Unknown's avatar

About Dayphoto

My name is Linda Brown. I live on a farm on the western slope of Colorado, in the high mountain desert. I’ve lived here all my life, hailing back four generations on my father’s side. Today I blog about our farm, the everyday activities that keep the farm going. I also write about my thoughts and dreams and goals. On Friday’s I always write about TLC Cai-Cai. Our sweet kitty who helps keep the farm safe. And Boo Berry Betty, a breeder dog learning to be a Farm Dog! The lovely thing about blogging it opens the world up for all of us to reach out and meet people from many different cultures and different ways of life. You can find me every day (but Saturday) at https://coloradofarmlife.wordpress.com/ Your Friend on a Western Colorado Farm, Linda Brown

Irrigation Step 7, Continued

gated-pipe

Some of our irrigation is set up with either a dirt ditch or cement ditch, which uses siphon tubes or the easy way….gated pipe!!  (My personal favorite)

 

It is easier to use, costs more to set up, harder to fix if the pipes become broken.  The easier to use part is why I like it.

 

on-no

Here is an example of what you don’t want to have happen.  The water gets caught in a low spot and starts cutting over into another furrow until you have a bog hole.  The only way to fix it is re-dig the furrow by hand, er shovel.

 

now-what

What Ya Got?!?!?! Can I Have Some Too?

whats-up-whats-up

Anytime I walk outside and I look like I’m carrying something the chickens run over to me as fast as they can.

chickens-003

They didn’t think the camera looked like anything good to eat, still I enjoyed the expressions on their chicken faces.

Step 7- Starting the Irrigation Water

utah-wind

Before we could begin a big wind storm from Utah hit our area bringing with it 45-60 mile an hour wind.   

Step 7 has many, many parts to it:

1.     Call the ditch rider so the water can be turned into your head gate.  This is the amount of water you are allotted per season.  You can NEVER go over this amount, but they can cut you short of your amount because of drought.  You still pay the same, whether you get your full amount or not  (and water here, costs more than the taxes on the farm.)

2.     Gather up all the siphon tubes and lay them out in the correct pattern

picking-up-tubes

 

 3.    Turn the water down the main ditch artery for our place- once it is turned into this ditch, that ditch will always have water in it until the end of the growing season.

4.     Although we cleaned the ditch (by hand-called digging out the ditch) the really messy wind had filled it back up with trash

cleaning-the-ditch1

5.     Set the tubes.  This requires a siphon like action.  I have to put the tubes in the ditch, cover up one end and then hurry and spill it over the side. 

Terry just walks along and covers one hand over the end, pumps two times and drops the tube in the furrow.  I take forever; he is done in a short time.  THEREFORE I set the tubes in the furrow, while he siphons the water into the furrows. We try to have enough tubes that once they are set we don’t have to pack them again. But every year we have to replace tubes as they wear out or get broke.  Some years we just pack the tubes as that is a cheaper way to go. 

Depending on the field there are about 30-40 tubes per field.  It also depends on the amount of water in the ditch.  Sometimes we double tube, but that is later on in the season.

setting-tubes

 

6.     The water is moved after the proper amount of ‘subbing’ has taken place.  And the water has made it to the end of the field.  Usually about a 12 hour set.  But when water is short it is moved every 8 hours, day and night to get it through all the crops.

wind-in-fuzzys-fur1

Fuzzy loves to help, he spends lots of time barking at bubbles, trying to catch sticks and sometimes jumping in and wading. 

 

7.     The irrigator has to follow the water down each row, making sure it doesn’t plug up, sink in a hole, cut over into another row until it gets to the end of the row.  5 acres is a job, 30 acres a pain, and 50 acres horribly hard.  We farm 80+ acres.  The water only has to be walked if the leveling job is not good (that’s why I say it is an art form).   Then we only have to walk until the row is imprinted with the memory of the water, after that it is sealed.  BUT….once Terry cultivates we have to start over again.  Then when the crops get too big to get the tractor through the field the water just has to make what way it can, hopefully the imprint is firm and we don’t have to worry.

Maybe you can see the subbing taking place in the below photo.

 

water-in-the-furrows

There is more, but this gets the water started for the season.

 

Step 6- Marking Out

down-the-row-step-6

Because Terry likes to irrigate before he plants, step 6 is marking out the rows

step-6-marking

 This is always my favorite part.  I love seeing the fields all marked and ready for the first water to come hurtling down each and every furrow.

Step 5 – Kick the Dirt

kick-the-dirt

After all the snow and rain, then wind and snow, and then rain, the sun came out and warmed up the earth.

To check the soil to see if it was ready for more tractor work, a good rule of thumb is to rub your foot into the soil to see what type of moisture comes up.

The soil is ready!

Next Winter’s Heat Supply

wood-for-next-winter-0021

Even though we are still not through heating the house, Terry is rebuilding our woodpile.

The piles also keep down the weeds plus the chickens LOVE to climb on the logs!

What Happens to Old Trees

wind-and-trees

High winds for a couple of days, snow and the weight of leaves and flower blossoms sometimes cause the collapse of really, really old tree limbs.

Sigh! 

But the tree is still living so to shave off a heavy branch is just alright.

Soccer and Being in the First Grade (according to Bladen)

Organized sports are such a fun thing, especially when you are in the first grade and you get a neat shirt with your last name on it, “Like Dad has”. 

soccer-and-blade

That is worry on his face, he was afraid he won’t do well.mccormick2

“Only Dad’s say Football, or Basketball, or Track and also say Coach” I was informed.

 

blade-and-soccer 

But the “REALLY BEST THING is getting to run ALL the time!  Football is ‘okay’ but soccer is the best BECAUSE  YOU GET TO RUN ALL THE TIME!”