March 1, 2023

Spring is Springing

March, from my cross-stitch calendar Christmas present. :)

March is the first month of the agrarian year. It's really the homesteading year as well, so I tend to think of goals and projects according to the season. We still have about six weeks or so before the last frost date (which is no guarantee!), so it's the time to plan and begin the planting season. Because of that, we don't have many projects on our spring to-do list.

Outdoors

Indoors

Anything else is worked in as time, need, and inspiration allow.

March is also the month to celebrate the transition from winter's brown and grey to the glorious colors of everything waking up.

Daffodils have been blooming since January. Now my fancies have joined the party.

Japanese Magnolia

Violets

Forsythia

Henbit

Spirea

Speedwell

Peach blossoms

How's everyone else's spring shaping up? 

Spring is Springing © March 2023

February 26, 2023

Garden Notes: February 2023

Rainfall 

  • 2nd: 0.9"
  • 9th: 0.4" 
  • 11th-12th: 1.0"
  • 15th: 0.05"
  • 17th: 0.95"
  • 20th: 0:05"
  • 23rd: 0.05"
  • 24th: 0.15"
  • 27th: 0.125"
  • Total: 3.675 inches 

Temperature
  • range of nighttime lows: 25 to 63°F (-4 to 17°C)
  • range of daytime highs: 46 to 79°F (8 to 26°C)

Weather Notes

With the exception of the past week, our lows have mostly been in the 30s. We're still in our winter weather pattern, which is that temps warm up as a new front approaches, then drop significantly after the front moves through. 

The wind is picking up as spring approaches. On gusty days it's strong enough for me to use extra clothes pins when I hang out laundry!

Winter Kill Survivors

In December, we lost our winter garden from a severe hard freeze. I was curious if anything would make a comeback, and amazingly, a few plants have.

Of course, the winter wheat survived and is now thriving.

Lone surviving kale plant in the African keyhole garden.

Field turnip (one of many) growing new leaves

You may recall that I harvested a lot of the turnips growing in my pasture before the winter kill. They've been in a box in the pantry, and have kept fairly well, although softening up a bit and sprouting leaves. So I've been surprised to find most of the turnips I left in the field have not only survived, but thrived. A few turned mushy from being frozen, but most of them are crisp and growing. 

My daikons, on the other hand, were all killed. Even the ones I mulched heavily in their garden bed. They all froze and turned to mush. That was be good for the soil, but left none for feeding ourselves and the goats. 

Lesson learned: If faced with a severe freeze again, harvest the daikons and mulch the turnips!

Some of my collards also survived.

I didn't plant this, it's a volunteer from the compost.

One of three surviving and thriving heading collards in the garden swale berm.

Mostly, I want to let these survivors go to seed for collecting. Whatever they've got genetically, I want more of! I harvest a few leaves now and then for a treat.

Chopped garden collard greens, goat cheese from this year's first
paneer, and sliced leftover potato oven fries, both sweet and white.

All scrambled with eggs because the chickens are laying again.

Garden Tasks

I tried to do a little leveling in the garden swale, but the clay is too wet, heavy, and sticky. So, I've continued aisle clean-up and wood chip mulching.

Daffodils are blooming everywhere

Dan is replacing bed borders, so everything is beginning to look neat and tidy.

Planted

It's early for planting, but these are cool weather veggies that I hope will make it.
  • snow peas
  • carrots
  • daikons
  • turnips
  • lettuce
  • radishes
I also planted some of the garlic that was sprouting in the pantry.

So far . . . 

Snow peas

Probably daikons

Seedling carrots with violets and fall planted garlic.

The cultivated burdock is awakening from dormancy and sprouting leaves.

A very welcome sight! But I know better than to succumb to the planting bug. The past couple years, we've had late frosts, so I'm not going to assume that lovely weather now predicts anything. As we all know, weather is very fickle.

So, there's the record of my garden happenings for February. How about you? Anything going on in your garden?

February 23, 2023

Our Newest Baby Goats

Born yesterday evening! I didn't think Ursa was due until next week, so I really hadn't been keeping a close eye on her. But when the others presented themselves for their evening feed and she didn't, I suspected something was up. She was lying behind the hay feeder, looking very much like a doe does when she's coming up on delivery. Dan helped me set up the kidding stall and we moved her in. She wasn't interested in her feed or hay, but since nothing looked imminent, we went in after chores to eat our own supper. 

After we ate, I went out to check on Ursa's progress. When I have a doe due soon, I always listen as soon as I get out the door. They often call or sometimes I hear the new babies first, which always gets me running! I heard nothing until I opened the barn door. Then Ursa cried out and I could see something was going on. Actually, two somethings, and she must have just pushed the second one out. I quickly cleared the babies' air passages and stuck them under her nose. She got to licking immediately and had them cleaned up in no time. 

Here they are this morning, about 13 hours old. 

Two stout boys!

These are Ursa's first, and it's always a relief when they take instantly to mothering. Some does are less sure with their first kids, puzzled by where these little creatures came from and upset that they want to get to their teats. But I've only had one kid rejected by a doe, I think because she had quads and knew she couldn't feed them all. He was the runt, and she tended to him like she did the others, but she refused to let him nurse. He became my bottle baby. 

Ursa couldn't have picked better weather, because while other parts of the country are experiencing a winter storm, we're having lovely mild days. No worries about the babies getting chilled.

So, only Caroline is left to kid. My anticipated due date for her is March 5th.

Our Newest Baby Goats © February 2023