Author: theMan

  • Bees Feed Us

    ArugulaBlossoms140527
    BumbleBeeOnArugulaFlowerA patch of arugula is in full bloom. The wild bees are buzzing all afternoon, finding plenty of food to gather as they buzz from flower to flower. Luckily for me, this means I will have plenty of arugula seeds to keep planting through the summer. The great thing about many vegetables is that you don’t have to keep buying seed. Let some of the plants flower and go to seed and you have a supply of vegetable seeds in perpetuity.

    That’s assuming that the wild bees will keep coming. There’s no guarantee that they will. They can’t reproduce and survive if their habitat, our gardens and our fields, are continually doused with poisons. When I visit garden and hardware stores and see aisles of poisons and herbicides, I wonder how much longer our fragile environment will last. It’s a sobering to think that one of these springs, the buzzing of bees may be gone.

    Honeybees abandoning hives and dying due to insecticide use, research finds
    Beyond Honeybees: Now Wild Bees and Butterflies May Be in Trouble
    Decline of bees forces China’s apple farmers to pollinate by hand
    Declining Bee Populations Pose
    A Threat to Global Agriculture

    Bee Sustainable

  • Raw Egg on Rice

    RawEggOnRice

    After working hard outdoors, few things are as satisfying as a raw egg on warm rice with a dab of pickled plum and wakame (Undaria pinnatifida). The yolks of the eggs at a man and his hoe® are so buttery, with a texture like very heavy cream. They have so much flavor, you don’t need any salt.

  • Great Chicken Wall of 2014 part 2

    Work on the Great Chicken Wall of 2014 continues. Today I’m hanging the wire fencing on the posts, but before I do that I need to dig a trench so the bottom of the wire can be underground.

    ChickenFence14052601
    ChickenFence14052602

    Digging the trench brings out the chickens. They haven’t come to help. They are out to devour as many earthworms as possible. Their claws are no match for a shovel which can dig much deeper and expose fat, juicy earthworms.

    ChickenFence14052603
    ChickenFence14052604

    Even though they are losing some of their pasture, they will still have this meadow to roam. In late fall, after the harvest is over, I’ll open the gates to the vegetable fields and they’ll be able to scratch through them all winter long.

    ChickenFence14052605

  • It’s a Jungle Out There

    Everything is wet after steady rains through the night and morning. Behind the chicken yard, it’s a jungle of comfrey, burdock and tall grass.

    ItsAJungle01
    ItsAJungle02
    ItsAJungle03
    ItsAJungle04

    It’s a perfect place for a mother hen to scratch for food with her chicks. They huddle around her beak, eager to snatch up any bugs or worms she finds. This is where chicks belong, outdoors with a mother, exploring a jungle full of exciting things to see and do.

    An interesting fact about mother hens is that they don’t care at all whose chicks they are raising. They are communal birds and will sit on anyone’s eggs. The chicks they hatch may be those of other hens, but they love them all.

  • Building the Great Chicken Wall of 2014

    It’s time to build the Great Chicken Wall of 2014. There’s nothing like a dog to help with the digging. No one licks the sweat off your brow better than a dog.

    GreatChickenWall01
    GreatChickenWall02
    GreatChickenWall03
    GreatChickenWall04
    GreatChickenWall05
    GreatChickenWall06

    The first fence post is in. Six more to go. I could use the power auger to dig the holes, but it’s more relaxing to dig the holes by hand with a shovel, and much quieter. There is so much beauty to see when you work outdoors. The foxgloves (dead man’s bells/witch’s gloves) are blooming. Amazing that something so beautiful is so poisonous.

    GreatChickenWall07
    GreatChickenWall08

    The fence posts are in. These are the posts (see Posts – Nature’s Gift) I made back in April from young alder trees. Tomorrow I’ll put up the wire. The purpose of the Great Chicken Wall of 2014 isn’t to keep the chickens in, it’s to keep the chickens out. I need more vegetable beds to grow greens and vegetables for my customers.

    GreatChickenWall09

    Foxglove ~ Botanical.com
    Plants Poisonous to Livestock ~ Cornell University
    Foxglove Plants ~ About.com Landscaping
    Foxglove ~ The National Gardening Association
    Foxglove Poisoning ~ National Library of Medicine