Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Progress in the garden

I've been spending long hours working in the garden. We aren't going to be moving in any new tires this year, so I've been busy planting and weeding and mulching and watering the tires we already have in.

Smart gardeners in north Idaho know better than to plant a garden sooner than June 1 because it's often too cold and wet to do much.

Around June 6, I planted corn.


I have nine tractor tires dedicated to corn.


At three seeds per hole, spaced six inches apart, I was able to fit about 156 (give or take) seeds per tire. A quarter-pound of seed planted almost three tires.


This is what the corn looked like this morning:


Meanwhile Don and I worked on finishing up the deer-proof fencing. Here we're laying out field fence to reinforce some spots.


Don also ran a high-tension wire around the entire perimeter of the garden at eight feet.


We had a six-foot roll of chicken wire, so Don cut it in half...




...then I took the three-foot rolls and aproned the top perimeter of the garden, wiring the chicken wire to the high-tension wire.



View from on top the ladder.


The blueberry bushes are producing heavily.




I mulched the entire bed to help with water retention.



I also brought out loads of straw from the barn...


...and mulched all ten strawberry tires.



I packed the straw very carefully around each strawberry plant.


I found this colorful specimen on the handle of the shovel. Any arachnophiles out there know the species?


I got two rows of peas planted.



Then I went through and mulched everything.


Halfway done.


Then I gave the peas a good watering.


I got eight tomato plants transplanted and mulched.


The herbs that over-wintered -- thyme, sage, oregano -- are growing luxuriously. I still need to plant rosemary and basil.


The horseradish (which also over-wintered) is huge.


I finally got all the viney tires planted (by "viney," I mean plants that vine out and sprawl). Some I started from seed, others I bought already started. In these rows I have pumpkins, watermelons, and cantaloup.


Yesterday I transplanted and mulched the broccoli...


...and the peppers.


The potatoes are doing well.



The raspberries are positively luxurious.


They've dropped their blossoms...


...and are forming tiny green fruits.


Onions.


The garlic, planted last fall.


What's left to plant? Beans. I want to plant four types: green, navy, black, and pinto beans. Beans are fairly short-season so I've left them until last. I can't plant until I weed out last year's beds. As you can see, they're wildly overgrown with weeds.


You can see the dramatic difference the tarps and gravel has done with weed control. Here's a row with weed control:


...and two rows down, without.


The ironic thing about the progress we've made on the garden is I've discovered I'm allergic to hay. As in, handling it with my hands to mulch around the plants. After I mulch, I come down with a vicious itchy rash on my arms and face, resulting in puffy fingers, puffy eyes, and other issues. I think I'll have to restrict myself to handling hay with a hay fork while standing upwind. Talk about an occupational hazard!

Sunday, June 16, 2013

Jonathan and Charlotte

Younger Daughter brought to my attention a tremendously talented duo who won second place in the 2012 Britain's Got Talent competition who go by their first names, Jonathan and Charlotte. Like Paul Potts a few years go, Jonathan is overweight, has no confidence, and presents a grim picture. Yet his soaring, massive, extraordinary operatic tenor voice absolutely floored the judges and brought the house to its feet in cheers and applause. Their audition is here.


At first Charlotte presented a less strong presence, but she more than made up for it in the semi-finals, when she lent her singing talents toward an operatic rendition and outdid herself.


Their finalist performance is here.


While they didn't win the 2012 competition (they came in second), within days they had a million-dollar recording contract. The most amazing thing? Both these young people are seventeen years old.

These videos will make your day.

Saturday, June 15, 2013

Friday, June 14, 2013

Stacks of tractor tires

Despite the late date, I'm still working on pulling the tire garden together. I've got a couple more things (mostly beans) to plant, but we're trying to get more components (tires, gravel, tarps) in place for next year as well.

To that end, we're still collecting tires. A friend who works at a tire store in a nearby town recently told me he's collecting an eighteen-foot tractor-trailor's worth of tires for me. Yikes! Where are we gonna put those until I'm ready for them?

But those haven't arrived yet. What did arrive, two days ago, was a double delivery of tractor tires.

If there's one thing I've learned about tires, it's that people are more than anxious to get rid of them. The regional tractor dealership is no different than anyone else -- to the point of delivering these massive giants straight to our door.

Here come the two trucks.


The front vehicle, if you'll notice, has a self-loader unit on it. Whoo-hoo!


Lots and lots of tires, some of them extremely wide. It's our plan to use these very wide tires for fruit trees. Someday.


The fellow on the left is operating the self-loader unit. The guy on the right is directing the hook into the tire center.


This is a whole lot easier than shoving things around by hand!


They were also able to stack them fairly neatly. This is the first row.


More unloading.


But the men had to pause in their operations while Polly ambled by, followed by our quartet of heifers. Can't take a chance of squashing a skittish calf!


Polly stopped to sniff curiously at the truck, but I shooed her along.


The men finished unloading, having stacked the tires in two neat rows. They'll probably stay there until the fall, when we can afford more gravel.


View from inside the barn.


Then off they drove in a cloud of dust. Nice guys.


The reason we're taking so many tractor tires is the potential for various uses is amazing. We can use them to plan fruit trees, sunflowers (we're going to experiment in planting oil sunflowers), and cattle feeders, in addition to fruits and vegetables.