Categories
Beginning Farmers

Beat the Heat … Help Stop Global Warming

Cherie Langlois Hanging Laundry
© Cherie Langlois
One thing we’re trying to do to reduce our carbon footprint is hang the laundry out to dry more often! ~ CL

As a passionate lover of the outdoors, I enjoy sunny, warm weather as much as the next person, especially after a soggy, Puget Sound winter and spring.

About a week ago, however, we experienced some record-breaking July heat here in Western Washington, with temperatures soaring into the upper 90s — 15 to 20 degrees above normal (please don’t laugh you folks in Nevada or Arizona – that’s really hot for us coastal Washingtonians ).

Now I’m wondering what August has in store for us, given the global warming situation. 

Many of us here don’t have air-conditioning in our homes, and even if we did, my livestock wouldn’t have any AC to keep them cool and comfy.  I’m picturing the whole lot of us succumbing to heat stroke, vultures circling like in those old westerns.

Kelsy Holding Home-grown Broccoli
© Cherie Langlois
My daughter Kelsey holds a giant broccoli we grew in our garden ~ CL

I’m looking for ways to beat the heat–and slow the warming.

Yeah, I’m a believer in human-caused global warming.  I’ve seen it in action: hummingbirds returning earlier each year, glaciers melting, cloudless Costa Rican cloud forest and more. 

I’m terrible at arguing politics; instead I’d like to share five steps we’re taking to try and reduce our carbon footprint on the farm.  Take them or leave them.

  1. Switch over to fluorescent light bulbs.
  2. Hang the laundry out to dry more often.
  3. Reduce, reuse, recycle – more!
  4. Grow more of our own food organically.
  5. Drive less (especially my gas-guzzling truck!)

Who knows?  If we all pitch in and change our habits just a little, maybe we can beat the heat.

~ Cherie

Categories
News

Tips for Spring Cleaning

Read It!

Spring cleaning planning list!For the whole story and a fun, step-by-step narration about how to make spring cleaning a breeze, read “Spring Clean” by Gretchen Olson

Spring is here! And if you haven’t already started, now’s the perfect time to take another look at that farm shop or garden shed that doubles as storage for everything from empty planters to leftover paint.

The best way to begin is to have a plan–and it helps to write it down.
Here’s a checklist to get you started:

  • Start with pen and paper: Then go out and have a look at “the mess.”
  • Categorize: Organize the items into broad categories or types.
  • Regroup: Look at your broad categories. Make subcategories, if needed, and be tough with yourself about what you think you might need to dispose of.
  • Decide what to throw away (and where!): After you’ve decided what to throw away, don’t forget to check local regulations on

    Environmental Tip
    Concerned about contamination due to household cleaners and pesticides? To learn more about more eco-friendly alternatives that still get the job done, visit the World Watch Institute website.

    how dispose of chemicals and other hazardous materials. Keep charities in mind for the items that still have some life in them.

  • Choose your organizational system: Will you need more shelves or storage containers? What are your space needs?
  • Go shopping: In addition to purchasing any needed storage equipment, you’ll want to make sure you have cleaning supplies as well.
  • Get it all out in the open: Make like reality TV and make a big pile outside. After you clean, you’ll get to sort through it all.
  • Clean up: From top to bottom, get out the grime and dust so you can start with a clean room.
  • Make a floor plan: Figure out where you need to install any additional shelving or storage containers or where to move the existing ones to suit your needs.
  • Sort it and put everything back: Dispose of unwanteds and put back what you’ll use where you decided it needs to go.

A place for everything and everything in its place!

Categories
News

ALBC Annual Conference: Register Today!

Find More Events!
We always have interesting events posted in our online calendar. Click here to find more activities and learning opportunities.

Register today for the 2008 Annual Conference of the American Livestock Breeds Conservancy (ALBC).

The Theme:
Multi-Tasking Livestock: Adapted Breeds for Productive Farms

The Dates:
September 19-21, 2008

The Location:
Tillers International (learn more about Tillers and other educational venues) in Scotts, Michigan.

Registration!!
You can register online or submit the conference brochure.
But don’t delay: the deadline is Monday, September 1!

For details, visit the ALBC website or call 919-542-5704

More About the Conference
ALBC conferences always feature informative seminars. This year’s focus on integrating multi-tasking livestock for productive farms. Tillers International, where the conference will be held, will help to demonstrate the value of multi-tasking livestock breeds.

You’ll also want to come for the food! The ALBC conference will feature special meals that include rare breeds in the menu on Friday and Saturday nights!

Plus, enjoy the opportunity to network and share experiences, successes and plans. Download the conference brochure for more details. BONUS: ALBC breeds posters, T-shirts and much more are now available for purchase online. Visit www.cafepress.com/albcStore

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Categories
News

A Funny Thing Happened When We Moved to the Country

What funny thing happened when you moved to the country?What’s your funny “new-to-the-country” story?

Sue Weaver starts us off:
“It was early January and a very snowy year, so the white stuff was already pretty deep when we arrived. Well, actually I was involved in two deep snow country blunders within the first few days …” Read More

Cherie Langlois says:
” … although I’d done trail riding and taken a few lessons along the way, I was still very much a green rider … I should have known better. There’s a saying in the horse world that I think goes: “Green plus green … Read More

Don’t be shy!
You know we’re all in it together! Visit the forum today …

Categories
Animals

Sheep Versus Alpacas

Alpacas ... or

How Do You Choose Between Raising Sheep or Alpacas?

Both offer the grand resource of their fleece.

Both are described as “great yard ornaments, lawnmowers and pets.”

What else does a prospective owner need to know?

Sheep!Says Sue Weaver:
As prey animals,
“the most important thing: never, never, under any circumstances … Read more

See what Sue, Cherie Langlois and our forum guests have to say about owning sheep.

Alpaca owners!
We need you to weigh in!

Related Articles

 

Visit our Web Exclusives

Categories
News

Bees Get Grant: $4 Million for Research Awarded

USDA grants $4 million for bee research

Read More About Bees

What to Do When You Find a Hive …

Harvest Honey in a New (old) Way

Basics of Beekeeping

To help bees in their struggle to survive Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD) and other bee diseases, researchers have received a boost of more than $4 million.

The money–awarded by the U.S. Department of Agriculture–goes to the University of Georgia to study the causes of diseases affecting bee population.

The 4-year grant is funded through USDA’s Cooperative State Research, Education, and Extension Service (CSREES).

How much are bees worth? According to USDA, their pollination activity is valued at $15 billion annually to U.S. agriculture. The pollinating that bees do is a key to supporting the nation’s food supply.

The U of G project, “Protection of Managed Bees Coordinated Agricultural Project,” aims to improve the health of managed bee populations in agricultural systems.

The research will address genomics, breeding, pathology, immunology and applied ecology to explain the causes behind dwindling bee populations.

Researchers will work closely with the extension community and other stakeholders to develop and implement mitigation strategies for CCD and other significant problems.

CCD became a matter of concern in the winter of 2006-2007 when an estimated 25 percent of the beekeepers in the United States reported major losses of adult bees from their hives.

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Categories
News

Organic Pecan Crops Show Higher Yield

organically grown pecan trees can offer more pecans, better nuts
Courtesy USDA/Scott Bauer

Is a pecan or other nut tree orchard in your future? Consider the opportunities related to another popular and reemerging nut–the chestnut. Read about chestnuts here>>

Learn all about the nuts and bolts of growing trees for produce; crack open Orcharding, a recent release from the Popular Farming Series. Buy your copy online today.

Here’s some good news for current–and future pecan farmers–who want to go organic.

According to USDA Agricultural Research Service scientists, organically treated test trees out-yielded the conventionally managed, chemically fertilized orchard in each of the past five years.

Specifically, the organic test site surpassed the commercial orchard by 18 pounds per tree in 2005, and by 12 pounds per tree in 2007.

According to the ARS, “The conventional management system generates about $1,750 per acre when the crop is sold. But the ARS certified-organic-management system would gross $5,290 per acre.

“These greater dollar returns prove that adopting an organic system and obtaining certification could provide more income for pecan growers, thanks to increased yields and improved kernel quality.”

Considering that U.S. growers provide about 90 percent of the world’s pecans (according to ARS), with an annual crop of about 200 million pounds worth about $400 million, this is good news for pecan farmers or those interested in beginning their own pecan farm.

Read more about the ARS’s pecan research here>> ARS is a scientific research agency in the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

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Categories
News

Videos and Tips on Chain Saws from Husqvarna

Husqvarna gives three tips on handling chain saws
Courtesy Husqvarna

More Chain Saw Safety
Visit Husqvarna online for:

Watch a Video
Watch videos on starting and sharpening a chain saw here>> 

Safety on your mind…
Chain saws aren’t the only thing on the farm that require attention to safety.

Hobby Farms' Farm Safety Checklist

Download Sue Weaver’s farm-safety checklist to get you on the right track.

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Do you know how to handle a chain saw safely?

Husqvarna, one of the world’s largest producers chain saws and other outdoor products, has held chain saw demo days at its dealer centers to help consumers learn first-hand chain saw skills, techniques and safety tips.

Three Basic Safety Tips
Three critical items Husqvarna instructs you to do before you start up your chain saw include:

  1. Always wear protective clothing: work gloves, eye and ear protection, chain saw protective pants or chaps, helmet and boots.
  2. When cutting, stand on firm ground to the side of the saw furthest from the chain. Keep an escape route open, in case the tree unexpectedly shifts or rolls. Never stand on a log pile while cutting.
  3. When cutting a pile of wood, watch the position of the chain saw tip. Make sure the chain saw tip does not come in contact with any logs behind the one you are cutting. Such contact may cause the saw to “kickback.”

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Before You Buy a Chain Saw

Things to keep in mind when buying a chain saw:

  • Safety. Using the correct techniques when you work makes your work a great deal safer and easier. Ask your Husqvarna dealer for Husqvarna’s material on chain saw techniques. Be sure to use approved protective clothing.
  • The first question you should ask is how the saw will be used: professionally, for private use, etc. This will determine which type and size of saw you should choose.
  • Weight and engine size. Remember that a light saw is easier to maneuver if you’re not too experienced. But don’t choose too small an engine: more power gets the job done faster, even if you’re “just” sawing wood.
  • Size and hardness of the wood. Select a bar length based on the size of the trees. The stronger the engine, the longer the bar you can combine it with.
  • Ergonomic engineering and design. Low vibration levels in the handle, a slim, well-balanced saw body and a high center of gravity are welcome features, even if you only use the saw for part of the day. Good ergonomics can be just as important as low weight.
  • Safety features. Efficient kickback protection is a requirement in most countries, but how easy is it to replace a chain catcher stud that has been broken off?
  • Do you work in winter? Winterization, for instance with heated handles, makes work more efficient and comfortable.
  • Is the saw easy to maintain and service? Good access to the air filter and spark plug, and chain tensioning from the side save time and effort.

Source: Husqvarna, one of the world’s largest producers of lawn mowers, chain saws and portable gas-powered garden equipment such as trimmers and blowers.

For more information about chain saws and other outdoor equipment visit Husqvarna’s Master Your Great Outdoors website.

Read an interview with Dave Zerfoss, president of Husqvarna Forest & Garden.

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Categories
News

Cloned Animals Safe Says FDA

Cloned animals may be used for food, according to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), but organic production is not affected.

Producing food from clones remains prohibited under the National Organic Program (NOP).

The Organic Trade Association (OTA) reacted to the FDA announcement by reconfirming its support of the use of traditional processes for breeding and raising animals and noting its long-standing opposition to cloning.

The FDA decision opens the door to the use of cloned animals in livestock in the U.S. food supply.

One early report from the largest U.S. meat producer, Tyson Foods Inc., states that it has no plans currently to buy cloned livestock.

Read More:
OTA stand on FDA decision
Information on NOP and organics
Report from Tyson and related

FDA says cloned animals safe

Online Organic Resources
Click to continue>>

Learn all about organic farming!
Add Popular Farming Series: Organic Farm to your gardening reading shelf.

Categories
Crops & Gardening

Identify and Create Your Garden Theme

By Rick Gush

Plan a garden theme

In This Article …

Portuguese Landscaping: Retail nursery workers in California during the ‘60s used this ignorant term to describe the haphazard way that most homeowners planted their gardens.

“One plant of everything they liked in the nursery,” the savants would snicker.

What they were referring to was the way that too many different elements in a garden create a sense of clutter that prevents the garden from achieving the calm and elegant serenity that a good garden design can provide. 

Actually, gardens in Portugal tend to be the opposite of cluttered: They are generally simple arrangements with repeated structural elements and plant use and an occasional brilliant flash of color that collectively creates the idyllic calmness of a great garden.

By contrast, what American gardeners usually produce might–most politely–be called a “cottage garden” effect, with a cacophony of materials, textures and colors, splashed awkwardly across the demarcated rectangle that is the yard.

This hodgepodge arrangement is the natural way our gardens evolve. With a little foresight and self-control, any garden or farm can be transformed into a more powerful presentation. This forced calmness can make any farm garden more impressive and beautiful.

Obviously, a good garden provides enjoyment for the residents, but improving a farm garden can have beneficial effects on a farm business as well.

Visitors will automatically perceive the whole farm as more powerful, more vibrant, and more successful if it has attractive and well-maintained grounds. If a small farmer derives some of their income from on-site sales of their products, a more organized and powerful-looking garden will give customers a greater sense of confidence in the farmer’s products.

What Is a Theme?
People often think a garden is made up of just plants and trees, but the physical structures found in the garden are equal partners, and even the most tasteful plantings won’t bring together a great garden if the buildings, fences and assorted structures of barns and outbuildings are themselves a grab-bag of styles.

5 Transplanting Tips
Garden FenceTransplanting isn’t really so difficult, and the ability to make significant adjustments to existing trees and shrubs can have dramatic, positive results for an older yard.

With a reasonable amount of care, transplanters should average about a 75 percent success rate.

  1. Make sure to protect the trunk and any branches that might get damaged during the lifting process. Cut the tree back as much as 50 percent prior to digging, if possible.
  2. The hardest work is digging the rootball.  A good job here will make the move easier and the transplantee happier.  Remember to plan the job according to how much weight you can move.
  3. Use Vitamin B1 and light fertilizer both before and after digging.  Once replanted, water enough to wet the soil, but do not give too much water for the first few weeks or months, unless the season is very dry.
  4. A good idea is to dig in stages, say one-third at first, then another third in a month, and the final third a month later. This gradual digging lets the plant grow more functioning roots in the rootball area.
  5. Choose the right season to transplant. Late fall or winter is the best transplanting season for most deciduous and coniferous plants, but spring or summer is best for palms and evergreens like citrus.

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On the other hand, structures made of similar construction materials and painted in a farm-wide color scheme present the perfect backdrop for a stunning planting arrangement.

The components of a garden are like the spices and ingredients of a recipe. Good cooks know that a delicious dish is most often created by combining only a few key ingredients and spices, while novice cooks often use too many different ingredients, adding this spice and that in a poorly targeted attempt to create a tasty combination. For example, marjoram might be a wonderful flavor, but it doesn’t combine well with just anything; when mixed with too many other spices and flavors, it can easily be lost or produce awkward flavor combinations.

The same is true in gardens. The theme is like the recipe; a good balance of structural elements, paint colors and planting materials makes a great garden.

A garden theme, then, is a deliberately short list of desirable elements. What color will the buildings be? What color will the trim be? What structural materials will be favored? What trees will be used? Where will the shrubs be planted? What species will make up the bulk of the plantings, and what species will be the focal points?

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The Power of Repetition
The most effective tool in propagating a theme in a garden is the repetitive use of thematic elements. As delightful as a multitude of different and interesting species scattered about may be, a more homogenous garden is more relaxing and has a more powerful aspect. The same rule is true of the structural elements. A garden with a green fence, a white barn and a yellow house looks messier than a garden with all the structures painted according to a deliberate scheme. 

Once a theme has been decided upon, it should be propagated. This means that if all the other outbuildings are painted white, it’s a good idea to paint the new chicken coop white also. If some structures include different building materials, steps should be taken to de-emphasize the unlike-materials. A theme is usually not imposed instantly on a garden, rather it’s found, nurtured and gradually propagated.

Certain pleasing elements within the existing garden are favored and encouraged, and other less appropriate elements are phased out. Propagating a theme is a gradual process.

Hardly anybody builds their dream garden from scratch; we usually inherit a mixed collection of buildings and plantings, then we proceed to modify the arrangement to suit our own needs.  Imposing a theme on a farm garden and property is almost always a matter of figuring out ways to make all of the disparate elements in a farm garden more uniform.

A good exercise to use when evaluating one’s garden is to take a walk around the yard.

Garden TrellisMake a Nursery: 4 Tips
Because the worst-looking part of many gardens is the accumulated clutter of potted plants, making a deliberate nursery area is a great cleansing action that results in an instantly better looking garden.

We can’t seem to stop collecting cute little plants in pots, but there’s no reason that tendency should ruin our garden’s potential.

  1. If at all possible, locate the nursery so it receives morning sun, as this is the most gentle light. Too much sun or too much shade are both bad for nurseries.
  2. Keep a hose handy, preferably one for nursery use only. For zealots, an automated drip irrigation system is marvellous for potted plants.
  3. Situate the planks or other bench structures so the pots sit high off the ground. This makes the plants easier to care for and observe.
  4. Shadecloth or other overhead coverings can also protect the nursery from falling debris. Side panels can protect from prevailing winds.

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Note each of the different elements, both plants and structures, and ask if each of those elements should be part of the desired theme. If so, determine if there other locations in the garden where it might be appropriate to consider using that element again. In other words, if you see some bricks you like, think about where else in the garden bricks might be added.

Keep the same farm of mind when observing and selecting plants. Unless you’re building a botanical garden, selecting too many plant species is inappropriate. A powerful garden is made by resisting the collector’s impulse; scattering our botanical discoveries around the garden may amuse the horticultural explorer in us, but it won’t make our gardens look nice.

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Aesthetic Mistakes to Avoid (and 2 Tricks!)
When attempting to build a more powerful garden, there are a few traps to avoid. One common aesthetic “mistake” gardeners often make is using too many commonly available, pre-made materials. Custom-made elements are always preferable. In the case of trellises, using the inexpensive trellises available at big box store nurseries may save a few dollars, but custom-built trellises–painted according to the thematic plan–will be infinitely more pleasing.
 
Storage sheds create a similar problem; inexpensive storage sheds built from a kit will always look exactly like inexpensive storage sheds and are unlikely to add to the charm of any farm. There’s something about the sight of a cheap storage shed that makes visitors think, “Hey, I saw one just like that on sale for $129 last week!” That’s hardly a thought appropriate while visiting a breathtaking garden. On the other hand, a cute little, custom-built storage shed easily adds a great deal of charisma to a small farm garden. 

Clever gardeners know how to paint an inexpensive trellis to quickly create a custom piece, and many gardeners use decorative coverings to mask their cheap storage sheds. Very clever gardeners would use this shed-disguising project as an opportunity to propagate their theme, perhaps constructing their trellises from the same wood that shows on the house eaves.

The two main tricks used in propagating a theme in a garden are:

  1. transplanting misplaced trees and plants, and
  2. making a place to hide the clutter. It’s sad to see a yard held hostage by a pre-existing plant growing in the wrong place, and nothing brings down a garden more quickly than the sight of a rusty bicycle and a pile of unused garden pots.

Most gardeners are reluctant to transplant trees and shrubs in their yards. The task sometimes seems both physically and botanically difficult, and gardeners can be unsure as to whether the transplanted plants will survive.
 
Often, the transplanted tree’s survival is actually of little real importance because removing a tree that is blocking a viewpoint automatically provides a more powerful garden arrangement. Transplanting isn’t really difficult (see sidebar for tips), but too casual an approach isn’t best either. Yes, a bunch of dirt must be dug with the roots, and yes, moving that big mass of dirt and plant can be cumbersome and awkward. But, if you have a tractor or can borrow one from a neighbor, most transplantings, even of large trees, can be accomplished with reasonable ease. The results can be stupendous.

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Find Ways to Manage Clutter
Most of us are messy garden managers, and we strew our patios, porches, and exterior walls with all those extra toys and tools with which we amuse ourselves.
 
We have a tendency to accumulate things of variable usefulness, from the old boat motor we’re going to fix up some day to the rusty bicycles that don’t get used much to the half-used bags of barbecue briquettes and the inevitable collection of old garden pots.

Having acknowledged our own slovenliness, the first step to a more pleasing garden is simply hiding the clutter. As far as hiding the clutter is concerned, this can be done by creating deliberate areas, out of view of the garden center, where the accumulated debris of life can be inoffensively stored. Behind the barn, inside a shed or along the north wall, any garden will offer a variety of potential choices. A short section of new fence can create a new angle with any building–and a great deal of material can be concealed behind a fence.

Hide the clutter! It’s a simple plan, but it works remarkably well. Just cleaning up all the distracting elements will automatically make any garden more attractive, restful and welcoming.

Hiding the clutter of a collection of plants in pots is a slightly different matter, but the positive results are equally impressive.  The facts are that almost all groupings of potted plants look messy.  Some of the plants may grow and flower abundantly, but the overall results will be mixed at best.  Removing all the cluttery groups of potted plants from the porches and patios can have an amazing effect on a garden. The best place for a collection of potted plants is in a dedicated nursery area, which is a very easy thing to construct. You’ll need only a few planks mounted in a nice area that receives morning sun (see sidebar for simple instructions).

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Will We Still Ignore All This Advice?
It’s amusing how easy it is to preach the virtues of powerful garden design through simplicity and uniformity, but for most of us this is just a dream, a reality that’s almost impossible to put into effect. A whole range of different natural instincts within us push us towards cacophonous gardens. We’re cheap and we have a hard time resisting “cost-effective” solutions.  We’re suckers for a puppy and the little almond tree in the nursery looks just like a puppy to us.

We’re lazy, we lead incredibly busy lives and it takes an extreme focus to accomplish most projects, which means that they get postponed.  Most of us love our gardens and have very romantic imaginations; this means that a garden project conceived is almost as good as a garden project completed.

The homeowner may proudly announce “We’re putting the koi pond and Japanese garden over there.” As they say this they can fully imagine the pond and garden in all its glory, but the guest will only see the patch of weeds that the space really is at the present moment.

It’s unlikely that our gardens will ever develop to their full potential, but even taking a few steps in the right direction can bring forth a new, more pleasing garden. The Camelot that is a perfectly realized garden can remain our unobtainable dream.

Portuguese Landscaping … don’t we wish.

About the Author: Rick Gush is a regular Hobby Farms and Hobby Farm Home contributor, freelance writer, designer and small farmer based in Italy.

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For more articles like this one, consider reading
Hobby Farm Home. You can buy a copy of the current issue online or find one in a bookstore or farm supply store near you.