Quail.. a lovely set of six young ones..

With the loss of so many of my good laying hens to a really bad Fisher attack, he killed for sport, not for food.. I was suddenly down by half on eggs, now I know lots of folks would have gone out and paid though the nose to get older chickens but given, I am currently raising almost 40 chicks, most laying hens, a few meat birds, it makes no sense to lay out for hens at the most costly time of the year for them.. a hen locally can start at 25 right now.

IMG-20150603-00256

I just needed a stop gap for fresh eating eggs, for baking and so forth..  Quail to the rescue.. they are just young but will be laying hard for months to come and while they are small eggs, they work great for me, Hubby can have the bigger eggs and I will have the smaller. I know I have three females for sure, one mostly likely female and two.. huh.. anyone can guess at this time..

IMG-20150603-00254

Plus they are funny, sweet and so cute! these guys are very well bred and handled by children and are so tame.

I modified a rabbit hutch for them, give them a outside area and a protected inside area, and a total of 16 square feet plus I added in branches to make it two levels in over half of it..

Posted in Critters | 3 Comments

Juno is Home!

IMG-20150603-00252

My new Nanna to be.. once she grows up a some, she has been running with a buck so it is possible she is expecting, we will see if she comes into heat in the fall or not, I will be feeding her for growth as a young doe, and that is the same as I would be feeding her for if she was expecting so its covered either way.

She will take two to three years to get to her true full size, but I am hopeful she will get close to her mothers size but we will see as her father was a bit smaller.. Very grateful she came trained to a collar and lead, makes things so much simpler that’s for sure

Juno traveled home in her bedded down X large dog crate, she was weaned last week and is a nice big solid 55 pound Miss..  she settled quickly and made sure to be turned to us so she could watch us and make eye contact.

Hubby carries her down and we put into dry lot, she said hi, and then jumped out when we were not looking, she is grazing in the pasture with the small flock and lambs, the big sweet ewe is tuning her in, so she is learning she is not top ranking.

The sweet sheep in the pasture are both cookie monsters and come running when called, it will be short work to get Juno trained to the same, she is already interested and people friendly but respectful..

We have the top and bottom hot line, we will see if we will need a middle hot line with Juno here on the farm, its possible we will.. if so, then that will happen soon, but she is trained to the hot line at her old place and we do have both the hot line and the sheep fencing, but I do not want her to learn to step up on the sheep fencing, so hopefully she will get a good Zap and learn to stay away from it..

Posted in Goats | Tagged , , | 3 Comments

Know your land -Asparagus Planting..

As you know I was lead on a community plant group buy of different plants, just one more folks to get their plants and everyone will have had their plants delivered at this point and we are getting busy putting our own plants into the ground..The Nation-20150602-00211

Sometimes you need to know your land.. you see I need to put hundreds of Asparagus 2 year crowns into the ground and if I had tried to put them into the main garden, the grass and bits of other plants would have been a never ending battle or I would have had to spend hours and hours double digging out that bed..

But as it happens just across from the main garden is a wild area that is just allowed to do its thing and there is a plant that controls that space in a way that is impressive, it takes over and nothing else grows there.. its a ground cleaner..

It has quite big roots, if cut off and allowed to stay in the ground, they harden and take years to compost, but pulled out, the pigs like them for fresh eating, and you can have clean land ready in matter of cut, pull, add compost and GO!

This is just what we did, we cut out a new section right in their thickess part but in a good spot and cleared the land in a matter of two hours, and voila, something that could have taken ten plus hours to clean, double dig and prepare was instead done in two hours.

The Nation-20150602-00216

This bed has hundred plus new two year old crowns of only male asparagus planted into it..  looked after it will produce for 25-30 years..  Yes, they got covered up, hubby was taking photos for me and he was just showing one in the ground.

We should get a average of 50 pounds per year once in full production, that will give us a good amount of fresh eating but it also means that we should finally have enough to put some away for the winter use as well., if after five years or so we want more, we will expand at that time.

The Nation-20150602-00212

We mixed dirt and well turned barn compost from the pigs to cover it, we will build up the cover with time and I am planning on laying down cardboard on the walkways edges with a top dressing of straw..

IMG-20150603-00248

We have hit the big time folks, we are expanding the garden to the other side of the ditch.. o my..

 

 

Posted in gardens | Tagged | 7 Comments

Stepping out of my comfort zone-Sort of

If you have ever meet me in person, I can talk a mile a minute and on more subjects then you can shake a stick at. I do not mind small groups but I have been asked over the past years to do public speaking, and had kept turning it down..

But when a friend asked me if I would join in a combo plant event, multi speaker day and talk about food preservation, I said yes.. and I am so glad I did.. I would maybe have a tiny cheat sheet next time, but other then missing my key start planned speech out of nerves, it went good, lots of question an answers

I have been asked to do a few more talks both this year which is good because I have been asked to speak at a large event next year, it should be interesting. I will consider this reaching a goal of mine for the year, which was stepping out of my comfort zone more and second my goal to be more active both off and on the farm in my local food movement.

Ottawa-20150530-00201

Posted in Goals | Tagged , , | 4 Comments

Just a bit of Garden overview

I have been playing it careful this year, its been a odd spring and my hunch was that we would have late frosts and a longer fall, I have the row covers and more to make that end season longer on some things if needed but overall, I went with a number of quite short season seeds..

So I am well aware that compared to someone that went out and bought starts, my garden is just starting in some ways but given that my last hard frost was less then a week ago, it was the right thing to do for sure..

I also outsourced my tomatos and peppers this year, a fellow garden friend in the area is working on plants this spring and I am all about sharing, (plus she had the most amazing heritage plants so many of them) so I have ordered a whole host of new to me kinds and will grow out and see if I like them and if I adore them, I will save seeds

My early planted crops are rocking, my current seeded out are all up and going well, but we will be planting lots more in the next two to three weeks.

DSCN6461thanks to a friend and some bartering, we were able to come home with precut posts, she was clearing a bit of smaller woods, and I needed garden posts! Win, Win.. This is just a sample of them.. We also have been able to get a number of wood pallets for a different project.

DSCN6462

they will have used older sheep fencing nailed on to them for a total growing height of 4 and half feet

DSCN6474

Some of my early planted greens, beets, turnips, and strawberries in the background.. I am slowly weeding out the middle of the pigweed as we eat it.

DSCN6473

My first rows of planted suger peas are over two and half feet tall at the moment, with my smallest peas being four to six inches tall, all the peas for the year are planted now, grow babies grow

DSCN6465

Hay bale garden, this year we are growing climbing beans over them.. the Beans are up.. there are two sets of beans in each hole, two holes on each side and one on the top of the bale, ideally it will cover the bale in green.

DSCN6471

 

 

 

 

Posted in gardens | Tagged | 3 Comments

Mays Off-farm Trip..

On my to do list for this year included taking the time at least once a month to go to a local site or event and get off the farm even if only for a few hours.

We headed out to the Bog for a nice picnic lunch out..

DSCN6418

The Alfred Bog is a little piece of boreal (northern) forest, hundreds of miles south of anything like it. Yet, at 4,200 hectares (10,000 acres), it is the biggest bog of its kind in Southern Ontario, big enough to give refuge to many plants and animals that were stranded as the warming climate pushed the boreal forest northward. This domed peat bog has been building for 10,000 years and shelters many plants and animals that are rare or endangered, some of which are of national significance. Examples include the Bog Elfin butterfly, Fletcher’s dragonfly, spotted turtle, white fringed orchid, Atlantic sedge and rhodora. In fact the bog has been designated by the Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources as a “Class 1 Wetland” and an “Area of Natural and Scientific Interest (ANSI)”.

DSCN6446

Being a domed peat bog, the Alfred Bog is unlike the kettle bogs most commonly encountered south of the Hudson Bay lowlands. Kettle bogs are found typically in depressions such as those found when a huge block of glacial ice is buried and subsequently melts, leaving a pond in which vegetation has crept in from the edges until the whole surface is covered with a flat, quaking mat. Domed bogs drain in all directions from the dome and the only nutrients received come from rain and snow. The dominant vegetation in both types of bog is sphagnum moss, known to gardeners as peat moss. Sphagnum moss thrives in the interior of bogs where cool, wet, oxygen starved, nutrient poor, acid conditions prevail. The dome is formed over millennia because sphagnum moss has the ability to wick up water from below. These conditions produce a unique community of plants and animals.

DSCN6421

DSCN6448

Alfred Bog lies in the east end of an abandoned channel of the Ottawa River . This was the main channel of a great river flowing down the Ottawa valley to the Atlantic Ocean. It drained a glacial lake centred in Manitoba. Because of reduced flow and glacial rebounding, the river abandoned its old channel and moved to its present location. Mer Bleue, lying in the west end of the channel is Alfred’s smaller twin.

DSCN6433

The most significant impact upon the bog over the years has been the conversion of the bog land for agricultural purposes. The first settlers in the area found the bog to be of little use for farming and an obstacle to building roads. Nevertheless, over the years drainage around the margins has reduced it to about a third of its original size.

DSCN6436

 

Posted in Goals | Tagged | 1 Comment

Rhurab Goals for 2015 – 300 pounds

I have set goals for a number of the bigger crops in terms of poundage, it would not make sense to do so without having a idea of what things produce.  otherwise I will have little to no way to meet my goals for production this year, I am aiming for 6 tons for house use and putting up for cellar or pantry goals, and 4 tons for the critters.

DSCN6065

Rhubarbs goal for the year is 300 pounds and I am clearly going to make it and then some.. I have 30 plants, and even only doing a half picking of the big stems on them, I am getting between seven to ten pounds per plant so far based on my weights.  I will be only very very lightly picking the biggest stems from my two best plants that are being allowed to go to seed side by side.

DSCN6063

The red rhubarb will be used for baking, canning etc, the big green-pink will be used for relish, rhubarb pickles, rhubarb juice and so forth.. This is my BIG canning bowl, that is 40 cups of diced, washed and ready rhubarb for processing.

DSCN6066

I have firm plans to take a second picking and then some selective picking over the rest of the year..   I will do a final update in the fall on rhubarb total but my spring pickings are going very well indeed..

What is your rhubarb goals for the year..

 

Posted in Food Storage, gardens | 2 Comments

Readers Question

Any idea as to why the beef prices have gone up so high? Feed problems? Mad cow? What is going on with the price of food?!!

http://www.theguardian.com/business/2015/jan/16/steak-bacon-get-more-expensive-cattle-hogs

“When you to go the meat counter and say, ‘Wow, that steak’s only $3.99.’ But it’s not a pound. It’s eight ounces,” says John Kleist, lead agricultural hedge strategist, eBOTTrading.com, a brokerage and research firm.

The reason steak dinners aren’t getting any cheaper: livestock markets, including cattle and hogs, have seen significant increases in prices, and consumers are feeling the pinch.

There are, to put it simply, fewer animals to eat. During 2014 herd sizes for cattle and hogs were down versus the previous year, and chicken flocks were also lower. It’s an unusual occurrence for all three to have smaller numbers, said analysts at Urner Barry, a firm that closely follows protein prices.

That led to record-high futures prices for cattle and hogs, which translated to high prices at the supermarket meat counter

The origins of the record-high cattle prices lie in ethanol and the 2013 Midwestern drought. Cattlemen compete with ethanol producers for corn. A shriveled US corn crop in 2013 intensified that rivarly and sent grain prices to unprecedented levels. The drought also baked pastures, which is where cattle spend most of their lives.

Unable to profitably feed the animals, ranchers culled them, which caused the herd size to shrink to its smallest tally since 1951 in 2014

Hog production slid in 2013 and into the first quarter of 2014, caused by losses from the highly infectious porcine epidemic diarrhea virus known as PEDv. Infected older pigs at a minimum lose weight, and the disease is usually fatal to piglets. It doesn’t affect humans or meat quality.

But as producers started to better control PEDv, hog futures and wholesale pork prices fell. This year’s drop in corn prices because of a record harvest encouraged producers to, well, pig out

Side note pork prices are holding steady in Canada more so and in some cases went down because our government and the Russian government have been have tit for tat issues.

http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/russia-sanctions-vladimir-putin-retaliates-sanctions-canada-1.2728885

Canada announced new economic and travel sanctions against Russian banks and high-ranking officials Wednesday, just ahead of Russia issuing its own ban on Canadian agricultural products.

In retaliation against Western sanctions, Russian President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday signed a decree limiting the import of agricultural, raw and food products from countries that imposed sanctions against Russia. The decree lasts for one year, a spokeswoman for the Russian Embassy told CBC News.

Russia’s sanctions on Canadian agricultural products are expected to hit the pork industry, although a spokesman from the Canadian Pork Council said the industry has “not received any official notices that would indicate a disruption in trade at this point

In 2012, Canadian agricultural exports to Russia were worth $563 million, with pork and pork products making up most of the top five exported agricultural products from Canada to Russia. Numbers from 2011 indicate Russia was Canada’s 13th-largest agri-food export market that year, although the pork industry says Russia is Canada’s third-biggest market for its products.

In 2013, Agriculture Minister Gerry Ritz visited Russia to try to improve exports to the country and announced Canadian livestock companies had signed deals worth up to $11 million. The visit came a month after Russia imposed new restrictions on meat imports

Then come the next hit

http://www.cbc.ca/news/business/california-drought-to-squeeze-produce-prices-but-so-will-other-factors-1.3024691

California is the primary source of many of Canada’s imported fruits and vegetables, including:

  • 84 per cent of broccoli and cauliflower.
  • 76 per cent of fresh strawberries.
  • 68 per cent of lettuce.
  • 69 per cent of carrots, turnips and other root vegetables.
  • 89 per cent of almonds.

Prices of some of those products have increased in the past year, but it’s hard to draw a clear line between those increases and the drought, say Bishop and others.

Between February 2014 and February 2015 prices rose 3.5 per cent for fresh fruits and 8.4 per cent for fresh vegetables — compared with overall inflation of 2.1 per cent.

Lettuce prices have jumped about 40 per cent in that period. Part of that is likely due to the shift Californian farmers have made from so-called row crops, such as lettuce, carrots and tomatoes, to higher-value perennial crops like nuts and wine grapes. But it’s hard to separate the effects of the drought from other factors that affect retail prices, such as:

  • Fuel prices, which have been falling and made transport cheaper.
  • The low Canadian dollar, which has made U.S. produce more expensive.
  • Other weather events, such as frost.
  • Labour disruptions, such as the farm workers strike in Mexico, where some produce comes from in winter, and wage pressures.

“Periods of drought often get exaggerated in terms of their impacts on retail food prices,” said Richard Barichello, professor of food and resource economics at the University of British Columbia. “The larger likely effect is to shift land away from producing hay and livestock feed and more into valuable crops.”

No substitute for fruit and veg

The University of Guelph’s Food Institute estimates the price of fruits and nuts will go up between one and three per cent in 2015 while vegetable prices will increases by three to five per cent.

Sylvain Charlebois, lead author of the forecast, says if California produce gets too expensive, Canadian grocers will have to find a cheaper alternative because unlike meat, which can be substituted with other food that provides protein like eggs or fish, fruits and vegetables “have no substitutes.”

And although locally grown produce is finding a foothold in some grocery chains, it could never make up the volume of lost Californian imports

As you can imagine, I really disagree on the idea that we could not produce our own food here in Canada but sadly we hit a real problem..  lets look at bc fruit, they are contracted to sell their crops out of country, we grow it but we are getting eat only small or in some cases non of it..

  • B.C.’s two largest tree-fruit crops are apples and sweet cherries.
  • In 2013, B.C. growers produced more than 103,000 tonnes of tree fruits including apples, sweet cherries, peaches, pears, plums/prunes, nectarines and apricots, as well as other tree fruits. This is almost a quarter of the total Canadian production.
  • B.C. exported $41.7 million in cherries in 2013 with the top markets in Hong Kong, United States, Taiwan and China.
  • B.C. apple exports have increased almost 30% in the past two years. In 2013, B.C. exported $19.1 million in apples and top three markets were the United States, Mexico and Taiwan.
  • The B.C. tree fruit packing industry has just completed more than $5 million in upgrades to its fruit packing equipment and to help packinghouses modernize.

I really could go on, but its just more and more examples of the above, its all interwoven, bottom line..  in a rough quote, when hedge funds start buying farms because the money is made because everyone has to eat.. they want their profits

The prices will rise.. I see no end to it in truth.. grow your own if possible, and I think you will see a even bigger split between the have*s and have nots..

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/soaring-farmland-prices-a-crisis-in-the-making-don-pittis-1.2420223

If you knew there was a very safe Canadian investment that skyrocketed by 20 per cent last year, you’d probably say that was a good thing.

But when the thing that’s going up in value is farmland, Christie Young says it’s a crisis in the making.

The latest survey by Farm Credit Canada shows the price of farmland in Quebec rose by a staggering 19.4 per cent last year. Nationally, Canadian farmland from coast to coast has risen by an average of 12 per cent a year since 2008. That’s more than five times the rate of inflation.

For people who already own farmland, soaring prices are a windfall.

But Young, executive director of FarmStart, a group trying to help young farmers get into the business of farming, says Canada is facing a sea change that bodes ill for agriculture.

“The average age of farmers is 60 years old across Canada,” says Young.

“According to StatsCan data, about 50 per cent of our land assets will be transferred in the next five years. And of the retiring farmers, 75 per cent of them don’t have successors. It’s a transition we’ve never seen before in agriculture. And it’s one we are wholly and completely unprepared for.”

FarmStart has two incubator farms in southern Ontario to bring new farmers into the business, but at current prices, Young says there is no way those starting out could earn enough from their farms to make a living and pay their mortgage.

Overpriced land

It is a problem that Rejean Girard, who farms southwest of Montreal, understands.

He bought his small plot of land near Saint-Cesaire 20 years ago. But Girard says the return he gets from the sheep he raises would never pay for that land today. By that measure, he says, the land is overpriced by about three-quarters.

The steadily rising price of land has caught the attention of savvy Canadian investors. Global investors have an interest, too, but in most provinces only Canadians are allowed to own farmland.

That has created an opportunity for Canadian farmland investment funds like Bonnefield, Agcapita and Assiniobia, which have been assembling blocks of farmland and selling shares to high net worth Canadians.

The president of Toronto-based Bonnefield, Tom Eisenhaur, says farmland has been one of the most lucrative and secure investments especially when markets are volatile, and “a better hedge against inflation than gold.”

Eisenhaur says he expects the price of land to continue to rise, if not at the same rate as over the past decade.

He quotes a United Nations survey that shows world food production will have to double over the next 20 years.

“While it’s trite to say, no matter how bad or how good things get in the markets, people still have to eat.”

Profits from rising prices

While Eisenhaur is profiting from rising prices, he scoffs at the idea that funds like his are responsible for the land boom.

He says that while farmers buy and sell some $15 billion worth of land each year in Canada, third-party investors like his company trade a mere $100 million worth.

So it seems clear that farmers’ pursuit of more acreage is helping to push up the price of the land.

That seems to be in direct conflict with what Girard, Young and many others say about the difficulty of paying for farmland with a farm income.

That is, until I speak with Gary Brien who farms near Chatham, Ont

“The way we’ve looked at it is more of a way of life. It just so happens the land has gone up as we accumulated it over our lifetime,” says Brien. “I really don’t think we own it. We’re just using it while we’re here. The value to us may not be in a dollar value.”

Brien says that the last few years, bumper crops have pushed up farm incomes to record levels, so farmers have had cash to spare. And when farmers have money on hand, their non-monetary way of thinking of land, combined with the tax rules, encourages them to put that spare cash into farmland, whatever the price.

“Farmers don’t like paying income tax,” says Brien. “And if they get a bunch of money and have a choice to pay income tax, or buy more land, they buy more land.”

Bigger and bigger

That tends to mean existing farms are getting bigger and bigger, able to take advantage of the efficiencies of expensive modern farm machinery and make the money to buy more land.

But that doesn’t help the farmers who are just starting out small, without inherited family land and little prospect of paying off a mortgage, even if they could get one.

“We have farmers in rural areas paying far over the productive value of the land that they are buying because they have the income or there are such scarce land resources that they’ll pay anything,” says Young.

“For a new entrant looking at that landscape, it is almost impossible to conceive of buying a farm.”

Posted in Life moves on daily | 2 Comments

Wordless Weds

DSCN5952DSCN6036DSCN6058

Posted in Life moves on daily | Leave a comment

Duck Breeding Program

I am not raising a beef calf at the moment, I went to get a calf this spring, I did, I am picky on what I get and where I get it from, I get my week old calf*s from Farmer R, I know they have their first feedings, I know how they are treated, and I know how their mothers are treated etc.

And boy was I in for a shock, my normal 50 to 100 dollar calf was sitting at around 400 for a week old..  ok then.. so the price of beef at the moment in crazy and I am not paying 400 for a calf, I will wait a year or two for the price to come down on it, as the supply will catch up to demand to a point.  (plus I have a lot of beef in the freezer and cellar) so I have flex to a point..

But there is a catch, if you are only eating out of the freezer or the panty and not putting anything back.. you have a issues for sure..  add in the fact that I have limited steaks and limited stew meat, but boy do I have lots of burger 🙂

2013-01-01 1936 (600x340)

No problem, I got this..  I increased my duck breeding program..  my amazing machovy duck breeding program, no other duck breed will work for this plan..

I was on the hunt this spring and the last of the ducks came out of quarentee this past weekend and all my duck breeding pens are in force, I have a total of three active breeding pens, each pen has a set unrelated ducks, for a total of six unrelated breeding lines that are being started with this year, this should allow me to breed out for a number of years before needing to bring in new blood if I want to, but it also allows me to trade with friends and provide them with a nice mix of bloodlines.

My first hen is sitting currently, and she is due this week if my dates on her sitting solid are right, she is with grumpy drake..  I had to laugh I put silver girl with pretty drake and they went into the pen that had the big goose straw house, well she loves it.. she strutted in and looked in and went.. YES! and made a nest and laid her first egg, made me laugh.. that pair should produce outstanding ducklings.

The third breeding pair is a nice chocolate hen with a sweet but HUGE Bard black and white male carrying chocolate himself.

dsc01266

Now I should be able to get the hens to have a min of two sitting on 12 to 16 eggs, for a min of 50 ducklings to raise this year..  that’s 100 steaks or 50 steaks and 50 pounds plus of stew meat..

dsc01270

Add to that another 400 pounds or so of duck meat for other uses.. o my..  that is a lot of meat, I expect that to be honest, the prime cuts will taken and the rest will be used as hound raw food..  The feathers are used for the garden use. They are a wonderful 0 Mile farm critter in the sense that nothing at all will go to waste.

I will need to cure out a good amount of them into Salt Cured Duck Breast Prosciutto and then give them a gentle smoke for awesome smoked meat sandwiches.

So are you adjusting your breeding programs based on costs this year, are you increasing the amount of meat chickens you are raising, are you hoping to pick up a young kid or lamb to raise for the freezer this fall.. I tell ya even the cost of lamb this year is crazy high.. Its almost double from last year..

I am looking forward to doing a fully done cost out program on the duck meat compared to raising my beef, it will be detailed to be sure..  I wish you all the best of luck on finding a way to grow more of your own food, be it eggs, meat, milk or fruit or veggies..

Trust me, I may not get to the store much but I read the flyers and the prices are rising and then some!

Posted in Critters | Tagged , , | 4 Comments