Sunday, April 20, 2014

Freya Had a Little Lamb, Little Lamb...

And her name is Mary....


After a long, cold winter, the signs of life that accompany early spring are most rewarding.  The birth of a frisky lamb to a ewe who miraculously survived being submerged for five hours in a flood last June soon after losing her twin lambs in an  accidental drowning warms the heart.

Mary and her proud parents - Freya and Uncas Jr.
Freya is a hearty and stubborn "leader sheep" who has remained the matriarch of our small flock of Icelandics we are attempting to rebuild.  Her new lamb "Mary" was named for our good friend Mary Thomas whose family the Walters lived on and worked the farm's land for the better part of a century.

Our other ewe "Olive" that was born last spring is named after Mary's departed older sister.  We are thrilled to have Mary the black
Olive
lamb as our latest addition.  Mary Thomas spread her wings, leaving the farm and traveling the world while working for IBM, so the black color suits the lamb's name just fine we think :)

In other news we will soon begin constructing our 14' x 14' three season cabin to house interns for the summer season.  We are also finishing up work on our commercial kitchen in the barn, and Dave will be completing the outdoor shower stall and we will be readying our "old school" privy.

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A most delicious spinach & egg farm salad
Our veggie seedlings have been growing like weeds and some of the tomatoes had to be transplanted to larger pots.  We will be planting twelve heirloom varieties this year.

The sap recently stopped flowing - it was not a banner year by any stretch.  Last year we had more sap than we could handle, and it figures this year when we were more properly geared up, the flow was minimal.  Nonetheless we were still able to cook down a few quarts.

The Benner boys were on spring break this past week, and with some friends up to visit, we seized the moment and fired up the earthen pizza oven for the inaugural bake of the season.  Al's friend Jordan decided to slide a tray of OSF root vegetables coated in olive oil into the oven, and even though they should have been covered for some of the time, the results were outstanding!  Very intense flavors - especially the beets.

The spring peepers have started, the bikes were taken out for a spin and trout season opened...spring
Winter Rye (cover crop) is a vibrant green this time of year
has arrived.  Dave added two more mini hoop houses atop the rooftop garden beds and these four cold frames of sorts have since been planted with lots of brassicas (kale, cabbage, brussels, broccoli, etc) and onions.  The snap peas get planted out in the garden soon.

We are loving the batch of sauerkraut Dave made last fall, and have found it mouth watering when added to a  pork loin or one of our free range turkey breasts in a slow cooker along with OSF carrots and potatoes.

With farming there is always a catch, and right now the one major glitch is our '66 Ford pickup - "Hoss".  Seems he has piston ring problem.... still unclear if it is simply
stuck or if we are having oil blow by due to wear.  If the latter, this will require a pretty significant engine tear down to repair and could see our truck out of commission for several weeks during a critical time of the year....Dave is running tests this coming week...

Until next time, enjoy this special time of year and be sure to get some seeds in the ground soon!

Your friends at Old School Farm...    (More photos to follow below)



Coleman and Owen "plant" refrigerated turkey eggs in nesting boxes

Dave Campeau standing in the soon to be commercial kitchen area in barn

Wide eyed broody hen observer

Three 8 year olds on the old road bed to upper pasture

Winter's gory reminder - a young raccoon that didn't get to
 see spring was spotted hanging from a crevice in a hemlock

Bacon fat fun

Jordan Cassway - photographer and friend

The lower orchard greening up

Early spring frog eggs

Heavy downpours almost had the Dyberry jumping it's banks again

A light dusting of snow in mid-April along the falls

Focus   Focus Focus -  Dad was proud of his boys this past week

         Our Spanish Black Tom has been very charged up - gobbling
constantly and hopefully fertilizing a new batch of eggs

Owen Benner spent hours observing our first three chic hatchlings -
incubator in foreground holds more eggs

Albeit a bit weedy, our holdover spinach from last fall's
planting is very flavorful

Our rooftop mini-greenhouses

Biking along the Dyberry


Eitan, Coleman and Owen

Dave's amazing (and much needed) railing in the barn

Eggplant Seedlings under the high pressure sodium light


Tuesday, March 25, 2014

A Taste of Spring



The new evaporator pan receives it's inaugural pour of sap
Finally a warm day - Saturday, March 23rd to be exact.  We hit somewhere between 55 and 60 degrees for a high and the sap (a favorite of 8 year olds - see above) finally started to flow as the snow and ice were melting.  It has been a LONG winter and it was great to be outside in the warm sun even if it was a bit muddy in places and very short lived (it was 10 degrees the next night!).

The chickens are laying at a brisk pace now - just shy of one egg a day.  We are currently selling 6 - 8 dozen per week through the local co-op that we are members of.  The chickens have been creating some "chicken highways" in the snow - turning these paths
The chicken highway
into muddy runs that freeze at night and thaw again the next day.  They have since been moved to the other hillside so our grass can come back in April.

To Al's disappointment he found one of the hens underneath the steps that lead into the turkey coop - recently deceased with no visible cause.  Such is life - thin margins between life and death on a farm after a long, cold winter.

With the ongoing cold temperatures and some snow still on the ground, Dave continues to focus his spare time on getting the kitchen area in the barn completed and ready for the PA Dept. of Ag. inspection later this spring.  Right now the piping has been re-installed (a plumber did not do such a good job), and soon a floor drain that prevents backup from the waste line will be installed into the floor beneath the three bay commercial sink. Butcher block counters and wainescoating for the ceiling will soon go in, along w/ a urethane coating on all the walls and ceilings so they are washable. (thanks to Dave for a lot of sanding of the hemlock siding and timber framing in this area)

The bread bowl/serving stand sits on our
veggie wash sink, while it gets routed out
with an "arbor tech" grinder attachment
Depicted in this update are a few photos of a bread bowl/food serving stand that Al is making out of a chunk of White Oak from a tree that was at least 500 years old.  The "Columbus Oak" was a famous tree in Bucks County, PA that collapsed about ten years ago.  Al's dad, Dave gave him this section that contained the only burl on the tree, and the bread bowl/stand is taking shape - the boys even pitched in with some sanding, drilling and gluing.

The teepee planned for the spring has been crossed off the list and replaced with a 12' x 14' bunkhouse/cabin.  Canvas teepees need to be replaced every 3 - 5 years, and given the magnitude of the expense for the material and the associated labor, it has been decided to go with a more permanent and weatherproof structure.  This will house two interns this coming season.

We will also be constructing a compost shelter, and a small animal cart to move our sheep out of the floodplain and up to the middle pasture come May or early June.   Dave is also currently completing an outdoor shower for our summer workers.


Our seedlings are growing (some better than
The sap collection barrel and gravity feed line
others), our cold frames are being set up later this week, and we continue our search for an "old school" plow and disker for our old Ferguson tractor.

We hope to do some haying of our lower pastures this year and we are going to be expanding our vegetable growing areas and cultivated areas this season.   We have a very busy season coming up and will be posting more regularly all our activities as we move into April and May.

Oh, and our bees made it through the winter!   We were very pleased to see them buzzing about this past Saturday.  It appears leaving them the lion's share of the honey for this long winter has paid off.

Until next time, think spring- it will come - it has to!  


Your Friends at Old School Farm
(scroll down for a lot more photos!



A warm glow is cast by the high pressure sodium seedling grow light in the sunroom. 
Coleman Benner inspects sap line

Finally we can see our ground!

Owen feeds the flock
The big hornet nest that had to go (above our moss growing area)

Some rocks and a large stick, and not much remains


Bee activity - YES!

Desperate deer...eating Christmas Ferns

Loading the incubator for this  year's flock replacements

Moss on felt mats - moss loves snow.

Iceball

What's left of the "Quinzee" shelter

Dark leaves absorb heat and leave prints - maple here

We have a few sap buckets near the house for the boys

The new sugaring location

Chipmunk tunnel exposed by melting snow

Owen Benner sands a leg for the bread bowl/stand

The still frozen frog pond offers entertainment for almost eight year olds

Don't worry mom, it's not running (yet :)



The evaporator pan set up

A winter's worth of mice tunnels exposed...

A boys life in March on the farm