Showing posts with label crab-apple. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crab-apple. Show all posts

Monday, September 5, 2016

More harvest stuff - shell beans, tomatoes and squash



Shell Beans


I planted 19 45-foot rows of shell beans this year.  The patch was originally unprotected (no fences).  Deer eventually found it and ate the leaves off most of the plants!  I eventually did place a baited electric fence around the patch that did stop the deer (either tha or they found better things to eat!), but the damage was done. Many of the beans did not fill out - they didn't mature.   Anyway, we started picking the beans the last weekend of August - we got about 1 bushel of the Accelerate beans from 4 rows.  This weekend I was by myself but able to dedicate most of my time to picking so I got another bushel and a half of the accelerate variety.

The rest of the "Accelerate" bean harvest

I started in on the "velour" variety but found some issues.  The Velour bean is much smaller and evidently matured earlier.  Also, the weeds in the velour side of the patch were much more prevalent so picking was very difficult!  I essentially was pulling EVERYTHING!  Except for some volunteer locust trees which I think I will try to transplant next spring.  I got only a tiny amount of beans, shown below.  I still have most of the velour section of the patch to pick.  I hope the weather doesn't turn rainy next weekend!

"velour" bean harvest to date.



Elderberries and crab-apples



I found more then a few elderberries left on the bushes - at least enough that I didnt feel good leaving them there!  So I picked these last elderberries:
There is about a half-gallon of them after picking off the stems.  Very ripe!

I mowed what was tall in the orchard - there is a draught so not all the grass needed mowing.  AS I did I noticed some crab-apples were ready to pick - so I grabbed them.  Not sure what I will do with these though.

Crab-apples - this is whole harvest!  Of course, these came off a tree that I thought would have died this year!  

Tomatoes and squash


I harvest the volunteer tomatoes in the front patch as well as the planted tomatoes in the sweet-potato patch.  I got about 35lbs!  We are going to be drying some of these, but I don't think we can dry them all before they go bad.



From the planted tomatoes

From the volunteer tomato plants in the front patch.  The squash are from the  squash plants - go figure!  The last of the corn harvest is in there too - not sure if it was worth it though.

I also harvested the zucchini and even one of the butternut squash from the far patch!  There are lots of butternut squash getting close.  IDK what I will do with all of these!  I hope they keep well!


Strawberries keep coming!


Decent strawberry harvest considering the time of the year and the drought conditions!  I am definitely going to have to buy more everbearing strawberries!

Sunday, August 14, 2016

Too Hot again!


Still more elderberries

I didnt pick elderberries on Friday.  Decided it would be too late by the time we got them all cleaned.  So Saturday I got to picking... 30 quarts (on the stem)!




Then on Sunday I picked another 18 quarts (sorry, no pictures from Sunday).  I do know that we got between 6 and 7 gallons from Saturday and Sundays pickings!  Then, before I left Monday, I got more - I don't know how many yet; Katherine is still destemming them I think.  Of the last batch we put at least one gallon of them into the freeze-dryer!  We will see how it goes.  Mom was nice enough to let me put some out berries into her freezer, so I took 6 gallons over to her place before we left.


Also, blackberries and strawberries


We picked some blackberries off of the thornless bushes we planted in 2015.  Pretty goo yeilds for such young plants!




We got another pint (guessing) just before we left.  Plenty enough for a decent size pie!

Not a lot of strawberries - but enough to eat!  I put these into the freeze dryer too!


A few other pickings...


First of summer squash from the late plantings!




Onions are ready but it was too damned hot to do much work outside.  I was already half-dead from picking berries and re-setting up the  fence around the beans.

First onion, a couple more volunteer tomatoes and a couple apples that the birds had damaged.

Grape Vines

While do a ride around I noticed that one of the grape vine arbor posts was leaning way in!  Turns out that it rotted off at ground level.  I will have to replace it.  Until I get a chance, I just braced it with a couple of small posts.










On the lighter side of things - the grape vines are growing nicely!  



I think that the nitrogen I added last year really helped.  I plan on adding some more early next year.


Fruit trees



I found another peach!  It looks rough though.  I wonder how long it will last?

Here are 4 apples that I found - 2 had been pecked by birds.  I picked them (above).

Same apples - I sliced them up an put them in freeze-dryer

Crazy crab-apple bloomed recently - now it has little apples on!  

We figure its going to die - trees will do this when they are stressed.

These are crab-apples - believe it or not!  Large variety that hasn't produced much until this year.

Hornets nest!  Getting bigger!  I want to keep them around - they aren't as mean as  yellowjackets and they eat other bugs.

It looks like the parrot tree (or whatever it is!) is going to make it after all!  It looked mostly dead but the rains seem to have brought some of it back to life!


Just a couple green sprigs there - which some bugs managed to eat - sheesh!  But it seems to be fighting

I was riding around and noticed that my english walnut trees were taking bug damage!  I looked closer and found them - little fuzzy "acid dropper" worms!  I sprayed them with sevin.  I didn't see any worms the next day.  I hope the trees recover.

Fuzzy worm damaged english walnuts


Worms also got one of my butternuts too!  Its also recovering.  

Gardens


We might get something from our corn!  We will have to wait another week I think - not quiet ready. We talked to neighbor, he said he saw a mommy and several baby racoons just across the road from our place.. they probably are the ones eating my fruit!  They love corn and you can see where they have been tearing up the field corn..





Weeds are taking over!

Squash plants are doing nicely.  I actually picked a summer squash!  They had just started blooming last weekend!



the front four plants are summer squash (I think) - winter squash in the back.

Deer Issues in the Bean Patch!


I saw more deer eating away at the bean patch again this weekend!  The electric fence was evidently not working.  I went to put some peanut butter bait on the fence and found that it was not functioning. So I connected the bean patch fence to the "hardwired" fencer!  No I have it baited and connected to a kick ass voltage - that should get thier attention!  I hope my beans are far enough along that they recover and produce!

More Flail Mowing


I was able to get the flail mower out and mowed that field up around the pecan trees.  This area wasn't as hard to mow as the hill was!  Not as dry so I didn't have to backtrack as much either.







Equipment problems


I have been nursing my mower around because of leaking transmission oil and a loose drive belt. Somewhere along the line I got a bad leak in my left rear tire.  It wont hold pressure worth a damn now.  I barely got the grass mowed around the pecans before I gave up.  I didnt have the right patches to plug the hole!  I ordered some more patches - they should be here Tuesday.  I wish the replacement drive belts would make it here before we go up next time, but they haven't shipped yet so there is not much chance of that.


Main mower is down!  

Saturday, April 30, 2016

Rainy weekend. Tree-tube cleanup and machine work.


Mowing - of course!


Just so its recorded, I mowed the front lawn - not around the cherry trees or the persimmons though.


Cleaned up the Paw-paw tubes


In my continuing mission to remove all of the protector tubes from my trees I attacked the paw-paw trees.  Unfortunately, the trees aren't doing as well as I had hoped.  I was only able to remove the tubes off of 6 trees.   Some of the trees are about as big as when I planted them!  ARGG.    Well, at least they are all still alive.  I put cages around the ones that I removed the tubes from.  I don't want to risk deer damage on these poor trees!





Ornamental tree cleanup as well


I went ahead and cleaned out the tubes for some of the ornamental trees too.    The two crab-apple trees in the front are doing quite well and are already out!  I took the tubes off of them and replaced them with cages.







I was hoping that the red-bud and dogwood trees were ready to have the tubes removed but alas, not yet.  In fact, the redbuds didn't seem to survive the winter - which is kind of a surprise since they are native in this area too!  The dogwoods seemed to do ok though.   I removed the tubes from the dead redbuds and cleaned and re-set the tubes on the dogwoods.  Some of the dogwoods are a bit rough. We will see how they fair this year.




Started work on my new milling machine arbor


Since it was rainy out and I couldn't mow or do planting, etc. I decided to start working on new milling arbor.   I received a set of gear cutters that need a slightly smaller arbor diameter than what I have, so the new arbor will be sized for them.  The length and shaft of the new arbor will be the same as the arbor I already have, so I just measured that out and began cutting a piece of my alloy steel using my bandsaw!

The existing arbor is model 6-151- style "C" - I actually found it in an old VN brochure!

About 9.25-9.5 inches long

The critical part is the taper insert.  I might try doing a threading on a scrape piece to be sure I get this right!  Oh, and taper too.  I have some mild steel laying around...

The widest diameter is the flange.  I didn't buy a large-enough diameter cylinder to match the original flange but I don't see why my flange has to match  diameter.  As long as there is enough flange to engage the registration tabs - which I am sure it will.


Measuring the actual portion that sticks out of the spindle.  This is the part that will hold the cutters.  I will also have to make spacers for this too since the original arbor spacers will have too large of a inside diameter to fit right.  Oh, will have to make a new arbor nut too!  Joy!  Inside threading on a small ID!

I mounted the cylinder up on the bandsaw and started it up.

It was much slower going than cutting through angle iron

I set it up, started it, and went inside.  I did put a little cutting oil on the cut to start, but I am not sure it was needed.  The chips coming off looked fine.  Didn't seem to get hot at all.  No discoloration of the chips was noticed.  No damage to the blade that I can tell.

The saw finished the cut and turned itself off.  Sweet!  Damn nice cut too.

I missed a few pictures of the drilling the centers (I used the drill press).   I was upset that I didn't have any center finder tools to determine the center points at the ends of the cylinder.  I managed to use the calipers to get the centers and then used a punch to mark the drill centers.  Well, turns out that getting the center drill bit to hit those marks was much more difficult than marking the centers!  I was planning on using the 4-jaw chuck to hold the piece while the other end would be held in tailstock center. However, after trying this approach I quickly determined that the centers where NOT concentric with the outside diameter of the cylinder!  So, I  decided to do the machining between centers using a lathe-dog to drive the head engaging on a jaw of the 3-jaw chuck.  3-jaw chucks do not hold material exactly concentric to the center of the piece, however.  To get around this problem, I used an old trick I learned on youtube!  The trick is to put a sacrificial piece of rod in the 3-jaw chuck and cut the 60 degree center in place.  Since its cut in place, that center WILL be centered on the lathe and will hold the piece perfectly!  Just don't remove the cut center before you are done, otherwise you will have to re-cut the 60 center all over again!

After I got the center ready, I needed a lathe-dog.  I had an old lathe-dog from my small home-made lathe.  I had brought the lathe-dog up to the farm a couple weekends ago.  The drill holes were too far apart so I had to find a new center and recut the clamps on the mill.

Re-cutting some clamp grooves on the old-lathe-dog clamp pieces.  I had to drill and re-tap the holes for the clamps too.

Once I got a couple of longer clamp bolts, the clamp fits nicely and holds well!

The lathe dog arm had to be extended a little bit to engage the chuck jaw.

Here you can see one of the new grooves I cut with the mill.  It could be a wider angle (its only 90 degree) to hold better on this large diameter cylinder, but remember, this cylinder will get turned down to a smaller diameter!  Then this clamp will fit the smaller diameters better.

Once it was mounted up, i took a cut.  Works fine!

the chips come off in long thin razor like strips!  AND, they are damned hot too!

Turned the entire cylinder here.  Should be perfectly centered and concentric at this point.  I should check for "taper", but I have lots of material to remove before that maters much.

See the pretty blue chips?  I made sure the piece had plenty of cutting fluid on it.  The cutting fluid would smoke!  the shop was foggy when I finished this cut!  The piece was quite warm too.

In between showers...


I was able to get out between showers and do some planting.  We went to TSC and picked up some grass seed and a couple of spearmint plants (amongst other things).  I planted some grass seed in the front yard where I need to do more landscaping.  I figure it is going to be awhile before I get to the re-grading and fill so I had better get some grass growing here.  In fact, that was my plan last year as well, and I did plant grass here last year, but this soil is so poor!  Also, I added some fill here too last year and ran the tractor over it a bit too much for the grass I had planted there to survive.  Anyway, I planted some more!  I actually raked it in a bit this time too, so the birds don't eat it all and so it doesn't wash away (as easily).  I need to plant more in several places on the farm, but this is all I could get too.





We got 7/10ths of an inch!  Yay!  We needed it bad - the new trees need water!

I was supposed to pick up a couple spearmint plants from mom on the way up this weekend, but she was not home.  So I picked up a couple of plants at Mile Level in Bedford.  They were $2 a pot.  I decided to plant them down in the wet area near the old elderberry bushes.  Spearmint, if it takes hold, can spread quite invasively!  I am hoping this stuff does well here.  To be sure though, i will pick up the stuff that mom has and try it in another location.  Also, I have a bunch of little spearmint plants started from seed down at the city house.    If they little plants do well i will also spread them around - probably start some down in the city house yard too.






Stare of the garden report:


The front garden is the only one with anything in it yet.  I do see good growth though.  the onions are definitely showing signs now.  


Onions showing their tops!


Potatoes looking good

Strawberries taking hold!

The city raised beds

To be fair to the city house, the raised beds are doing quite well - only kale and potatoes planted here so far though.  It's obviously a bit warmer here!  Those potatoes are getting large!


Except for a couple that the squirrels keep harassing!

Kale and collard greens.  These will need thinning soon.