Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Bee-isaster - n. a disaster relating to bees

My bees are dying!.  I went to check on them on thurs. afternoon and where usually I can't see any of the comb this is what I saw.

actually it's a really good picture of what they've been doing the past three weeks what with all the bees out of the way.  The next morning I hurried out and gave them a little sugar snack, my current theroy is that with all the rain and cloud weather we've been having the past week+  they didn't have energy to keep everybody warm,  for the good of the hive the fat was cut.  luckily on friday and today it was nice and sunny and they were flying about like mad, and ignoring the sugar water I put out for them, so I think that the hive is going to make it, but there is a depressing number of dead bees on the floor of the hive right now.

The garden has been coming along, and like everything else taking much longer than I had hoped.  The lateest set back came on wed. afternoon when the dipperstick hydroluic ram quit.  And I only had one more day of digging to go!  now I have to wait for a week or more for a new one to get here.  but here are some pic of the progress so far.






In the mean-time I'll be working on setting up the piggy pen I've already got the bottom strand of electric fence, and the shelter for the pigs done. 

Friday, April 17, 2009

What $72 can get you these days - 3#s of Bees

I got Bees!!!  This morning I got a call around 9 that my bees were ready to be picked up.  Unfortunately I hadn't quite got around to a few all important finishing touches on the hive, like oh say actually setting it up outside or a roof.  So I scrambled around for a couple hours to finish everything up.

improvised cedar shingle roof

All the Parts ready to go

Ready for bees

I went to the apiary ready to drive home in a cloud of bees, but they have the bees in these really nice little boxes, and there's not a spare bee to be found.

The installation was nerve wreaking, you have to open the lid of the bee box and hold on the string that's attached to the queen cage.  needless to say with all the bees flying around and the gloves on I dropped the cage into the bee box (which has a small opening).  eventually I got the cage out and then had to "pour" about three pounds of bees out of the box into the hive.  The bees were very patient with me through all of this. 

Within five min. or so they had settled in to their new home.  I left the queen in the cage for a couple of hours so they wouldn't move out.  

it took a little while for the bees to learn where the entrance is

First floor view

the swarm

I had to force myself not to spend the rest of the day watching them.  I've named the queen Ba‘alat Gebal after the Phoenician Goddess of the city of Byblos.

 

Sunday, April 5, 2009

Conected

I guess it has been a while since I've been near the internet.  The big news around here is that I've gotten rid of my cell phone in favor of a landline, which means DSL and Internet access.  So I should be able to update a little more often now.  

Spring is solidly here.  I boiled down the sap from my maple trees today.  Unfortunately I tapped the trees late and weather warmed up quickly.  None of those below 32F nights that really make the sap flow, so I only ended up with about 7 gallons of sap.  Which turned into about 3 cups of maple syrup, not a whole lot but it is very tasty.  

 My bee hives are  ready for bees, which should be here in the next couple of weeks.  I was going to post detailed how-to make these beehives but someone already did a much better job than I ever could - http://thebeespace.net/2008/07/30/introduction-warre-beehive-construction-guide/

The whole beekeeping thing was a really nice organic process.  Last fall I had no plans to keep bees this summer, then the Cap'n mentioned that he had some old langstroth hives in his barn that I could have if I wanted.  I took him up on the offer, cleaned out the hives and was just about to hit the send button on a overpriced order of foundation and other replacement parts, when I thought to myself - there has to be an easier way to keep bees.  Not more than 5 min later I found Abbe Warre and The Peoples Hive.  The short version of his story is that he decided to find the best hive for the masses.  So he built a lot of very different hives to test different designs, took the best aspects of each and came up with the People's Hive. I'll add some very informative links about his method of beekeeping and his book to the sidebar.  The main Idea though is to let the Bees be, they know what they are doing, and they don't need your help.  This is what my hives ended up looking like, 

For the past couple of weeks I've mostly been clearing trees and making a lot of really big mud pits with the tractor.  The ground is still really soft from all the rain but if it stays dry this weekend then I should be able to really start in with the backhoe. 

 

Monday, March 9, 2009

Snow.

I'm back from my first trip up to hope and thought I'd put up a couple of pictures of the absolutely gigantic snowbanks.  I'd gone up kind of hoping to do some clearing and other outside work, but ended up pretty much shoveling for two weeks.  I guess clearing a woodlot in February is a little bit ambitious.


The snowbank that welcomed me home, measuring in at about 6 1/2 feet.




It did give me a chance to play with the tractor though, after I spent a day digging it out.


The road into Camden the day after

I've been taking to the phone company and it looks like I'll be getting a landline by the end of march.  And saying goodbye to the ole cell phone!  I think a big part of me was worried (probably irrationally so) about having a cell phone and keeping bees.  luckily I never had any reception near my house anyway so I don't think that the cell towers in the area will hurt them.

I've got a date for the bees arrival: April 16th.  I've still got to finish up building my hives, which are actually coming together fairly easily and should be done this week.  

Friday, February 13, 2009

Robert Hart's grave


Robert Hart's grave, Rushbury Church Stretton, Shropshire, UK. 

Robert was one of the founding people of the modern idea of forest gardening.  Basically, without knowing  a whole lot about plants or gardening he got a smallholding and lived off of an 1/8th of an acre for about fourty years.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Hart_(horticulturist)"

http://www.spiralseed.co.uk/forestgarden/

http://www.pfaf.org/leaflets/gdlovene.php

Sunday, January 18, 2009

ready... set... go

after I bought a new-used tractor this past fall I think that I am obligated to give my farm a name and call it started.  here's what I've got at this point in time towards being self-sufficient;a strawbale house, a piece of land that's mine in all but deed, a new/used tractor, my first seed order is slowly arriving, and I'v absolutely no experience growing things.

I'm choosing to view the fact that I only know about farming and other homesteady activities as an advantage, I figure that it just means that I will have less of a bias towards doing things one way or another.  If I'm not caught up in my own traditions than hopefully I'll be able evolve my own farming practices more effectively.  although I might just be telling that to myself in order to feel less nervous about the vast amount of work that this whole thing is going to end up being.  

My current list for stuff to do through to this fall:

tapping maple trees

get a land line to the house - for internet and so I can get rid of my personal radiation device

Raising three pigs

slaughtering and butchering said pigs

keeping bees - hopefully with out getting covered in bees http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xs-tl6GBOBo&feature=related

making three hoop houses - one for a workshop, one for the tractor, and one for a winter garden

clearing trees for the garden

planting walnut trees 

starting a winter garden and sowing cover crops on the rest of the garden area

finish the outside trim work on the house

cut and split wood for next winter

that's all I can think of at the moment though I'm sure there is more.  so that it then the official start of my farm as far as internet is concerned, here's to gettin in over you head... and staying there.

Friday, January 16, 2009

Mission statment

Statement Of Intent
Or How I plan to do my part

 This farm will be place of healthy living and learning. A place where viable options for a sustainable life are tried, revised and put to use, as we reconnect our isolated selves to earth. As we create a space that meets our physical needs and is nurturing to the mind and spirit, we discard old habits that have as destructive and unwilling managers of an ecosystem. We return to being an integral part of the ecosystem that provides our lives. This is as it should be.

Desired Farm conditions:
• All food is grown on the property. The end goal that it would come mostly from perennial forest garden, with “extras” coming from interwoven annual patches. While the forest garden is being established an annual garden will be the main source of food, and eventually be phased out.
• As much as possible all other needs, (heat, clothing, money for taxes, ect) should be met by the farm. This is a boundary that will continuously be pushed, both in the sense of relearning lost skills, and in the sense of removing those thing in my life that are too energy intensive.  

Possible manifestations of the goal:
The ideals that drive this project are set in stone; the physical realities are still very much fluid. For many reasons I feel that South Hope could be, and is a fantastic location. However I realize that there are other considerations because I don’t technically own any of the land yet. My current vision is of a 2 acre Forest Garden, encompassing the house and a few possible outbuildings in the immediate area, and in the future probably an addition to the house including some sort of barn. I will try to balance a respect for the people who own the land with my need to be active with these ideas.  
Some ideas I’ve had so far:
• Terracing or swales on the hill behind house
• Small water storage pond from seasonal spring
• Barn with root cellar for winter storage 
• Attached foundry and forge
• Living raft for vegetable and fish production
• “Four seasons” style cold frame green house 
• Bucky Dome for food production before forest garden is fully yielding
• Vegetable oil Co-Op

How the Farm relates to the world:
• True sustainability cannot be measured on the time scale that humans are generally are familiar with. This is part of why the word “sustainable” has come to mean “less of an impact then the conventional equivalent” The great law of the Iroquois states ”In every deliberation we must consider the impact on the seventh generation” To me this is the idea that should be implied in the word sustainability. The ultimate goal then would be to create a sustainable lifestyle.
• This is to be a place where I can start to learn how to live without destroying the ground beneath my feet, where others are welcome to do the same, and/or to learn from my experiences.
• To encourage people to make lifestyle changes on their own by, spreading the information gained by experience, and creating a supportive community those difficult tasks.

Farm Establishment
The Forest garden will be established over the next ten years, with heaviest amounts of work being done the first few years. Work will tend to be concentrated in the spring followed by maintenance through rest of year. The gardens will begin come into its own 8-10 years after start. Early establishment will concentrate on major land moving (if needed) projects, tree plantings, and cover crops as trees and shrubs get established. Aqua culture, cold frame, and Bucky dome projects are on a “as the opportunity presents itself” level. Most likely these projects will happen in the 3-7 year range. As they are no longer needed for my food supply they will be dismantled and site returned to nature (in better shape than found) or evolved into the expanding forest garden. As the farm provides for more of my needs a shift can be made where more time will be freed to spend working on the farm. A personal goal to this end is to have retired from the workforce by the time I am 30. I am planning on creating a garden that will yield more than what I strictly need providing the opportunity for the farm to be economically sustaining.  


Basic approaches
• The main desired condition being that of a independent food source, food plants will be the main concentration, due consideration will be given to other characteristics of the plant so that harmful species are not introduced
• K.I.S.S. (Keep It Simple Stupid). Simple solutions often work best, and even better is to eliminate the cause of the problem in the first place. A “simple” lifestyle is to be pursued.
• In this civilization we have very little cultural memory, our gardening “traditions” are very new relatively speaking. While current traditions will be given due reverence, empirical knowledge will be valued above all else.




Motives
 How to put my motivation into words? The obvious answer is that I can’t, the level of exaggeration required to pass a feeling along to the reader would render the words unbelievable. In comparison I have not been motivated in anything that I have thus far done.  
What I seek to do is something that I am simultaneously drawn and pushed towards. A life without a carbon footprint, providing directly for my own needs, spending that majority of my time outdoors working for myself, are all thing that draw me to do this. This combines with my general dissatisfaction with the modern, distraction oriented, lifestyle, climate change, peak oil, government incompetence and oppression. It adds up to some serious objections on my part.
We have reached a point in these issues where I have realized that I am no longer comfortable with effect minimizing actions. I mean how can you call cleaner ski lifts “good for the environment” they still pollute, right? These things have always come with the asterisk that in the future we will need to be doing a lot more. That future has arrived for me. Climate change and peak oil are now questions, and in a way always have been, of when and how quick of an effect they will have. It is looking like it will be sooner rather than later, with the peak production of oil being in May of 2005 we seem to be on the plateau. Even if I am wildly wrong about the when and this is not on our doorstep where is the harm in being prepared for it a few years early?

These are the facts, off the top of my head, which I am working with:
• We live in a society where things are considered disposable, which is most untrue, everything we have is already on earth and can’t go any place (with the obvious exception of the occasional odd spacecraft)
• The current prevailing lifestyle in this country (and the lifestyle that most people in the world strive towards) is having negative effects on the climate of the planet.
• Oil production to date peaked in may of 2005 
• As excess oil supply is used up instead of turning to sensible option (using less energy, using alternative energies) the gut reaction of the governments of the world will be to fight, steal, and embargo their way into “energy security”
• Politicians are ultimately people, as such they are given to looking out for themselves first (not that there is anything wrong with that, just it’s silly to expect any person under normal circumstances to do otherwise, just as it would be silly to follow them for that exact reason).
• The first world economy is based on continuous growth and thus has very limited and unhappy options for facing the physical reality of a finite world.
• All empires end 
• Civilization itself is based upon a population density that grossly outweighs the carrying capacity for that given area. Thus civilization requires the importation of resources from other areas. This is NOT A SUSTAINABLE WAY TO LIVE. Meaning that it is a way of life that can not be sustained. This also means that every person in an industrial country still has slaves; we just don’t have to look at them.

I have hope that I can live a life more closely in tune with my beliefs, a life as close to freedom as one can hope to get, that I can live working directly towards my immediate needs and do away with all that I don’t truly need. To live this way would be to live knowing that I would have done my best to change the world in a positive way. I need to be free from this civilization, or to at the very least have tried. If I fail to reach my goal than at least I’ve given the next generation a good starting point. As I live now I am constantly and painfully aware that everyday everything that I do and use is in some way contributing to the destruction of a planet which is important to all those who live. This knowledge is unrelenting and at the same time I find it absolutely necessary to me and in a way a comfort to have. Because from it comes the realization that I alone am responsible for changing myself.
I am motivated by the scope of what I can do. I recognize that this project will require a lot of work. As well as giving up thing that I may like or enjoy from this culture, though for me there is much more to be gained. I am being drawn away from this culture because I find that my fundamental beliefs are at odds with the majority. I believe that everything is connected. I reject the idea scientific idea that something can be singled out for study, or that effects have only a singular cause. I believe that when we live out a certain lifestyle there are both negative and positive effects, these are the direct result of that lifestyle. These effects are not always seen as being connected because they are happening in many different theaters simultaneously. I believe that because they are intrinsically connected we cannot single out a condition that we find unsatisfactory, such as war, and expect to change it; without first changing the whole of our cultures. I do not hold anyone to the standards that I set for myself. We all need to find our own version of right and wrong. I only hope that you can understand it as my unique truth. I in return recognize that if there is any truth to be found anywhere we must each find it of our own fierce will. 

Good luck.