Monday, April 7, 2014

Promises

Artichokes
Strawberries
The garden is teasing me with the first of her many promises:
Tomato
Onion
Figs

Sunday, April 6, 2014

Today

I'm harvesting some fantastic lettuce from the garden daily.  I have a tray of transplants ready and waiting...as a lettuce is harvested a lettuce transplant replaces it...along with a small scoop of my awesome new compost.  If all goes well, I'll have daily lettuce until the middle of June and then I'll replant in August for lettuce daily from Fall to Early Summer.  There's just such a short period of time it's too hot for lettuce.  I then turn to roasted corn and black bean salads; tomato, onion and cucumber salads; tomato, basil and mozzarella salads, chilled 3 bean salad, but I do miss a nice crisp leafy salad during that period of time.

Sunday, March 30, 2014

William Thomas Reynolds

Introducing the latest "Little":


6 pounds 6 oz of PERFECT!

Sunday, March 23, 2014

Slot Machine Jackpot!

For my birthday a few weeks ago, my family took me to dinner at the local Native American Casino just a few miles down the road.  After a wonderful dinner, my kids and their kids all headed home.  My husband handed me a $20.00 bill and I went over to the Penny Slots and promptly won $200.  I gave my husband his $20 back and we headed home.  Today I used my winnings for this delivery:




Saturday, March 22, 2014

We Have Spring!

The lilacs, wisteria, roses and tulips are blooming...as are ALL of the fruit tree!  The almond bloom is ending, so the bees have headed my direction! Thank you, thank you!   Although we are still in the worst drought in recorded history, I am hopeful.  Met with my gardening family and friends and we divided up what we will grow this season and will each share with the other...just not enough water to do it all.  I will grow as much as I can, but I'm sure I will run out of water by August.  There will be no sweet corn.  The squash and watermelon will be grown close to the river by a friend.  I'm growing the onions, potatoes, artichokes and green beans.  I will have to wait until the Fall for the cole crops.  Usually I grow a bit of everything and manipulate the plants' environment...can't risk doing it this year...cannot waste a drop of water.  I have enough tomatoes, herbs, lettuces, chard, beets and berries for our own use and will baby them along.

Next Season's Potatoes
New Seeds, New Company
Love, Love, Love The Packaging and Art Work
Non-GMO Sugar Beets...Took Forever
To Find!!

Friday, February 28, 2014

It's Raining!

We have had rain for the last few days!  You can hear the collective sigh of relief throughout the county...heck throughout the STATE!  I know our drought is not over, we still have no water for 3/4 of the land we normally plant.  I am grateful for the rain we're getting: enough for the garden, enough to fill my catchment system to get the garden and fruit orchard through a long hot rainless summer...I'm relieved...thank you, thank you thank you..

Sunday, February 23, 2014

Folks...Ya' Need To Plant A Garden

 Please plant yourself a nice big garden.  The fruits and vegetables you are used to getting at the Supermarket will not be coming out of California this year or if we do manage to make a crop it's going to be so expensive it'll make your bank account weep! You'll need most of your hard earned cash to pay for your meat, milk, grain and eggs... those prices are going to at least double! Our family (and every other farmer) has had our water allotment cut to almost nothing.  We aren't planting rice, corn, alfalfa, sunflowers, no melons, no beans, no cucumbers, no squash...all of our water will be given to our tree crops...hopefully they will survive (we planted new babies in the fall).  Our son's main crop will be processing tomatoes, and he'll only plant 1/4 of the amount he planted last year. More than 3/4 of our land will lay fallow.  Those of us that have farmed for a long while will most likely weather the drought and come out on the other side a bit worse for wear, but in a position to continue farming (when and if the rains come).  Most of the new/young farmers will be destroyed.  They are just starting out, stretched to their limits...no back up plan and no money saved for the bad times...it's the young folks I feel sorry for.  Farmers are an aging commodity...we have so few young folks picking up the reins...and now this horrible drought.  It is so sad.  It will take years and years for the California farming community to recover from this devastating drought...if we ever do.
Fallow Unplanted Fields
No Feed For Cattle---ANYWHERE
I have a couple nice deep wells here on the "home piece"...thank goodness.  My garden and orchard were set up to be very water-wise.  I've always been aware California has a history of very dry years.  The new fruit orchard looks good.  I pulled out the old compost from the raised beds and replaced with nice "new" compost.  I planted one of the beds to a "Winter" garden: chard, kale, lettuce, celery, beets, broccoli, cabbage, herbs and onions.  I am transplanting leeks (12 plants), lettuce (6 plants), endive (6 plants), tomatoes (6 plants), tomatillos (6 plants), pimentos (6 plants), NewMex peppers (6 plants), rainbow chard (6 plants), and romaine lettuce (6 plants).  That's 60 plants.  I plant up a tray of 60 every 6 weeks...that way I always have something in the garden ready to eat...year round!  I have several bins of potatoes planted for year round harvest, too.  The holes in my cinder block raised beds are planted with onions, carrots, beets and lettuce...one plant per hole.  They get nice and big, but stay sweet and juicy! My garden is used mainly for fresh eating. My canning produce comes from the local Summer farmers market I manage.  I get really great deals from the vendors, saves me garden space and time.  I don't know what the market will look like this year because of the drought.  I do have my fingers crossed.
Garden Bed One...The Beginning
Ready For Planting