Sunday, June 30, 2019

Summer Fun: Tales of entertainment

This one Little Tykes slide has been the source of many hours of entertainment and new games over the years. Thank you Little Tykes for making something so durable. 
First ripe cherry tomato!
My cats are regularly enjoying the catnip that I planted in the garden. I wanted the cats to WANT to hang out in the garden to make sure that we did not have any trouble with voles in the sweet potatoes again.  Catnip attracts them like nothing else... though I am not sure they are in a state to catch voles after they eat it.
For people, catnip is effective as an herbal remedy for intestinal issues and is a calming sleep-aid gentle enough for children. It is an ingredient in some herbal colic remedies. For cats on the other hand, it makes them a little crazy rolling about and needing to be petted.
 The kids wrote and acted out a play for us last week.  It was about a shark who attacks unicorns.
 It had musical accompaniment from A and M. 
 It had a happy ending where they all worked out their differences.
 We took the kids to see "The Other Side of Heaven 2" this weekend.
It was not quite as good as the first one. Great funny parts, lovely spiritual message, and I felt, their was a great message of acting in solidarity with good people of other faiths. 
Christopher Gorham and Natalie Medlock in The Other Side of Heaven 2: Fire of Faith (2019)

Tuesday, June 25, 2019

Farm Fresh: June in the garden

Tiger 2 is so lovable and fat and lazy.  He gets lots of attention and looks a bit like Garfield.  I have seen him catch a few things and eat them so I guess he is earning his keep. 

Peas for dinner. Peas for snack. The kids love making little picnics with the peas and blueberries. Sometimes I get them to help shell them for dinner.
So many chickens... two more friends brought us their chickens since they are moving away. That means we are up to about 60+ now (2 x 20 incubator babies, some broody mama hatchlings, and about 20 from friends moving).  We will keep them over the summer, pick our 12 favs and sell the rest to the halal folks as winter rolls in.
This has been a good garden year so far. I am enjoying the ease of the Amish style long rows.  They are all mulched and not too bad for weeding. 
  There are 2 x 70ft rows of various tomatoes.  I made myself leave plenty of space between the plants this time. So far so good.  We are going to have a big tidal wave of romas in a couple weeks. The big beef, cherry, carbon, and moskvich are all putting on decent amounts of fruit already too.
Onions and carrots in one long row just like last year.  I have been using the thinnings in soups and salads.  Fresh carrot greens smell so wonderful.
 New asparagus patch with some late beans along the fence line.
I have been working on creating beds around the edges of the garden. I am filling them with perennial herbs and flowers... as much as possible.
 Feverfew and valerian:
 Chinese forget-me-nots are annuals, but they are so pretty and are supposed to self sow.  It was easy enough to start a big plug tray of them and then I had 50 little starts to add color all around the yard.
 Getting these Calendulas started was quite a struggle. I started them directly in the ground (per packet instructions) but then I had to fence them until they were big enough to stand the chickens scratching around them.
This year's compost-in-place aka. weed & manure pile is almost ready for growing melons.  
 Purple sage.
 Gomphrena -- trying these out as a flower for dried arrangements.
And in my spare time, I am making slow and steady progress on the new front garden beds. On the right side are (starting at the back corner) rows of: parsley, cilantro/coriander, papalo, horehound, holy basil, german chamomile, Saint John's Wort, summer savory, and thyme... with a few johnny jumps thrown in. 


 Nettle and purslane (with a couple bee balms in the center) in big planters. I love eating nettle, but I definitely don't want it to start growing all over the yard.
On the lefts side are various types of basil, chives, german chamomile, a few leeks, evening primrose, cranesbill (perennial) geraniums. Catmint is running along the log. The big pots have a bay laurel and a rau ram plant.
Everyone who comes to our house asks me about the water bottles.  Why are they there? Turns out that my dogs (and to a lesser extent the chickens) LOVE to dig and lay in freshly dug soil. It's hot. The soil is cooler. I get it. But oh my does it make me mad when they ruin a newly planted area.  The water bottles are my solution to that problem.  I station them around each newly planted area or single plant to make it less appealing for digging.  It is working well so far.

In the orchard the elderberries are coming in well. 
The comfrey patch has passed its prime, but it was gorgeous with all its purple blossoms. 
 The area where I first planted comfrey is completely filled in now.  I have 50 more starts sprouting under the grow lights.  I will put those around my other fruit trees.  In the foreground is my new strawberry patch for next year.
 Putting all those leaves around my fig worked!  It is already fruiting! We will finally have a fig crop.
 The newly transplanted old blueberry bushes look happy in their new sunnier location.
 Wild raspberries are growing all around the edge of the yard.
 I have also been adding a few shade plants to the part of the front landscaping that I am calling my "woodland garden".  Too many English cottage gardening books, I know.  Lots more to do on that area.
 The paw paw trees. 

Sunday, June 9, 2019

Field Trip: Calvert Cliffs State Park (aka hunting for shark teeth and fossils) and Reunions in Georgetown

Saturday was a perfect day for playing at the beach and combing through the sand for fossils and shark teeth.  
  Here is a little information about the cliffs from their website:
The massive cliffs, from which Calvert Cliffs State Park was named, dominate the shoreline of the Chesapeake Bay for roughly 24 miles in Calvert County. They were formed over 10 to 20 million years ago when all of Southern Maryland was covered by a warm, shallow sea. When the sea receded the cliffs were exposed and began eroding. Today these cliffs reveal the remains of prehistoric species Including sharks, whales, rays, and seabirds that were the size of small airplanes. 
 We went prepared with sifters and shovels.

 
 My future oceanographer was in heaven.
 
 
Success! We found tons of interesting shells and coral and 3 shark teeth.
 Then we headed down to Georgetown to meet up with some of hubby's old friends who were in town sightseeing D.C.   We saw this funny sign for anyone familiar with Studio C. If you have not seen it, check out this episode.
 We had tacos and then ice cream.  Big sister A practiced her new skill and made balloon animals for the kiddos.