Happy New Years Eve! Running a day late with the garden update this week, yesterday was rabbit processing day so everything else was put on the back burner. We did little planting this week and used some of the bamboo we harvested last week to start building trellis'. The garden beds are coming along nicely. This weeks weather has been a mixed bag of rain, cool days and warm days. The beds with little babies have been getting closed each night to keep them a little warmer and opened during the sunny days. The beds with freshly planted seeds are kept closed continuously until the seedlings emerge. My hypothesis being it keeps the soil warmer continuously and should give us a better germination rate and stronger start for the new seedlings. As you will see in the photos just about everything is up in GB4 which was planted from seed 12/21/13. I think the Nantes carrots, which take their time, and the gourmet blend lettuce, which was older seed, are the only holdouts.
Tuesday, December 31, 2013
Monday, December 30, 2013
Rabbit Processing Day.......
With the move to our new home I have gotten way behind on butchering rabbits. My old butcher station was a porcelain sink on two saw horses, thanks to my husband Rick, my setup has had a makeover.
My new butchering station is between two sheds. This gave me a wall to mount things on, access to water and shade. The two shelf brackets mounted to the wall are my rabbit station and the orange cone is my chicken station.
Monday, December 23, 2013
As the Garden Grows.......... 12/23/2013
A weekly chronicle of the first year of a new garden.
Scurvy Elephant Farm moved to a new home this fall necessitating starting gardens from scratch. This presents an opportunity to chronicle the process from the start. As life permits Monday's will be "As the Garden Grows" post days.
Without further ado lets get started!
Thursday, December 19, 2013
The Scurvy Elephant Flock.....December 2013
We expanded the flock on the farm this year to include Pekin Ducks, more Buff Geese, Turkeys and more Delaware Chickens. Of these, the only purchased were the eleven Pekin Ducklings. The Buff Geese were from eggs hatched from our original pair. The Turkeys were eggs from a friend that we hatched out. The Delaware Chickens were from eggs from a breeding flock of 5 hens and one rooster that we selected from our original mixed flock. This was our first year incubating and hatching our own eggs. We learned a lot!
Thursday, December 12, 2013
Winterizing the garden, hoop frames and covers installed to grow year round.
Although our winters are mild here in north Florida, we do still get a few freezing nights each year. With the edition of hoop frames and plastic we hope to keep right on growing all winter.
4 - 10ft 3/4 inch grey pvc conduit per frame @ $1.88 each
8 - 18inch pieces of 1/2 inch metal conduit per frame (already had these, I buy 5 ft sections for $1.29 each and use them as garden stakes they outperform wooden stakes by miles! )
1 - 100ft x 10ft roll 6mil plastic sheeting $69 ( we covered 3 frames and have enough left for at least 2 more frames)
1 - 12ft 1 x 4 per frame (used free wood from a local business that puts scrap out for free)
staples
So each frame cover cost aprox $24 to build
Materials for each hoop cold frame
4 - 10ft 3/4 inch grey pvc conduit per frame @ $1.88 each
8 - 18inch pieces of 1/2 inch metal conduit per frame (already had these, I buy 5 ft sections for $1.29 each and use them as garden stakes they outperform wooden stakes by miles! )
1 - 100ft x 10ft roll 6mil plastic sheeting $69 ( we covered 3 frames and have enough left for at least 2 more frames)
1 - 12ft 1 x 4 per frame (used free wood from a local business that puts scrap out for free)
staples
So each frame cover cost aprox $24 to build
Monday, December 9, 2013
A garden is born.......................
I have been without a real garden for a while. We moved to the new property in August, the weekend before the fall semester started. Then I had back surgery, which really slowed the garden progress down. Thanks to a helpful husband and a really mild December, the first four raised beds are built and partially planted.
The project began with free wood I drug home.
The project began with free wood I drug home.
Sunday, December 1, 2013
Prickly Pear Jelly...........
I have been eyeing a rather large Prickly Pear just up the road from the farm ever since we moved in this fall. I comment on the ripening fruit and my desire to turn it into jelly. Thanks to a post from a friend about the need for gloves during this process to avoid bright purple hands, I finally went and picked some today. I am a huge fan of free fruit you can turn into jelly and other goodies!
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