Monday, May 14, 2018

Mother's Day Presents!

My children are always my favorite Mother's Day's Gifts. 

Talking on the phone for over an hour to my son who lives 6 hours away was wonderful. 

The home made flower bouquet made by my daughter and her going with me to pick out more herb seeds was great too.


As  you can see I secreted away some other veg too while I was at it!

Some women have vast shoe or hand bag collections, I hoard seeds. I don't mind too much, and my family get tasty dinners and snacks from it all so they are happy as well. 

As I tend the young plants and seedlings each morning I snip a pinch of this and a pinch of that off the herbs that are popping up more rapidly every day now.

I love herbs! When I was younger, I did not value them as much as I have in the last 20 years or so. I have learned that a healthy variety of fresh herbs added to your meals packs a powerful nutritional punch. The surprising combinations one can come up with for tea recipes is also an unexpected benefit of my obsession.

Here is a my list of herb seed gifts from Mother's Day:
Cilantro
Chives
Rosemary
Oregano
Marjoram
Sage
Mint
Catnip

and then the two fruity veg:
Early White Bush Scallop Squash ( a white patty pan type)
Black Beauty Eggplant

I can't wait to get out the bucket of soil and start my new seeds.

Stay Squirrely!

Transplanting Seedlings

Our seedlings in the green houses have been growing strong.


This is one of the things I have been trying to control as well as I could this year. I did not want plants that were too big to tuck away inside the green houses at night.We have neighborhood cats that like to use my seedling bed as a litter box, so I cant use my seedling box the way I wanted to.

I wanted to set up a grow hot box that I could remove the cover from when the temps started to rise this spring. That didn't happen this year ...YET! I am looking for materials for this fall.

So, I have transplanted the seedlings on average 2 times now. That was my goal, not to exceed transplanting 3 times before the final installation into beds or pots/planters. They are stocky;thick and strong, not tall and leggy.

We are also into digging up some volunteers and adding them to our collection:


Erigeron annuus, or  Daisy Fleabane 

Daisy fleabane is a dieuretic and I have been told it be used to help digestive ailments when drank in a tea or eaten as other cooked greens. The leaves and root are the edible parts, I am told. I have also been told that Daisy fleabane leaf extracts contain caffeic acid which is an active compound that has antioxidative and neuroprotective effects on neuronal cells. I am going to research this and ask one of my friends who is a long standing member of the Indiana Herbal Society and get back to you with what I find. 

Contrary to old folklore, it will NOT get rid of fleas. Its soap-like scent and astringent qualities probably helped it to become an old herbal cleaner in household use for ages. 

We have more herb seeds to start today, so I had better get outside to the potting bench in the shade!

You know the drill:
Get outside today and STAY SQUIRRELY!






Thursday, May 10, 2018

The Dead Hedge Hugelkultur Mound or "Fedge"

Siusaidh's Bonny Felter  



That's a Scottish way of saying Suzanna's Beautiful Tangle.

This tangle can go by many names though. Dead hedge, hugelkultur mound, fedge, living wall (and some persistent trespassers have called it and ME several other creative names as well!) I will discuss those names and this little creation's many uses in this post.

We have been in the process of cleaning up a property that had seen a lot of neglect. Previous renters had left a horrible mess and took no notice of the condition of the yard. We have had our hands full.

We could have hauled all the brush off to the city transfer station, but I knew all those hardy branches and thorns could be used for the betterment of this property.

We also had an ongoing problem of trespassers. We had to make the neighborhood aware that there were new people living here now and things had to change. There had been squatters living on the premises, and other illegal activities had taken place there in the past also.

All this has stopped since our presence here.

We have made a few people quite mad because their activities on our property are now being recorded by our security. That information is being passed on to proper authorities also.

We have gotten a huge amount of moral support and hand shakes thanking us for cleaning up a problem property in the neighborhood and just for being decent folks.

Then came the green houses out front. That has been a pleasant surprise to many. I have had several folks walking by stop to chat and ask questions about my gardening efforts they can see from their stroll in the neighborhood.

This was one of the best ways I could show people that there is no need to spend money to improve your neighborhood. Just use a sharp blade and cut away overgrown brush, mow your lawn, pick up trash (and trash and trash and trash...), wash the windows, hammer back up some sagging gutters, walk around and check your property every day.

I renewed our family's volunteer status with the Connersville Parks and Recreation Department so we could go around and collect fallen brush and clear away trash that was blowing all around the park behind us and into our yard. All that brush has been used in our composting efforts and we are creating healthy soil with the help of kitchen scraps and our friends, The Worms!

So what is the dead hedge hugelkultur mound?

Dead hedge is just a man made hedge (or boundary) made from dead brush (or from fresh clippings from the plants you want to propagate along a fence row.) In this case we wanted the dead hedge to be the fence row.

Fedge is just fence + hedge. A Fence Hedge. Very simple to understand.

We wanted to show that you can create a fence in a way that served the purpose, but also benefit the community. This was important to us because we did not want to block out our view of, and our gateway to, Offutt's Park behind us, and we wanted to use the brush material as a basis of a pollinator habitat.

I am also very proud of the fact that it cost us $0!!!! Hand tools and carrying (or dragging!) brush by hand to the site meant no fossil fuels were used either.

Hugelkultur mound? Now that is a bit more complicated. Hugelkultur is the agricultural practice of digging a trench, laying logs and branches down, then layering green mulches (like grass clippings, fresh leaves, fresh tree trimmings, and even kitchen scraps) , then dirt, and then repeating the layers with more logs and branches, green mulches, and then more dirt.

Usually, one would want to start this process in the late summer or early fall to get a good head start for the next year's seasons to help in the decaying and feeding processes in a most hands off way. We came to this property January 1, 2018 so we did not have that option.

So here is what I did instead:

1. I cut a tiny trench along the length of "fedge row" that I wanted to create.
2. I laid out a thick layer of vermi-compost (worm poo and dirt they make) from one of my older worm bins in that tiny trench.
3. I laid down the trunks of the small trees, larger branches and the woodier pieces from all the shrubs and bushes that we had to remove.
4. Then I have added as the months have progressed. (pulled weeds, leaves, left over dirt from old worm bins.
5, Then this past month I wove in rose bush canes and lilac bush clippings, making sure to root in the bottoms of these so they would start to grow nicely within this fedge.
6. Every day in May I have sown wildflower seeds of all sorts to grow into the most appealing pollinator habitat I could imagine. This will be ongoing for the duration.
7. Starting this week I have been sowing in greens, legumes, and beans that will provide food for us humans as well as the seeds, pollen, and nectar for the birds and bees!

Here are just SOME of the plants we have seen pop up (some are just now sprouting) from our efforts just in the last few days: hollyhocks, foxglove, snapdragon, daisies, bachelor's buttons, cone flower, moon flower, morning glories, cosmos, nasturtium, marigold, squashes, mustards, lettuces, carrots, onions, garlic, chives, dandelion, wild violets, roses, lilac, sweet peas (both flowers and legumes!), broad beans , green beans, bush beans, radishes, turnips, sweet potatoes, and the list will continue to grow as the year progresses.

Most importantly, I wanted this to be viewed by the public WITHOUT having to come onto our property. A nice stroll in Offuttt's Park will afford you a view onto our efforts in urban farming, pollinator habitat creation, urban greenscaping and food forest production. There is a new community garden going in at Offutt's Park this year and this pollinator habitat will be an extremely valuable resource for their efforts in that little space.

I just registered Siusaidh's Bonny Felter with the Xerces Society. If you want to learn more about pollinator conservation please visit your local library to find resources there, or visit the Xerces Society online.

To learn more about the Xerces Society's Million Pollinator Garden Challenger go here.

These are all topics I discuss, research, and investigate here on this blog and in my everyday life.


Here is another community resource that we hold very dear to our hearts -

Another Connersville Parks and Recreation Property: The Nickel Plate Rail Trail. 

The entire trail is a pollinator habitat, among many other passive urban agriculture activities going on at this quiet urban oasis.

The Nickel Plate Trail and The River's Edge Project are a part of the ongoing Whitewater River development project that we have volunteered many hours to in various ways. I will touch on those efforts in future posts.


Well for now you know the drill:

Get outside, DO SOMETHING, and Stay Squirrely!

Thursday, May 3, 2018

Urban Farm update: May 3rd, 2018 (Wait, has it REALLY been that long?!)

Hey folks!

We have been busy here at Squirrely Acres, as any farming/gardening family is at this time of year.

The weather here in east central Indiana was just irregular all throughout March and April. Many of the pre-season work had to be done indoors because too wet and too cold followed by too dry and too warm would have killed off the small seedlings popping up.

As it was, we had to keep shoving trays and trays of seed starts around the kitchen in order to cook, eat, do home work, laundry, dishes...ugh! Now most of those items are out in the portable green houses and are sheltered from the storms.



There were weeks where there was nothing we could do but look out the windows wondering if we would even have a spring. This is when I fine tuned the worm bin processes a bit. (At least my hand in it all. Honestly, those guys are hard working little farmers!)

It has warmed up for now, so I worked my ongoing dead hedge project this morning. Not completely finished - it never will be, that is the crux of a dead hedge, all that dead material fosters an ongoing and on-growing process of self sustaining hugelkultur.



Right now that is it. I am going to add three more posts soon:
- Update on the seed list of items we are starting in seeds trays this year.
- Talking more about the portable green houses and the worm bin operations.
- An introduction into the dead hedge hugelkultur mound project.

So for now Stay Squirrely and be on the move with your adventures!

Cooper the Urban Farm Beagle wants to remind you to see what there is to see beyond this digital screen world!



(Cooper trapped behind the couch after falling from his perch on the back rail. This winter was a long one and he became confused, thinking of himself as a house cat that could only bark.)

Monday, March 19, 2018

Urban Farm Journal Update

*We will periodically post updates to the daily work accomplished here at the urban farm. I enjoyed reading my great aunt's journals that she wrote for over 50 years before her death in the late 1990's. It gave me an inside look at her daily life. She taught me much in my life and her writings taught me so much more after her death. I hope I can leave as rich lasting legacies for others as my family has for me.* 

Monday March 19, 2018:
Temp was 34 at 7:30am this morning. Supposed to get up to 59 degrees today.
Will have to remember to open greenhouse flap, that will be too warm to keep it closed.
Need to take photos of the mobile green houses to post here.


Sunday March 18, 2018:
Found more seed stashes I had forgotten, so a NEW seed inventory was started. VERY helpful in planning new seed purchases this year.
Purchased herb seed, spray bottles, outdoor garden shed broom, organic seed starting medium, and Snickers Bars for the Little Squirrel and myself for needed working energy...
Checked on the worms, fed them scraps from kitchen garbage pail. Doing well. We check them almost every other day.
Set up mobile seed starting station in the drive way in front of the garage. (Until I make a potting station/bench at the west side of garage I am STILL a mobile unit, but at least on my property!)
Listened to hippie music from YouTube on my phone while I worked:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ocjSc7v83pk&t=2008s


And:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U6vp1EMnqho

And ending the day with stuff like this: 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KmactMIhrRM&list=RDEMClER5Zb-stY2NWQThbul1A

(Cooper the farm beagle enjoyed my singing along, but I'm not sure any one else did.)

Started the following seeds for greenhouse growing:
okra
parsley
cilantro
rosemary
chives
marjoram
oregano
thyme
dill
sage
beets
brussels sprouts
cauliflower
Some of these will have several start dates so as to have a continuous supply for ourselves and extended family. Recorded type, qty, and date of starts.
Many more in the stash to be started in the days to come.
Cleaned up the garden supply corner of the garage and swept half the floor space, looking much better, feeling accomplished after the frigid winter temps and down pouring rains preventing me to get out there in January and February. 
Hung up rake and other hand tools on the wall above floor storage area.
Reorganized work tubs. These are recycled kitty litter and bakery tubs from a local grocery. The snap-on lids help store small hand tools, jute, seeds, bottled water, gloves etc. while providing a tote for carrying supplies to hard to reach plots. The lid also provides an excellent spot to park tired rear ends and soothe aching backs.
Tidied up the roof storage area of a small garden shed near the porch.
Swept the front porch and took snow shovel and bag of sidewalk salt to garage storage - this will surely cause a major blizzard to occur within 48 hours, as a rule of thumb.


A recap of journal updates from this past month:

Saturday, March 3, 2018:

I didn't record the temps today.
Sorted out seed stash
Inventoried pots and seed starting supplies.
Determined the 2017 worms died in the small vermi-compost bin.
Prepared worm bin for new worms and garbage.
Bought two new greenhouse units from Tractor Supply Company on clearance for $16.99 each, then assembled them and put on south facing wall of the house (not sure if they will stay there, may have to be moved due to wind, etc.)
Priced farming supplies at TSC
Made paneer cheese.


Sunday, March 4, 2018:
No outside work
Worked on weaving projects

Monday, March 5, 2018:
Bought new worms
Priced various farming supplies at Walmart
Wind blew over one of greenhouses, adjusted the stakes.
Worked on weaving projects
New Territorial Seed Co. seed catalog came in mail today!

Tuesday, March 6, 2018:
Picked up trash blown into yard
Other greenhouse blown over, adjusted stakes on both greenhouses (may have to move or tether down in a different way)
Found supplier for live willow, ground cover, iris, etc.
Worked on weaving projects.
Installed new worms into worm bin, fed with kitchen garbage.

Wednesday March 7, 2018:
Celebrated my son's 29th birthday!

Thursday, March 8, 2018:
Wrote articles on urban farming.
Tried new recipes for freezer storage in the future.

Friday, March 9, 2018:
Worked on weaving projects. Worked new to me, but ancient, fiber arts techniques. Started a braided rug sample.
Researched natural fiber dyes and techniques.

Saturday, March 10, 2018:
Foraged wild fiber materials for urban farm fencing and gate projects.

Sunday, March 11, 2018:
My father's birthday, he would have been 80 years old today.
Memorialized my father and his brother with written pieces and with traditions they enjoyed in their rural Appalachian lives.

Monday, March 12, 2018:
Conducted business operations: Ran errands around town, wrote emails, did freelance work, made new business visits and calls. There is a great deal of un-farm-like business in farm business. If you don't want to be a business manager, then this life is not for you!

Tuesday, March 13, 2018:
Uncle Robert's birthday, he would have been 83 years old today. Jolly Bob was his nick name, 'nuff said about that.
So much of who I am is from the benefits I received, and continue to, from my older family members. So many of them have passed and it is hard to maintain a productive momentum, but that is again how they continue to inspire me. They pulled ever onward and forward all during the hardest times of their lives. Its how I can continue to be close to them. I want to share this part of living with my children and loved ones.

Wednesday March 14 - Friday March 16, 2018:
Wrote articles, interviewed farmers and craftsmen, was interviewed by a St Louis writer friend for an urban farming initiative blog.
Laundry, dishes. You can always count on laundry and dishes to be there in your times of success and need.

Saturday, March 17, 2018:
My sister's birthday, she wouldn't like me to say how old she is. She diapered me while mom cooked and cleaned. She told me stories and took me on long walks in the woods and berry picking and picnics and we washed our hair in the water falls of Garrison Creek when we were young girls. We shared a bed and room when we were young. She has shared every bit of her life with me - her children, her love, her food, her home, her experiences. She is a very good big sister. She knows I am not exaggerating when I say we grew up in the 60's and 70's knowing more about the Little House on The Prairie life than the Brady Bunch life.
Worked on fiber projects.









Tuesday, March 13, 2018

Let March Roar On In!

Here in East Central Indiana March came in like dirty laundry. 

Yep, it just trickled into my life bit by bit until all of a sudden there was this big stinking dirty mess in the floor waiting to be worked on.

https://yourteenmag.com/family-life/sleep-away-camp

Hey, I'm a farming/soccer mom - what analogy did you expect?!

This is the time some Hoosiers make big mistakes.

Some Hoosiers start seeds too early, set pants out too early, plants die, and then they have to start all over again. Big waste of time, money, hopes, and garden dreams, if you ask me.

https://hubpages.com/living/How-to-Protect-Tomatoes-Peppers-and-Eggplant-from-Frost


Some Hoosiers put all their pent up energies into their local basketball teams, anchoring their dreams to going "All the Way to MSA" (Market Square Arena) to the Indiana high school basketball championship. 

https://hendrixmedia.wordpress.com/2015/11/24/connersville-spartans-schedule-rosters/


(Yeah...we have Spartan Spirit here in Connersville. Some of us more than others, just like any other small town in America. In case you are not familiar with Hoosier Hysteria, or March Madness here is where you can begin your basketball education.)

Some Hoosiers take out tax return loans to bank roll the next few months.

http://www.malibuspas.net/tax-refund-can-buy-hot-tub-sauna/


Some Hoosiers HOPE for a better year, but do nothing to make it happen. 

OR

Like me, they wake up at 3:42 am planning and re-planning the steps to take for the next six months. 

https://envisioningtheamericandream.com/2014/06/19/victory-gardens-in-wwii-2/


THAT is a Hoosier Farmer.

I don't care if you have 1000 acres or just a few micro growing beds in the back yard, you are thinking out each step for the next six months of life. 

One of my mistakes is not exercising restraint. My upbringing taught me if you work smart, think hard, and plan right then things are still going to pan out just the way they were supposed to, you might just be better prepared for life though. 

So this year I have found a new skill level of self restraint. 

                                                  
https://www.pinterest.com/pin/166633254942053106/

I have put up two inexpensive portable greenhouses against a south facing wall at our new digs. There is an ell on the house that protects them from western winds. I wanted to see what March would have in store for these $16.99 bargains - before I placed delicate seeds out there to face the elements. 

I checked in on my worms. Sadly, they did not survive the move last December. That's alright, I just decided to put the left over scraps into a fallow raised bed next to the green houses. I had previously dumped old leaf mulch into it knowing it would be a gold mine in the spring. 

When I pulled back that leaf mulch and reached down to put the scraps in though, I was shocked to witness a huge mass of red wigglers and earth worms REACHING up to take the scraps! Mine and my daughter's reactions were reminiscent of that of Kevin Bacon and Fred Ward in the movie "Tremors."

http://www.slashfilm.com/kevin-bacon-has-joined-the-new-tremors-tv-series/

My daughter has always warned me I might be breeding the next batch of monsters from her favorite movie. She might have a point...

Anyway, like any good scary movie actress, I did not heed warnings to cease - I purchased a new herd of livestock. We shall see what the future of our vermi-culture endeavors brings. 

http://megalawlz.com/?cat=31&paged=8


So far, 2018 has brought desert dry -20 degree temps in January, almost 80 degree temps and rain in February, and now in March we have had 50 degrees and snow. 

I know, it does not make much sense, but that has been my life for a long time now. 

We squirrels learn to roll with it. 

Stay Squirrely, see ya soon!
-Suzanna

Monday, March 5, 2018

Pause, Fast Forward ... PLAY

There are some things one can only achieve by a deliberate leap in the opposite direction.     
Franz Kafka

http://petitcabinetdecuriosites.tumblr.com/post/33757630179/legs-up-and-down-red-squirrel-jumping-away-with

You will be expecting an explanation as to WHY this blog just abruptly stopped back in January 2016.
I did not stop.
I paused. 
I had things to do away from this Internet thingy.
Helping start a local farmers' market.
Running several gardens around this small town.
Raising my daughter to be a great kid. 
Then, there was one of the most important tasks of my life: Over two years of caring for my aging and then dying parents. 
Ushering them through that stage of life has been one of the most honored labors of my life. Being my children's mother has been the other. 
The last two years have left me with so much to express that it has been caught up in my throat. It has been swirling around in my head. 
The last two years have left me with an incredible amount of wisdom. 
In my life...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-eCh3y5VROM
I know from past experiences how to recognize those moments when you really really need to pay attention and learn the lessons at hand. 
Because there is ALWAYS a test at The END.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YE3vHxr2il8
I knew I had to get this one right. 
For my kids, for me. 
For my sanity. 
For my heart. 
For my love. 
As the youngest of a family with five children, I came out watching and analyzing life. 
I figured out all my roles in life hold lessons that are crucial to understanding and loving this life itself. 
Child
Sister
Friend
Mother
Wife
Caretaker
All these roles are at the heart of why I created this and my other blogs. 
This life is an incredibly wild, thrilling, crazy making, scary, and a joy filled experience. 
We do not have any choices but to stay on the ride, or check out. 
I have not found it in me to check out yet. 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6qrDlRsARwk
You will see that my love for classic rock lyrics and how they influenced my life has not changed. 
If you are new to this blog, please check out past posts. 
I have two other blogs that I will be pressing the PLAY button on also:
https://whitewatervalleyadventures.blogspot.com/
And also:
https://whitewatervalleyhistoricresearch.blogspot.com/
All three have corresponding Facebook pages to visit, if you like that sort of thing. 
If you don't - Bully for you! Get outside and have a life! 
That's why I do this -  documenting HOW to have a good life in the midst of LIFE. 
So, I am BACK playing squirrely and loving life. 
Stay squirrely, I will be posting regularly again and we will be having fun. 

-Suzanna
https://www.boredpanda.com/squirrel-photography-russia-vadim-trunov/?media_id=squirrel-photography-russia-vadim-trunov-8