Sunday, October 25, 2015

Fall garden cleanup started


Picked the Sweet taters!

I dug the potatoes in the big patch Friday evening.  That ground was fairly wet and HEAVY! UGH.  Sweet potato tops looked really good here, but the results under the ground were less than exciting.  I am guessing that there is too much nitrogen in that soil.  Also, the plants ran for about 4 feet in radis from the center of the plants!  It was a lot of digging for not many taters!

The potatoes on the right are from the paw-paw patch.  They looked better!

The nest morning I got up and dug the potatoes in the paw-paw patch.  I had less hope for them since the tops of those potatoes didn't look so nice and they were overrun badly with grass and weeds.  Well, I was surprised.  I got some fairly nice potatoes!  I am planing to pressure can the bad ones and try to save a few for seed potatoes for next year.  Next year I figure I will only put them in the paw-paw patch - on the upper side since that is where the soil is well drained.


Pie-time!

I am out of blackberries but I have some rhubarb left in the freezer!  So I grabbed a bag and got some frozen strawberries (purchased) and made a pie.  I was not real pleased with the flavor though - just didn't taste like I remembered them!  Maybe I will get enough strawberries from my own plants next year to make a pie.

Strawberry-rhubarb pie.

Castor Bean seed collecting


I cut the seed "spires" off of the castor bean plants and placed them in the dehydrator.  They were a bit damp so I wanted to get them dry to they wouldn't mold or rot.  I put them in the dehydrator at 90F and ran it all weekend.  I kept hearing them popping the whole time!



Those pods are prickly!  I had to use gloves to take the pods off the spires.

I took them out of the dehydrator an removed the pods from the spires before I left, but I will have to wait until later to separate and shell the rest of the beans.


More UTV issues


Actually, I guess its really the same issue again.  I took the beast out Friday evening when digging the sweet potatoes in the big patch.  When I got on it to go back to the house, the shifter was REAL mucky - not at all easy to move - like pushing through bubble gum.  By the time I got it back to the house I couldn't shift at all!  I parked it in "H" for the night.  Next morning I checked it out.   I remove the end of the cable at the transmission side and determined that the transmission was able to shift just fine - it was the cable causing the problems - AGAIN!  I didn't have time to remove the cable and look for the problem.  I will get into that later.  Just a reminder that I had just replaced that cable the year before last!




Garden cleanup


With the sweet potatoes and tomatoes done the paw-paw patch and the front patch (the un-fenced part) were ready to be cleaned up.  So I removed the black plastic (no small task!), picked up the rocks, and mowed over the patches.



I am thinking about using some roundup on the fence line now since there is no worries of killing any vegetable plants.  The grass in the fence lines can get rather nasty.


Tomato patch all cleaned up.  Took a while to get all the rocks off of this patch!  Not to mention all of the staples an paper holders ( those red plastic ones).


More maple milling and wood chipping (and general cleanup)


I got the top part of an old maple tree and milled it up.  Got some nice wood out of it - not as much as I got from the bole last weekend - but still a good amount considering its age and the number of limbs.  After I got that log out from in front of the barn I decided to mow where those logs had been laying.  I got in the with the zero-turn mower and got wedged between the big log and the old barn door.  Darned if the old barn door didn't break!  Almost in two!  I had one board holding the entire weight of the door - and it was bowing quiet significantly!  I rushed back to the house to get a jack and a come-along (not to mention screws and power driver) and went about straightening the door structure and putting some new support boards in place.  Fortunately things turned out ok and I didn't have to rehang the door!  Whew!

Door is restored!  Better than it was last year now!

Cleaned up the weeds and grass where the logs were laying

Just a few more logs to go! LOL
After milling and cleanup (and door repair), I was able to do some chipping.  I chipped a the scrap from last week and this week as well as some miscellaneous stuff I had laying around.  The maple scrap had an annoying habit of jamming the chipper - so I had to stop and clear that - 3 times!




I am guessing that I got at most 1 cubic yard of chips there.  On the lighter side I might have enough saw dust now to finish mulching the blueberries!

More harvest

I picked more Brussels sprouts, broccoli, and a cabbage this weekend too.  There wasn't as much broccoli, just enough to steam and eat Monday night for dinner - for one person.  The cabbage will be put to good use as slaw - I am sure.  I didn't get a picture of the sprout plants, but they look pretty much like they did last weekend.  


Cleaned Sprouts, ready for blanching

Frozen and vacuum sealed




A very pretty cabbage!  This was in the "flood plain" and barely survived!

Hawk?


As I was finishing picking the sprouts and cabbage I looked up an saw this bird - pretty sure its some kind of hawk - but I don't know what kind.  I wish I had my camera and not just my phone.  I could have got a nice zoom on him as he sat there on the dead limb.




Thursday, October 22, 2015

More pickled peppers!

Pepper pickling is get old!


Katherine picked the peppers from the back lawn (at the city house) as well as sorted through the peppers we brought back from the farm last weekend and did up another batch of pickled peppers!

I believe that she actually gave these big ones away to the neighbors!  She was getting tired of processing peppers!

They look pretty!  I wish I could eat peppers!

14 pints here - one in the fridge.

Sunday, October 18, 2015

First frost?


Cold weather weekend

First things first, we harvested a bunch of the veggies since they were calling for frost Sat and Sun nights.  


We got a good harvest of brussel sprouts:

Which we ate over the course of the weekend!  Roasted with some olive oil, salt an pepper!  Delicious!  There are more to come on the plants, we just took what was ready.
We got a surprisingly good bunch of broccoli - which I froze.
Last of the eggplants/  Some are small, but what can you do.  I harvested a cabbage for some slaw.
Last of the bell peppers.  We took them all since frost will certainly kill them.

Continuing my efforts to clear out the freezer I grabbed another pack of frozen blackberries and made another pie:

Blackberry pie.  I used tapioca  as a thickener this time.  Turned out quite nice!

More pumpkin processing!

Sliced up another eight dryer trays worth of the sugar babies an dried them this weekend.





After drying I put them in the vitamix an turn them into powder!  

A few random pictures of the place in the fall













A documentary on quarter-sawing an oak log - gone awry


Well, I wanted to do a bit of a show piece to illustrate how I do quarter sawing on an oak log, but I messed up and got into a maple log instead!

Anyway, here are some pictures of the whole process.

Trusty tractor with chipper and front forks

The logs (well some of them)

The remains of the chipping operation (I did another 2 + cubic yards and got all of the apple orchard trees mulched!)

The log

This crotch - side limb is a bit of a problem.

Great, it has a piece of wire embedded in it!

So I had to saw off the limb to try to get into the wire


And I had to dig in a bit with the chainsaw to get to it - but I got it out!  I didn't want to hit that with the sawmill

I lifted it up an marked it - in pencil.  So you can't see it.  In fact, I had a hard time seeing the marks!  I need to get some bright crayons for woodmarking. 

The other end.  It was going to be tricky making sure this thing was "even" on the mill bed!




Up on the mill bed.

Fiddled around trying to figure out the best cut - even after the markings earlier, it wasn't clear

OK, I think I got a good alignment.  Now to check to be sure the blade and carriage wont get hung up during the cut 

First cut is done - you can kind of see the cut line here.



Flipped over onto the flat side
Positioned for the next flat cut.
Second flat cut and slab removed.





Rotated 90 degrees.  

Top removed.

Rotated 180 degrees to get last side

Last side removed!  Nice rectangular cant now. 

 Its about 9+" by 14.5" 


See that grain?  It's amazing that it took me so long to realize this wasn't OAK!  Sheesh!

I decided to mill the side slabs first.  I ha some idea that this was smarter and would save the blade somehow.  I don't remember my logic at the time.  I can't for the life of me think now what advantage it would give me.


Slabs all cut up into boards.  But they need to be edged

After edging.  They still need some ends trimmed off.  Nice little boards for misc purposes.  I had realized that this was maple at this point so I saved these. Otherwise I would have probably chipped these smaller ones.

The remnants after edging.  These are going on the chipping pile.

The big cant back on the mill bed.  At this point, if I were still  quarter-sawing, I would cut this down the center to give me 2 nearly square cants, then rotation them each 90 degrees, positions them next to each other and start cutting boards.

Boards cut!  I chose to cut at 6/4 (one and a half inches thick)

These are in pretty good shape!

Nice stack of wood there!

Stickering the boards

I put the short and small ones on top.  I need to figure out how to better organize my wood stash.

Rough ends.  I think I will clean these up some day - maybe.

Side view.  I will have to restack I am sure.  I think the hardest part of operating sawmill is finished wood management!

Finally got our frost!


Got up on Sunday morning to see this:


Kind of pretty, really.


Site seeing



Finally got to go for a drive down "Summit Road" - the dirt/gravel road that runs along the summit of the mountain above our place.  Here are some pictures from the trip.






Panoramic view - looks a little weird at first.