My May Post on Trees

My monthly post is a tad bit late….I had to do the History post on Thursday and what would Friday be like with out Fuzzy and Boomer …. a wee bit lonely I do believe…so here is my tree post today June 2, 2012

Lots and lots of lovely shade giving green leaves.

And as a delightful blog friend   Ceclia, from New Zealand, now living and farming in America says: “A bendy tree day”!

If you get a chance zip on over and visit Ceclia…you will meet Momma Sheep, several little pigs, a cow who is going to calf any moment and beautiful Kupa, not to mention all the wonderful chickens.

For those of you who love to cook, she is a delightful cook, sharing recipes will all of us.

This is such a lovely time of year!

Linda

Sheryl’s Garden of Cactus

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Aren’t they all amazing!?  My header shows a green bloom…I didn’t know cactus had green blooms!

Thank you, Sheryl, for sharing this really cool experience with me and letting me post to my blog!

Linda

Part of the Burn Area

They have arrived in all their terrible glory….Russian Knap weed….horrible stuff.

With all of the native plants destroyed the invasives have taken over. This hillside is the worst for Russian Knap weed.  I thought about showing you the ugly Canada Thistle patches (which equal this patch of Russian Knap Wee) and the beautiful but every so hateful Musk Thistle  (we all know people just like that….beautiful but very hard to be around).

There are some other weeds that I enjoy and am glad to see  Milkweed (excluding the poisonous kind) and Golden Rod are two that come to mind as I’m writing this.  But these are NOT growing where the other three are, because the other three are thugs and take over the spot they are growing in, acting like bouncers by kicking everyone one else out.

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I’m putting on leather gloves every other day and pulling up the poisonous types of weeds, bringing them back and burning them. The last thing we want is for the cows to eat something (next winter) that kills them.

The burn still makes me sad.  And the farmer who burned everything is stalling on doing anything….so now the three farms are going to have to approach him as a group to get something done.

I was hoping that he would have been a better neighbor and handled everything to the best of his ability, instead of waiting and waiting and ignoring the whole problem.

He is to be pitied, but being a responsible person in life is to act responsibly.

Enough of this…onto a lovely sunny day!

Linda

This Week’s Sunday Stills Assignment—-Songs in Photos

I was afraid I could not do this week’s assignment….a song in photos!

Then I got an inspiration—

The Sounds of Silence, by Simon and Garfunkel

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Lest we forget…..

Linda


Only Two Left, Only 2 !!!!!

There are some things on the farm a person just can’t do without, a shovel for one.  I always seem to be in need of shovel….the scoop shovel is a good example. It’s very good for grain and then a separate one for cleaning out the chicken house and the barn (no mixing of shovels for food items, now, ya hear!

Then there is the shovel for the irrigation water, each field has at least two shovels in it….one for Terry and one for me.  We like different types of shovels, the shovel that fits best on your shoulder and has a nice weight in your hand is what you look for.

Then I have a shovel for the yard…this one has a large shovel so I can dig up clumps of stuff in one or two digs, not a whole bunch of little ones.

I also have a little red shovel that I use for my water trough flower beds.

And I have two rakes….a leaf rake and a regular rake.  I only need the two.  They are for yard work and that is all.

There are other implements that are more than necessary but used only for that particular thing…like planters for planting and the lawn mower.

But the thing I use the most for all sorts of things is….

BALING TWINE!!!!

And I only have two left!  (WAIL)

Baling twine is what I used to put the top on the chicken run with, baling twine holds my vines to the trellis, baling twine has been know to ‘tie the gate shut’ until one of us could get to town and get the proper latch.

Or to close the garage door until the opener can be fixed ….. that was three years ago and we still have that on the ‘to do’ list.

Baling twine is the farmer’s (at least us) answer to what others use duct tape for.

And I ONLY have two left!

How this all came about was last year when Terry decided to sell the cows, he decided that he would sell ALL the hay, since we wouldn’t need any to feed over the winter.  We kept enough for the chickens and Misty’s goats, but that was it.

Gradually the bales were used and I stored the very precious, to me, twine so I would have some when I needed it.

I’m so glad I did.

Terry should cut the alfalfa sometime the first of June (depending on the weather), he will bale up the hay and haul it into the yard.  He sell the hay….BUT I’m requesting several  bales to hold me through the year.  And on those several bales will be two strings of baling twine!

Linda

(P.S.  No! I can not go out and cut off any length I might want out of the baler….I can’t EVEN think of that….{{{ shudder}}}!)

Crop Update

This has been the most unusual of years!

Terry is planting the pinto beans right now.  He is taking his time — only planting one field, watching how the water is acting and assessing if he wants to get several more acres planted , if there isn’t enough water that would be foolish on our part.

He has left the 20 acres of alfalfa for later on in the year…hoping for more water.  When the sweet corn and the wheat starts to come off, those farmers stop watering that field and the field sets until next year.

(Since we do NOT irrigate from an underground aquifer, but from reservoirs, all the water that is used on a farm passes on down to the next farm below it.  This is how all farms from Montrose, Colorado, to Grand Junction, Colorado, are irrigated.  Nothing is wasted and all is put back into the canals so that eventually the water ends up in Arizona, Nevada and California. That is where our water comes from….we get our water from Blue Mesa Reservoir and the Ridgeway Reservoir….people on the Surface Creek Bench get theirs from Grand Mesa)

The water from the sweet corn and wheat fields should allow us to have enough water to plant the alfalfa.  We just might not get the acres we had hoped for into pinto beans, we will just have to wait and see.  The decision to plant the rest of the pinto beans will be made by June 1st. after that it will be too late to plant the seed.

The other strange part of the farming this year is the heat…we build heat up until we are smothering around 90* during the day –with 20-25 m.p.h. hot winds ( the heat is very early for this time of year) and then cooling down in the high 30s or low 40s at night, making the corn turn purple.  The purple color is leaf injury, although it doesn’t kill the plant.

The last two nights we were warm enough (48*)  that this morning we saw the  crown of the plant starting to green up, which is a welcome sign.

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Well, hope I didn’t bore you…farming is a huge part of our every day (and sometimes worry at night).  Often times people get to thinking it would be easy to be a farmer…just get some land, plant some seed, harvest the crop and make money.

I wish it were so easy.

Still those people are right in lots of ways—it is a good way of life.  At 68 and 63 years of age Terry and I can’t think of anything else we would have liked to do (although we both worked in town in really fun jobs to support this way of life) and we can’t imagine doing anything different for the rest of our lives.

Thanks for stopping by….

Linda

The Ring of Fire Solar Eclipse 2012

The Ring of Fire Soalr Eclipse happened right on time yesterday evening.  I had a hard time trying to figure out how to take a photo of it

  • First I tried regular glasses that turn dark when you go outside
  • Then I tried sun glasses
  • Then Terry remembered his welding helmet….nope, it needed an arc for it to darken
  • Then he remembered he had his OLD welding helmet

IT WORKED!  But only for our eyes….I couldn’t get the camera to get a decent shot through the tiny vision glass.

But we got to see the  eclipse even if I couldn’t take a photo.

The whole thing was really cool…and will not be back to our section of the earth until 2045…I’ll be surprised if anyone living here on our farm will be alive at that time.

But one never knows……

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Linda

 

This Week’s Sunday Stills Challenge is the Color Pink

For this week’s challenge on the Sunday Stills site, we are to photograph something the color of pink!

I had a great time with this…I have lots of pink around the house, the yard and with the two granddaughters, but I settled for:

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Just a few pink things!

Have a really nice Sunday!

Linda

My Yard in May

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Weeds and all!

Linda