Showing posts with label pecan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pecan. Show all posts

Sunday, May 21, 2017

Locust blooming


Locust trees are in bloom!


They are all over!  I can't believe that I never noticed them before!  Just goes to show me that I don't pay attention to the here and now enough.  I have to focus on being more mindful,






I mean - they are everywhere!  I even noticed them all along the roadways.  How did I miss these?


Strawberries

They are growing!  The old plants have lots of berries coming along.  The new plants are grabbing hold.




Even the new plants are starting to bloom!

Both rows of the new plants are ever-bearing varieties.

Tree status


Went around the farm checking on the status of the trees.  Some that looked dead are spruting out!  Most ofthe new ones have some signs of life.  

I believe this is a prior year pecan tree.  Some got set back due to wet weather and cold (I  think).

Butternut tree that was girded by some critter is sprouting out near the base!

One of this years pecans?   Or maybe one of this years black walnuts?

Ginko!  Some are showing these brown edges on their leaves.  In fact, some look dead from whatever that is.  Possibly too much water?  Or maybe the roots did not seat well?  I did plant these in rough sod, so good root contact with soil was hard to ensure.




Raspberry trellis


I finally got around to putting the wire between the stakes to make the raspberry trellis.  Mixed feelings about this because the plant spreads by runners - putting all of the branches up on the trellis will make it hard for the plant to spread.  I do want it to spread - at least some.  The patch is sparse in a few areas.















Sunday, March 19, 2017

More snow and tree planting begins!


More snow 



Big snow-storm over past week.  Well, not really that big it turned out.  Only about 4-5 inches in Silver Spring.  Had about 12 inches at the farm (I wasn't there at the time).   I got notified by email that my tree shipment from Cold stream Farm was on its way and should arrive Wednesday!  I had it shipped directly to farm for some reason.  I got on the UPS website and delayed the delivery until Thursday (I actually meant to delay it until Friday).

First wave of the 2017 tree order is in!


Just in time for the snow!  As I said above< i was able to delay it, but I really don't want to delay too long before planting.  Fortunately the weather removed most of the snow by Saturday and I was able to get 25 Osage Orange, 25 Black Walnut, 25 Gingko Biloba, 25 filbert (hazelnut), and 4 pecan trees planted!  I got 1-2' trees because they were cheaper and small trees transplant better in the long run (it does take them a couple more years to get to size though).  Here are some pictures, although the trees are hard to see since they are small - heck, even the orange surveyor flags are hard see!

Here are the filberts (hazelnuts)

Hazelnuts, see the orange flags?

They are there!

A little easier to see in this picture

Here you can kind of see the row of flags for the osage orange along the road.  If you look to the left there is also a longer row of gingko!
The row of Osage Orange didn't quite reach as far as I wanted (I planted them 10feet apart) so I ordered another 10 Osage Orange to fill in the space.   I would have liked to plant the 30 choke cherry and 25 choke berry trees too, but that area of the property was just a big mud puddle!


You would sink 8 inches into that mud! (I know - I tried it earlier!)


Chisel sharpening 


While waiting for the snow to melt down I worked on sharpening my "new" chisels.  I had planed on doing the sharpening by hand, but after doing a couple I decided that was not going to work for me.  So I did some research and decided to buy a WorkSharp WS3000.  After watching some youtube videos of others using it I gave it a shot.  I did read that you could use any grinder paper that you want on the glass disks and since the roughest they provided was 120 grit I went out to the shop and found some 80 grit so I could grind the horrible edges off faster!  Some of these I must have taken an 8th inch of metal off! Well, maybe a 16th.  Still, it was a lot of grinding.

It is a reasonable size machine - actually fairly sturdy considering it cost about $180

Notice that this edge looks "un-square"?  It is because of the uneven belt-grinding I did,  not a flatness or out-of-square issue.


I put a micro-bevel on each as advised by the manual.  Even though I only took them to 1000 they are sharp enough to shave!  I haven't decided if I will strop these or not.


Most of these are quite useable!  

They cleaned up nicely!

I used a belt-grinder out in the shop to clean off the rust and grime.  I did it freehand so some of the edges aren't as crisp as they could be.  Although, some were not so crisp when I started!

Some of the filings from the considerable grinding my chisels needed.

My setup.  Too cold to go out and do this in the shop.  It takes a while!

Sunday, January 8, 2017

Vacation Wrap-up


Well, vacation is over.  this post covers some of the things that happened during the last week of 2016 and the first week of 2017.


Chili 


Enjoyed making some chili with ALL home preserved or harvested ingredients!


My own venison from my recently harvested buck!


Beans that I canned last January.  I used Adzuki beans and Kidney beans. They canned great!

The final pot of chili!  It tasted great!!

Workbench top build


I decided to "frame" the 22" wide hickory section of my workbench top with oak so that I didn't have to mill up any more of my "finished" hickory boards/planks.  Remember that this project started when I took a look at the hickory mill ends and decided that it would be such a waste to just burn them (I didn't want to chip them up for mulch because I am not sure if hickory would should be used for mulch - hickory is in the walnut family which produces chemicals that retard the growth and germination of other plants!)  So anyway, I decided to recycle some of the old oak boards that I had laying around the place.  I have already recycled a number of these old oak boards for a canning shelf and for the base of the workbench.  As I started milling the old oak boards I noticed quite a bit of powderpost beetle damage.  I remember seeing lots of damage to the canning shelf lumber too.  I sealed the canning shelf with polyurethane as a finish and that seemed to stop most of the beetle activity.  However, the legs of the workbench have on-going powder post beetle damage (I see piles of dust under the legs!)   Therefore, for this workbench top, I was extra-picky to try to remove any damaged sections of the oak that had powderpost beetle damage.  I went through A LOT of the old oak boards to get the wood that I needed, and even then I still have some with powderpost damage.  I will finish the workbench with some kind of oil treatment and hope for the best!

This is one of the last hickory glue-ups.  I did 3 of them. one 11 inches and two 5.5 inches.



A total of  5 glue-ups were done - this is the last - an oak glue up, about 5-6 inches wide..


After the 5 laminated pieces were complete, I had to carry them out to the shop to plane them!  The 5 inch  wide ones weren't too bad, but the 11" one was quite a challenge!  

First step was to cut the 11" section in half to fit it through the planer!

My re-saw bandsaw did this task quite well!  I put up my roller tables to handle this heavy beast.


After cutting the 11" incher in half I then proceeded to plane the laminates (6 now) so that I had "good wood" and even edges to do the final glueup

Again, I used the roller tables to support the pieces 


They planed up quite nicely!  

I really should have put one edge through the jointer to make sure they were all square, but there was no way to handle these things through the jointer!

All laid out on the floor - ready to move to the workbench top for final glue up!

The final glue up!  I laid all of the laminate sections on top of the workbench and arranged them as best I could to get them square and aligned.

The workbench without a top.  It sags significantly in the center!

Glue up underway.  Clamps in place.



It was pretty cold that night so i placed this space heater on top.  I don't know if it helped or not, but the glue-up worked!


The next step, after allowing the glue to set and removing the clamps, was to "plane" the table top smooth, level, and flat.  I did this using a router sled on some wooden rails.  While making the router sled I discovered that my jointer blades were a problem for flattening boards over 3 inches wide - there was a nick in the blades from last years projects that caused the center of the jointer blades to not cut.  Therefore, when I ran a wide board though the jointer it would wobble significantly!  I burned a day of time learning this lesson!  Since I couldn't flatten a board using the jointer I just found a piece of OSB that was pretty flat and used that.  I made a couple of side pieces edge-straight (the jointer did work for edges) and then glued and nailed the sled together.
Router sled.  OSB with jointed oak sides

I made a couple of rails from old oak(?) I found and jointed.  I aligned them using the "cross string method"

The router sled runs on these rails.  The router bit height is adjusted to the lowest part of the table top and then moved across the table until the whole surface is routed to the same height.

Here shows after the first couple of passes

it works!


DONE!  I had to use some hand tools to get the edges, but that was easy.

Level and flat!  (actually, its mostly flat - if you look close there is a slight "sag" in the center that I think was caused by the sled sagging when the router was furthest from the edges.)

Sweet!

After flattening it, I sanded it a bit and patched a few mistakes and some glue-gaps.  Then I used some Watco Danish oil to finish it.  I only had time to put on one coat of oil so far.  I will do another the next time I am at the farm.

Before danish oil

After danish oil!




Pretty!

I also trimmed off the rough edges.  I used the hand held circular saw and then a hand saw to finish up.

At the upper right of this picture you can see the boo-boo I did.  Just at the end of routing it flat the router sled slipped off the rails and the router gouged out a section!  GRRR  I used some wood filler on it.  

Whew!  After doing all of this, I am thinking that maybe I should redo the base of this workbench! 300lbs is a lot for these legs.  The table does move (wobble) when you force it....  and I am not done adding weight yet.  I need to added the vices yet!  There is only 4 "board based" legs on this bench. Thinking I might replace these with 6 solid wood legs.


Faucet Replacement - sink repair


The kitchen faucet went out at the Silver Spring house.  The under counter part that held the faucet in place rusted out.  So i went shopping for a replace faucet.  I got one that had the long gooseneck with a sprayer built in.  This seemed ideal until we realized that we have a portable dishwaser and needed a ordinary faucet nozzle to fit the dishwasher adapter to!  I thought about it awhile and decided to add another simple faucet to the same sink - this simple faucet would then server as the dishwasher adapter faucet.  Instead of using the base plate to cover the old faucet holes I just used some plugs.  I think it turned out pretty nice!  The only problem now is tat the hot water feed line leaks a bit under the sink,  We have a bucket there now.  I am hoping that it self-seals; they often do.


Dishwasher adapter on left, fancy sprayer on right.

We put the dishwasher one on the left to keep it from splashing the clean dishes in the rak to the right of the sink.  However, the gooseneck makes the splashing so bad that even  on the left the splashes reach the clean dishes!  We will have to figure out something..


Miscellaneous


I finally got around to making some elderberry liqueur.  Well, I started it anyway.  It needs to sit for about 6 months.  I haven't added the sugar or lemon yet.    I made about 2 quarts.  I followed a recipe on the internet that called for 1 quart vodka, 1 pint elderberries, the peel of one lemon (with white stuff removed) and 1/4-1/3C sugar.  



It looks really pretty!


I also made a couple pies.  I am trying to "eat out" the freezer a bit so that I can fit my venison in (its in mom's freezer now).  While going through my freezer i found a container of blueberries that I picked the year before, so I grabbed them and a couple pints of canned apples (I am also trying to use my older canned goods) and made these pies.  They were quite good!


Apple-blueberry pies. 

More trees coming for the new year!


I went ahead and submitted an order with "Cold Tree Farms" for the following:

(placed on January 4, 2017 9:39:35 PM EST)


ItemSkuQtySubtotal
Black Walnut (Juglans nigra) - 1-2'WABL1225$27.50
Northern Pecan (Carya illinoinensis) - 6-12"PECA6124$18.60
Ginkgo (Ginkgo biloba) - 1-2'GINK1225$37.00
Chokeberry (Aronia melanocarpa) - 1-2'CHOK1230$51.30
Choke Cherry (Prunus virginiana) - 1-2'CHCH1225$51.25

I saw that the Fulton County Conservation District has also put put their tree order sheet for next year so I need to put that order together too.  I really should plan out where I am going to put all of these trees!