March Challange -Opps

Ok, I am owning it.. I had a opps on my March challange, it was grey, it was drizzling, it was cold and I wanted a little trip off the farm in the morning, I didn’t want to spend alot but it was not good weather for a outdoor trip, and so I said to hubby.. hey, has that huge new asian supermarket openned now and the answer is yes.. so off we went for a drive and to the store.. Now I gave myself a 50 dollar budget and the rest was to be just looking, pricing and writing down names of things so I could reseach them and learn how to use it..

I was good on the pricing, I only spent 55 dollars in total, but I was so BAD! I had fresh shimp dimsum, then I bought amazingly cheap fresh oyster mushrooms, and fresh tripe, a bit pack of beef soup bones, the other things got are all dried and storage items that can be held till after march challange is over.. but I am planning on making a lovely pasta tripe lunch today, I can freeze the beef bones to hold them off but those fresh mushrooms are going to be eaten over the next couple days..

So there is my opps, now on to the good stuff.. O my god, what a store, they have a fresh food court, and they have so many real dishes, and much to DH’s pleasure a tiny little section of canadian style dishes, the veggie sections was amazing, I finally can get a base price on things like what a burdock root is worth, or what chickweed by the bunch is worth,love it!

Then we hit the butcher shop and while most of the folks that walked down the row did a face ehhh, I was delighted!, they have ox tail, pigs feet, tripe, necks, duck and chicken feet, all kinds of organs available all at really! good prices, two huge turkey necks for less then a dollar each, 11 beef soup bones for less then 2 dollars in total, and then the fish row.. wow, I wrote down at least a dozen names of fish I had never even heard of before.

The dried and fresh mushrooms deserve a shout out, over 15 different kinds, and the prices were excellent, we had a good selection of mushrooms at the farm boy but the prices are so high that I rarely buy anything but the basic, at this store, you can buy all the different ones for less then the cost of plain white button ones at the local store.

Found laundy soap bars for a faction of the cost of the farm store or home hardware, and I won’t be buying the coconut oil from the health food store anymore, same brand, health food store 23 dollars, asian market 6 dollars.

Last but not least was the bulk area for spices, flours and rices, the prices were reasonable enough on the different ground flours to give them a try and be able to practise making some glutin free baked goods..

While it is a 40 plus min drive away, its still a place I can see myself wanting to get to four to six times a year to stock up and save hundreds doing so.. I also believe that I will move my old girl who has allergies over to a fish based diet for a change in protein for her.

The funny thing was that by the time we came out of the store it was sunshine and we drove home to bright sun and had lovely weather for the rest of the day for working on the farm, got another bird pen cleaned out, and the small barn gutters done and the rain barrels set up..

Posted in Life moves on daily | 8 Comments

Garden Shopping for Dinner Tonight -Spring Greens Soup.

While we got a bit of a steady spitting cold rain this morning, I was able to get all the grape vines pruned out, and then after warming up, the afternoon was more in the main garden in regards to work, with a little hugelbeet work and some compost turning and watering.

Still time flew and I got the.. what for dinner..  I was thinking I would like a quick soup hon? My mind flew to the pantry and the canned soups, stews or chili’s in it, then I looked around the garden and thought hmmmmm

So starting on the top left, you have a diced green onion, then below, you have blanched and chopped stinging nettle, the middle round peices are diced DayLily roots and the white diced is fresh horseradish, the greens are a mix of spring greens and spicy greens.

I cooked those shown above, other then the greens in a little duck fat, then added a quart of lamb bone broth, two handfuls of small pasta, once the pasta was done, I added in the greens to wilt, a little fresh cracked black pepper, and a tiny pinch of sea salt..

Light, tasty, full of flavour and packed with fresh goodes for our craving for spring bodies.. What are you eating out of your garden at this point? and how are you using it?

Posted in food, Food Production and Recipes | 6 Comments

Food Storage Friday Report- 03-23-2012

Another week has rolled by both on the farm and on March Challange, and so far the only thing that has been challanging is the fact that I am limited.. my meat is currently, in order of the most on the farm/freezers/pantry-Lamb/Hoggot, Duck, Chicken and Rabbit, My carbs are potato’s, rice or corn, my veggies are frozen red and green peppers, frozen carrots, canned beets, canned corn, canned sqaush, For Fruits, I have canned and dried still in all the basic’s along with lots of apple sauce..

In the storage area I have dried onions, garlic, cabbage-green and purple, dried pea’s, lots of dried greens, and a few fresh greens, being mainly spinach, wild greens, green onions, chives and just starting this week, fresh stinging nettles. Fats are tallow, duck fat, oil oil or butter, We have milk, yogurt, soft cheese’s and lots and lots of eggs..

You can tell that the hens are free ranging the afternoons away, as the eggs have gone from dark yellow to darn near orange in color and the taste after the winter eggs is amazing..

The sheep are starting on their downward curve in regards to milk production, I am currently curing leg of lamb which will then be smoked.. I have to admit that I normally make corned beef for st. Patty and was all out, so I am learning how to cure my lamb and duck, so far the duck is turning out to be more close to beef then the lamb, which is not to say that the lamb is not good, it is.

I think if I dig hard enough, I will have a few things of salmon to brine and then smoke at the same time.. we have not added anything to the storage this week, I did get to the stores in the sense of checking out the flyers for sales and there was really nothing there to rock my world..

Other then eggs, we really are in a lean month in terms of what you can find to add to the pantry. So how about you, did you find a good sale this week? Did you stick to your food budget? Did you look at your three or four or five current meat or veggie stash and think.. come summer time when the garden or the garden markets are in full swing, you will have ten or twenty different things to choose from again.. I will look forward to even having six to ten more different greens to choose from in the next month or so..

You know what the first thing I am going to get for april? Apples! Fresh tart crunchy apples!

Posted in Food Storage, March Challange | 2 Comments

Coming 40-What I want for my B-Day

I’m coming 40 this year.. I know, I know, the big 4-0, how did that happen? Now my birthday is not until the fall as some point but I will need to do a little extra work this spring/summer getting ready for it.. I promised myself a weekend horse back riding trip somewhere in Canada.. Still have not figured out where just yet, could be Alberta, could be Sask, could be Quebec? I think its narrowed down to those three provinces at this point.. but maybe B.C. or the yukon is possable.. Still a bit up in the air on if its a weekend or a week trip..

Alot will depend on how much riding I get to do before the trip to be ready for my time out.. Now as my regular’s know, I don’t put up very many photos of myself.. but figure the odds of you being able to spot the “me” now from these photos are slim..

Farmgal at the age of six riding bareback on her first horse-a pony of course, called Trupp, I had to share him with my big brother.

Farmgal at the age of 15 riding one of the big boys, this is King, and he was part of the driving team, again, riding bareback, this time, as you can see, he was not neck trained, but he was a good old boy.. not that he was old either, he was only 4..I hope that my daily workouts with girl will also help get me in shape for this coming trip, Did you ride as child? as a Teen? Did you take lessons? I didn’t, I was taught by the folks and what we did now would be called trail riding, we just called it riding back then 🙂

Posted in Critters, Family | 13 Comments

Power-energy.. and the never ending rising costs..

First, I should touch on March Challange, its coming along just fine, no issues to note to date, I will do a week round up on Food Storage Friday.

Second, nothing wrong here, just that this amazing (odd) weather has been putting in hours into the yard/garden/training the cow, and it means that time in the house is more limited and I am tired to boot.

So got my power bill in the mail for the worst months of the winter 2012, that would be jan and feb, and I was thrilled to see that we are down 56 kw per day over last winter, which in turned saved us several hundred in power costs, always a good thing, I have been quite pleased that this winter, we have each month been a min of 20% less per day and in some cases as high as 40% less power use.

DH and I are having talks about considering biting the bullet and getting a new energy star fridge and dryer, I know, I know, at least half of you, went.. use the line, and I do! but I have alot of hounds and purrpots and in order to get the hair off the work /good clothes, I have to use the dryer to make it happen.

The question is trying to figure out how much power my machines are using and how many years would it take pay off the difference, the dryer came with the house and is still going strong, the fridge was got for $10 at a farm sale and works perfectly.. So I have ordered a gadget that will allow us to find out what they are in fact using in terms of power. That will help me figure out what to do in that regard..

I have to admit that the there has been a real difference in going back to being a single vehicle family, while I find myself thinking, O I should do this today.. and then remember, I can’t as I am on the farm and the van is with hubby.. I do see the difference in the bank account, no second gas alloted, no second insurance payment etc..

Still the higher cost of oil along with the effects of weather seem to be showing themselves everywhere I turn, my pasture is green!! right now and the cows are being locked up to keep from damaging the land, and as many of the pastures gates are closed to keep the sheep off them, but in the pasture they do have, they are out eating fresh greens in March!

We tend to do pretty much everything on the farm by hand, It means that the skills are learned and worked, and it helps keep us healthy (the farm is our gym) but it also gets us off the power grid.

Doomer posted about her pantry being money in the bank, and I have to agree, but I am going to take it one step further for me here on the farm.. yes, my pantry is indeed money in the bank, and compared to the rising costs of food, I am getting more bang for my buck then I would in a savings account.

Here on the farm, the gardens, the animals are also money in the bank, but so are my tools! Those wonderful old fashion hand tools, tools that let me trim feet, tools that let me work my gardens, tools that let me trim the trees, tools that let me self-butcher at home, tools that let us cut, dry and roll our own hay.. all of these things cost time to use this is true but there have lasted us for years already and I hope they will last us years to come.

They require no shop to spring or fall tune them, they require no oil changes, no gas or propane to run, just elbow grease.. We often see folks talking about getting things in the kitchen that require no power, so I ask, how are you doing in regards to removing power from your outside life? Do you rake your leaves or use a leaf blower or a lawn tractor with a leaf pickup?

Posted in farm | 11 Comments

Potted Rabbit..

As most folks who have been reading for a while know, I am on a steady, never ending learning curve on old ways to use and perserve all kinds of food that the farm produces.

I got a new cookbook called A Hunter’s step by step guide to cooking Game, Recipes by Andy Parle,this is a english cookbook and it show’s in a number of way, its always a very good thing to stretch your palate and this book will indeed do that, the bonus, many! of the recipes are in fact for critters I raise on the farm, while I am not hunting in the woods or pastures of England for them, I still have access to free range sometimes “gamey” meat.

The one that I am currently trying is Potted Rabbit (photos pending, when I can find the camera, its somewhere on the farm, but I sort of misplaced it yesterday)

I tried very hard to stay with the recipe but needed to keep to the march challange rules so a few tiny tweeks were needed, I will note them as they happened, they say that this meat will keep in a cool spot or the fridge for at least a month or more..

  • 1 Rabbit, cleaned, cut up, and soaked in salt water overnight-Farmgal Note, I used parts of two rabbits, as I took the tenderloins out of the rabbits for a different use. I was not about to let the best part be cooked and chopped up.
  • 4 oz of pork Shoulder-Didn’t have it, so used Lamb Shoulder instead, I know its a stronger meat, but I carefully trimmed all fat off it, so that it was as plain of lamb as I could get it.
  • 2 cups of duck fat
  • 2 cloves
  • 6 peppercorns
  • 1 cinnamon stick
  • 4 garlic cloves -I used frozen minxed Garlic
  • 1 bay leaf
  • 1 large carrot- I used frozen diced
  • 1 med leek-I used dried leek

So rince your rabbits in cold water, dry and cut into joints, put the rabbit and the pork/trimmed lamb into roaster, it must hold all the meats in one level, melt your duck fat and pour over top, then add your spices, garlic and herbs, set your oven to 200 and slow roast them covered for around 2 hours or more till the meat is soft and falling off the bones. Remove the meat from the dish, strain the fat and hold it for later.

While the meat is still warm, take it off the bones, and chop it finely, in a different pan, take a little of the fat and fry up your finely diced carrot, the add your leek, mix them into the chopped meat in a bowl and then add a ladle of duck fat and beat, continue, until the meat/veggie mix will not take any more fat, (they said three ladles, mine must be small as it took four), salt and pepper to taste.

Sterilze your glass jars and while still hot, fill it with the rabbit mixture, leave a bit of room on the top and cover with a layer of duck fat, allow to cool, then store in a cool place or in the fridge.. Its to be served on toast with pickles..

This is a very high calorie snack or lunch sandwhich filling, now while they said to serve it on toast, I put a layer of it in a oatmeal sandwhich with hot mustard, and lots of baby spinach and it was delightful, no butter, no mayo required, it has amazing mouth feel and a little of this goes along way.

Posted in Charcuterie | Tagged , , , | 4 Comments

Single Draft Cow Training..

Oxen in training..

Ah, I have been trying to spend at least half an hour each day on training girl and in so many ways its showing, the road work is helping harden and work her feet (a very good thing), the steady work each day is making her always willing self even more happy to see me. I am not as happy that most of the gear bought and made for her last year will not fit her this year, I even need a new head peice, thankfully she works just fine on a homemade lucet hand rope, with a instant head halter made as required.

The only two peices that could be made to adjust enough to use in training right now, is her back peice that can have bundles or weights hung on each side, and her bells, so that is what we have been working with at this time, the folks are even getting use to seeing us on the road, but we have hit a training snag..

So right now, I am working on a steady list of commands..

Walk on- Means just what it sounds like

Whoa-Stop

Easy-Slow down but don’t stop

Stand- Don’t move from where I put you.

Gee-Turn right

Haw-Trun left

Back-Back up

She is coming along real well and so I have been starting to walk beside her at rump or behind with her taking her commands by voice only, well the snag is that she has started having a bad habit of going right or left without it being commanded and then gets to the side of the road before the ditch and just stops..sigh..

See the issues, first, she should not be turning without command, second, while I don’t want her going into the ditch, she should not be stopping until I tell her to.. if I say.. walk on and that means going down the ditch and up and out the other side, then that is what should happen… I will worry about the second part for another day, I mean she is smart so I can’t really fault her for thinking I would not want her to go down the ditch, I once rode a horse called Blondie for a few summers, and I was warned that she expected you to tell her everything, I thought they were kidding a bit until I was on a road that curved and went right, and she walked right off the road in the straight line I had pointed her at , and down the ditch and stopped in front of the fence, she was honestly a great horse but she expected you to do all the thinking..

So yesterday Girl and I were out for while on the road yesterday and over and over again she would start straight and then slowly go right, I corrected her again, with the New Command “Front”, both of us were getting hot and sweaty, and I had her walk on.. she started going right, and when I said “front” she straightened back out. Now she only did it twice on command in a row, but I stopped right there and let her end on a high note, so we will see today if it stuck or if I am right back to sqaure one.

I think that having a team does make some things easier then working a single draft cow.. So for any of you that drive horses and or oxen.. what is the correct work to walk staight, do you use gee and haw only to correct the behaviour or do you have a “front command” and any tricks to pass on or reason’s you can think of for her to be pulling right or left, she does not do it when I am leading. Will having her hitched to a wagon help increase or decrease this behaviour?

I would like to point out that I have driven teams before but they were in harness, and I am finding it quite different to work with the cow as she does not have driving lines on her at this time, (I did use driving lines last year when I was just starting her) but I want to get her to the point of working off line by voice command. I guess I could put her back on driving lines while teaching the new command or just half on and half off for practise.

Posted in oxen | Tagged | 16 Comments

Food Storage Friday-03-16-2012

Food Storage Friday Report

To be honest it was a slow week, and a bit of a whiny friday to boot.. the weather has hit a unnatural high, typically we are 2 or 3 above and we are well over 20, on sunday we hit plus 26c, and my farm and my head is all in spring.. hubby was working without a shirt, while we are still tromping though snow.. very odd indeed.

All my fruit tree’s made it though the winter, and are all budding out, this is a great danger to my coming food storage and to the possable cost of fruit this year, it is only mid march and if they are budding now, they will most likely bloom early as well, which means all I need is one good spring snow storm or even a hard frost, and my whole hard fruit crops will be done for the year. This happened to us and most everyone in the area two springs around on our grape vines, it really effected the price, those few that had fruit where able to charge up to 5x the norm and if you wanted it, you paid it.

As I said to Dh, its a good thing that the strawberries, rhubarb, rasberries and currents are such faithful producers, we started some of the spring work in the ever growing strawberry patch, looks like I should have about 150 or so plants to move over into the new rows, which in total should give me somewhere between 300 to 350 plants producing this year.

The pantry is holding up very well, while the jars are getting empty, and I would worry that many of the regular items would not (without very careful planning) make it though two garden season’s at this point, I can see that we will have no issue at all it holding us very well until the garden is producing well.

I am however having a issue with my stored flour and as much as I hate the idea of it, I think I am going to need to mix it with water and bake it into bricks and feed it to the chickens, it has gone off, despite being held in the freezers, and I am starting to think that my body is reacting to it, of course my cast iron tummy of a hubby is fine but I am really starting to wonder, I think I am going to go to grinding my own only for what I am using and or just having to cut out all baking/bread that I would need to use it in and see if it makes a difference.

If this is the case, what a waste!

Thank goodness for the amount of whole grains in my storage that are holding up just fine..

I took one of my big blue plastic waterbarrels (safe for food rated) and I placed it on top of a area of good stinging nettle patch and I am pleased to say that its doing it job well, and I have a nettle already a few inches tall, which will be soon finding its way into my fry pan, the daylilies are also starting to come up and I think a good stir-fry with some of their roots sounds lovely..

Posted in farm, Food Storage | Tagged , , , , , , , | 5 Comments

March Challange and Permaculture

March Challange:

Breakfast-Yogurt, canned mixed fruit, walnuts

Lunch-Baked Beans on Bread

Supper-Pasta with roasted Chicken leg in a pasta sauce mixed with yogurt and dried squash.

Dessert- Hot Spiced Roasted Peanuts.

Ok, so lets talk about Permaculture today, the idea as I understand it in a nut shell is work with nature, layer, and layer some more.. follow nature’s rules, instead of trying to bend her to our will..

We all have the image in our heads of a perfect garden, that English garden, that has head gardeners, and under gardeners and is so sweet and perfect that we all drool, we have even seen these places in our garden magazines and on the net.. stunning they are.. and if they rock your world.. go for it.

I garden to fill my belly first and formost, and for pleasure second.. I often wonder if I have it wrong, my grandmother always planted flowers in her garden, not just to help bring in the bee’s but because she loved to have flowers, I remember her giving me my first chick and hen, my first sweet pea’s to plant and grow, she talked about the sweet smell they would give to the garden area, and I still plant them and think of her.. Rasberries always make me remember my grandfather, the many hours of “grandpa” chats that took place in my teens over his rasberry patch, now as a adult, I wish that I had spent more time out there listening and learning and just being with him..

In someways my garden and its many styles almost seems like a revolt in some ways from the way I was raised to garden, but I do believe each has its own place in your yard, don’t tie yourself down, have a raised sqaure foot herb, have a vertial growing space in that spot in the garden, use rocks to raise the temp and create a mini zone for your strawberries, Grow your horseradish in pots on the deck if you want, make narrow beds, make 4 foot wide beds (never bigger if you want to be able to reach the middle) make and use hugelculture and their wood based huge hugelbeets. Use Green covers, use mulch in your pathways, use mulch in your garden, have some area’s that are no till, some that are in fact lightly tilled and have some area’s that are double dug (awesome for potato’s). Try wintersowning, build and use cold frame, consider making a cold hoop house, have at least a few rows worth of row covers, don’t put all your eggs in one basket by this I mean, have many garden spots in your yard, and your farm.

Be wild, got a spot by a building, put down a wood ledge, be it bought or cut, mulch it down, cover with dirt and compost mix and plant it out..  Got a area that the pig rooted out for you to make into a new pasture? Throw a fence around it and put it into sqaush for the season, it will go crazy and produce like mad, when you take it out, frost seed it late winter and you will have pasture the year after..

Know your plants, some will only go down a few inches, some a foot and some three or more, this knowledge will let you know if you can dump a couple shovels of dirt/compost into a tree stump and turn into a working garden spot!

Ok, so tell me some the wild things you do in your gardens, what do you mix and match! What new thing are you going to try this year?

Posted in farm, gardens | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

March Challange-Frost Seeding

We are coming into our 5th year of frost seeding to improve our pastures, and we can’t speak highly enough of this process.  A little background on our pastures, the call names are, Big Pasture, Little Pasture, Corner Pasture, and the Correl an the stripe. When we moved to the farm, the Big and Little Pasture were being rented out to farmer R, who had put them into hay for dairy, so the last time they were tilled and seeded was in 2004, Farmer R believes in a proving all the helping hands he can get and on our first year, we took off just under 700 square bales at 80 pds per bale.  However, Back Corner, correl and at least half of little pasture and about 1/6th of big pasture was in “native”, I had Farmer R cut it all down and used it for bedding to get it under control.

We have used our animals for grazing and pasture control along with hand digging and hand cutting, we spread well done compost over the pasture from the barn..

We went to our local seed place and explained what we had in terms of soil, and critters and he mixed us a tailored seed mix for our small mixed farm, taking into account what will do well naturally in our area etc.

We tend to frost seed out 25% of the overall pasture area, however the corner and the correl were done different, they were eaten down to nibs, and then were frost seeded all over, then closed off and have very controlled grazing thoughtout the season them, the hay pasture is the same, the area’s that are frost seeded are fenced off and or only have limited grazing on them until the grasses are at least six to eight inches high before the first graze.

We have seen the results of this program in terms of milk yield and also in a increase growth and weight yield for our lambs, as they are grass pasture raised.  We often see in many gardening books that they talk about no till or cover crops in the garden area, very important indeed but give you are going to have grazing critters, please consider putting into a yearly plan for pasture improvement. Your land, Your Pasture and Your Critters will thank you for it..

“Frost seeding is an economical method of improving pasture and hay fields by broadcasting the seed on frozen ground. As the ground freezes and thaws, it opens and closes allowing the seed to be incorporated into the soil. This keeps the seed from germinating until there is a good moisture supply early in the spring. Legumes are the most successful for this system as they tend to be rounded, dense and most importantly, they -germinate at lower temperatures so will begin growth early in the spring. Grasses have not been as successful as they are lighter coloured, less dense thus they sit on top of the ground and wait for warmer temperatures to begin growth. This often coincides with drier weather as well.

The ideal candidate for frost seeding is a pasture field that is “run out”. If you walk across the field and can see bare soil the size of a loonie, then these spots will be good frost seeding sites. A field can be made ready for frost seeding by overgrazing in the fall to weaken the existing plant growth in the spring. This is not necessary but can be helpful in allowing the seeds to make good soil contact.

The addition of legumes to a pasture or hayfield benefits the forage in many ways. The legume is higher in protein and energy at all stages of growth than the existing grasses, so the addition improves the quality of the forage. Legumes are also able to “fix nitrogen” from the air. As their roots rot back naturally they “share” this nitrogen with the surrounding grasses. Nutrient requirements of a legume grass stand are much lower than for a pure grass stand because of this “free” nitrogen.

As we work pasture fields harder, using rotational grazing to keep them vegetative, we are finding that legumes such as trefoil are not Iong lived perennials but rather live 3 – 4 years and reseed easily. If we do not allow them to go to seed, they will thin out of the pasture. It is more economical to frost seed every 3 – 4 years than to set aside a portion of the pasture to allow it to go to seed unless land costs are extremely low. Frost seeding can help to limit the density of legumes such as clovers if they are frost seeded rather than seeded with the original mix. This along with good grazing management will help with bloat control.

Alfalfa will frost seed as well as any other legume, but alfalfa has an autotoxicity which will not allow new alfalfa seed to grow in the presence of a mature alfalfa plant. You will only have one chance to get a successful stand if you are frost seeding into a pure grass stand. For this reason, alfalfa is usually seeded conventionally or no-tilled to produce more consistent results.

You have the choices of conventional reseeding no-tilling, fertilizing or frost seeding forage fields to improve their production. Your goals for the field and the condition of the stand will determine which is best. In hay fields, we generally want an alfalfa grass stand so conventional reseeding or no-tilling, after killing the original stand, are the most effective. Alfalfa stands can be patched by frost seeding red clover into the stand to get one more production year, but this is usually done in the spring when winterkill reduces hay supplies. Fertilizing, can double or triple the production from an existing stand, but keep in mind that it could also do this with a more productive species that you have introduced. If you have an adequate grass stand in a pasture field, then adding a legume by frost seeding will not only add a high quality plant to the stand but will also help to provide nitrogen to the grasses, improving their growth as well.

Frost seeding requires very little equipment. It is often done using an all terrain vehicle (ATV), snowmobile, tractor and spreader or with a hand-held broadcaster. Many custom operators provide these services. Cost per acre is low. This makes it a very attractive alternative for someone who wants to improve a pasture with very low input costs. It also has the added advantage that the pasture will be useable the summer following as there is no need to remove the livestock completely.

The ideal time to frost seed is in the very early spring. The ground should freeze and thaw 2 – 3 times after the seed is broadcast. Another good time is December, after all the growth has stopped for the year. This is an excellent time for areas which normally receive good snow cover and do not experience prolonged January thaws when the seeds could germinate. Too many times fields go from snowbanks to mud in the spring so there is no time to frost seed. Do consider December seeding,. A light skiff of snow will help to show where you have seeded. Tractors with a spinner spreader can often be used at this time, making the job faster and a smoother ride.

Bird’s foot trefoil is Generally used for frost seeding as it is a non-bloating legume that established relatively well. A seeding rate of 5 kg/ha is adequate. The clovers are more aggressive in establishment but do introduce a bloat concern. If you manage your grasses to keep them young and vegetative, this can be reduced. Seeding rates of 1-2 kg/ha are adequate for clovers as they have many seeds per kilogram. There has been some success with perennial ryegrass and orchardgrass but this should be considered more as a last resort. Legumes are about 50-60% effective in establishment and grasses about 20-30% effective when frost seeded. This really means one year of excellent catches, one year of no results, and two years somewhere in between. You will need patience and perseverance when frost seeding. The cost is 25-30% of conventional or no-till seeding so you can afford to frost seed 2 – 3 times to get an acceptable stand. If you do not find this wait acceptable, then you should consider other alternatives. Weather in the spring will determine how successful the frost seeding will be.

Phosphorus does favour new seedling but in a frost seeding situation, where there is so much existing, competition, fertilizing the field will give the advantage to the existing plants. A late summer application of phosphorus and potash would strengthen the root systems of the legumes for the winter.

An early summer grazing can help reduce the competition from existing grasses. If a rotational system is being used, limit the time that the livestock have access to the frost seeded area. Often, in continuous -grazing situations, livestock have overgrazed the area and killed the legume. Watch their habits to see if this is the problem and try to alter their behavior. A minimum of four paddocks will help you to control grazing patterns, which will allow rebuilding of root reserves between grazing periods. The legumes can then establish and be more productive.

Frost seeding is a popular method of improving long term pastures or patching hayfields for one more year of production. It is a cheap but high risk option. Many people will frost seed 25% of their acreage each year so that they are spreading their risk over different years. It takes about two years to see the improvements from trefoil applications so these should be made a year before the existing plants die out. This will continuously maintain a good pasture rather than allowing it to lower its production. Frost seeding is one of the most economical and easy improvements that can be made to a pasture.

Original written by Harry Harricharan and Joan McKinlay.”

http://www.omafra.gov.on.ca/english/crops/facts/98-071.htm

March Challange

Breakfast-Baked Beans

Lunch- 3 hardboiled mashed eggs with mayo, greens on bread

Supper- Chicken leg/thigh baked in my homemade chili sauce, served with cream baked potatos with a side of canned pears.

Extra’s, water and coffee.

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