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7/30/2011

Small Farm & PYO Potential

This is a photo, not a painting, of a u-pick in Washington. So pretty!


1st step is developing a small section for personal use. Next, decide on a basic strategy: u-pick or not. Since it's a small farm, we'll probably be most successful in specialties and not mainstream varieties.

With u-pick, we'll need a plan for excess fruit: beer, wine, jam, fresh wholesale, dried, juice / ciders, chutney. Possibly we'd like to start our own nursury stock for on-farm use, online sale &/or retail sale. There's not much u-pick in northeast Alabama, possibly because residents typically grow their own, but there's a fair amount of thru traffic between Memphis/Florence and Hunstville.

  • blueberries - perrenial, can sell fresh, dried, wine, beer, jam, frozen, or juice, easy to grow organic??
  • blackberries - perrenial, highly perishable, can sell fresh, dried, wine, beer, jam, frozen, or juice, well suited for growing in Alabama?
  • figs - perrenial, easy to grow organic, highly perishable, can sell fresh, dried, or jam
  • kiwis- perrenial, highly perishable, can sell fresh or juiced
  • muscadines - perrenial, can sell fresh, dried, wine, jam, or juiced
  • watermelons - very good selling price, good market in Alabama
  • pumpkins - would make Kaitlyn very happy, good late season u-pick item
  • pecan trees - takes 7-10 years to start getting fruit, beautiful tree, possible timber value much later
  • other fruit trees: have 3 white peach trees already

With non u-pick, we'd probably want to specialize & develop cultivars best suited for Alabama & sell online to specialty grocery stores & restaurants.

    • green onion - good market rate, easy to grow organic
    • parsley, basil, and other herbs - good market rate, somewhat easy to grow organic, highly perishable
    • garlic - would be interested in varietal plantings of gourmet and selling to grocers, restaurants, and online
    • kale
    • asparagus - perrenial, love this veggie

Regional Annual Avg Daily Traffic

County Population

Regional Climate
Alabama Wine Tour (we're the pink dot)

Here's a link to a great blueberry reference guide for Alabama:
http://www.agrisk.umn.edu/cache/ARL01713.htm

7/04/2011

Puerto Rico Vacation - Agenda Ideas

In a nutshell, Puerto Rico is an American territory (no passport needed); square shaped island, 40mi (N-S) x 110mi (E-W), with several small surrounding islands. Spanish is the main language though the dialet differs from Mexico having been infuenced by Africa, Spain, Armendian, & US.  Approximately 20% of the population speaks fluent English. The median income is $19,000. The landscape is mostly mountainous with coastal beaches to the north & south. The highest point is 4,393 ft. Caverns are located to the north west, rain forest to east, & the world's largest dry coastal forest to the south. The Puerto Rican Trench is the deepest trench in the Atlantic, 5.2 miles deep, found 71 miles north of the island. Average annual temperature is 82 degress without much variation. Baseball & cock fighting are big sports, pork & plantains are common foods, and music & dance (tango) are also big. San Juan is the 4th largest port in the Western Hemisphere & has been subject to many attacks throughout history, thus all the forts.Fort La Fortaleza:  The last 170 governors have resided here, oldest mansion in New World (1533). A World Heritage site.

Fort San Felipe del Morro (see top picture)


Fort San Cristóbal: built in 1797, once walled the entire city of San Juan but 1/3 was demolished in 1897 to ease traffic


El Yunque Dwarf Rainforest: Only rainforest on island. Located in large
park on east end of island. Yunque is in the center of this park.


San Pedrito:  rain forest bird


Coquí: rain forest tree frog


Cock fights: Hosted at Club Gallistico (San Juan) and in Salnia (southern islan).

Mona Island: Snorkling & rock climbing, pristine coral reefs & underwater caverns. Half way b/w Dominican Republic & Puerto rico, about 25 miles off shore


Mosquito (Phosphorescent) Bay at Vieques island: 5 miles east of main island, accessible by ferry. Vieques is a military base though mostly empty. Iguanas & horses roam the island. The 3rd picture is of 300 yr old Ceiba tree. The bio bay is claimed to be most impressive on Viegue island but others can be found at Lajas in La Pargera on southern part of the main Puerto Rico island & Fajardas on the eastern part of the main Puerto Rico island. Some claim the most beatiful beaches in the Carribean are found on Vieques island.



Café Restaurant La Nueva Union: 35 miles west of San Juan. Famous for goat stew, coconut flan, octopus salad & bbq pork.


Historic City of Ponce: Southern part of island, 2nd largest city, known for it's architecture (& crime, like San Juan)



Playa Flamenca: claimed as 1 of Puerto Rico’s prettiest beaches – about 10 miles east of main island of Puerto Rico

Arecibo: NW part of island. Home of the world's largest radio telescope


Camuy: NW part of island. Known for caves & caverns. Puerto Rico hosts the worlds largest underwater river? (not sure if reliable source)



Luquillo: public beach on eastern part of island w/ reef swimming & view of rainforest & easy access to ferry


Caja de Muertos Island: Uninhabited but beautiful small island 5 mi south from Ponce. Known for turtle traffic.

Plantations: Coffee, sugar cane, & tobacco, some museums & some still in operation open for tours. Coffee is still widely made here.


Puerto Rico Museum of Art:


Noche de Bohemia & Canvas Resturaunt: in central part of island, Caguas, Puerto Rico Big on tango & maracas. Other good restaurants- Ostra Cosa, The Parrot Club, Dragonfly, & Tantra.


El Convento Hotel In San Juan: 350 yrs old & $120 - $150 / night.



Cathedral of San Juan-Basilica built in 1520. 2nd oldest (building or church?) in Western Hemisphere, oldest in Dominican Republic.


Casa Blanca gardens: are supposed to be spectacular. Structure orignally meant to house Ponce De Leon but he died before hand. Housed his discendants until 1700s.


Paseo de la Princesa: a very pretty park/promenade in Old San Juan


6/26/2011

New Land

We purchased ~9.5 acres of land in North Alabama recently with a stream and a moderate amount of trees (unlike the heavily forested google image). Still deciding how best to use it since it's 1.5 hours from home and won't have day-to-day care.
One idea we're tossing around is pecan trees:
  1. Beautiful
  2. Eat and sell pecans from years 7-30
  3. Timber value after 30 years (around when we retire)
Visited the property last weekend and an Army Corp of Engineer contracter was overseeing trees being hauled away after the tornados. We spoke for quite some time, and he was insistent on the value of pecan trees. He even quoted a timber value at $10/ft for board. I queston the accuracy of this quote (sounds terribly high), but prompts further investigation into the orchard then timber concept.
As you can see, there's a lot of fallen trees: around 30 total. Planning to call a lumber company and see if they're worth anything.
While we were visiting last weekend, a little beagle puppy followed us around all day. So cute, so shy. He seemed homeless (all cute dogs with no collars do), but the neighbor's grand-daughter was so eager to take care of him, he think he's in good hands.
Here's Mark cranking up his new chain saw. It's a little rough around the edges but does the trick (on part of 1 tree, that's the extent of testing thus far).
Our neighbors to one side have cows, to another have a horse, and to the other have chickens, just a few on the loose. Snapped a shot of them SLOWLY crossing the road.
Upon inventigating of pecan plantings and tree nursery's in the area, came across Westervelt timber company in Tuscaloosa, Al that grows 6,500,000 loblolly pine seedlings/yr on 17 acres to keep their 500,000 acres in max production. Had to look at the picture a few times to make sure I was seeing it correctly, thought it was a field of grass. Very neat.

4/03/2011

Organic Pesticide - Ladybugs

If you see these rascals in your garden, their friend not foe for the vegetable gardener. These baby ladybugs will eat tons of aphids as well as other soft bodied insects including caterpillars.

3/12/2011

Nasturtium Flowers


Lipstick Nasturtium Flower
 I'm a bit of a utlilitarian gardener you might say. However, I do want a pretty garden. My idea of pretty might not be everyone's idea of pretty, but I do try to keep that in mind. This year, I've tried to be utilitarian and a bit more pretty at the same time, thus Nastirtium flowers come into the picture. They're an extremely hardy edible annual. Leaves and flowers can be used in salads. Seeds can be used in place of capers. I'm going to try to be open minded and actually try eating these guys.

The leaves look like lily pads. The plants attract the aphids away from the veggies. They're supposedly blind simple to grow. Time will tell. We purchased the following:
  1. Papaya Cream - compact, good for borders
  2. Lipstick
  3. Jewel - compact, good for borders

Nasturtium Ravioli Antipasto from CafeNilson.com


2/02/2011

Seeds Arrived


Our seeds arrived today from R.H. Shumways. My daughter and I went to the Botanical Gardens where they had a large selection of seed catelogs. R.H. Shumways old school looks caught our eye, then the 5 free pack of seeds with $20 order won us over.

Almost time to start the cold hardy spring plants either outdoors or inside for later transplant. The experimental varieties were the freebies. They didn't indicate variety name on those, only descriptions. I'm guessing they don't have names yet. Strangely, they didn't ask us to give feedback on the "experimental" varities.

PlantVariety
PeaExperimental
Snow PeaMammoth Melting Sugar
Squash MedlyButterstick, Clarimore, Goldbar, Sungreen
TomatoExperimental Hybrid Med. Red Determinate
TomatoGoliath Hybrid 'Pio' Large Red Indeterminate
CucumberBush Pickle Monoecious
BeanExperimental Green Bush
ArugulaRocket
KaleDwarf Curled Scotch
Radish MedleySparkler, White Icicle, Easter Egg II, French Breakfast, Champion, Early Scarlet Globe
CarrotsSweetness III Hybrid Orange
BasilExperimental Dwarf Blend
BeetsBull's Blood - Red, Round
Pak ChoiWhite Stem
CornTrinity Hybrid se+
CornExperimental Hybrid se+

Then here's some saved from last year
Oregano
Spinach Mustard
Cilantro
OkraHeirloom (from Mark's uncle)
OkraStewart Zee Best (cajun)
OkraBowling Red
CornSilverqueen
DillMammoth

1/23/2011

Winter Garden

Ok, so now that it's the new year, it's a little too late to start a winter garden, but winter's on my mind, so winter garden planning I will do (for next year of course).

Here's a list of winter plants in order of cold hardiness according to Eliot Coleman. I plan to update this based on my personal experience once I've tested these specific varieties. In my experience though parsely belongs at top of list; turnips, mustards, collards above lettuce, and kale earns a high place on the list.

SEQCROPCULTIVARSUPPLIER
1MacheVitJ
2ScallionWhite SpearJ
3SpinachSpaceC,J
4Tatsoi J,S
5CarrotNapoliI
6Claytonia C,J
7SorrelDe BellevilleC
8ChardAgentataS
9Minutinia C,J
10LettuceSamanthaJ
11BeetsRed AceJ
12ArugulaSelvaticaC,J,S
13EsceroleCoralJ
14EndiveSalad KingJ
15RaddichioAugustoJ
16ChicoryBiancaJ
17ParsleyRicciaJ
18MizunaForest GreenC,J,S
19Dandelion C
20TurnipAmelioreJ
21MustardHakurei, Red GiantC,J,S

C = Cook's Garden
J = Johnny's Selected Seeds
S = Shepherd's Garden Seeds

Crop Rotation Sample Plans

This book contains many example crop rotation plans.
Haven't had a chance to review it myself yet.

Example 1:
1) Peas & Beans-> 2) Cabbage -> 3) Corn -> 4) Potato -> 5) Squash -> 6) Roots -> 7) Beans -> 8) Tomatoes

Green manures started as undersowing for matching #
1) Clovers -> 2) White Clovers -> 3) Soybeans -> 4) Rye -> 5) Sweet Clover -> 6) White Clover -> 7) Vetch -> 8) Oats

Example 2:
Potato -> Peas & Beans -> Brassica -> Green Manure -> Onions -> Root Crops
Manure before potato. Lime before legumes. Compost before brassicas.

Reasoning:
Legumes benefit from loosened soil from potato. Brassicas benefit from nitrogen. Onions are ok to compact soil from brassicas. Root crops beenfit from loosening from onions.

Example 3:
Potato -> Squash -> Carrots -> Peas & Beans -> Corn

Reasoning:
Potatoes and squash are cleaner crops meaning they smother weeds. Carrots are poor competors to weeds so perform well proceeding cleaner crop. Root crops loosen the soil which legumes benefit from. Carrots are usually a negative preceeding crop but legumes are immune. Legumes add nitrogen to the soil which is good for the heavy nitrogen feeders such as corn.

1/22/2011

Recipe Nutrition


Tortellini Soup From Pioneer Woman

Found a website for determining the nutritional content of home cooked meals. You plug in ingredients, then it calculates the nutritional content. I love it. Although a little time consuming, if you're health consciouse like me and like to keep all your favorite recipes written down anyway, this site is perfect.
Click below link to see an example nutritional content posting for this recipe then click "All Nutrients"
http://recipenutrition.com/MRBshowRecipe.aspx?recno=20122&bck=2&recname=Tricolor%20Tortellini%20Soup

11/20/2010

Nice Quote & Architecture

Falling Water, Bear Run, Pennsylvania, Frank Lloyd Wright

"He who permits himself to tell a lie once, finds it much easier to do it a second and third time, till at length it becomes habitual; he tells lies without attending to it, and truths without the world's believing him. This falsehood of tongue leads to that of the heart, and in time depraves all its good dispositions." - Thomas Jefferson

Fall Garden - Onions & Garlic

Intermediate Day Length Onion Sampler 
Onions are one of my favorite plants to grow since they're available for picking scallions half the year, take up little space, and are practically pest free.  Although I plant all storage varieties, usually half my onions are grown for bulbs and half for scallions. We have scallions available throughout the winter, spring, and summer.

Although ACES, the Alabama County Extension office, suggests you just grow short day varieties, this year I plan to experiment with some intermediate day length varieties too. Short day onions are triggered into "bulbing" during the short 10-12 hour day lengths of winter while intermediate at 12-14. I'll post back how the intermediate's perform in central Alabama.

 
Garlic
For the last several years, I've just planted garlic cloves from the grocery store and purchased onion sets from the local hardware store (always simply referred to as "yellow" or "white"). Today, I branched out and ordered the short day sampler pack and intermediate day sampler pack. 10 dozen onions of the following varieties should be arriving very soon, I hope:

INTERMEDIATE DAY
  • Candy (yellow)
  • Super Star (white)
  • Red Candy Apple (red of course)

 SHORT DAY
  • Texas 1015Y (yellow)
  • Contessa (white)
  • Hybrid Southern Belle (red)
Detroit Beets
SPACE
Garlic and onion 2"X10" apart.
10 dozen onions = 120 plants = 240" row = 20' row
20 garlic cloves = 40" row = 3.5' row.

COST
The garlic was free since we used leftover cloves from last year's harvest. They've sprouted nicely already. Just today, ordered 10 dozen onions for $14.00 including shipping from Dixondale farms in Texas. Not bad.

Next year, I'll try to track down a nice garlic sampler pack and maybe even some leeks although I've been pretty pleased with the grocery store garlic variety so far.

Grand Rapids Lettuce & Rabbiteye Blueberry