Canesister's 2019 farm journal

baymule

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Spray the milk (after you skim the cream) directly on the garden and pasture. The live bacteria will benefit the soil. Do a test patch in the pasture, you will see a difference. You can mix the milk with water to make it go further. The ratio is 17 gallons water to 3 gallons milk. Or anything below those numbers.
 

bobm

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More notes, just because this is a convenient place to keep a season's details together.

Two weeks in and I was able to drop Eva down to once-a-day milking. Patty Cow is keeping the front 2 quarters milked out so I'm only getting the back two. Bringing a little more than a gallon in each evening. And getting A QUART of cream each day!!! I'm not sure what the 'normal' percentages are on pure dairy cows but I'm thinking that nearly 25% cream is pretty darn impressive for a 1/2beef girl! Proud as can be of my little cow. :celebrate

Between the new den floor, rain, family visits, rain, getting back into the milking routine, rain, and this brand new world of spring allergies - almost nothing has happened in the garden. Cool weather starts got leggy and died in their starter cells. Maybe in the fall? Strawberries are uncovered and coming up well. Again - busy with life - I've been dumping milk in the garden and compost when I don't have time to deal with it in the house. Should make happy tomatoes this summer I think. Having Eva in at night has created a need to deal with stall cleanings in much larger quantities. And since there is about 1/3 of the area that I want to be garden that is still lawn, I've started covering that in roughly 4'x4' sections with cardboard and dumping the stall cleanings on it. The cardboard will suppress the grass and the manure/hay/sawdust will eventually compost into very nice garden soil for this fall or next summer. Hahaha - the heart of every garden is looking forward to 'the next season', right? :p
More notes, just because this is a convenient place to keep a season's details together.

Two weeks in and I was able to drop Eva down to once-a-day milking. Patty Cow is keeping the front 2 quarters milked out so I'm only getting the back two. Bringing a little more than a gallon in each evening. And getting A QUART of cream each day!!! I'm not sure what the 'normal' percentages are on pure dairy cows but I'm thinking that nearly 25% cream is pretty darn impressive for a 1/2beef girl! Proud as can be of my little cow. :celebrate

Between the new den floor, rain, family visits, rain, getting back into the milking routine, rain, and this brand new world of spring allergies - almost nothing has happened in the garden. Cool weather starts got leggy and died in their starter cells. Maybe in the fall? Strawberries are uncovered and coming up well. Again - busy with life - I've been dumping milk in the garden and compost when I don't have time to deal with it in the house. Should make happy tomatoes this summer I think. Having Eva in at night has created a need to deal with stall cleanings in much larger quantities. And since there is about 1/3 of the area that I want to be garden that is still lawn, I've started covering that in roughly 4'x4' sections with cardboard and dumping the stall cleanings on it. The cardboard will suppress the grass and the manure/hay/sawdust will eventually compost into very nice garden soil for this fall or next summer. Hahaha - the heart of every garden is looking forward to 'the next season', right? :p
Cane... going back to when my father was the official milk tester in Cal. Through wonders of chemistry ... Holstein cows tested between 2.8% to 4.2% butterfat. Jerseys and Guernseys tested in between 3.6% to 5.7 % butterfat. :idunno
 

canesisters

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Spray the milk (after you skim the cream) directly on the garden and pasture. The live bacteria will benefit the soil. Do a test patch in the pasture, you will see a difference. You can mix the milk with water to make it go further. The ratio is 17 gallons water to 3 gallons milk. Or anything below those numbers.

I know :hide, and I'm sure the cream is doing no favors ... but on the nights when I've gotten home at 9pm and rushed out to milk - I just tossed it on the way back to the house. Or when it's pouring rain and I get almost an inch of rain on top of the milk before getting back to the house..... :hit

ya do what ya gotta do
 

flowerbug

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... The cardboard will suppress the grass and the manure/hay/sawdust will eventually compost into very nice garden soil for this fall or next summer. Hahaha - the heart of every garden is looking forward to 'the next season', right? :p

definito! :)
 

digitS'

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Debbie, I thought of you when I read that NCTomatoman, Craig LeHoullier, will have a presentation on strawbale gardening in the DC area soon.

He is the author of Epic Tomatoes and a long-time expert on heirlooms and now, the development of dwarf varieties.

Recent years, he has gardened in containers but has grown more in strawbales each year and has plans to continue on that path. link

Steve
 

canesisters

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COOL! Thanks for the link. I REALLY enjoyed doing the straw-bale garden and would have continued just like he did if I could have gotten a good source for cheap straw.
 

ducks4you

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Keep your eye out for Rained On Straw. No livestock owner will want it, and it will go pretty cheap--you might be able to buy it for less than $1/bale. Only problem is that straw is generally harvested from winter wheat or oats After the grain is harvested, so mid summer, but you could use them for a Fall crop. Otherwise you will probably pay around $6-7/bale. IF you can store it you could use it 2nd year, but most gardeners don't have the storage space. AND, you don't want to stack a winter time mouse hotel!
I get a good deal on my straw. I buy it in July for $4/bale and the bales are pretty heavy. I am SO GLAD that I bought 50 bales last Fall. I have only used 26 of them this winter, but I will probably strip my shelter soon and bed it with straw for more straw and horse manure compost.
I used it in my horse's stalls--my 21yo mare really likes to sleep in straw--and I even used some in the chicken's coop. It kept everybody warm this winter.
 

canesisters

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Not around here. I can't imagine what 'the problem' is - but farmers would rather watch it rot, even my regular hay guy. When I was picking up a round bale for Eva last spring I asked if he ever had any old, busted bales or some that had gotten wet that he would sell as mulch. I had barely finished asking when he said "No." with that 'this discussion is over' attitude. And we were standing in sight of a long line of flattened black bales along the tree line.
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I've asked at the feed store and a couple of other near-by cattle owning folks - same reaction.
 

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