Showing posts with label 2006. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2006. Show all posts

August 14

2005

2006


2005


Gardening in the High Desert
[Sunday] I won't be building a garden room any time soon, but I wonder how my garden bench would fare outside all winter.
WINTER THOUGHTS
  • Bulbs for forcing
  • Don't forget that you got a bunch of Christmas stuff last year
  • Bus some music or nature sound CDs

2006


Gardening in the High Desert
  • Some of the hybrid popular [trees] are 3 feet tall. so hard to start holding back on water, but if I want to see them next year, I better! [2013-08-11 I presume this is so they will harden off for the winter]
  • Mulched the ones along the south fence, but still need to mulch the ones against the west (2006-09-03) [Presume that the date in parenthesis refers to when I mulched the ones against the west fence]
  • Need to keep pinching flower buds back on the basil.  They looked so naked after I harvested my little bit, but I hear they will grow back with a vengeance.
  • [Check marked] Buy bleach, rubber gloves
  • MDH flattened out and graded where the chicken house will be, and also the area he wants to put rock in to store his cars
  • I so don't want to work today.  Just want to sit in the mellow sun
  • Mulch tress n. of metal building 9/6/2006
  • Make concrete Garlic signs 9/2/2006 Made a wood one [not concrete]

August 13

2006

2007


2006


Gardening in the High Desert
Bloom/Harvest
  • Something is eating my lovely pepper
  • Basil blooming nicely
  • Tom blooming, bust still no fruit
  • Harvested one small Ziploc [bag] of regular sweet basil and one of the giant, curly leafed one
  • Beans blooming, but only one very slender one out yet

2007


Gardening in the High Desert
Bloom/Harvest
  • Veg Bed #1
    • Green toms - only 2, I think
    • MG [Morning Glory] has 2nd real leaf
    • Other 2 vining things reaching for the sun - about 2" tall
  • Veg Bed #2
    • Alaskan Fancy - 10+ green tomes, some have turned that pre-ripening light white green
    • Tom that I thought was a yellow pear has decidedly round fruit forming
    • Stunted sun flower blooming under Marigold and Cosmos
    • Buds ready to open on Marigold
    • Many tiny wax beans
    • 2 Cukes growing strong
  • Veg Bed #3
    • Black eye peas - more nearing harvest; only a few blooms now
    • 2 two little yellow squash and 1 zuke ripening
    • 2 sunflowers blooming - took pictures - they are about 3 ft tall with 4 inch blooms - need to find out how long it took from seeding to flower. [later, undated note] 2 months from seed to bloom
    • 10+ green toms of various kinds
    • Lemon basil ready to shear back again
    • Regular basil ready for another harvest
    • Flower basils are pretty much done [2013-08-11] I usually plant some basils in strategic places around the garden and let them bloom - they attract enormous amounts of pollinators - and in the desert, we need to bring in as many as we can find
Journal
  • watered orchard & veg beds
  • Took lots of photos - some at night
  • Apple Tree Thoughts for Fall Planting
    • Grand Gala (pol. grand gala, granny smith)
    • Sept Wonder Fuji (pol. grand gala, granny smith)
    • Red Fuji (pol gran gala, granny smith)
  • That's about $70 for 3 trees
  • Sunflower saving strategy - cover ripening heads with paper bags sprayed with deer-off

January 31

2006

Gardening in the High Desert
Business trip every week for 3 weeks has not been good for growing seeds. They are surviving, but are lanky and leggy and no true leaves, yet. Toms need potting on. On MG [Morning Glory] died. Other one is not happy. I am thinking of planting it with our ficus inside. Sweet potato is very happy. Using up a cup of water every 2-3 days. Someone watered the ficus very well while I was in Baltimore. Excellent.

Seeds and catalogs from southwestern gardens came today. Will need to order more from them. Prices good, very fast shipping, and a good selection of short season veggies. Also, lots of high desert plants - sages, grasses and such. Wish I'd thought to bring it on the plane with me today.

Saw a nice light, water, PH, ferti. gauge at Charlie's Geenhouse. $35. I will probably get it. I wonder how deep the probe goes.

Good thing we are both employed with lots of over time - putting in/buying all of our infrastructure items.

Garden Bench Considerations
  • Fit my height
  • Peg board back
  • Potting soil storage
  • Hose and gravity fed sink
  • make small hose long enough
  • side windbreaks that fold against the back?
  • shade - how?
  • skids for ATV mobility - secure hooks for pulling
  • fits through gates
Accomplishments
  • Back [of back yard fence] done and part of east side. Jake [our Weimaraner] will step over MDH's string lines, but Mauly [our Dobie] will go all the way around. MDH says it's because she's done a number of "nose plants" into the ground [presumably by tripping]
  • Bird seed on tray has either blown away or been eaten. I would guess, with our winds, they've blown far and wide. We'll see what sprouts.
  • I left the laundry room lights on, but they are too far away to feed my little solar seedlings. Going to try put them under fluorescent lamp until I get a grow light. Need a cheap grow light frame.
  • Toilet paper roll temp housing for toms that desperately need potting on

December 25

2005

2006

2010

2011


2005

Gardening in the High Desert
Warm, sunny day, and I didn't even go outside today.

Frost this morning looked almost like snow.  Glittery, shiny on the sand, cars and fence boards.  As the sun warmed the fence boards and the ice crystals melted, the boards looked like they had diamonds twinkling on them.

2006

Gardening in the High Desert
Merry Christmas - bright, sunny, clear - in the mid 50*F [during the day].
  • Sprayed deer off on all the trees out front
  • Check out veg area
    • Garlic on the ground have been nipped down but none have been dug up
    • Garlic in [raised] beds not nipped
    • [in reality, it didn't matter if the leaves had been nipped, as far as final production]
    • Irises mostly brown now
    • Oregano going strong
  • Orchard - glad I wrapped my tress - the ones from last year that were chewed are chewed again.  My wrapped ones are safe, for the moment.  Can't believe how thick their trunks got in just one season.  I am heartbroken to think that I will have to leave them.  All that work to coax them along, and I won't be around to see them mature.  I hate starting over.  I finally have something and I have to let go.  I guess that's just how my whole life is - having stuff just to have to let it go.  It's so hard for me to let go.  Children, dogs, gardens, land, husbands - so hard for me to say good-bye.

Rosemary - Buy one early, harden off and put in the ground in a sunny place.  The one from last year did pretty well in partial shade - it'll be good to see how well it does in full sun.  Maybe I should put it in a pot and bring it indoors for winter. [2011 Note: the original rosemary plant is still going strong, having survived negative 10*F weather and several snow storms over the years]

Basils - Could I really put out a hundred plants? If so, how yummy and how pretty.  Let the ornamentals go to flower - cut back stalks when just beginning to set seed.  Will they really grow 2 ft tall in full sun?  Will the rabbits and chipmonks really leave them alone?  I mean, something has topped off my garlic sprouts, so obviously, they didn't read the book on what they're supposed to like.

Garlic - Did I mulch them well enough? [2011 Note: even non-mulched hard neck garlic has done well over the years] What kind of yield will I get?  Are desert bunnies desperate enough to eat garlic in the winter? Ate least none of the cloves have been dug up, yet.

Black-eye Peas - Plant a lot all at once and use as "shelly beans."  They'd go good in corn and peas salad.  Use the yard long beans for stir fry.

2010

Gardening in the High Desert
Weather forecast says wet snow or rain

2011

Gardening in the High Desert
  • Have a whole bunch of stale bagels from work, so the wild critters will get a treat.  Also have a new bag of cracked [presumably corn]
  • Hot water froze yesterday
Lessons Learned
  • Regular, deep watering is key - yes, use a timer
  • I recently read that it takes 3 - 5 years for soil to really show the benefits of care - my personal experience here with the sand concurs
  • The roma and Alaskan Fancy toms both set early, making them the most productive (the already have a lot of tiny fruit set before the summer heat starts preventing pollination)
  • If you plant it, they will come - butterflies and bunnies, birds and chipmunks - all to enjoy the bounty of the garden
  • Zukes really do need to be looked at every day - and even then, some will be missed and grow to the size of your arm
  • I like the taste of green zukes better than yellow squash
  • The hybrid yellow squash and zukes are more prolific than the open pollinated - but surely, one does not need that high of a production in a home garden environmentD! The OPs were plenty productive.
  • Don't plant squash too close together (I leared this years ago, but, apparently, I need to learn this again)
  • Cukes sown under zukes do not get enough sun
  • Velour beans were the tastiest - but also the most finicky to grow
  • Bunnies will eat morning glory leaves if they are hungry enough
  • Home gron corn really isn't worth the effort - until you eat one raw off the stalk.
  • I need to find some more efficiencies if I'm ever going to do this on a market garden scale
  • I'm starting late in life to be dreaming of becoming a full-time farmer; therefore, I shall have to use all of my wits and the wisdom of others to pull this off
  • I can raise 50% of my chicken food during the summer months with barely any extra effort

December 23

2005

2006

2010


2005

Took a walk around the perimeter today for the first time in months. Mauly and Jake have dug numerous large holes under various bushes as they peruse their prey. How am I going to have a "wild" area if they keep destroying it?

The back yard fence that MDH is building is turning out really well. The West side is nearly done. Going to start the North side soon. I can't believe we're really doing this. Over a decade of dreams finally starting to blossom.

Sweet potato has real leaves, but it's still too cold for it to really take off yet. Still, its good to see something growing in the house.

Something is chewing on the ficus leaves. Not serious, yet, but I can't seem to find what it is.

2006

Son has moved the rest of the unplanted bulbs into the metal building for me yesterday. Now I just need to choose a nice, sub-freezing time to plant them out.

Hundreds of daffs to go.

Go my library card out of hock and gathered a bunch of herb books to bring home for the holidays with me.
  • Filled bird feeders and set out water
  • Watered front trees; bottom pine branches have been eaten
  • Inspected fruit trees
  • Earlier in the week planted a pot of misc garlic bulbs for "chives"
Winter is a time for hiding under the covers with a good garden book and spring-time dreams. Herbs for tea
  • Lemon Flavors
    • Lemon Verbena
    • Lemon Balm [2011 Note: Lemon Balm smells too medicine-like, even though it has a lemon smell to it]
    • Lemon Thyme
    • Lemon Grass
  • Mints
    • Spearmint
    • Applemint
    • Blue Balsam Tea Mint
  • Anise
    • Anise Seed
    • Fennel
    • Anise Hyssop
  • Fruit
    • Pineapple Sage
    • Fruit scented Geraniums

Potpourris Herbs
F = Flowers, L = Leaves
  • Anise Hyssop F, L
  • Anise Seeds
  • Basil F, L
  • Bay L
  • Borage F
  • Elderberry L
  • Hussop F
  • Juniper Berries
  • Lavender F
  • Lemon Verbena L
  • Marjoram L
  • Mint L, F
  • Rose F, Hips
  • Rosemary L
  • Scented Geraniums F, L
  • Thyme L
So lovely to behold the winter landscape under a bright sunny day. ** Try a lemon basil hair rinse or a sage tea [hair] rinse. Herb Vinegar
  1. 8 inches of stem for 2 c vinegar
  2. Use red or white wine vinegar
  3. heat vinegar until just below boiling in glass, enamel or stainless [container]
  4. Fill hot, sterol jars
  5. cover & cool
  6. ready to use in 2 weeks
  7. [2011 subsequently heard that it should be kept in the refrigerator]
Placed a $30 order with Thyme Gardens. I know I could get the seeds elsewhere for a bit cheaper, but I like to support the small growers when I can.

2010

  • Dug in another 9 gallons of compost into new existing beds
  • Started a new bed - no compost yet, but started digging it up
  • My granddaughter worked in the garden with me for an hour.  She called me a farmer.  She said that I had chickens,  corn and a big blue tractor, so I must be a farmer.  [My recollection here in 2011 is that she did concede that I didn't have a very big farm because I did not have cows.]
  • New weeds have sprouted in the empty beds; I hoed them up.  Need to hand pull [them] in the garlic and raised beds.
  • Now leaves on any of the fruit trees now.
  • 4 ivys look good; no signs of transplant shock
  • Sweet potato doing well. Lovely deep purple leaves - tiny and nearly black.  Need to put in a good pot.  Last one I grew had green leaves.
  • Need to start taking better care of my poor ficus.  Needs food and regular watering.
  • What will happen if I winter sow spinach now? Will it germinate?  How much seed do I have to play with? Surely I could try 20 seeds or so?

December 03

2006

Gardening in the High Desert.

Plant/Sow Page

  • 20 Metron Tulips in the bronze oval planter that held daffodils last year
  • 4 small winter pots - 3 with 3 lavender mixed crocus and one with 4 of them
  • 2 clay pots - each with 3 Queen of the Night tulips and 8 lavender mixed crocus
55 Bulbs

Sprinkled all with bone meal and put in metal building for a few months chilling after watering.

350 Bulbs as of 11/26/2006
 55 More today
------
405 total so far - several hundred left

Journal Entry Later in the day

17:28

  • Planted some pots for Spring forcing
  • Son started digging me a bulb planting trench near the dogs' pen
  • Filled bird feeders
  • Sprinkled bone meal on daffs from last year

Now that I am mostly over my cold, I hope I can get on with the bulb planting program.  Still hundreds left to plant.

January 22

2006

2008

2011


2006

Gardening in the High Desert

Seed Orders

Bought 200 seeds of a lavender moonflower.  Never seen lavender ones advertised before.  [Finally got a few blooms in 2011 from a rabbit ravaged vine.] [Purchased from Onalee's Seeds] Also bought a few more seeds.  We'll see.

D has put up 10 more fence posts and is out of concrete now.

Should I get a Mantis Tiller? [2011-11-18 I did not, and I'm glad I didn't.  The sand is easy enough to just hoe up, and I do not have that big of a plot.]

Ordered some [used] "backyard bird" and "backyard wildlife" books from Amazon.com.  Had so much fun watching birds and such with my brother at his house.  Ordered a bird ID book, too.

From Onalee's Seeds - $27.50 Onalee@aol.com

  • $15.00 - Impomoea Alba - White Moon Flowers
  • $12.50 - Impomoea Turbinata - Lavender Moon Flowers

Plants of the South West $28.50 (Rec'd 1/28/2006)

  • $2 - Lemon/Apple Cukes [2011-11-18 - Grew this in 2011 - seeds still viable - did not check germination rates, but it was over 50%
  • $8 - High Desert Wildflower Mix 1 ounce
  • $5 - 2 Pkt Blue Gama Grass
  • $2 - Yellow Pear Tomato [2011-11-18 - These were also still viable in 2011]
  • $2 - Sugar Snap Peas
  • $2 - Mexico Miget Tomato [2011-11-18 - These were also still viable in 2011]
  • $5 - Shipping

Prairie Garden Plant Ideas

(medium tall)

  • Butterfly weed
  • Columbine
  • Cream False Indigo
  • Narrow leave purple cone flower
  • Nodding pink onion
  • Orange Cone Flower
  • Prairie Smoke
  • Prairie Spiderwort
  • Purple Con Flower
  • Purple Prairie Clover
  • Western Spiderwort
  • Wild Petunia
  • White Aster
  • Prairie Dropseed Grass
  • Blue Sky Aster (short)
  • Downy Sunflower (tall)
  • Little Blue Stem Grass
  • Prairie Blazing Star
  • Blue Gama Grass
  • Big Blue Stem
  • Prairie Sage
  • Common Ox-eye
[2011-11-18 Note: Need to check if they are on the state "invasive" list.  Also, need to see what is poisonous to livestock, incase some escape from the "Prairie" to the "Pastures."]

Prairie Garden Tips
  • Grow some samples in know places so you know what the seedlings look like
  • Photograph samples for future 

Sweet Potato Storage


  • Wash/Dry
  • Grease with crisco, prick w/fork
  • Bake 350*F until done
  • Let cool & then wrap in foil (regular)
  • Put in plastic bag and freeze
To Use
  • Run under hot water and peal
  • Prep as if fresh boiled
  • Or microwave and will be like fresh baked

2008

Gardening in the High Desert
Need to start tracking weather in N TN and S Ky.

Remember: Procrastination Kills Plants!

2011

Gardening in the High Desert

00:46

I swear it feels like the tomatoes grew 2 inches in the last few days. Looks like the weather will be warm enough to put them outside a spell again.
Started, yes, more tomatoes. Also started some peppers. 12 weeks ahead of transplant time - just about right. Tomes will be leggy for sure, by then. But still, the more important thing is that they'll be old enough to start flowering as soon as they're in the ground. And set fruit before the scorching season arrives. Hopefully sunflowers will shaw and contain them.

22:17

Got so much done today; it was a good day for gardening
  • Toms and basil and some ivy went outside
  • Potted up some more basil from lettuce tray
  • Potted sweet potato cutting in old Jack In The Box cup and put in a [decorative] tin pot
  • Brought small daffs in for forcing
  • Turned compost
  • Hoed under some weeds in future beds
  • Can't believe how much bigger the transplanted basil is

10 - October 02

2005

2006

2007

2010



2005

The sweet gums [trees] are looking decidedly perky this morning. I was concerned that yesterday's dry winds would have been hard on them, but I guess the cooler temps and deep watering helped them. Of course, I took pictures yesterday. Need to add them to my database.

2006


  • DONE - See how deep rain penetrated into the ground – not much; 6” only
  • DONE – Buy dirt – 2006-10-21
  • DONE – Take a nap
  • DONE – Remove clothes pins from fruit trees – 2006-10-04 [used with string to keep young branches spread apart]
  • How do I put diesel and oil in the tractor?
  • [Plant] more peas, please
  • Fall cleanup
  • More soap making
  • Remove Christmas décor from last year
  • Wire fence fruit trees [I have no idea what that means now]
  • Cut back viburnums
  • DONE- Trees? 2006-10-07 none at HD [Home Depot, probably Carson City] [Black Austrian] pines

So much to do before D leave for trainin in South Carolina – and then a blink of an eye and he's of to Iraq.

Strange, but I think I won't have to water this week.

2007


[Accomplished]

  • Watered all houseplantsHaven't been in the garden in 24 hours – miss that contact with the Earth
  • Filled bird feeders
  • Played with dogs
  • Dreaming of Garlic
  • Put dead lettuce in compost pile

One place I saw said 12 -15 bulbs of garlic per person per year – seems like our family could eat more than than
Garlic Use – Crush, add to butter, put in molds, freeze, pop out of molds, wrap in plastic wrap and freeze. Instant garlic butter for cooking. I love it!

I am taking a class on jumpstarting your creativity by studying Leonardo da Vinci – It's been a year or more since I've kept a non-garden journal. I wonder if now is the time to start one again?
A year ago D was contemplating spending a year in Iraq – and now, now what are his plans? I am so blessed to have him home. He planted a tree this weekend.

2010

Big fat drops of rain accompanied by the usual winds. Cooled things down nicely. Still, one should not mistake this little rain as actually watering anything. It has barely wet the surface [of the ground]. Had to run to put dog food and chicken food out of the rain, but other than that, not a big deal. Even when there is lots of it, I've always loved the rain.

07 – July 30 - Journal Entry

2006



2006

Can't believe we've been here [in Nevada] nearly a year. So much accomplished, a few disappointments and so much more to look forward to.
  • Watered
  • Front trees
  • Fruit trees
  • Veggie Bed
  • Little Lilacs
  • Bird Bath
  • Ficus
  • Kitchen Window Plants
While watering pines out front, I noticed that each has its own resident lizard. They looked like some sort of anole Eat bugs, eat bugs and go forth and multiply.

Smooshed a grasshopper.
  • DONE – mulch hybrid poplars (2006-07-30 – ½ done; 2006-08-13 Front done)
  • DONE – Get rid of dead indoor plants
  • Pot up houseplants into dirt
  • Clean bird feeders
  • DONE – Pick up trash [along fence line] – 2006-07-30
  • Put away tree pots
  • Build bird houses
  • DONE – Make soap [glycerin; not home made, but I did combine the ingredients and set it up in molds]
  • Concrete [plant] markers
  • Suet pinecones
  • kiddie pool to burry for bog garden [at some point I realized I lived in the desert and gave up on the idea of a bog garden]
  • Order [driveway] gravel – 2006-08-24 delivered 12 tons $265 [12 tons is nothing; could have used 3 times as much]
  • DONE – sow clover and winter rye – clover done 2006-9-3
  • [Buy] thick plastic from Wal-Mart
  • DONE – Take more photos – 2006-08-06
  • Make map
  • DONE – Order Garlic – 2006-08-06 due to arr mid September
  • Order small river rock
  • Dig a compost pit
  • Inventory seeds – 2006-09-08 started
  • Plant out lilacs
  • Russian Sage Cuttings
  • Sweet potato cuttings – 2006-08-11 – it's dead
  • DONE – Clean bird fountain
  • Raspberries for fall planting
  • Get site ready for bulbs – 2006-08-20 will use old day lily site [chipmunks and/or mice ate them all]

The list goes on and on. I am currious to see if the daffs survived our brutal summer and if they will return [in] Spring. I hope, I hope

08 – August – To Do – Week 3

2005

2006

2007


2005

  • DONE – buy a heavy duty sprinkler
  • Start compost bin (2006-07-01 – still not done)
  • DONE – Look at trees [what kind to buy]
  • DONE – Visit Nurseries and Garden Centers
  • DONE – Get some catalogs
  • DONE – Take more photos (2005-10-1 and 2005-10-2)

2006

  • DONE – Start withholding water and food from trees; water only one a week. Otherwise they won't harden off well for winter (once/wk for establisehd; 2x wk for new)
  • DONE – Last week to fert trees
  • DONE – Make Garlic Labels – I am thinking of concrete ones for the generic garlic label and wood burned ones for varieties

2007


  • DONE – Look for 1st set of blackey peas to be ripening (2007-08-12 – getting close)
  • DONE – How are the squash doing? - 2007-08-12 – Already ate a few; zukes better [tasting] than yellow
  • Need bed for fall garlic
  • DONE – Space for winter peas – big accident – something smashed some yellow wax beans – so now I've got an area for peas :-)
  • Spray Deer-Off around trees and veggies
  • DONE – Enlarge,enhance water troughs in orchard (done 2007-08-21)
  • Fill bird feeders
  • Transplant Russian Sage
  • Transplant Lilac to backyard
  • Freeze more oregano
  • DONE – More photos (2007-08-23)
  • Update website
  • DONE – Rig support for cherry tom in veg bed 2 – sort of – mostly just wove it through the fencing wire
  • Buy concrete and posts – 3 bags per post – get a pallet like before
  • Do something for sweet potato vine
  • Order fall planted trees

08 – August – To Do – Week 2

2006



  • Change Fridge Water Filter – Whirlpool WHCF-R-Plus
  • See Lists from Week 1
  • Feed ficus and other houseplants
  • Start acquiring “Chicken Stuff”

08 – August – To Do

2006

2007

Goats



2006


  • DONE – Order Garlic before mid-Sept (Ordered 2006-08-12; arrived 2006-09-25)
  • DONE – Order the fancy daffs – last spring's were great (Ordered 2006-June)
  • Grand Gala Apples are ready for harvest in August in zone 5 (2006-August – no apple harvest this year; 2007-07-29 not this year, either)
  • Plant Trees
  • [Plant] Winter Rye

2007


  • Plant Trees
  • DONE – Squash planted mid-June should be ready for harvestsoon (2007-07-29 – 4 zukes almost ready; right on schedule)
  • Pick up trash [along fence line]
  • Update website
  • DONE – Take more photos
  • Mulch Trees
  • Spray Deer-away

Goats

  • Breed angoras in Aug, Sept, Oct, Nov after fall sheering so they will kid after spring sheering

May 16

2006 - Journal Entry

Mosquitoes: 150
People: 30

The mosquitoes were the unequivocal winner in last night's challenge. Even MDH was chased inside. Tree went un-watered, dog pen was left un-cleaned, dirty coveralls were left outside. Lesson to be learned - don't plan on accomplishing anything when the vampires are out.

Got all 26 of the large poplar cuttings planted out, but only about half of them got all the water they needed. Supposed to be in the 90's today - we'll see if they survive. 2 or 3 of the first 10 (9" cuttings) are looking very poorly, and a few are looking very well. The rest are just kind of hanging out, although their leaves are nice and deep green. These are tough old trees, though, so I am continuing to water them all, even the one that looks pretty much mostly dead. :-) About 50 more 9" cuttings are sitting in water, languishing... way too much top growth for the roots to support at this point.

[Incomplete]

March - To Do - Week 1

2005

2006

2007

2005 - Nevada

  • DONE - Research Trees
  • DONE - Plot the location of things
  • DONE - Keep tracking weather and wind
  • DONE - Price tree protection
  • DONE - Plot shade through a day
  • DONE (2005-05-23) - Take photos of plants on property

2006 - Nevada

  • DONE - Continue photographs
  • DONE - work on website
  • Plant more peas
  • Sow more rye
  • DONE (2006-03-29) - Photograph daffs (Potted)
  • DONE - Order tree rootings

2007 - Nevada

  • DONE - (2007-03-28) Start Toms! Red Pear
  • [Sow] Indoors - Salvia
  • DONE - (2007-03-31) Take more photos
  • DONE - (2007--3-31) Work on website

March - To Do

2006

2007

Breeding & Birthing

Goats

Bees


2006 - Nevada

  • Look for Ducks at Lake Carson now through September
  • Ending of the Snow Gease Season at Lake Carson
  • Canadian Geese have returned to Lake Lahontan
  • Deer in the Genoa area until April
  • DONE - Fertilize trees - add spikes if not done in Feb
  • DONE - Plant Pease
  • Order chickens - not this year
  • Buy light meter
  • Buy food scale to weigh harvest
  • Get another set of grow lights
  • DONE - Order more driveway rock (Note 3/06 - MDH built a pickup truck bed hauler and can get it himself for cheap, now. He's so clever with building stuff)
  • Plant more winter rye & also the yellow clover

2007 - Nevada

  • March - April - Good time to move day lilies
  • Plan some vacation days for March, April and May for planting out
  • Stromberg's Chickens - Turkeys start being available mid-March; Common Geese available; Bobwhite Quail available; Ring neck pheasant available mid-March

Breeding & Birthing

Bred on March 1 gives birth on
  • Mare - Feb 3rd
  • Cow - Dec 8th
  • Ewe - July 30
  • Sow - June 22
Birthing
  • Day old chicks available by mail order
  • Mare bred April 1 - birth on Mar 6
  • Cow bred June 1 - birth on Mar 10
  • Ewe bred Nov 1 - birth on Mar 27
  • Sow bred Dec 1 - birth on Mar 21

Goats

  • Comb Cashmere Goats
  • Crotch does before they kid
  • Collect kidding gear
  • Have fecal samples tested and worm if needed
  • Set mouse traps near feed storage
  • Check fences and gates for winter damage
  • Clean out stalls

Bees

  • Inspect hives & medicate if needed