Stripped!

This evening, I headed back to the shed my brother and I patched up, so clean up the maple I had cut away to make it safer for him to get to the ladder.

Normally, I would have just dragged the whole thing over to the still growing pile of wood we plan to have chipped.

I do, however, now have carving tools, and I’ve been reading some articles about the difference in carving with green wood.

Now, when I looked at that tree coming down, I saw it in a completely different light!

I saw cups and small bowls, and spoons, and other such useful things.

So I went back to salvage as much as I could.

It also gave me the opportunity to finally test out my new long handled, ratchet pruners.

Oh, those things were a dream to work with! I easily cut through thicknesses I’d had to use a saw for, previously.

After trimming away and cleaning up, I brought the pieces I wanted to keep to the house.

I had one large piece, and a couple of smaller ones.

With the wood so fresh, I wanted to debark the pieces right away. I wanted to get that done right away, as I figured even waiting until tomorrow, they would be harder to debark At this point, the bark came off so easily, I used mostly just my fingers, with a knife to get the odd bits started.

When I got to the big piece, my daughters came out to give me a hand. :-)

That wood is just so beautiful!! It’s incredibly smooth, and such a lovely colour. I look forward to figuring out what to do with them.

The pieces will sit outside overnight, and then will be moved to the basement. On days when I can’t work outside, I’ll see what I can come up with!

I have an old friend that has been carving for 30 years. He carves things like faces onto walking sticks, and the most wonderful, life-like birds, he later paints. After he found out I got a carving kit, we talked shop for a while, and one of the things he recommended was to start with basswood.

That would be the smart thing to do.

Starting with a hard wood like maple is certainly not recommended!

Aside from the spoon blank that came with my kit, though, I have no basswood, and my reason for wanting to take up carving is to use the wood we have.

Right now, that’s maple!

My brother visited our mom on his way home, and filled her in on what we did here at the farm. She was quite excited about it and phoned me later on. As we were talking, I mentioned having to cut away part of a tree that’s growing out from under the shed, telling her that I hoped to use it for carving, rather than letting the wood go to waste. She asked what I planned to carve, and I told her maybe some small bowls or cups, etc.

She requested a mushroom! :-D

So when I next have a chance to practice carving, I will try and carve a morel mushroom for my mother. :-)

It should be fun!

The Re-Farmer

Nooooot quite!

My daughter and I went into the shed to get the door I was thinking of using to replace the broken door on the sun room.

The replacement door is in pretty good shape, and even has complete hinges attached, so we took the old door off, hinges and all.

We did not, however, replace it quite yet.

The replacement door is about 2 inches wider.

It is, however, a wooden door, and we do have a circular saw. It was given to us last year, and we’ve yet to use it. Once the weather is calmer, I want to get the old saw horses out of the garage that are matching heights, and we’ll cut the hinge side of the replacement door to the correct width. It’s a temporary measure. Cutting the door will mean that side will be weaker, but we’re not in a position to buy a replacement door. The inside door will do to keep the weather out, for the most part, but it doesn’t close well, either.

Speaking of weather, it’s gotten wild and windy out there since this morning! My daughter and I walked around the yard (I found new deer damage, this time to one of the tamaracks. The bark was torn away all around the trunk, so it’s dead), and I noticed a fair few things blown around since I went through the same areas this morning. We noticed one of the spruce trees is starting to come up at the roots, making it another to keep an eye on. We also looked at where we were thinking to build the cordwood outdoor bathroom we are planning on. The ground is uneven there, but we’ll be removing the sod and leveling it with gravel, sand and some sort of base (possibly paving stones or concrete) before we build. There are a number of old tree stumps around the area, so we might be clearing out dead roots in the process.

We also talked about when we can get the tree guys back to take down three dead spruce trees that are of most concern; two nearer the house, and one near the garage. We were quoted at $750 to get all three done. Depending on what other expenses come up in the next while, we might be able to do that by the end of May. It’d be nice if we could get the wood piles chipped, too, but that was another $650. The live tree in front of the kitchen window that keeps overgrowing the roof and dropping branches was also quoted at $650, all on its own. That tree can probably wait a few years, but the dead tree removal and the chipping is something we really should do sooner rather than later.

Which gets me to thinking about our need to replace the roof. With all these things that need to be done, that’s money that isn’t getting set aside to replace the roof.

So many things, pulling at the budget, and so many of them are urgent or essential.

Hhhmmm… Thinking of removing trees to protect buildings, I sit here watching the wind blowing the branches of one of the maples outside my window. Among my goals, as we are able, is to take down some of the lower, heavy branches. The main trunk of this maple leans heavily, and I’m hoping that by removing the weight, it will prevent the tree from breaking in these winds and extend its life. Maples like a good pruning!

So much to do, and I’m really looking forward to the work! :-)

The Re-Farmer

Starting more seeds

My goals for the day changed significantly, with our sad dealings with kittens, but I did manage to accomplish one main thing on my to-do list.

I got the second round of seeds started, with the hopeful expectation of transplanting 3 weeks from now. Weather willing.

I was surprised by how many gourd seeds there were in the packet. I figured I wouldn’t plant all of them, though. Even just 5 plants would be enough for starting out the things I have in mind for them.

It… almost worked out that way.

The bent straws show there the different seed types are. The squash packet with the most seeds were the sunburst squash, which are planted on the left. In the centre are the summer surprise mix. I had somehow expected more of those, but that will still be lots for our needs.

Then I just finished off the tray with the birdhouse gourd seeds. I ended up with only 2 seeds left unplanted!

This is a LOT of squash to be planting. We’ll see how many germinate, and how many survive transplanting. Conditions are not exactly ideal here, and I just sort of assume we’ll have losses. If not…

I’m going to have to find lots of ways to preserve summer squash! :-D

As for the birdhouse gourds, this is something that we can’t even use for a year. The gourds need that time to dry out before they can be scrubbed, sanitized (everything I’ve read mentions having to clean mold off the gourds first) and be ready for various projects.

Between the gourds and the giant sunflower heads we’re planting for bird seed, we’re going to have to find a lot of space to store these over the winter!

With the mama cats indoors, I am thinking that, over the next few days, I should move the cat bowls out of the sun room, then move the mini-greenhouse and the planting trays into there. With the doors fully closed, it will be much warmer in there, plus they will get more like 8 or 9 hours of direct sunlight, compared to the 4 hours in the morning they get in the living room. Plus, it’ll be easier to harden them off from there.

This is all new stuff for me so, at this point, I’ll be happy with a 50% success rate! :-D

The Re-Farmer

Our mysterious van

I got a call from the garage today, about our van.

Once again, he drove it around and examined it on the lift.

Nothing.

Not a knock. Not a shudder.

The van is running fine.

The only thing he could find, after going over the entire front end, was a minor tear in the front driver’s side boot (bellows). It’s something that is good to get fixed before it causes problems later, but it could not be what caused the knocking and shuddering that was happening before I dropped it off, because there wasn’t any at all when he drove it.

He cannot find anything that could have caused that noise or shuddering. Anything that normally could have caused it, is fine.

I asked about our theory that mud had kicked up in there and got into something, but after the van sat as long as it did, things melted and whatever it was had simply fallen off. He said it was possible, but he didn’t sound very confident about it.

So I asked him to let me know how much it would cost to fix boot, since I may as well get that done while it’s there! He said he’d get back to me, but he wasn’t able to before he closed, so I expect to hear from him tomorrow.

I was able to describe to him more about how it handled throughout the day, and how it went from some odd noises to suddenly being so bad, it was alarming just to drive across the road. How could it have been so bad, so fast, and now nothing? He is very perplexed as well.

I just don’t understand it.

I do hope we can get this done and fixed tomorrow, because we need to go into town, and I don’t want to make multiple trips with my mother’s car.

Thank God the things we do need to do aren’t urgent or anything! I will be much happier when we have our van back, though.

What a mystery our van has become!

The Re-Farmer

A day of rest – and crochet yarn bowls!

Usually, my daughter works a short shift on Sundays, so I spend time in town as part of keeping Sunday as a day of rest. It feels weird to not be doing that, but the pharmacy is now closed on Sundays. It’s also totally messing with my sense of time! :-D

When my husband called in his prescription refills, he was asked to get our daughter to pick them up during her break, so we figured she was getting another weekday to make up for the loss of Sundays.

We were wrong.

Her hours have been cut back to just 3 shifts every 2 weeks. The pharmacist must have assumed she’d be in. I’ll just have to make a special trip in to town for the refills.

I just checked the government website. An $82 Billion aid package was recently passed to help people who are struggling financially due to the Wuhan virus shut downs. Last I saw, people who lost more that 8 hours a week could get aid, but that was before the bill was completed and passed. That is gone now. She’s have to lose all hours completely, in order to qualify for aid. :-/ Thankfully, she’s okay with that.

Once again, I am so incredibly thankful for my husband’s excellent private insurance disability payments. That and living here on the farm, where we pay “rent” by taking care of the place.

Last night, I managed to find a Canadian Orthodox Lutheran church service for this 5th Sunday of Lent to watch this morning. Celebrating Easter this year is going to be another strange one. No blessing of the baskets at church this year!

One of the things I decided to do to recharge my batteries today was finish a small crochet project; a yarn basket. I’ve made three slightly different versions of them so far, and am quite enjoying the process.

Here is the first one I made. (click on the images to see them better)

I used 2 strands of Handicrafter Cotton yarn, which holds structural shapes quite well. (I can get the little skeins of this yarn at a dollar store in town, but have to go to the city to be able to get the large skeins it also comes in.) I had no pattern, but saw one on Pinterest and realized it was just a simple bowl shape with an opening for the working ends of yarn.

This is the one I just finished.

This is actually the third one I’ve made, and the first where I added an extra colour. I wanted to use up some of the little balls of yarn I had left over from other projects.

I like to reball my yarn into centre pull balls, and the first yarn bowl I made was large enough to hold two full sized and one little centre pull ball of yarn. Having the yarn threaded through the opening in the bowl helps keep it flowing smoothly – especially when using multiple strands at once.

It also helps protect my yarn from cats! :-D

The second one I made used one strand of solid gray and one strand of variegated yarn that included the same shade of grey in its colours. My daughter picked that one for herself. :-) Each bowl is slightly different in size and shape as I experimented with the design.

I’m quite happy with how these are turning out. They are great to work on while watching a movie or something, since they’re made almost entirely with one stitch, and require very little counting.

Tomorrow, it’s back to work. The girls plan to do baking, so I plan to head out and shovel away the drift in front of the barn doors, so we have someplace to store the things we will be taking out of the basement. Then it’s time to start clearing things out, so that we can clean it and turn it into …

A maternity ward. From the looks of her, Butterscotch is pregnant, and may have kittens before things melt away and dry up enough to empty and clean out the sun room, so we can use it as a maternity ward like we did last year. Plus, we have to get Two-Face indoors as quick as we can. She’s booked to be spayed in mid April, but there’s a risk of her going into her first heat before then.

*sigh*

So we’ll have inside cats, outside cats and basement cats!

The Re-Farmer

Thinking of Spring

It’s taken us a couple of years, but we feel we are at a point where we can start doing some actual gardening.

Last might, the girls and I went over our Vesey’s catalog and placed our order.

We really had to exercise restraint in the process! There are so many things we’d like to plant, but we’re just not ready for them.

When selecting what we’d like to get, we had several considerations to take into account.

First, we mostly limited ourselves to growing things that will be eaten. With limited areas we can plant in, we want to get the most out of that space. Over the years, we will plan out areas for things like bee and butterfly flower gardens, as well as utilizing flowers that deter deer. For now, however, we’ll stick to food.

With the spaces we have right now, we decided to not get any fruit trees or berry bushes, either. We’ve got the haskap we planted last year, but it looks like one of them died in the fall. If so, we’ll replace that one, but that’s the extent of our perennial food plants for this year. We’ll continue to work with what is already here, though we are aiming to eventually plant many of these sorts of things.

As we went through the selections, we also asked ourselves things like, will we actually eat this enough to make it worth growing ourselves? Will they grow in the spaces we have? Will they need to be started indoors? How long is their growing season? According to the notation with our address on the catalog, they rate us at Zone 2a, but looking at the zone map on the Vesey website, we’re actually firmly in a 3b zone, so that does open up our choices a bit. Still, there are many things we’d like to grow that we’ll have to wait until we can create micro-climate zones, or acquire a greenhouse.

So this is what we finally settled on.

A Coloured Carrot Collection. Regular carrots are cheap and easy to find, so if we’re going to plant carrots, it may as well be varieties we can’t find in the grocery store! This collection includes Deep Purple, Rainbow (a range of yellows and oranges) and White Satin. That’s a lot of carrots, but we use them in a lot of things, and if we have enough for winter storage, that’ll be good, too! Winter storage is not a major goal for this year, though.

Cucamelon. This is one of our “try something new” things. We’ve never actually seen any, other than in photos! I know someone who has grown them, they did really well for him, and he quite enjoyed them. They are supposed to be very productive and disease resistant, too. I’m really looking forward to seeing what these taste like!

Summer Surprise Mix Squash. Unlike most of the collections they have, this one has a “surprise” mix of 5 different types of zucchini. At least it looks like 5 different types in their photo, though the description lists only 4; “dark green, light green, yellow and striped zucchini“. Young zucchini is something we enjoy eating, but the ones from the store tend to be expensive, and go squishy way too fast. The challenge is going to be keeping the plants under control! :-D I’m aiming to build a trellis for them, and limit the number of plants. Hopefully, we’ll be able to tell the seeds apart enough to try to get one of each, at least.

Sunburst Squash. This is something we’ve tried to grow on our balcony in the past, with limited success. We don’t see them often in the grocery stores, and when we do, they’re awfully expensive, so it’ll be good to have our own supply.

Sunflowers: Early Russian and Giganteus. We chose these two varieties for very specific reasons. One, they grow really, really huge. Two, they can withstand high winds, and are recommended as wind breaks. They will be planted along the north and east sides of the old garden area, where there is less tree coverage to block winds and provide privacy from road traffic. And finally, three: both varieties are good for bird seed. The heads can be harvested and left to dry as they are, and we will be able to hang them up for the birds throughout the winter, as needed. We’ll just have to figure out how to store them! :-)

Fennel: Orion Fennel is one of those things we’d love to buy more often, but either the budget is too tight, or they’re simply not available.

Yukon Gem Potatoes. This is another one where the produce is so easy to find and relatively cheap (though the cost of potatoes has certainly gone up, lately!) that, if we’re going to grow them, we may as well grow a variety we can’t find in the stores. We quite enjoy yellow flesh potatoes, and this variety is more disease resistant. In the future, we plan to try out other interesting varieties as well. We probably won’t get these with the rest of our order, as they get shipped after all danger of frost is past, so they can be planted right away. We are also looking to inter-plant them with marigolds, which deter the Colorado Potato Beetle. For the marigolds, we’ll just buy transplants from a garden centre.

Coloured Beet Collection. This collection includes the varieties Merlin (a dark red), Boldor (golden yellow), and Chioggia (alternating rings of purple and white). Beets are one of those things we don’t actually eat a lot of, but would like to. I keep looking at them in the grocery store, but can’t usually justify getting them, when there are other things I need more. So these are basically a treat vegetable! :-)

Parsley: Starlette. I don’t use fresh herbs as often as I’d like, mostly because what we buy at the store just doesn’t keep well. I’ve picked up fresh herbs for a specific recipe, only to find them covered in mold by the next morning! Eventually, we plan to have many herbs, but for now, we will start with parsley. We chose this specific variety because it’s supposed to handle adverse weather conditions well, and have a longer shelf life after harvesting.

Bird House Gourds. This one was an extra I chose for myself, as I plan to make things with them. It’s a long term project, as the gourds need to sit for something like a year after they’ve been harvested, then have to be cleaned and scoured before they can be used for projects. I have a number of projects in mind for them, so I hope it works out. I’ve never grown gourds, before!

Lawn Mower Blade and Tool Sharpener. Okay, I did have to get at least one non-seed item! I saw the state of the blade on our push mower, and it’s pretty horrific. A lot of other yard and garden tools around here could use a good sharpening, too. This is a drill attachment, with a reversible wheel, and should last long enough for 10 lawnmower blade sharpenings. Since I’m sure the blades of the riding mower need sharpening, too, this will come in very handy!

So that’s it. This is what we are planning to grow this year. We’ve managed a mix of the familiar and the novel, the tried and true and the experimental. This is on top of a few things that we already have here, such as onions, chives, horseradish and grapes.

Hmm. I do hope the grapes survived the winter! I guess will find out, soon enough.

After two years of hacking and slashing things as we clean up the mess around the yard, it’ll feel really good to start planting and growing!

The Re-Farmer

Recommended: Liziqi

Hello, and welcome to my first “Recommended” post! I plan to do these every week for now. Whether I do it more or less often, or drop it completely, will be up to you and your feedback, dear reader! So do feel free to leave a comment below. If you have your own favorite resources to recommend, leave information in the comments and I’ll check it out for possible future posts.

I hope you find these recommendations as useful and enjoyable as I have!

My first recommendation just has to be the first YouTube channel I found that completely enchanted me! Until recently, I hardly ever watched YouTube videos, and only followed people I actually knew in person. I can’t even remember how I came across this channel, but once I did, I kept coming back, eventually working my way through 2 years of videos – and wanting more!

The Liziqi channel has been around since 2017, and is one of several similar channels from China I now follow (the others will have their own Recommended posts!).

While many of the videos are centered around food and cooking, there are also videos on making a warm, woolen cape, building furniture out of bamboo, traditional silk embroidery, and building a cob oven. Quite a range! Liziqi’s very first video was about making a dress – but first using grape skins to dye the fabric!

There are many things about these videos that are appealing.

One of the first things that stands out is the entire atmosphere of the videos. Just watching them leaves you with a feeling of peace. Even if you never want to actually do the things featured in the videos, they are a pleasure to watch. There is no narration. With a couple of exceptions in topic, no one speaking to the camera. Just LiZiqi doing her thing – and doing it beautifully!

Another thing that blows me away about these videos are the tools she uses. Her main tool in many videos is a massive cleaver that gets used to bash things flat or chop through bones one moment, then finely shave food into the most delicate of pieces the next. Many of the tools she uses have clearly been used for many years, if not generations. In fact, it’s almost a surprise when she brings out modern tools, like a cordless drill, or takes things in and out of a refrigerator.

I think one of the things that I find wonderful about these videos, is how they often run from the very beginning of something, through to the final product. And by “very beginning” I give you the following video as an example: How to Make Salted Duck Egg Yolk Sauce.

First, acquire fertilized duck eggs, and get a chicken to brood them…

See what I mean?

Watching these videos leaves me incredibly inspired. It’s not just about the things she makes, but the entire process. That perfection in the smallest of details. The videos are so beautifully filmed and edited, it makes the simple act of cleaning out a wok or picking produce from the garden look gorgeous.

Also, Grandma is adorable.

I definitely recommend checking out the Liziqi YouTube channel. Don’t be surprised if you find yourself wanting to go through all the videos!

The Re-Farmer

The past few days

First up, an update on Two Face and her neck wound. It’s looking really good today, but she wouldn’t stop moving enough for me to even look too closely, never mind get a picture, so I’ll have to make do with this one from yesterday.

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Hmm… this could be why

First up, I just wanted to let people know that Two Face’s injury was looking really good today. It was hard to see it, not only because she wouldn’t stop moving, but because the fur around the injury is cleaner and fluffy enough to hide the patch of missing fur, almost completely. We did apply an antibiotic cream to it last night, but that was more of a just-in-case, than a need.

She is going to be just fine.

The rest of us… not so much, it seems! LOL

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Planning ahead

There is a project we’ve started talking about, potentially to do this coming summer. I wasn’t going to bring it up here on the blog yet, because I know how quickly plans can change. After our latest escapade with the septic troubles, however, we’re extra motivated to get it done, as quickly as possible.

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