Showing posts with label Hobby Farm. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hobby Farm. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Re-Learning Biology

So I took Biology twice. Once in middle school and then once again in high school. Neither time did I really enjoy it. There was a lot to memorize, there was very little math for me to excel at, and the idea of dissecting  stuff really just did not appeal to me at all. No here I am ten years later kicking myself for not trying to learn biology a little bit more. As I am starting to garden and have high hopes for having a variety of animals I  figure that it could be important to have at least a little more that a rudimentary understanding of how it all works together.

Thanks to the wonders of technology and libraries I checked out Biology for Dummies and a Basic Biology textbook and have started to teach myself biology again. I am finding that it is still just as hard as it was ten years ago but at least this time I am a little more motivated to learn this time around. I know that I am not retaining about three fourths of it so far but I am hoping to retain more as I go through the second book (and probably a third or fourth book after that).

I guess that this all started when I tried reading a botany textbook at http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Botany but found that I could not understand every fifth word or so. I at first tried looking each one up but then I did not understand the definitions much better than the original word. So I decided that I had to back to the basics and start with Biology 100. Sometimes that is what is needed to actually understand something.

Monday, October 8, 2012

PW County Farm Tour

About a week ago Tami and I went on a county farm tour. We visited 6 farms and had a wonderful time meeting lots of different people and learning a little more about the local agriculture and what we want in the future. The tour included Evergreen Acres, Yankey Farm, Blue Top Farm, Clover Meadow Farm, LynnVale Farm and Studio, and Oakwood Farm. Each one was unique in its own way but we loved it all.

Evergreen Acres is primarily a Christmas Tree farm with rows upon rows of White Pine, Norwegian Spruce, and Scotch Pine. They also have pumpkins, corn, tomatoes and squash. It takes around 10-12 years for a Christmas tree to grow to selling size.

Yankey farm is primarily a pick-your-own pumpkin and corn farm. They also had several local beekeepers there with a display hive and a bunch of equipment for people to show. I spent about 20 minutes talking to a relatively new beekeeper. His first season only produced about 5 quarts of honey from his two hives, but this season produced 50+ quarts. Hobby bees are not a cheap way to get honey but it definitely seems very rewarding.

Blue Top Farm is a horse stable. Definitely not the route that I want to go in the long term, but I do love to be around horses. They also had a couple goats and a small pen of chickens. That is exactly what I want. I wouldn't mind having a horse, but if I do have a horse it will be a horse for working on the farm.

Clover Meadow Farm is an Alpaca farm. First of all I had no idea that Alpaca wool was SO SOFT. Alpaca yarn is softer than any baby yarn that I have ever felt. That being said, Alpacas are apparently one of the more expensive farm animals to buy. It is no longer legal to import them so it is necessary to purchase them from the relatively small US herds. Before the market crashed a couple years back, the average breeding female was selling for about $20,000. That is crazy. The prices fortunately have come down quite a bit over the past five years and you can get a small start up heard of 8 for about $10,000 now. I am not sure if I would ever consider getting Alpacas to breed but a couple of the cheaper neutered males for wool production has definitely crossed my mind.

LynnVale Farm and Studio is a flower farm and art studio. They sell their flowers to a variety of local florists and to people for special occasions. It looked like they had also did a lot of photography and some paintings in their studio.

Oakwood Farm was the last place that we visited. It is a small experiment farm funded by a grant from the County Water and Soil department. They are trying to experiment with different ways to improve local farming techniques that could help local farmers. Their focus was on horses and the two main things that they were trying to do is reduce animal waste runoff and build up, and also set up a rotational pasture system that reduces the need for feeding the animals purchased hay.

It was an incredibly educational experience that I would suggest to everyone. I realize that most people cannot come to this farm tour but you would surprised by the number of farmers that are happy to give tours if you just ask. Find a farmer and learn about the world around you.

Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Community Supported Agriculture

CSA's are not a new idea but they have changed over the years. It used to be that a group of people would get together, buy some land, and then hire a farmer to tend the land and provided them with fresh produce. Now it is more often a farmer who owns land already that will sell "Shares" of his or her crop. This way any family can basically pre-purchase all of their vegetables and sometimes fruit, eggs, honey, and on occasion meat.

There are both pros and cons to a system like this. Some of the major pros include being organic, being local, being fresher, and getting to try new veggies. Some of the major cons include having vegetables that you will not eat, having a bad growing year (you are accepting the risk along with the farmer), and having to learn to eat what is locally in season.

We are currently looking at a CSA from a farm about 30 miles from here that has a pretty good variety of food including some fruit, but no honey, eggs, or meat. The thing that is drawing us to them the most is that if you are willing to come to the farm at least 12 out of the 22 weeks and help pick then you get everything at half price. Not only that but we will also get the opportunity to learn some of the tricks of the trade. And by we I mean Tami since it is only on Wednesday and Sunday mornings (but hopefully I will be able to go at least once sometime).

Check it out in your area.
http://www.localharvest.org/
http://www.bountifulbaskets.org/
http://www.eatwild.com/

Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Wishful Thinking

I am just looking to put down a few ideas about what I want in the future. I want a piece of land that can be a hobby farm. I do not know if I would be brave enough to jump into a full farm right away, nor do I think that Tami would let me. However even on a small plot of land I could do most of what I want. It would have to be on at least two acres unfortunately, since there is a lot of ordinances restricting "farm animals" out here. Anything less it is illegal, but at two acres we could all of the sudden have 64 chickens 2 cows and 5 goats or pigs. Why I could have half of that on an acre out in the middle of nowhere I don't know.

Now I do not think that I would start with that many animals all at once. I think I would want to start with a few egg laying chickens, maybe 2 milk goats, enough meat chickens each year for our family, and at least two bee hives. Now I do not think that I would go buy all of this at once. I think it would be a one species at a time deal so that I would have time to figure out the basics before I add something on top of that. Tami would want us to start with the chickens probably and I would be content with that even though I might prefer the bees.

I would also want to have a garden that was about a quarter of the lot. I would try to grow multiple varieties of everything that we love to eat and maybe a few things that could be experiments. I have learned to love zucchini just in the past year after all. I would also try to plant a small variety of fruit and nut trees. A few sugar maples would be great too. All of this together would keep me happily busy in the afternoons and on saturdays.

In order to prepare for this as best as I can I plan on filling our balcony with as many plants as possible this spring. We have great light and I hope that the garden will do as well as our last little container garden did this past summer. And hopefully better than our poor Arizona garden. If I can convince someone to let me "rent" a corner of their property I will start an apiary as soon as possible and maybe use honey to pay the "rent".