Richard Lane, Jane Barker, Breagh and Cameron Lane have moved from the Isles of Arran and Skye on the west coast of Scotland to Caledonia, Nova Scotia in the Maritimes of Canada.
Tuesday, November 2, 2010
Deep Sighs
Jane is working fairly full-time for the Mersey Tobeatic Research Institute (MTRI) creating a group of owners of woodlots certified to FSC standards. I think she's enjoying it, doesn't talk about much else now anyway! I've been working with webprogrammingsolutions.com providing web build and programming for design agencies, primarily on the US west coast. You might think that LA, San Fran, Palm Springs and Seattle would be hoaching with programmer types, but apparently designers have trouble finding folk to do the work accurately, on time and in budget - we're probably mucho cheapo too :-)
In fact, this is the first time I feel like I've had time to draw breath for a while. There has been so much that I could have reported on over the summer, Cam's first place in Provincial 4H woodwork, and Breagh's 2nd in photography, my return to cycling and success in the scything competition etc.
What's on my mind a lot though, is this balance between income generation and the rest of life. We had to to earn a bit more cash, but now, we're both working full-time, and we won't be able to run a market garden next year. Is that really what we're here for? I'm back to sitting in front of a computer for 12 hours day and I haven't been out in my canoe all year. I think we came to the decision that really, until the kids leave home, we have to concentrate on earning a living, hope to put a bit of cash away, and chip away at the infrastructure. The alternative is to live cheaply and work less, but that isn't the kids vision, it's ours. With hindsight, maybe we should have bought a house in town and stuck at good paying jobs, then bought a big woodlot with lake frontage and room for a cabin as a weekend retreat and 'retirement' destination... on the other hand, maybe we just need to work at balancing work and income, chores and recreation, and enjoy the farm!
On the upside, we managed to cut, split and stack firewood for the year in a couple of wonderful days in the wood. We have poured a concrete floor in one stable, made 30lb of sausages, 2 full sides of bacon and the freezers are stuffed with pork, beef, chicken, fruit and veg. Beer brewing, we're just about ready for winter... bring it on!
Tuesday, June 1, 2010
Roundup
What else? 100lb of seed potatoes are in the ground in 3 long rows, 3' apart - we spread horse muck to about 4 inches and disc harrowed it in, then I ran the tiller over it with the furrower on, placed the potatoes with at least 18" spacing, and covered them up to a few inches depth. The furrower is also a hiller, so I'm hoping that when the time comes to mound soil on the growing haulms, I can run it between the rows and do two sides at once.
The Queens County Farmers' Market has been running two weeks now and even when it's quiet, can earn a few dollars - we've just about covered the cost of the seed already, but we've been selling our transplants which do seem to sell well - it'll be quiet now until the veg starts cropping properly (nearly have peas though!). We could easily have sold twice as many tomato plants. It's just finding the time to plant and tend for lots of seedlings... maybe next year we take orders. The market is a bind though, and I have a idea of establishing a small self-serve farm shop here. We could sell eggs and veg direct, have a box scheme pickup, I could try some bedding plants and we could even sell some frozen meat of our own, or from friends locally. For the future...
More pressing is the imminent arrival of this years piglets and chicks. Chicks are due on the 11th, pigs are due for pickup week commencing Sat. 19th. The chicks will be indoors for a few weeks, then out - we have a house and fence for the meat birds, but I have to come up with something for the new flock of layers. The pigs will probably go straight out, but I want to create a moveable hurdle fence to restrict them when they are still small.
We had a run in with a fox. I looked down the farm the other night to see him/her wandering off with a hen in his gob. The following night, we were keeping an eye out, but in a flash he was inside the fence! Jane and I plus two clueless dogs hurtled to the rescue. I got to within a few feet of him, before he shook free of the fence and streaked off across the field. We brought the hens back up closer to the barn and electrified the net - he hasn't been back yet.
We had an interesting walk through the woods with a local guy who won the Woodlot Owner of the Year a couple of years back. It's amazing what we have when you take the time to look, and I feel a blog entry coming about the woods.
There's a gap in IT work this morning, so I think I'll take the opportunity to get out and cut grass in the plot. I've been out with the scythe more, but this is a job for the flail mower!
Monday, May 3, 2010
Spring with a Vengeance
With no further ado, preamble or farting around, Spring, with it's over long task list is upon us. The black flies are upon us too, making the task list into more than chores.
This past weekend, in volcanic temperatures (well, above 30deg anyway), we spent Saturday making a start on pruning the 600+ pear trees in our newly acquired 1 acre pear orchard. A local farmer decided that they were too much work for him, and offered the orchard to us. This is potentially a lot of work, for not a huge monetary reward - so, what else is new, it matches the rest of my life. What is exciting, though, is the prospect of making more pear cider, perry, than we can feasibly drink (ed. doubt it).
I also managed to get the field behind the house ploughed and disced with the old tractor. My ploughing isn't going to win any plooboy laddy prizes, but hey... The field needs a huge quantity of horse muck, and luckily we know a man with immense quantities of horse muck. Then I can plant my potatoes.
The other big task this weekend was felling, logging, drilling and plugging some hardwood logs (ash and maple growing in the wrong place) with mushroom spawn dowels. We have a mixture of shiitake and elm oyster and I have prepared 12 logs. They still need to be sealed with cheese wax and planted end-up in a special grove I have created in the woods, hopefully shady and damp enough for them to develop. Then we wait and see.
The new greenhouse is up and inflated. The beds are nearly finished and we've had the tomatoes out there on a bench for a week or so. Seed planting continues apace.
The horses are on the move; grazing them on smaller areas of pasture but keeping them moving with electric fence in an attempt to lessen the bad influence they have on my pasture. Chickens too, the mobile house is mobile again. This years meat birds (18) and additional layers (24) are ordered, and 2 Berkshire piglets are scheduled to arrive in June.
Thursday, April 1, 2010
just stuff
Spring is with us, and it has been great start to the year - dry and warm. The lakes are open, we have heard peepers and loons in the last couple of days, crocus and daffs are blooming and even the grass in the field has started to come away. I got the top field clipped off, but am still pinching out rocks that the frost heaves to the surface to wreck unwary mowers.
It's easter weekend and it should be torrential rain in a traditional Arran sense, but the forecast is for sun and temperatures averaging 22deg :-)
The new greenhouse is still coming along, but shouldn't take too much more work in time to fill with transplants for sale.
The kids have been very busy. Cameron won his Grade 6 Science Fair and went on to the regional finals where he came away with a prize. Breagh designed a 'peace poster' which went on to Provincial level and was given an 'honourable mention' - they framed it for her and is currently on display in the school. Cam was headhunted to play drums and played a gig at Westfield Hall last week with Billy Martin & Old Country - they want him to sit in whenever he can! Breagh is working on her Heritage Fair projects. They are both in full swing with 4H, in particular the public speaking component just now.
What else? Well, with Jane's work and my interest in woodland, we've been out at a few workshops recently. Last weekend we went to Windhorse Farm in Lunenburg County. Jim Drescher manages a 100 acre block of old growth woodland which has been continually harvested for over 100 years, and serves as a model of sustainable approach to forestry. The woodland with big trees, diverse species mix and regenerating younger woods accessed by low impact sawdust paths, and extracted by horses is a lovely place to spend time, and indeed in addition to selling timber products, they also provide retreat and conference facilities. The whole place was really inspiring and a privilege to visit.
Friday, February 19, 2010
Dream Farming
The principal of the programme is that the presenter, Monty Don, tries to help folk who want to 'get back to the land' put solid business ideas together for the farm or smallholding that they own. I've often thought that this could be a successful commercial venture, in fact, or even better, a free service to be offered by Agricultural Colleges! Unless you inherit an existing farm business, or are an exceptionally focussed entrepreneur, trying to work out what is actually going to pay the bills from the land is daunting.
Monty Don is obviously of the 'do it now and think about the problems later' school which comes of having experience and confidence. Most of the participants have neither and he becomes frustrated with their reticence. It's easy to say "get some cows", but if you are strapped for cash, how are you to pay for them, how are you going to make your fences stock-proof, will they have a roof over their heads, and how are you going to round them up and restrain them for essential maintenance?
Despite this, he's right - it is the right attitude to have, because problem anticipation = paralysis = energy drain.
It's all relevant at the moment. Jane is currently working full-time for MTRI (www.merseytobeatic.ca) and I'm torn between building my web business back up, or concentrating on making the farm pay. Practically, I'm going to have to do both!
So, Farm Plan 2010:
- double (at least) the number of laying hens, need more mobile houses built
- cost out producing meat birds for other people, in addition to our own
- new greenhouse to go up, first concentrate on transplants for sale in spring
- garlic crop went in the ground last fall, research adding value
- ordered a dozen fruit trees to create a new orchard in fall 2010
- need at least one beef creetur for Cam's 4H project
- looking for a jersey / guernsey house cow for ourselves, but there is also an obvious market for smallholder cows - breeding stock?
- more pigs - loved the pigs last year - consider upping the numbers to 4? Breeding sow?
- veg sales - farmers market again, but also develop farm gate sales and CSA
- we have a lovely south facing slope, perfect for grapes or hops - need to research the market
- make the woodland work for us, mushrooms, ginseng, rustic furniture making? Plus our own firewood needs of course.
- acre of barley, for brewing, feed, and straw. Hope for a hay crop too.
- put a system of managed intensive grazing in place to improve pasture. Needs fencing!
That's not everything, but it's quite a lot to be getting on with! Must go and have a lie down...
Friday, January 1, 2010
Happy New Year!
