Playing favorites

Last week Tuesday night we saw overnight temperatures in the mid-30’s. I chanced it and didn’t cover anything, but Thursday night when a low of 27 was predicted I drug out the bedsheets. All of the container plants I could manage got drug into the garage. The rest were draped with bath towels and blankets. Madeline’s edible landscape project got covered with black fabric I use for a photo shoot backdrop. I’m just not ready to give up having all of those fresh herbs right by the front door, and the gem marigolds are still really pretty.

Certain things got harvested. All of the melons. The bell peppers, the jalapenos. Any tomato that had even started to blush.

And then it was time to cover what we could in the garden. But there aren’t enough sheets to cover our entire garden – so what to cover? It was time to pick favorites.

The Amish pasta tomatoes got top priority, because I’m needing a whole lot more of their slow roasted goodness for my freezer yet. Chile peppers similarly ranked high, once again for their roasting value. The celery got a sheet. It’s the first time we’ve grown celery, but we haven’t yet harvested any. And then I started doling out the few remaining sheets to the best looking tomato plants. It was a good thing, because that frost came just as predicted.

Today’s high? According to my car, it was 90 degrees at 5:00 this afternoon. From Carharts to shorts again in 2 days. Gotta love Iowa weather.

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It's a wrap

So the Big Melon Project is almost wrapped up. Your last “clue” is…look for us in the pages of Country Gardens Magazine! It won’t be for about a year, but of course I’ll be mentioning it here when our issue is on the newsstands. The CG crew was here for a few days this week for a photo shoot. It was a fun experience, very interesting to see how much goes into a single magazine article.

And now, to get back in the saddle. Hoping to have a little more time to blog again.

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At long last…

I’m typing to you from my new laptop. I don’t have access to my pictures from it yet, so just text for tonight. But I can tell you I am thoroughly enjoying it, as one does when one has saved up their pennies whilst banging their head on the desk in frustration as one coddled the old computer along way longer than one should have for as long as I have. That really awful sentence just doesn’t come close to describing it. But hopefully you get the gist. I am happy to have it, and happy I didn’t succumb to a credit card or payment plan just to have it sooner.

I want to direct your attention to a new blog on the scene, Newton Boer Goats by my cousin’s wife. She’s mainly showcasing her photography skills while contemplating a career in that direction, but as a young couple getting started in farming and raising meat goats she’s got a lot of good blogging material to pull from.

Sadly, though, my time for blogging will be sparse as the Big Melon Project comes to fruition. (Ha) I realize I’ve only mentioned the Big Melon Project in passing without many hints as to what I’m talking about. I’m still not going to give you the deets yet, but here’s a pretty generous hint. It involves an editor, a “creative design director”, a photographer, and a food stylist. And I am in full panic mode at this point. Will the melons be ripe enough? Over ripe? Are there enough of them? Is our garden photogenic enough? Did these people know what they were doing when they asked to work with us?

Today Madeline and I picked, scalded, skinned, cored, seeded and pureed enough tomatoes to can 8 quarts of spaghetti sauce. 8 quarts doesn’t sound like that much, but anyone who’s done it knows just how many tomatoes it takes to make 8 quarts of puree. And we didn’t actually get the sauce canned, just the tomato puree done. All the while my mind raced with the things yet to be done for the Big Melon Project. And so this post over at Casaubon’s Book was very timely for me today:

“So when people ask me “how do I do it?” The only possible answer is – I don’t. My life doesn’t look like what you are thinking. That is, the reason I put up that food was because yesterday, I blew off the book, 50 unanswered emails and 3 foot weeds in my garden to do food preservation. Today, I’m blowing off the still uncanned raspberry sauce, the weeds, and the book to write this post, and then homeschool the kids. Every time I am doing something, I’m letting something else lapse, usually something that probably shouldn’t. Right at the moment, I’m praying that the couple who are renovating our garage into a goat barn won’t have to pee at all, so that they don’t see my bathroom. The house has been sacked. I have no idea what we are eating for lunch – we have tomatoes, eggplant and beer. I don’t think good Mommies feed their children beer for lunch, so I guess we’ll be having eggplant ;-).

The reason I can do what I do is that I have a committed (probably ready to be committed) husband who can do much of his work from home, because I’m always more than willing to neglect the housework, and because I work from home. But mostly, because I’m comfortable with chaos.”

Go and read the whole post here. I’ll be practicing my deep breathing and embracing the chaos.

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Found

by the girls, in the corncrib when they were converting it into a “clubhouse”.

I think I’ll be invoking eminent domain and sniping this treasure for myself.

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2-Minute Warning

If you’re wanting beef or pork before the end of the year, let us know soon! We only have 2 quarters of beef, 1 beef bundle, and 1-1/2 hogs left for this year. Otherwise we’ll have beef again in February and early March, but those slots are filling fast as well. Pork we won’t have again until probably early April.

I’m running low on inventory, so I’ll only be at the Mason City Farmers Market every other week until October. See the list of dates to the left. In October I’ll be there every weekend, with pork and maybe a few chickens if I have extras. Otherwise chickens are pretty well sold out for the year. The Farmers Market was a big success for us this year. Thank you to everyone who gave us a try! We’ll be back next year for sure.

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Three's a crowd

Two of the muscovey ducks and a white rock hen are trying to hatch the same clutch of eggs.

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If cuteness could kill

we’d all be dead by now. And the killers names would be Smokey, Candy, Dexter, Sammy, and their mother, Casper. Especially that little blue-eyed calico girl, Candy. She’s especially dangerous.

Dexter, showing why this flower box is not looking nearly this pretty these days.

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Ready

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Hurricane Ridge

Seattle is a pretty cool place in that you are a short drive from two different mountain ranges. Mt. Rainier is in the Cascades, and Hurricane Ridge is in the Olympics. We visited Hurricane Ridge on Day 4 of our trip, so named because of the hurricane force winds it sometimes experiences. The skies were overcast that day, which made for some interesting effects at 5400 feet.

The view went from this…

to this…

to this in a matter of minutes. (Again, those flowers and meadows make me want to yodel.) And then it rained on our way back down the mountain.

There’s a fun website that shows the current view from Hurricane Ridge 24/7:
Hurricane Ridge Webcam

From there we went back to sea level to visit the Point Wilson lighthouse. The original light was atop the caretakers house, built in 1859. The lighthouse was built in 1913 and the light was moved there. In 1976 the light operation was automated and the lighthouse building closed to the public.

My computer and camera are in another snit, but hopefully I’ll have a few more photos to share tomorrow. (Come on, new laptop, get here already!)

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Mt. Rainier

Backing up to Day 2 of the trip, we spent the whole day at Mt. Rainier – 14,410 feet high. Scientists think it was originally 2000 feet higher but lost its original peak in a volcanic blast. It boasts 26 active glaciers. Luckily we had perfect, clear weather – we were told that it wasn’t often one could see Mt. Rainier this clearly.

There was breathtaking view…

after breathtaking view…

LaGrande Dam on the Nisqually River

Beautiful waterfalls

The Henry M. Jackson Memorial Visitors Center at Paradise on the mountain. This is as far up the mountain as you can go by car – at about 5100 feet. This building is to be torn down soon and replaced by a new, more energy efficient visitors center.

This douglas fir cross section was interesting. Major events in history were marked by its rings…

…from its birth…

…to its death.

The meadows and wild flowers made me want to braid my hair and romp through the grass like Heidi.

A very awe-inspiring day for this flatlander!

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