Gardening · Homesteading · Urban Homesteading

September On The Homestead

September is the month of the last big harvests. And if anything marked September for me…it was the forest fires in the mountains above us. It was also hot, hot and hot. Our youngest hated it, and lived with his face mask on, with very limited time outside.

But I know: the heat was good for the tomatoes. We were pulling in daily harvests, until the last week of September, when it finally cooled down, and the rains came.

The apple crop this year wasn’t the best. Only a few of our trees put on apples. However, that is normal when the trees are growing. The rainy and cold Spring didn’t help either, with fruit setting on.

During the week of forest fire smoke, I couldn’t work outside, so I came up with ideas on what to do, once it cleared. One was redoing the original raised beds. The middle beds all came out, and the fill mix in them spread out.

This was after raising the beds we were keeping. The beds on each side stayed.

Before:

During the tear out of the middle beds.

We had toyed on wether or not to do in ground here, or to rebuild, with new fill. We opted for new beds. I may make them a set higher, we shall see. It was nice though to get the end beds higher, so the blueberries would have more depth. I also dug up many of the blueberry bushes along the fence, as that fence will need to be replaced soon. As well, they were not faring there well. We had sunk the bushes in quickly when we moved in, and never broke the ground open enough. Many were stunted growth wise. Fall is a prime time to move them, and they will fare better next year.

The field tomatoes, soon before the end.

I was happy with the red grape production this year. They have fared well in this spot.

The cranberry beans:

But would it be September if it didn’t hail so hard, it looked like snow? And then go back up to 80° the next day….

The end of September brought the first Fall carrots.

Jack Be Little pumpkins:

Carrots at the Harvest Festival on the last day of the month.

And tiny Gourd Spinners. Nature’s fidget spinner….

And now the prep work for late Fall and Winter starts. It’s just cool enough I can work midday again. Tomatoes are coming out, the ground is being put to sleep. Soon, the garlic and shallots will go in the ground. But for now, we have Fall beans and carrots growing, and a lot of work – and dirty feet – waiting.

Gardening · Homesteading · Urban Homesteading

Urban Farming Books For Reading

While it’s hard to find enough time to study and read in summer, I try to get in some time on the elliptical every week. I work out, I get a workout for my mind. These books have been a great help for our continuing education on how to urban farm better.

The Urban Farmer:

The Market Gardener:

The Farmers Office:

Sustainable Market Gardening:

The Organic Farmer’s Business Handbook:

Mini Farming Self-Sufficiency on ¼ Acre:

Backpacking · Gardening · Homesteading · Preserving · Recipes

Dehydrating Zucchini Chips

Dehydrating is one of our favorite methods for preserving produce. It’s quick, easy, and takes up little pantry space when done. Zucchini is a vegetable people run out of ideas on what to use it for, however dehydrating is a great way to have some for the long winter!

You will need a mandolin, or good knife skills. If you have a food processor that can take wider vegetables in the chute, that is an option. Harvest your squash, wash and dry. Trim the ends, then thinly slice.

Place on dehydrator trays, and dry at 135° till fully dry. This can take a few hours to up to 12 hours, depending on your kitchen’s temperature and humidity.

We have been dehydrating on a L’Equip Dehydrator for nearly 10 years now. While not as well-known as other brands, it is affordable and works well. It also fits into storage easily, due to being rectangle.

A few large zucchini (4 trays worth) pack into a glass mason jar. Keep tightly sealed, and they will be fresh for up to a year. No worries about losing in a freezer, due to power outages, or frost burn.

Soak in cold water, and let hydrate, and you can use them all winter. If used in soup, add in dry, and let hydrate that way.

Gardening · Homesteading

Visiting Ed Hume Seeds

Yesterday Kirk and I took the boys to Ed Hume Seeds for their annual summer fair/open house. It’s a PNW thing, and fun to see where a favorite regional brand of seeds comes from.

They have built an amazing set of gardens you can walk through, with lots of little touches. It takes many years to get this level of growing. And….Ed Hume himself led the tour.

Yes, jealous. Our onions were sad this year. Lesson learned, I will start from actual seed next winter, and not use starts.

This was Walker’s favorite section – the carnorvious plants.

Garden decor. I can never see enough for ideas 😉

And this awesome steam punk aphid metal sculpture that was ginormous!

And 2 happy boys….

Who are becoming best buds as well as brothers 🙂

Gardening · Homesteading · Urban Homesteading

Farm Tool Review: Rogue Hoes

What’s the first tools I go for in the fight against weeds? Rogue Hoes.

6″ Garden Hoe

5.5″ Field Hoe

When Kirk ordered me these last year, I pretty much rolled my eyes, thinking “how can these be any different from other hoes?” So many tools sold in big box stores fall apart now in a few days, if you use them for actual farm chores! So to say I had no confidence in these was truthful. That changed quickly enough though. A year later, they look the same. I keep them in the green house, so I can grab them as needed – and catch the weeds before they get bad.

Reasons:

  • The hoe itself – you probably won’t have used one so solid and well crafted before
  • Solid handles. Ash wood (some come in a fiberglass option as well) that can be sanded and re-oiled easily. Some tools have length options as well.
  • The collar part that fixes it to the handle is solid. No flimsy screws.
  • Made in the USA by a small company.
  • Made from recycled agricultural disc blades.

The only upkeep has been to sand and apply linseed oil to the handles. It’s actually made weeding slightly less than sheer drudgery….