Category Archives: Blog

NaBloPoMo – Glass Half Empty? or Half Frozen?

Prompt: Do you see the glass as half full or half empty [on the farm]?

I’m looking at my Iphone screen right now and having a serious glass half full/half empty moment:

Half full?On the glass half full side, look at all those little yellow suns!!!! Not only is a bit of sun (low slung though it may be these days) a balm for the post-November soul, it also means the heavy traffic hog zones will dry out a bit, as will the mucky area near the gate to the turkey pen where I have my breeding birds. For some reason, this year the water has been pooling right there, which means I risk getting stuck, or the gate getting stuck when I’m trying to maneuver into the pen with buckets of feed and vegetables and water containers while not letting any turkeys out.

Turkeys

This dance of the hysterical turkeys (because they do get a bit silly when they see a human coming with buckets attached to her arms) will resolve itself very soon when the field where the Christmas birds are growing out will become available for the breeders. This lovely, large, and securely fenced area will give the few birds I will keep for next year’s procreative roster plenty of room to frolic before we have to get serious about selecting breeding groups, collecting and hatching eggs, etc.

Also on the glass half full side of the equation is an upward nudge of the daytime temps to just above freezing (for my friends south of the border, we are looking at Celsius temperatures, not Fahrenheit). The forecast had been putting the daytime highs just below freezing, which would definitely have been more of a glass half empty kind of thing.

As it is, with several nights of below zero temps, all my water pipes are going to freeze. And that is most certainly NOT a good thing. The little suns mean no snow, sleet, hail, or other nasties falling from the sky (half full!) but the frozen water ,means hauling Jerry cans into the laundry room, filling with hot water, lugging said cans, now full and VERY heavy, to various water containers up and down the hill…

Oh yes. The hill.

Room With a View

A half full sort of geographic feature when you are standing on top of the hill surveying the amazing view we enjoy, but a half empty bump in the road when you are slithering down it trying to hold back the cart loaded with VERY HEAVY containers of hot water because the hill is a) steep and b) frosty and you realize as you are about to hit a fence post because the cart has developed a mind of its own and is determined to plow you over and send you arse over tea kettle into the goat pen but there’s no way you are going to let go of the cart because then it would tip over and the cans would fly out, probably shatter in the cold, and then you’d have to make a trip to Canadian Tire to replace them with better, stronger versions so you can return to the laundry room sink, refill, and try again. I don’t think that last bit was in any way grammatically correct, but who thinks of grammar at times like that?

Where was I? Oh yes, trying to think if there was a glass half full way of looking at my frozen water situation because, basically, I am very much a glass half full kind of person.

Nope. I don’t think there is. Wait! Yes, I did think of something that won’t happen when there is a nice, thick layer of ice on top of the hog water tubs: the ducks won’t be able to get in there and blow their noses and wash their backsides!

Little White Duck

This may not be a good thing for the ducks, but it is a good thing for the hogs who (after I hack drinking holes for them) will have cleaner water to drink and for me because I won’t have to tip, scrub, and refill the hog water so often.

The other thing that won’t happen if the water freezes is I won’t find little bodies in the horse troughs. Every now and then the bantam hens and certain foolish wild birds decide they can drink from the horse troughs (they can’t – they slide in and can’t get out…). Fortunately, this is an infrequent event and those who don’t figure out that they are NOT ducks generally don’t survive to raise future generations of misguided offspring. A protective layer of ice will eliminate this problem entirely. Which is a good thing.

The other good thing about the forecast is that single degree above zero will give me hope each day that the water pipes might start flowing. I will check every half hour starting at 1pm, just in case. This will continue until 4 pm and the sun starts to go down and the temperature dips again. Most likely, the pipes will NOT unfreeze, once they are nicely frozen – but where there is sun and a single plus side degree, there is hope. And where there is hope, the glass is always half full.

Theme_Large_Nov_2013_0 nablopomo

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NaBloPoMo Here We Come! More, or less…

NaBloPoMo December 2013

Over on the Blogher website, there is a whole lot of blogging going on! When I started this whole blogging biznatch waaaaaaaaay back in 2000 (!) there was no such thing as a blogging community. The blogging tools were crude and I had no idea what I was doing. I mustered up one whole blog post that first year. In 2001, I picked up the keyboard again on September 12, the day after 9-11. Given how that event changed the world, I wrote surprisingly little about it online. (Curious about those early blogging days? Here’s the link. Be warned, it’s pretty  boring.)

I didn’t post a photo until 2002. Here it is:

Me in my Pony Express hat, posing inside a whale rib cage…

That was the year I rode sections of the Pony Express Trail across Nevada to promote a children’s book I had written, Jo’s Triumph (note, there was no such thing as a Kindle edition back then, though that is the first link that comes up in a search today…)

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Foolishly, I had created another website where all those photos and notes from the trip were kept. That website doesn’t exist any more, so all that material is lost. Which is probably something to keep in mind while we are all producing so much stuff that exists only out there in the ethers. I never print anything off that I post on my blog and I guess maybe that isn’t such a good idea, if I’m worried about posterity. How do other bloggers deal with this?

In 2012 I moved my writing blog over to WordPress when my website got an overhaul, but I have to say I have been a tad inconsistent when it comes to writing about writing, probably because writing about writing is kind of boring. I always felt a bit odd writing about pigs and snowstorms and what I was harvesting from the garden on a blog that was supposed to be about me and my books. So, in 2009 I started my Dark Creek Farm blog over on Blogger and then in January of 2011 I moved the farm blog here to WordPress.

Since starting to write about farming, I have found blogging got a lot more interesting. Maybe it’s all the procreation and death that goes on here that ups the readability factor. Farm life is much more real and compelling than a stack of manuscript pages. And, I get to post photos of horses:

and piglets:

Piglets!

and, occasionally, sketches by my dad about life on the farm:

I find it’s really helpful to have the motivation of a deadline to push me along, which is one reason to sign up for this month’s blogging challenge. But I have also found (after participating in a 30-Day Farm Blog challenge in November) that this here blogging community that sort of sprouted when I wasn’t paying attention is a whole lot of fun!

My goal for this month is to write more and worry less. When I can I’ll follow the writing prompts and otherwise, I’ll just keep on jotting down my thoughts about life on this here little farm.

The first prompt is: Do you think you’re more or less likely to complete December’s NaBloPoMo? I think there will be days when it’s a snap and then, right around Christmas when everything gets totally crazy with visitors and meals and hockey games and stuff… well, those days could be a tad challenging.

What I have noticed is very different today from those very early days back in the mists of blogging time is how handy my phone is! I hope to make better use of that nifty device, not just for snapping photos (for which it has been SO great!) but also for blogging quickies on the go. The other thing I’d like to try to do is include more videos, but December may prove to be just a bit too frenetic a month to attempt that. More video, though, might just be a good New Year’s resolution. But, I’m getting ahead of myself! For now, I’m excited to be part of this challenge and can’t wait to get to know some of the other bloggers who have also decided to participate.

Versatile Blogger Award

In November, Wuppenif nominated the Dark Creek Farm blog for a Versatile Blogger Award. I was simultaneously delighted (thank you, Wuppenif!!) and horrified (it turns out there’s quite a list of rules associated with this here award…) Of course, the award landed in my blog comments right when things were getting even more insanely busy around here than usual.

Shock waves shake Dark Creek Farm!

As a result, I haven’t had a minute to even think about compiling a list of my favourite blogs and seven things about myself. With the conclusion of the 30-Day Farm Blog Challenge, I can take a quick breath before launching into my next project, participating in the NaBloPoMo challenge for December. Yes, I think I have officially lost my mind.

Versatile Blogger Award Rules

1. Thank the person who gave you this award. I’ll start with thanking Wuppenif, a blog covering all my favourite things – food, gardening, living lightly on the land…
2. Here’s a link to the blog… So far, not so difficult.
3. Select 15 blogs/bloggers that you’ve recently discovered or follow regularly. Sigh. This is where it gets tricky. There are just so many cool blogs out there! I’m not sure that I can do this part in a timely manner…
4. Nominate those 15 bloggers for the Versatile Blogger Award — you might include a link to this site [I’m not actually a hundred percent sure which site that would be… Is there an official Versatile Blogger website? Must do more research…].
5. Finally, tell the person who nominated you 7 things about yourself.

I’m not actually sure how to do this part officially, so I’ll post the seven things here and then let Wuppenif know I’ve done so over in the comments of that blog… If I missed something obvious, oops!

7 Things About Moi

i. I have way too many books. I used to think it was not possible to have way too many books, but I have discovered I was wrong. I am in the midst of a major cull that will see my collection cut by 75% and that will still leave me with … yes, way too many books. This, I try to remind myself, is why the world has libraries, so one person does not wind up with way too many books.

ii. I love libraries. Which is a bit weird, really, for someone who has way too many books. Why I would ever need to set foot in a library is beyond me because even with my vastly reduced (and still shrinking) collection, I could read all day long, every day and still not get to the end of what I have right here because… I don’t even have to say it… I have way too many… You get the point.

iii. I have way too many library fines. Honestly. There is no hope for someone like me. Obviously, when you have way too many books and you bring home way too many more books from the library, there is no possible way to read all those library books so they sort of sit there, buried in the piles of the books that live here and the next thing I know, the library is sending me pithy notes in my email box saying things like, “Did you know you owe us quite a bit of money? Did you seriously need to take out fourteen books about building tree houses?”

iv. I love tree houses. I would like to live in one. Again. I did spend a lot of time living in a tree house back when I was a teenager. At the time, we lived in Fort McMurray waaaay up in the frosty northern end of Alberta. Each year at about this time I think about how very, very cold it was out in the un-insulated tree house and how I would have to eventually give up and slink back into the actual, real house until after the spring thaw rolled around again. When I build my ultimate dream tree house it will have a cozy wood stove and most excellent insulation. And, it will be located somewhere other than Fort McMurray. Before embarking upon a project like this, one should be prepared. Hence, the need to read many books about tree house construction.

v. The other dwelling I would love to build is a vardo.

Gypsy vardos are, quite simply, gorgeous.

I have a half gypsy cob mare who will pull me and my glorious wagon all over North America. That, I believe, is when my blog will get interesting.

vi. My all-time favourite sweet treat is chocolate-covered macaroons.

It is NOT possible to have too many macaroons...

It is NOT possible to have too many macaroons…

I found the recipe for these chocolate dipped macaroons in, yes, a library book called The Art of the Cookie: Baking up Inspiration by the Dozen, by Shelly Kaldunski.

The book has so many good cookie ideas, in fact, I am going to order myself a copy (you see how easy it is for a total biblioholic to get into trouble?). Until then, fines are adding up as I have renewed this book the maximum number of times allowed but I have not yet reached the end of the Christmas cookie baking season.

vii. And, finally, one place I’d love to go before I die is Outer Mongolia. If anyone has a whole whack of airline points they’d like to get rid of, I’d be happy to help you out. While I’m waiting for those points to be transferred, I will make my way through the shelf or two of books on Mongolia I have been collecting over the years and which have earned an exemption from the Great Cull. Unlike the books about growing cool cactus and succulents, which have found good homes on other bookshelves.

Now, for my nominations for nifty blogs to check out:

Sailor’s Small Farm North of 49 Tilly’s Nest  Our Little Acre  Nature’s Place  The Crowded Acre  Adventures in Natural Beekeeping

Ack… there are so many more! But, the hour is getting very late and I have an early morning tomorrow and a very full day ahead… So, for now, I’ll leave it at that and let the nominees know as soon as I catch my breath and get a teeny bit caught up around here! (Hah!)

**My apologies to the loyal readers who slogged through all that thinking they were reading the farm blog… I just realized there wasn’t much farm content there at all… which is maybe ok given the name of the award is the VERSATILE Blogger Award… We will return to our regularly scheduled farm blogging tomorrow.**

Day 29 – Moss on a Plum Tree – Taking a Poetic Seed Catalogue Break

Moss on Plum Tree (Quote)

I don’t like to post poems in their entirety out of respect for the poets and their copyright, but if you like the teaser stanza above, here’s the link to Moss by Bruce Guernsey. And any time you feel the need for a poetry break, the Poetry Foundation website is amazing. I’ve enjoyed listening to their podcasts, reading the magazine, hanging out at the website and playing with their poetry app.

One of the highlights of winter is having longer evenings during which to study seed catalogues and read farming and gardening magazines. The current issue of Small Farm Canada Magazine is extra delightful because it includes the annual seed buying guide, a list of various seed catalogues sure to get your heart a-thumping! At least, it got my heart going which, to be honest, doesn’t take much these days.

I have already spent several sessions going through The Whole Seed Catalog (from Baker Heirloom Seeds), a fantastic publication that not only includes a huge selection of unusual heirloom seed varieties but also has articles, recipes, profiles of growers, seed fanatics, farms and farmers. The gigantic version of the catalog is available for purchase and the regular seed catalog is still available for free. I’m so glad I splurged on the fancy version as it will stay on my bookshelf as a reference to be used for years to come.

I think one of the reasons I get so excited about seed is all the incredible potential crammed into that tiny, perfect, amazing package. Stick the seed in some soil, add water and sunshine and presto – something starts to grow! And, given half a chance, plants will grow – in so many ways plants are forgiving and will fight to stay alive, produce fruit and go to seed even when your soil conditions aren’t quite right or the weather doesn’t exactly cooperate or you get a little busy and don’t weed quite as often as would be ideal.

Mushrooms

I get a similar thrill when I see mushrooms sprouting up all over the place right at the time of year when the leaves are dropping and the plant world seems to be going to sleep.

Moss is another plant that reminds me that winter is a time of rest and renewal and not death and desolation, as it sometimes appears at first glance. The moss is never greener and more vibrant than at this time of year when it seems to shout, “I am alive! I am still here! I am drinking all this rain and reaching for that low-slung sun!” Moss makes me smile and I would happily replace all of my lawn with the stuff. Contrast the soft blanket of green with the gorgeous lustre of natural stone after a good rainwater scrub and you can see why moss is a fixture in so many Japanese gardens.

Until I get a chance to work on the Japanese garden of my dreams, I steal my moss moments when I can. Early in the morning when I find myself on the north side of the fruit trees all I can do is admire the sturdy but delicate forest of green that thrives in the damp, refusing to cough.

Interested in learning who else is participating in the 30 days agriculture blog-a-thon or the five things Holly Spangler will be talking about this month? Head over to Prairie Farmer to find out!

Day 28 – Soil, Seed, and the ALR

I am officially too tired to write anything – but I made this commitment to the 30 day farm blog challenge and given that I have made it all the way to Day 28 without missing a blog entry, by golly I am not going to let a bit of weariness beat me!

SAVE ALR button

Just came back from the big Hands off the ALR (Agricultural Land Reserve) meeting in Sidney feeling simultaneously optimistic (close to 400 people turned up), disheartened (sometimes it seems like there are just so many fights to fight), and very, very tired (an evening meeting at the end of a long day of farming, writing, and running errands is… taxing).

I’ll write a more complete post on what’s going on with the ALR when I have a bit more time, but what strikes me is that the issues are actually pretty basic.

1. We all need to eat.

White Cheddar

2. To eat, we need farmland.

3. Lots of good farmland is either a) in the path of urban development or b) here in BC, at least, in the way of the oil and gas or mining industries

4. Where money is to be made, people tend not to think of future generations and what makes sense for the long term. Which is why protecting farmland through regulation makes sense, even if our current system could use some tweaking.

Tomatoes!

At first glance, it’s pretty straightforward – protect the farmland so we have something to farm so we can grow more food and improve our food security. However, if farmers cannot make a living on the land, then what good is protecting that farmland through legislation? (the reverse version of this observation is, if farmers were making a good living on the land there would be no need for an Agricultural Land Reserve or an ALC (Agricultural Land Commission) to oversee it.

And this is where the can really starts getting wormy. If we as a society decide we want cheap food more than we want local food, then there is very little political will to support programs that support farmers. Nor is there much concern about insisting on organic practices that build soil and leave farmland in better shape each season than the year before (Atina Diffley’s book does a good job of describing this process).

If people just want cheap, then who cares that the food has travelled a gazillion miles to get here using gas guzzling transportation systems and questionable farming and labour practices? Consumers and all levels of government need to get involved to help establish and maintain local markets strong and large enough to support local farmers. Governments need to be willing to step in when crops fail, markets falter, or infrastructure is required.

Farmers need to be able to take back control of their supply of seed. Seed security and what is going on there is worthy of a whole other blog post (actually, a whole other blog, but I only have one lifetime and this blog is more than enough to deal with). Similar issues are relevant to those of us who are desperately trying to preserve the genetics of traditional livestock breeds (yes, more posts on those issues coming soon, too).

Large Black Hog piglets

Large Black Hog piglets

Meanwhile, here are some ways to connect with the saving our farms for the future movement, if you feel so inclined.

On Facebook: ALR Watch

Farmlands Trust Society

Farmland Defence League of BC

On the Web: Farmland Protection Coalition