Wednesday, September 27, 2023

I Give Up - Sorta: The Farm Report 09-28


 I Give Up - Sorta

The Farm Report
09-28-2023


Loyal readers will remember from last spring that I was pretty disgusted at the herbicide applicators bombing my gardens! To say the least.... No grapes again, dead fruit trees on the 'field' side, half my potato rows bombed out, new raspberry row wiped out. You get it. I don't want to relive it. So what to do? No sense fighting it; I give up. At least, I'm giving up trying to grow grapes and raspberries where the chemical guys go.



What will grow here? IRIS! Iowa Orchids. They will even withstand mild doses of Roundup. They're tough, and they produce beautiful flowers. After having about a hundred bucks worth of fancy raspberry rootstock killed by the herbicide applicators, I decided to just buy a box of raspberries at Walmart and go a different direction.



I thought it was nothing more than appropriate to buy an Iris rhizome named 'Immortality' to start off my new project in the 'poison fields' as I'm going to call them. The fields (gardens) aren't poison - they just get poisoned every year by the field guys. The iris rhizomes in the first pictures are the free ones I've scrounged from my sister and my friends' gardens. This one, Immortality, is one I paid for. This little dried up root cost me about $18 bucks. So - I'm not saving anything, I'm just hoping to have a little more fun along the way doing it.


I like to keep things labeled as much as I can. My label of choice? Old throw-away aluminum or vinyl mini blind slats and a #2 lead pencil. I staple them onto a wooden stake or use a zip tie and I'm good to go. The pencil marks last forever and never fade away.



Out on the garden, I'm planting fall cover crops on the bare areas. I use a walk around whirligig seeder mostly.


What to plant? Whatever is available and cheap. For a long time, I thought the seed choices touted in gardening magazines were the only way to go. Now, I realize that just about anything green and growing will work as well. So, for me, I use oats and soybeans; because I have them. Neither of these will winter over and cause problems next spring. Since they will kill out from cold weather, in spring, the ground will be nice and mellow - and ready for some seeds!



And for proof that gardening will keep you humble: These little plants are carrots. I prepared a new seed bed for fall carrots; fertilized it and tilled it. I planted with a fancy seeder just for the purpose. Nothing grew. Not one. What are these then? I had  6 year old packet of carrot seeds I found at the bottom of the seed box. "They'll never grow," I said to myself as I pitched them into the garbage bin. Then my Iowa gene kicked in and I pulled the seed package back out of the bin. Why not? So I took them out to the garden and poured them into my hand. With a wild Whooop! and a hardy backhanded swish, I hurled them into the wind. "Good luck!" I said. And so they grew; every one of them so it seems - with absolutely no soil preparation or welcoming party whatever. Beat that.....



My fall onion curing project seems to be paying off big time. These are the prettiest crop of onions I've ever grown.


Since I'm an old guy with a sewing machine and not enough education to know what I can't do with it, I got some burlap and made some fancy hand-made onion sacks. I even cut an oak leaf and acorn stencil to doll 'em up a little. Sticky stencil and a can of brown spray paint.



I even put velcro closures on the top of the sack to keep the onions in there where they're supposed to be. Go big or go home!



We had a rainy weekend, and my champion Megaton Cabbage heads split wide open. Kraut time! This head weighed in at over 15 pounds.



Part of the fun of making home made kraut is getting to use my Great Grandmother Amanda's old kraut cutter. (The other part is eating homemade kraut. If you've never had it, you're in for a treat. It isn't at all like the stuff from the store.) I added the little wooden legs so it wouldn't slip off the top of the 5-gallon plastic bucket I shred the cabbage into. The board tipped at an angle in the middle is so you won't make kraut out of the ends of your fingers!



It's an absolute original Keen Kutter patented kraut cutter. The patent was registered in  1910. My house (her house) was built starting in 1903. So the timing is right. That kraut cutter has probably been out here ever since the house was built.



That's the blade you're looking at. It is a real one; razor sharp and ready to shred anything that passes over it, including your fingers. No safety gear included.



Here is a look from the bottom side. This is a serious thick tempered sharp cutter. No kids, please.



It only took about 20 minutes to shred 30 pounds of cabbage ready to become sauerkraut.



You can't beat it for shredding cabbage, and you can't beat homemade kraut. My recipe? Simple: Weigh your nice clean fresh heads of cabbage. I probably could have put 45 pounds of cabbage in one bucket. I stopped at 30. Next, weigh out your salt. I always use pure canning/pickling salt because I don't want bitter 'off' tastes that might come from table salt treated with iodine etc. It is really - really! - easy to get too much salt. Weigh the cabbage and then weigh out a little over 8 grams of salt per pound. In other words, about a heaping teaspoon full of salt per pound of cabbage. Sprinkle the salt on as the bucket fills with shredded cabbage. No need to add water or anything else. When we lived in Nebraska, we learned to add a little caraway seed if we wanted 'Bavarian' style kraut. I like it best just plain.



Next, cover and press the shredded cabbage down nice and tight. Lay a clean cloth over the top and tamp it in all around the edges to keep the kraut shreds from floating around.


 
Like my Grandma Chlorus, I use a paint stick (new one) to tuck in the edges of the cloth. Good night sweet kraut. Have fun little lactobacillus bacteria; we'll be back in a few weeks to see how you did.



In the old days, my aunts and grandma's used to put a plate over the top of the cloth and weighed it down with a rock or a brick. I checked the calendar, and it is indeed, the twenty-first century now. So, I just filled a giant zip-lock bag with water and laid that on the cover cloth to weigh down the brew.



Over that, I new bonnet of clean fabric tied down so it can't get off, and so nobody else can get in, either. I let the whole works happen in the shop sink because I've done this before. If things get going too well, it can be like a party of high schoolers at home when the folks are out of town. Spewing can occur!



While that's all going on, I took a stroll through the sweet potato patch to check progress. I decided to see if the vines would root for me. This is day 1.



This is day 2. That's right; the very next morning!!!



Day 3. All I did was break off a piece of vine and put it into a jar of water. Nothing more.



Day 4.



Day 6. Amazing.

So, these will become house plants for the winter. Then, next spring, I'll start cutting new slips for the garden. I spend about $50 every year with Tator Man's mail order business. I'm getting cheap in my old age I guess. Tator man will be fine. I'll still probably order some 'new' varieties from him next spring. This year, I have Georgia Jets and Vardaman plants. Keeps me off the streets and outa the bars....



More stuff to spend seed money on. I'm so hooked on dahlias! These are all Wally's 3-for $5 dahlias, but my oh my there are some gorgeous ones on the internet - for gorgeous prices, too! Come on Powerball!



Kelvin Lights: They are HUGE, and last as cut flowers in the house for nearly a week.



How could you not like these?



Color Sensation. Almost as big as Kelvin Lights, but prettier.



My dining room table, with dahlias and roses.




Single dahlia blossoms floating in a fancy cup are great.



Annie Oakley says, "Okay, Tim. We get it that you're all enthused. They are pretty, but they don't have any fragrance and Randy just got here to work on painting the house. I need to get out there and see about him. Bye."



Yep! So in answer to 'What else ya been doin?' Well, we've been painting Oakdale Manor. My painter, Randy, and I started kindergarten together, so we're two old guys plugging along. Actually Randy is doing the work, and I'm the head cheerleader and banking resource manager. We just started with the idea of painting the porch floor, but we haven't found a place to stop yet. We will though, and I'll show you pictures next time. It looks fantastic.

Cheers from the crew out here at Oakdale Farm. All is well.


 

10 comments:

  1. With that much poison spewing around you, I think I'd resort to growing ALL my food undercover in the greenhouse! As for the dahlias, what you've got is dynamite. Why pay more??? – Michelle at Boulderneigh

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    Replies
    1. Why pay more? Good point. But the grass is always greener.... My Iowa gene will probably kick in just before I push the 'buy now' button and save me from myself. I may have been too critical of the farm guys. They try, mostly. It is just when one SOB has an off day that the consequences last for a long long time. Cheers!

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  2. That is bad having poison sprayed by your food patch.
    Interesting that you talk of lactobacillus, but it's just salt and cabbage?
    I have grown a sweet potato/kumera just for fun this year..a rescue plant from a garden centre! What you are doing looks fun....I might have a go,...

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    Replies
    1. We have had 'warm and meaningful discussions' with the chem guys. They promise to never do that to me again. I promised to be nice to them the first time, but not so nice after that. We seem to have an understanding. For many years, our 'deal' was that they stayed well back away from my gardens and orchards (they did) and I would tolerate some weed pressure up close. New owner, new applicator, re-newed understandings. I'm eternally hopeful! Yes, kraut is just cabbage, a little salt and the bacteria Mother Nature sends along free for the ride in the cabbage heads. Please DO take in a slip from your sweet potato to use as a houseplant. They are fun, and grow so easily. Cheers!

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  3. Tim. What a breath of fresh air you are!!! I have been chuckling, and laughing out loud, and reading bits to Hubby. Love your kraut making. Beginning to think I don't make enough in my small batches.....30 lbs! What do you do with it all? Once it is ready to your taste, how do you store it to keep it at that point?
    I grew a dahlia for the first time this summer, it was a freebee in with an order of bare root stock. It finally bloomed, deep, burgundy, ...and we have a good frost this AM. Guess that was short and sweet!
    Carry on..and give Annie a pet for me!

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    Replies
    1. What to do with all that kraut? Sorta the same thing as what you do with all the zucchini squash in the summer - find friends to take it off my hands. Once it is ready, I usually bottle it up and can it in a water bath process to seal it in the jars. It will last forever that way. My mother thinks canning it is a sin. She insists that it should be put into clean jars and stored in the back of the refrigerator. I do that, too. It is better, but it doesn't keep so well. Kraut and brats; Kraut and spare ribs; Kraut soup: Kraut cold out of the jar for a snack, and on and on. So.... Annie says Hi!

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  4. I learn so much from each and every one of your posts. Please keep it up forever! We left our beautiful place in Illinois because of the spray planes that turned smack-dab over our property. Well water was being poisoned and growing soil was contaminated. Even a greenhouse doesn't keep the chemicals from seeping through the ground and into plants. I could almost cry when thinking about the stupidity of it all. (Wow, guess I pulled the soap box out from under the bed, didn't I?) Anywho, you have so many great ideas (and tools) for growing and using your gardening efforts. Keep on, Tim.

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  5. It is better to pull the soap box out from under the bed than the shotgun I was looking for! We have an ag supplier who is 'new-ish' and an employee who has/had a bad attitude. For the most part, they do a great job. Now, with modern tech stuff onboard, they are truly using less and using it more appropriately. Just this year, that jackass running the rig tried to be the world's biggest Jackass and spray jockey. Methinks after our conferenced, he may improve his techniques - if he is still on the job!!! Cheers from the farm. I'll keep plugging along - and you, too!

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  6. I am sorry to hear about the toxic chemicals accidentally sprayed on your land. Terrible. I would avoid that land. Keep Annie away too. N.B.: A neighbor of mine wanted a perfect lawn and hired people to spray. The men spraying wore white suits and masks. Within a year my neighbor's dog had kidney cancer and died. Be very careful. This stuff is dangerous. Your dahlias are fantastic and the kraut sounds outstanding.

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    Replies
    1. I may need to clarify the spray deal. They did not actually spray anything on my garden soil at all. What caused the problem was a very small vapor drift in the air which touched the leaves of very sensitive plants like tomato and grape, etc. It still isn't a good situation, as it was completely avoidable, but I'm not feeling threatened by the possibility of soil contamination. They have always in the past (by mutual agreement) stayed well away from my gardens and orchards. This was one cowboy screw-up which has been addressed and corrected - at least it had better be! Cheers

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