitchen as well as fill our stomachs.

Corn and Kumara Harvest

Friday, March 28th, 2008

Somehow, despite our neglect, our corn crop came to fruition. The damage from shield bugs was not too bad in the end, but we did lose some to the birds. We are sure the crop would have been much bigger if we had side dressed with manure, or applied a foliar feed. Still, we are pleased enough with our first corn harvest. The colours of the kernels are beautiful. Some of them look as if they are lit from within! I am planning to string up the corn to dry. I think it will look wonderful hanging in the kitchen.


Indian flint corn

I am not sure if we’ll grow this variety of corn (“Indian Flint Corn”) again. In the end, we didn’t plant quite enough to have a viable population for seed saving, so our decision will depend partly on availability. Also, we have friends at Kerikeri and Takahue who are growing heirloom corn, and it might make better sense to grow the same variety they do — so that we could collectively maintain a bigger population for saving seed.

We have also started to harvest the first of the kumara. Kumara is a New Zealand sweet potato. We enjoy them baked, roasted, boiled, in soup, or even as the main ingredient in a variation on the traditional potato salad. We made a saute of peppers, zucchini, onion and garlic, added balsamic vinegar, salt, and olive oil, and mixed it together with cubes of boiled kumara. Very tasty!


Kumara

When we lived over at Kaikohe, my Dad used to tell me to bend each kumara shoot into a U shape before planting it, so that the roots would be facing up towards the surface of the soil. This way, the tubers would grow close to the surface rather than growing impossibly deep in the soft volcanic soil. I decided not to bother with the U shape here on the Farmlet, considering that our soil is heavy clay. Now that harvest time has come, I’m amazed at how deep the kumara have managed to grow, even in our heavy soil. Digging them is proving to be a bit of a mission! Lesson learned: Next spring I’ll bend the kumara shoots as I plant them.

Goals for the Year of the Rat

Friday, March 14th, 2008

1. Do “baby yoga” with Owen and have lots of fun. Any goal that relates to our precious baby would have to top the list, of course! I have a couple of neat books, Itsy Bitsy Yoga and Yoga Mom, Buddha Baby, which are helping us get started.

2. Build a chook house and chook run. We have had this on our “to do” list ever since we arrived on the Farmlet. Can’t believe we still haven’t done it. Disgraceful! Still, the extra time has allowed us to understand more about our land and our needs. Our chook run plans have changed and developed a lot over the past two years. It is now high time to put plans into action!

3. Install a solar water heater. Kevin has been doing the research, and has finally found what he thinks may be the right system for us. This will be a big step towards reducing our energy bills.

4. We plan that calves and goat kids will be born on the Farmlet this coming spring. This means we have to hook our cows and goats up with bull/buck, of course. I’ll be writing more on this matter very soon! Calves and kids mean fresh cow and goat milk. Yum! This year we hope to milk Daphne and Lulu (the goats) for the first time.

5. Carrying on from #4: Extend the small goat house and build a milking stand for the goats. The small goat house is all very well for two does, but certainly wouldn’t fit their kids as well. Something needs to be done about this.

6. Undertake some cool cheese projects using fresh cow and goat milk.

7. Make delicious meals using meat raised on the Farmlet. Yes, we have exciting plans for Herman Beefsteak when he reaches “the beefsteak phase of his career”! I’m looking forward to sharing some recipes. It’s especially nice to think that the first meat Owen will ever eat will have been raised kindly and cleanly here on the Farmlet.


Herman Beefsteak

8. Experiment with grinding and cooking cornmeal, including some from our own corn.

9. Save seeds from more of our vegetables, herbs, and flowers. As our garden matures and we discover which varieties of vegetables do best for us, we are committed to saving more and more of our own seed.

10. Continue to battle kikuyu and work on “taming” the house paddock. We hope to work on weed barriers this year, with the aim of reducing the ongoing effort.

11. Attempt to make some more crusty fermented beverages. In particular, we’d like to try making wine from our own grapes. We’d better hurry up with this project, since it’s already grape season!

12. Raise some seedlings of “bushman’s toilet paper” to plant out in the garden. This project was on our list last year, and I can’t believe we forgot all about it. I’m really keen to do this!

13. Last but not least: I want to write at least one update per week for the Farmlet website!

Best wishes to all for the Year of the Rat! It looks sure to be a busy and exciting one on the Farmlet.

The Year of the Pig in Review

Monday, March 3rd, 2008

Best wishes to all for the Year of the Rat!

One year ago, at the beginning of the Year of the Pig, I set out a list of 13 goals for the Farmlet. With the year now over, it is time to review our goals and achievements, and to set new goals for the coming year.

Here’s the report on last year’s goals:

1. Have some earthworks done in the middle cow paddock, in order to create an irrigation dam and level a site for a barn. The cows will be fenced out of the dam area. (The area in question is already swampy and damp — not especially good grazing, but an excellent dam site. The elevation of the site will allow us to gravity-feed water to gardens and stock. We plan eventually to plant the area around the dam with trees, creating a special dam-microclimate.)

Yes, we had the earthworks done. Sites have been leveled for a shed and a large water tank. The dam filled up beautifully and has stayed full of water right through the summer. We have surrounded the dam area with electric tape and planted mustard and lupins in the turned soil to prevent erosion. Still to do: Establish the gravity feed water system and plant trees around the dam area.

2. Build a barn/shed in the cow paddock for milking, storage, and keeping calves. We need to have this in place by July, when the cows are due to calve. (In due course, we plan to collect rain water off the roof of the barn. We will install a water tank next to the barn, from which water can be gravity-fed down to to house.)

The barn/shed project was shelved. We have been grazing our animals down on our neighbour’s pasture, in the middle of which is an old milking shed. Having the use of this shed took the urgency out of our need to build our own. We still plan to build the shed eventually, but other projects now seem more pressing.

3. Fix the fences around the goat paddocks. We need to reinforce the fences and put in more electric wires, so that the goats can be kept in the paddocks without their A-frame collars on.

Kevin fixed the goat paddock fences, with the result that they are much more goat proof. What a relief!

4. Extend the goat houses to give the goats more space, and better access to dry feed during the winter.

We have not done this yet. Now, with the goats expected to kid this coming spring, this project needs to move to the top of the priority list!

5. Build a chook house, and get some chickens. We plan to start with a small movable chook house in the house paddock. This way, the chooks can help us to clear kikuyu and create new garden areas. (Eventually, we would like to have a larger number of chickens ranging on the pasture up the hill.)

Alas, we still have no chooks! Over the past few months, Kevin and I have started to change and refine our chook house/ chook run plans. We are determined to tackle this project soon.

6. Plant fruit trees. Build supports for passion fruit and kiwifruit vines.

We have planted some more fruit around the place — a guava, a naranjilla, a boysenberry, a couple of tropical apricots and a grapefruit. I have also propagated seedlings for more passionfruit (both purple and yellow varieties), cherimoya, plum and guava, and we have been given a small fig, a raspberry, a thornless blackberry, a blackcurrant and a macadamia nut. We have to find places to plant all these! The passionfruit have supports to climb on, and we have just been enjoying the first fruit. The kiwifruit still need a pergola to climb on. They are looking a bit wretched after getting a rather fierce pruning from Daphne — naughty goat.

7. Continue to expand and develop gardens in the house paddock – including barrier plantings to keep out kikuyu.

We expanded the gardens by a considerable margin this spring, clearing the area that we are now using to grow corn and beans. We also worked on improving the soil structure in the existing beds. I didn’t do much work on barrier plantings in the end.

8. Experiment with making kefir, quark, and various cheeses. (This will be happening after our cows have calved and we have a good supply of fresh milk. We also hope to continue making yoghurt and butter.)

We have enjoyed making kefir, kefir cheese, Caspian Sea yoghurt, and butter using milk and cream from our own cow, Coco. I have to admit, though, that since Owen came along, I’ve really only kept going with the yoghurt (we get through several litres of this every week), having killed off our poor kefir grains soon after he was born. I’ll have to get some more! We’ve also been buying butter, which saves time, even if it’s not as nice as making our own. I’ve had several attempts at quark, and all have turned into yoghurt. The yoghurt culture has obviously taken up firm residence in this house and seems set on colonising any milk that I leave out at room temperature! Not good news for my quark mission.

9. Experiment with making assorted fermented beverages — perhaps using herbs from the garden.

I have had a lot of fun with fermentation over the past year, including growing a ginger beer bug and making ginger beer using our own lemons. I’ve also made water kefir using lemons and herbs from the garden. Sadly, the water kefir grains got very sulky quite some time ago, and nothing I could do would revive them. I am now looking to purchase some more. We continue to brew kombucha.

10. Grinding flour and making sourdough bread has become part of our routine by now. I’d like to get into the habit of using the sourdough in some other creative and delicious ways.

Yes, during the past year I found some delicious sourdough recipes in “Full Moon Feast” — sourdough pancakes, crackers and scones. I have also used sourdough to make fishcakes and pizza crust. By now, these recipes have become old favourites.

11. Start growing some “bushman’s toilet paper.” We plan to start seedlings and plant them out in the garden when they are big enough.

Ah. . . ! I’d forgotten all about this one. But it sounds like a neat idea. We should do this!

12. Install a solar hot water heater to cut our power bill and increase our energy self-sufficiency.

Kevin has been researching our options in this area, and has finally found one that looks right for us. With any luck, we’ll soon be embarking on this project.

13. Keep a more systematic record of income and expenditure. In particular, I think it will be satisfying to have records that clearly document the changes in our grocery bills as we produce more and more of our own food.

I kept these records very diligently through until October last year. Since our little one was born, my attentions have been focussed elsewhere, to the detriment of my record keeping! I hope the records will remain a useful basis for comparison as the Farmlet changes and develops.

So. . . does that mean we’ve achieved 8 out of our 13 goals? I suppose that’s not too bad.

The Year of the Pig has been a special one for us. Our goats grew to maturity, the first Farmlet calves were born, Kevin learned to milk a cow and shot his first wild pig. I got my firearms license. We had a rough time when Coco’s calf was born dead and we had to mother a new calf onto her. . . and it was hard to say goodbye to our fabulous cow, Esmerelda, even though she was going off to an excellent home. Of course, by far the most significant event of the year for us was the birth of our precious baby: Owen Thom Flaherty, born on the 16th of November 2007, Year of the Red Fire Pig. Our very own dear little piglet.


Owen

Now I’ve started compiling a new list of goals for the Year of the Rat. I hope to post this list in the next few days, so please stay tuned.

Enchanted Corn Forest

Sunday, February 10th, 2008

Sorry this is not the second part of the pig saga! Kevin’s still working on that. Meanwhile, in the garden. . .

The corn we planted before Owen was born is very tall now, and has started to form ears. I’m not sure what kind of harvest we’ll get, as we haven’t side dressed the beds with manure, applied foliar feed or watered it through the dry spell. The shield bugs are also numerous this year after the mild winter, and I’ve heard that they are very partial to corn. Successful crop or not, the corn looks fantastic — like an enchanted corn forest, more than 8 feet high.


Corn forest

As far as the “three sisters” planting (corn, beans and squash planted together), we’d do it again, but would make a few changes next time!
1. We would surround the beds with weed mat to stop the encroachment of kikuyu grass and other weeds. This has been especially bad for the low-growing squash, which have ended up getting practically smothered. None of our curcurbits have done very well this year anyway, but those ones really didn’t get much of a chance.
2. We would plant the beans around the outside of the bed. I’m not sure what I was thinking when I planted some of them in the middle of the corn. Even if they are doing ok in there, I’m going to have a devil of a job fighting my way through the corn to pick them! The beans I planted around the outside are cropping well, and seem to be happy climbing up the corn stalks. I certainly want to plant corn and beans together again in the future, as it saves time compared to building teepees or frames for the beans.

Whether or not we get a decent crop from our own corn, I’m still planning more experiments with the sacks of maize we bought recently. There is a recipe for polenta in Nourishing Traditions that I’d love to try. I like the idea of serving a hearty stew of wild pork on a bed of creamy polenta made from freshly ground cornmeal.

What else is going on in the garden? We have harvested our garlic, which is now dry and waiting to be braided and hung up for storage. Onions are ready to harvest also. While our garlic has been a bit disappointing this year, we are absolutely delighted with the onions. I’ll be sure to post a story and some photos when we lift them. We have been picking borlotti beans, as well as the first of the tomatoes. And I’ve never had oats to deal with before. . . but I have a hunch that our experimental oat patch may also be ready for harvest. All this, as well as a delicious baby to feed and play with! These days, life is so full of tasty things that I hardly know what to do next!