We knew the time was coming. The weather today was much too perfect to ignore. We had to attempt mowing our 7 acres of yard – and today was the today. Honestly – we didn’t think that the yard actually needed to be mowed yet. It just didn’t look that shaggy. But we borrowed my mom’s zero-turn mower for a test drive …
Planning the North Garden
The North garden is already proving to be quite the undertaking. We knew when we started plowing and tilling that the garden space next to our barn was massive. Despite warnings, we acknowledged how much work it would be, but continued ahead. So far – it’s amazing. We’re getting our first look at just how much we’re planting and what …
This Week on the Farm: March 30 – April 5, 2020
While the weather jumps sporadically between warm sun and nice breezes to freezing rain and dreary gray skies – we’re keeping busy with Springtime work. This week, the farm continued to make slow but sure progress – specifically in the garden, greenhouse and chicken coop. Aaron and I celebrated our first wedding anniversary I’m pretty sure I’ve mentioned many times that it …
Planting the Three Sisters
In planning our garden, Aaron’s stepmom Debbie recommended the Three Sisters. Being on a big companion planting kick, I thought the bright idea sounded pretty solid. Naturally, I dove headfirst into some research to figure out how to make the most of our South garden. What I found was the Three Sisters plus a pair of flower sisters that really …
Day 20: Coronavirus Quarantine
Yesterday, I stole a few minutes to write in Isai’s baby book. The difference, this month, is that we’re under Coronavirus quarantine on the farm. “Safe in place” orders are keeping people in their homes while the world scrambles to react to the Coronavirus pandemic. I can’t describe how strange it feels to try to document this time in our …
Whoa, We Have a Garden Map
We may have tilled a way-too-large garden. Aaron paused for a plow break while working on the chicken coop and enjoying the sunshine last weekend. He fired up the tractor, hooked up the old plow behind the pole barn and took the first stabs into the dirt where the farm’s garden has traditionally been planted. The grass and weeds that …