Showing posts with label drylands farming. Show all posts
Showing posts with label drylands farming. Show all posts

Monday, September 17, 2012

Farmers Market


Carrots

BEETS!

Washing Greens for baby salad mix

Harvesting Baby Red Mustard greens

Baby Salad Greens washed and ready to go to market.


Carrots and Beets

Chard and Baby Salad Greens

Kale, Scallions and Chard

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Solar Power Water Pump

We just did a demo of how the pump can work directly off the panel without a battery. We pumped water from one tub to a plum tree. This is so exciting. Everything is beginning to come together beautifully.

Friday, June 22, 2012

Garlic and Carrot Harvest

These carrots are as tasty as they are beautiful! 
We will have some this evening at the Eldorado Farmers Market

The garlic is small but packs a big bite in its spiciness.

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Water Catchment for Chickens

The layer hens now have a self contained water catchment system.

Even though they are only a hundred feet from our doorstep this is a vast improvement.

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Shade Cloth and Micro Sprinklers

Got a good rain yesterday. Planted and set up about 2 dozen micro-sprinklers.
All four beds with shade cloth were uncovered during the rains. Hopefully this will help germination of lettuces, mustards, chard, tomatillos and flowers. 

Chicken Tractors

 We have five chicken tractors with a total of eighteen layers in them combined.

A chicken tractor is named so because of its ability to replace a traditional tractor by tilling, weeding, mulching, fertilizing and so on. 

Sunday, May 27, 2012

Farming For the Future

Blue Flax and Orange Poppy


We got this 125 watt panel to power our 12 volt water pump for irrigating.

Broccoli and Lettuce and Beets under shade cloth,, carrots and scallions and more lettuce to the right.

Calendula

Snake in the Chicken Shack

This snake was making a meal of our eggs.


Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Pastured Poultry in Drylands



These hens have been getting moved on our native drylands pasture at least twice a day ,,,,sometimes four or five!
Hens on a diet of leafy greens, sprouted wheat berries and barley, and organic scratch, no soy whatsoever. 



These three hen tractors can on a good day produce three eggs each!


Growing

Purple Basil in the ground... no transplanting needed

Tomato plant in the same bed 
Yarrow on it's second year

Chives

Monday, April 30, 2012

Pastured Hens and Cover Crops

Right now we have nine hens pasturing in three of these tractors.

A planting of rye and buckwheat where we grew a bed of greens and carrots last year. This fall we will plant garlic here after the chickens scratch through a few plantings like this.

Growing Food with Water Catchment

This is a February planting of beets, broccoli and lettuce.

Second cutting is going to be great on this patch.



New expanded beds all set up with irrigation from the cistern... Growing here now are potatoes , chard, lettuces, kales, cabbages,  radishes, beets, broccoli, mustards and soon sunflowers down the middle bed with the chamisa at the end. 

Inside view of the far left hoop.

Red Russian Kale 

Potatoes

Early Corn Planting

Blue Corn

Blue Corn plot to be a Three Sisters Garden across the driveway, next to perennial herb garden.


Second Blue Corn plot, also slated to become a Three Sisters Garden

Thursday, April 26, 2012

Monday, April 16, 2012

Food Growing Everywhere!

This might be a year where we actually get some strawberries.

Companion planting of spinach and strawberries.


Hauling weeds off to the five hens that aren't on pasture.

Oregano 

We have tons of oregano . 

Parsley