Dear Friends,
I am excited to announce the launch of our website this past week, www.mirellarosefarm.ca. As a result, I am ending this blog and starting a new one on the website - it's hard to miss, it's the page at the top of the website that says "Farm Blog". I hope you'll join me over there, to keep up with our farm adventures.
A City Girl Becomes a Farmer holds a special place in my heart, as it journals the first steps we took as farmers, here in the lovely province of Nova Scotia. But now that it's been 2 1/2 years since we moved onto our property, I really am not a city girl any longer. I have butchered chickens, helped harvest 450 lbs of potatoes in 2012 and over 200 lbs of winter squash in both of the past 2 years, cooked down sap into maple syrup, pressed apples into juice, picked several pounds of salad greens in one day (among other vegetables), learned to can, dehydrate and freeze large quantities of a variety of vegetables and fruit, helped build a 1000 sq ft greenhouse, petted cows and pigs (Seriously! I'd never even been near cows or pigs before moving here), watched animals giving birth, experienced animals die, and pick and prepare food for our members each week. And by experiencing all of these things and more, I feel more connected to the earth and the cycle of the seasons than I ever have before. Farmers are a dying breed on this continent, and I am proud that we have increased the numbers even slightly, by taking on this role. It's hard work, but so rewarding. I can't imagine anywhere else I'd rather be.
So I hope you'll continue to follow along with us on our website, and maybe you'll even have the chance to try some of our food. We'd love to share it with you!
Friday, March 29, 2013
Sunday, March 24, 2013
Itching for Spring
The
new cows are integrating well with the existing ones. They're all
together in the same paddock, and are now eating from the same pile
of hay. Everyone seems fine with the new arrangement.
The
pigs are getting big; less than a week to go until we take them to
the butcher. Ginger, the sow, is due to farrow (have babies) in the
next week or two. Orrin built her a house of her own (separate from
the one she was sharing with Buxley), to have her babies in. He put a
bunch of hay in the paddock, and she will use that to build a nest in
her house for the piglets.
We've
got someone coming to stay with us next weekend, for an indefinite
period of time, as kind of a work-share situation. He won't pay rent,
in exchange for helping us out on the farm. So that's prompted us to
get the suite finished as much as possible in the other building, so
that he can stay there. He may be in our house at the start, but
hopefully not for long. So far, we've gotten drywall up in the
bedroom and half-bath (walls and ceiling), and insulation in both
those rooms, as well as insulation in part of the living room. Having
enclosed walls makes it feel like we're really getting something done
over there. Today we swept out the bedroom, and put a bed, dresser
and night stands in there. It'll be rather “cabin-like”, but it's
looking pretty good. We still have to finish the plumbing and
electrical, although both are fairly far along. We've got appliances
in the kitchen and bathroom that are ready to go, once we get the
plumbing and electrical finished up.
There
are lots of salad greens in the greenhouse now. I picked 3 times
this week, picking for our CSA members as well as for friends and
family that wanted to buy a bag of greens from us. The kale in the
greenhouse is looking good, and there's more available of that now,
too.
None
of the onions we planted a couple of weeks ago have come up, except
for the green onions. Orrin did a little research and learned that
onion seed has a pretty low germination rate if it's older than one
year, which ours is. So we'll be planting a whole bunch more this
week, with the newest seed we have.
I'm
looking forward to getting into the garden and starting to prep beds,
but that'll have to wait until the snow is gone. It's been a long
winter, and I'm looking forward to spring.
Monday, March 18, 2013
I'm back!
I'm
going to attempt to resurrect my blog. It's been awhile, but I hope
to write once a week, updating interested folks on what's happening
at Mirella Rose Farm.
With
the time change behind us, it's really starting to feel like spring,
with light later in the evening. We've got big growth in the
greenhouse. We've been able to offer our CSA members lettuce all
winter, except for a couple of the coldest weeks in February. And as
the days grow longer, the growth is much faster now, so we can pick
more. We've also been enjoying carrots in the greenhouse that Orrin
had planted back in July. New lettuce that he planted in January and
February is up and starting to get bigger. We planted turnips and
radishes in there this weekend, for the third time. We're planting
every few weeks to ensure a longer period of availability, once
they're ready to eat.
Last
weekend, Orrin planted approximately 800 onion seeds in soil blocks.
He planted both green onions and storage onions. Within a few days,
the green onions had already sprouted, and are looking healthy and
strong.
Yesterday
we transplanted all of the lettuce out of Bed #6 in the greenhouse
(there are 6 beds total), moving them into empty spaces in other
beds. Then Orrin planted Bed #6 with potatoes. These will be our
early potatoes, ready sometime in June.
Saturday
was also the arrival of our 2 newest additions to the farm, a cow and bull, which are Milking Devons. The cow is bred, due
to calve in early summer. These will be dual-purpose meat and dairy
animals. I look forward to making our own grass-fed butter with the
milk. The milk will mostly go towards fattening pigs.
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| Red leaf lettuce - our big champion of winter. It never seemed to stop growing, even in the coldest part of winter. |
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| Greens in the greenhouse, prepping the far left bed for potato planting this past weekend. |
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| From left to right: Nils, our new bull; Delilah, the new cow; Gigi and Elgie. |
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| Delilah. |
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