Farm
and Garden 2007 Season

Tasty
red delicious

Apple
pressing

Good
goat milk

Florence
Intern
Camp Project

Painting
by the Swedish sisters

Built
mostly of local and recycled materials
Forest
Stewardship Program

Before
tending

After
tending
Autumn
Activities

Jars
ready for juice

Putting
up animal feed for the winter
Winter
arrives

Early
January snow

Clearing
winter storm
|
The
garden this year was slow growing with the cool summer we had here.
There was an inch of rain in mid July which is not very common.
The summer time temps were just in the 80s with a few days reaching
90 F. The corn did not get very big and the cucumbers, tomatoes
and watermelons wilted with a mid June frost and had to be replanted
getting a late start. We then had early frost mid September which
killed our melon and squash vines leaving the pumpkins and squashes
to ripen in the sun later. The greens did great in this weather
with a summer long abundance of peas, lettuce, chard and kale. The
summer squashes did great also, inspiring many new recipes. The
apples came on by early September and it was an abundant year. We
kept busy with juicing and canning all the apples. The apple crisp
were coming out of the solar oven almost daily.

The
farm picked up action with the kidding of three does in May by our
Nubian goat Tiny. With the help of interns Montana and Kelson we
milked Tiny and bottle fed the kids three times day.

Alfalfa,
Zeta, and Florence were weaned off Tiny's milk by mid July and the
farm started enjoying the milk by making Feta and Chevre cheese
and Kifer. We sold Alfalfa and Florence in September to a family
in Petaluma and kept Zeta to breed next winter. Thanks for the help
and knowledge of Ellen Stretton when the what to do questions came
up.
We
started the building of intern camp in April with the digging of
the septic and leach line. We got all that done by June ready to
test out with the first big group of folks up for the season. Then
pole gathering and peeling started in July with the raising and
roof going on by the end of the month. In August the sink, counters
and shower went in and then the walls went up and final touches
were done in September.
Thanks
to Christina, Clair and Whit for the great digging. Thanks to Caroline
and Greg for the pole gathering, peeling and raising. And to the
Swedish sisters for the art work.
We
tend to the ongoing project of thinning and clearing in the forests
around the farm. Lots of trees were planted through the 1980s and
have become thick and over crowded. This causes the trees to become
weak and creates a fire danger. We have been going in and thinning
trees out. We use the poles from these trees for a veriety of building
projects. Then we limb the trees as high as we can to prevent fire,
if it does come, from climbing into the canopy. We also clear larger
trees around the oaks as they can get shaded out as the fir trees
get tall.
Thanks
for all the help of wwoofers, friends and visitors for the healthy
forest.
When
the days start to get shorter and the nights longer and colder we
think of getting the firewood pile stocked for the up coming winter.
All the apple and pear trees were full with fruit so the sauces
and butters were canned up and juice bottled. The herbs were gathered
and dried and put up for winter seasonings and teas. The Feta cheese
was made weekly and put up in olive oil and herbs for the winter.
Thanks
to Lucy for herb gathering and drying, firewood gathering and helping
with octagon improvements. Thanks to the Swedish sisters for firewood
gathering, apple picking and all the tasty sauces and jams. Thanks
to all the woofers for their help getting stonelake farm ready for
the winter.
We
got our first snow falling in late December with the big snow fall
leaving two feet in early January. It all started with 6" of
rain fall over night causing the creek to flood and by the next
day changing to snow.
It
was a grand winter with lots of exploring on skis and relaxing by
the fire with a good book. There was no place to go with the road
being impassable till mid march so we did art projects and stayed
at the farm living off the supplies we stored up from garden and
farm. |