Now that technology has advanced, and provided a large number of options for lighting that plants find beneficial when sunlight is in low supply, I find the options almost overwhelming.
LED is a reasonable option, but like most leds, they are expensive. The first time payout for such a new tech, and I will have to do more research to find out if they work, as they are using blue and red light principles, which I know very little about.
Incandescent is an option, but expensive to run in power consumption. They are also not as bright as less power hungry options.
Halogen is an old favorite, but has a voracious power appetite, and it turns the idea of growing extra seedlings, or an indoor window garden into an not for profit operation.
Fluorescent has been around for ages, and has bulbs available for plant and aquarium usage. The power usage is low, compared to most other options, save for LED, but without a fixture, there is still a startup cost involved.
I will do a bit more research, and find out how reliable LED's are for growing, as normal lamps and track lighting should be able to handle them, making the fixtures cheaper, but the bulbs the main problem.
Still, considering the lower power requirements, they might be the best and most viable alternative when the sun is lacking.
There go my breaks and lunch hours at work. In the end, this is all worth it. I love seeing new sprouts, and not using those fatalistic words that I have come to hate.
"I can't." Because the only one stopping me is me.
So, bloody hell, you bet I can!
Update - within only half an hour, I found a website that told me why my standard bulbs, although higher power consumption, were doing much less for my plants then the regular CFL's I had started with.
Bloody hell. What a waste. Should have did the research first. Got lots of CFLs, but only a few standards. As soon as I get home, out go those power hogs, and back go the CFLs.
For those who want the info, here is the site.
http://www.fullbloomhydroponics.net/hydroponic-grow-light-guide-fluorescent-hid-led/
A simple blog to tell about my journey through certain steps I took to try and get a place to call my own, whether it is a farm, a homestead, or a market garden.
Thursday, February 25, 2016
Wednesday, February 24, 2016
Ew, biosolids and other wastes
This may cause some controversy, but I am not writing for the sake of opinions, or controversies.
When I first heard of liquid fertilizers, I assumed it was a chemical fertilizer that was sprayed onto crops. Then more information becomes available as I research it, and I was not happy with the information. Human wastes that were treated, and sprayed over agricultural land for fertilizer. Not composted. Not sterilized. Not incinerated.
Recently, there have been many recalls of vegetable crops from grocery stores, and the reasons have been similar each time. A form of E coli, or other organism found on the food. It doesn't take a rocket scientist, or any other scientist for that matter, to figure out that using human wastes, or even animal wastes in its raw forms, is not good at all!
Some reports have shown that the plants love the stuff. They love the easily accessible nutrients within the excrement that was sprayed over the crops. They grow robust, and fast. However, history is filled with reports, or accounts, of humans using improper sanitation and suffering the consequences for it. Europe paid that price, and somehow science has decided that the lessons learned from the plagues that inflicted human civilization are isolated from modern society by modern science.
The problem with science is that if it starts out biased, it can prove just about anything with faulty reasoning, or other 'proof' that is too numerous to mention, as well as countless studies that show they are correct. Well, those who suffered those plagues also trusted the ones who were 'in the know', and the results are recorded for us, lessons we should not repeat.
I am not going to go on a rant about any one farm, or policy that should be abolished. That isn't my goal here, or a future goal. You can't fix a broken system that is resistant to all attempts to help, or repair.
The only thing any one person can do is do the right thing, for themselves, and others around them.
My own farm/market garden that I plan will only use compost, composted manures from reputable farmers that I am acquainted personally with, or crop residues from my own crops. This isn't a pledge, or a promise.
This is my way. I can't change who I am inside, so I would not sell seedlings, or crops, to anyone that I wasn't willing to eat or grow myself. Therefore, all seedlings I will be selling this Spring will be non GMO, and grown in soil, compost, peat moss, and composted manure(bagged as that is all I can find locally at the moment).
In the future, any crops I grow will be grown in real soil, enriched with compost, composted manures, crop residues (straw or chaff) or naturally occurring minerals, like lime and potash. Other methods of farming, such as companion planting, crop rotation, and beneficial vegetation that replenishes the soil, will be used to further enrich the soil without destroying the land that God gave us to take care of.
When I first heard of liquid fertilizers, I assumed it was a chemical fertilizer that was sprayed onto crops. Then more information becomes available as I research it, and I was not happy with the information. Human wastes that were treated, and sprayed over agricultural land for fertilizer. Not composted. Not sterilized. Not incinerated.
Recently, there have been many recalls of vegetable crops from grocery stores, and the reasons have been similar each time. A form of E coli, or other organism found on the food. It doesn't take a rocket scientist, or any other scientist for that matter, to figure out that using human wastes, or even animal wastes in its raw forms, is not good at all!
Some reports have shown that the plants love the stuff. They love the easily accessible nutrients within the excrement that was sprayed over the crops. They grow robust, and fast. However, history is filled with reports, or accounts, of humans using improper sanitation and suffering the consequences for it. Europe paid that price, and somehow science has decided that the lessons learned from the plagues that inflicted human civilization are isolated from modern society by modern science.
The problem with science is that if it starts out biased, it can prove just about anything with faulty reasoning, or other 'proof' that is too numerous to mention, as well as countless studies that show they are correct. Well, those who suffered those plagues also trusted the ones who were 'in the know', and the results are recorded for us, lessons we should not repeat.
I am not going to go on a rant about any one farm, or policy that should be abolished. That isn't my goal here, or a future goal. You can't fix a broken system that is resistant to all attempts to help, or repair.
The only thing any one person can do is do the right thing, for themselves, and others around them.
My own farm/market garden that I plan will only use compost, composted manures from reputable farmers that I am acquainted personally with, or crop residues from my own crops. This isn't a pledge, or a promise.
This is my way. I can't change who I am inside, so I would not sell seedlings, or crops, to anyone that I wasn't willing to eat or grow myself. Therefore, all seedlings I will be selling this Spring will be non GMO, and grown in soil, compost, peat moss, and composted manure(bagged as that is all I can find locally at the moment).
In the future, any crops I grow will be grown in real soil, enriched with compost, composted manures, crop residues (straw or chaff) or naturally occurring minerals, like lime and potash. Other methods of farming, such as companion planting, crop rotation, and beneficial vegetation that replenishes the soil, will be used to further enrich the soil without destroying the land that God gave us to take care of.
Still deciding, but I know where I'm leaning.
Raven's Rest, or My Father's Yard.
You already know what I think about My Father's Yard, but after careful consideration, and the thought that he would never be healthy enough to even enjoy that setting, along with other considerations, I have started to lean away from this name.
Raven's Rest. This was something I thought about a few years ago, in a poem that I wrote. A setting of a simple homestead, disconnected from human civilization, and a place for a friend to rest her weary wings. The lady goes by a moniker of Raven Shadows, or just Raven for short.
She's been a stalwart friend for the last few years, and though I've never met her, I know her as well as I possibly can without actually meeting her.
I like the name, so I am leaning towards it, even if she will never see the eventual fulfillment of my dream. She lives in another part of the country, and family obligations, on both sides, would prevent us from actually meeting face to face.
The land was the only part of her nightmare she called life that was actually pleasant. The land is the only part of my dream that I can imagine, and plan.
Happily enough, outside of this subject, I've planted some lettuces, Buttercrunch, as well as Old Simpson, in a couple of totes I had. Though its early in the season, and indoors, they are sprouting, and should yield up to six heads of lettuce for each of the two totes. Well worth the initial investment of the soil, and I can reuse the soil for other veggies when they mature, or fertilize with peat and compost, and grow some more.
The best thing about this is not what I can't do. I have stopped saying that sentence.
Now, I plan and think about what I can do. When I say I can't, its time to ask the question "WHY?"
Then its time to figure out if its a preconception, or reality. More often then not, its a preconception. Then its time to tear that preconception to shreds!
You already know what I think about My Father's Yard, but after careful consideration, and the thought that he would never be healthy enough to even enjoy that setting, along with other considerations, I have started to lean away from this name.
Raven's Rest. This was something I thought about a few years ago, in a poem that I wrote. A setting of a simple homestead, disconnected from human civilization, and a place for a friend to rest her weary wings. The lady goes by a moniker of Raven Shadows, or just Raven for short.
She's been a stalwart friend for the last few years, and though I've never met her, I know her as well as I possibly can without actually meeting her.
I like the name, so I am leaning towards it, even if she will never see the eventual fulfillment of my dream. She lives in another part of the country, and family obligations, on both sides, would prevent us from actually meeting face to face.
The land was the only part of her nightmare she called life that was actually pleasant. The land is the only part of my dream that I can imagine, and plan.
Happily enough, outside of this subject, I've planted some lettuces, Buttercrunch, as well as Old Simpson, in a couple of totes I had. Though its early in the season, and indoors, they are sprouting, and should yield up to six heads of lettuce for each of the two totes. Well worth the initial investment of the soil, and I can reuse the soil for other veggies when they mature, or fertilize with peat and compost, and grow some more.
The best thing about this is not what I can't do. I have stopped saying that sentence.
Now, I plan and think about what I can do. When I say I can't, its time to ask the question "WHY?"
Then its time to figure out if its a preconception, or reality. More often then not, its a preconception. Then its time to tear that preconception to shreds!
Saturday, February 20, 2016
Just received my seeds!
Well, I've been waiting for an eternity! Well, not quite. Just a bit over two weeks, although when I consider the excitement I felt, it certainly felt like one.
http://www.annapolisseeds.com/, is the website I've ordered from, a company located in my own province, and they have a quite robust seed bank. I placed my order on a Saturday, two weeks ago, and on Friday just passed, the package came in the mail, so I am quite pleased with the quick delivery time. The only real drawbacks to the ordering process is the website did not update its order or shipping status, which made it a little difficult to curb my enthusiasm. The other drawback, for me, was the method of payment was only through PayPal.
However, with the packets I've ordered, the owner also sent a bonus pack of Mouse Melon seeds for me to try, and I am quite eager to start planting some seeds, and get some seedlings going.
Their bank has many different types of seeds, from grains, to tomatoes, to lettuce, and herbs. I would highly recommend them just for the diverse ranges available.
As to the quality of the seeds, I will find that out over the next few weeks, and hope to have some tomatoes, a couple of the sweet apple pepper, and sweet chocolate pepper plants started. Although I only have a balcony to grow on, its not about what I do not have.
When it comes to learning to grow food, or planning a future, whether it be a self sustaining lifestyle, a market garden, a personalized homestead, or a larger farm, the best start is to learn, plan, and do the things you can do, and do them right now.
No one can move forward if they are always looking back. That isn't to say that we shouldn't remember our mistakes, or learn from them. What we should do is do what we can, and think more about making things happen with what we have available now.
I've stopped saying "I can't!", and "I don't have....."
Instead, I am now saying "What do I have to make this work?"
http://www.annapolisseeds.com/, is the website I've ordered from, a company located in my own province, and they have a quite robust seed bank. I placed my order on a Saturday, two weeks ago, and on Friday just passed, the package came in the mail, so I am quite pleased with the quick delivery time. The only real drawbacks to the ordering process is the website did not update its order or shipping status, which made it a little difficult to curb my enthusiasm. The other drawback, for me, was the method of payment was only through PayPal.
However, with the packets I've ordered, the owner also sent a bonus pack of Mouse Melon seeds for me to try, and I am quite eager to start planting some seeds, and get some seedlings going.
Their bank has many different types of seeds, from grains, to tomatoes, to lettuce, and herbs. I would highly recommend them just for the diverse ranges available.
As to the quality of the seeds, I will find that out over the next few weeks, and hope to have some tomatoes, a couple of the sweet apple pepper, and sweet chocolate pepper plants started. Although I only have a balcony to grow on, its not about what I do not have.
When it comes to learning to grow food, or planning a future, whether it be a self sustaining lifestyle, a market garden, a personalized homestead, or a larger farm, the best start is to learn, plan, and do the things you can do, and do them right now.
No one can move forward if they are always looking back. That isn't to say that we shouldn't remember our mistakes, or learn from them. What we should do is do what we can, and think more about making things happen with what we have available now.
I've stopped saying "I can't!", and "I don't have....."
Instead, I am now saying "What do I have to make this work?"
Wednesday, February 17, 2016
Farming - a series of my thoughts, a little random
I'm still considering options when it
comes to farming, but a book called the Market Gardener has pointed
me in a direction that my mind is rebelling against.
Well, not quite outright rebellion, but
questioning the logical thought processes of certain aspects of the
chosen methods used to farm.
Micro Farming, Intensive Market
Gardening, uses a seemingly endless plethora of calculations,
planning stages, soil tests, and new methods to counteract the
harmful aspects of intensive agriculture.
It doesn't seem to make sense. Harmful agriculture? Every form of land based agriculture is taking the soil, and planting food products that wouldn't naturally grow there without cultivation. Each food crop takes away when it is harvested, so that is the real damage, not the cultivation. Market Gardening counteracts its intensive approach with amendments, compost, manure, and the like.
They do not use the modern method of
farming called Mono-culture. I do agree with this. Old methods
required crop rotation, and a field that should remain fallow, to
allow it to rest, and wild grasses to grow there. In the intensive
method, and I'm still learning, they plant cover crops, and turn them
into 'green manure'. The green plant is mowed, and tilled back into
the soil. The organic material is allowed to decompose on its own,
over time.
While this seems logical, fallow fields
are given a rest so that the same crops are not grown year after year
in the same plot, like in mono-culture. This crop rotation prevents
insect infestations from getting established in the long term. If
you keep moving your crops around, once a nest is built, they have
nothing to eat because the food source has moved on.
The author did lots of crop rotation,
on a quite large scale, and with lots of planning, to keep different
types of crops from growing in the same plots year after year.
I was impressed. Not so much with the
green manure. They used lots of compost, which I liked, but the
green manure just seems like a waste. The plant grows, using the
soil, taking minerals to grow, gets turned back in, which, in the
end, adds nothing to the soil except fresh organic matter. In
retrospect, the organic matter was already there, in mineral format,
or compost. Maybe I'm not quite seeing something.
Maybe its like yeast, and sourdough.
Got to keep adding the food to keep the organisms, the ones that
decompose organic matter, fed.
That makes a bit more sense.
I also like the idea of intensive
gardening/farming. Use as much of the land as possible, without
using large scale machinery, and accomplish the same goal. A good
living.
Large scale mechanized agriculture. It
seems to be centered on bigger is better. From what I've seen
though, that motto has not given bigger balances to the farmer.
Bigger machines mean bigger debts, which have to be serviced by the
larger crop harvests. Larger land plots to work, bigger machines,
bigger harvests, bigger debts. Doesn't seem logical to me. Just
working to pay debt. Pretty much similar to what most people in the
city do, with different scenery.
Although I do not agree with everything
the author wrote, I do believe that his experience is valuable, and
gives a different approach that I never even considered before.
Bigger is not always better, and staying small may be good as well.
I would prefer self sustaining, but in
order to attain his level of farming, its just not possible. So much
time must be spent on the farming, and planning processes, that all
the extras, to be as self sustainable, it wouldn't work. Something
would suffer. Most likely the farm.
I like old ideas, and as modern
experience is reinforcing the old ideas once again, its time to
revisit some of them.
Not off grid. No grid. No power. We
lived thousands of years without it. Why not again? Preservation
through use of canning, salt, or honey, and not refrigeration.
However, I'm not a fool. The real
reason people didn't use motorized vehicles, or mechanized farming
for thousands of years was because it did not exist.
Would I mind sitting back, soaking up
the heat of a wood stove during the winter? Would I mind driving to
the city in a horse and buggy, with veggies to sell at market? Would
I mind milking the cow first thing in the morning, collecting eggs,
or preparing feed for the animals?
Not at all. I would love it. But I'm
also realistic. That is years off for me, and maybe impossible to
accomplish my total dream in my lifetime.
And what does my total dream look like?
That is a discussion best left for another day.
Sorry for the randomness of this post.
Once I start talking, I can't shut up, nor can I stay on topic. But
talking it out helps me to figure out my direction.
Thank you for listening.
My Thoughts
These were my thoughts when I considered what I would do, and what I wanted. This is a direct copy and paste from my other blog.
This something I wrote as I thought about what I would like to do with the rest of my life, in this old world. Small scale farming, but of course, I became sentimental as I tried to figure out a name. Memories were dredged up, and this is the result. (After a google translate, and another site, I've changed the name to reflect it better. I don't speak Finnish, so it may not be clear to someone who speaks it fluently.)
Isani Piha
My Father's Yard
This was not my father's dream. He wanted to retire, live near to his brother, and work around his home until the end. Unfortunately, many things prevent that. His brother died at age 51. At age 58, my father had more then one stroke which left him in a wheelchair, and a host of other physical problems.
Gardening was something I did with him before I left home over twenty years ago. We spent many hours tilling the soil, digging new beds on the so-called unusable hill behind our trailer, and planting.
When he wasn't working at the yard, he was working on the car, or in the shed, or in the gardens.
He eventually planned to retire, to stop working for a paycheck, and find a type of life he left behind many years ago, when he himself left home in his teenage years. To slow down, play guitar, mow the lawn, work in the shed, and in the garden.
This is my dream, a small farm, where I get to witness some of God's great gifts to mankind. And, its possibly a way to give him a little something to hold onto, something he can not do himself.
When I think of what I would like to do now, its not just about growing food. I have a bit of my father in me. I want to say "I did this."
And maybe, when I push his wheelchair through the carefully crafted paths, set out so he can see the garden in close up detail, he will see the name I chose and wonder what it means. And I'll tell him.
When I think of what I would like to do now, its not just about growing food. I have a bit of my father in me. I want to say "I did this."
And maybe, when I push his wheelchair through the carefully crafted paths, set out so he can see the garden in close up detail, he will see the name I chose and wonder what it means. And I'll tell him.
Isani Piha. Finnish for My Father's Yard.
A Start
I've considered my future for many
years, and what was always at the front of my mind is what dictated
what would happen. What was going through my mind each and ever
time?
That's simple. The things I could not
do.
I wanted to garden. To farm. To grow
things. To plant, and harvest. To build something.
I didn't have the land. When I had the
land, with my ex, I started, but it wasn't long before a small
obstacle stopped me cold. Then, I didn't have the land anymore. I
moved to an apartment, but didn't have a balcony, or the room. Had a
balcony last year, but didn't have the time to start anything.
This year, I stopped myself. I know
what I don't have. But what did I have? I have a balcony. Plenty
of room for some seedlings, and tomato plants.
How would I grow them? I won't have
any seedlings until the garden centers have them.
Stop! Stop right there! I have a
table.
I don't have any seed pots. I need to
go buy those.
STOP! I have empty containers from
cottage cheese. In the recycling bag. Over a dozen.
I don't have soil. I need to buy peat
pots to start the seeds, then put in the containers.
STOP, for the love of God, STOP!
What is the matter with me? Egg
cartons make good peat pots. Just pressed paper. Not enough light?
Turn on a damned light!
After kicking myself mentally, I
started to see what I had, and not what I did not have. I had egg
cartons, which after experimenting with, I recognize they cause mold
and mildew to grow. Not trying those again. Direct seeding into the
containers does work.
So, again, its not what I don't have,
or need to buy. Its what I do have, what can I use, reuse, or
recover, and - how will this help me in the future?
After a first attempt, I have several
cucumber seedlings growing, five zucchini, a dozen non GMO plum
tomato, and a dozen non GMO sweet red pepper plants. The cucumber
was just to see what would happen, and I'm glad I did. I'll keep a
few for myself, and give the rest away.
The tomato and pepper plants I will
keep a couple and sell the rest, to put towards a down payment for an
appropriate parcel of land to have a small garden/farm.
I've ordered seeds from Annapolis Seed
in my own province, but they are still processing my order, nine
calendar days after I placed it. I'll update this when I receive
what I've paid for.
I will take a picture of my plans for
the balcony as they take shape, and take account of everything I've
spent so far, just so I can find out what it will cost me, and what I
might save on the produce I will grow for myself. I'll put what I've
saved into a down payment as well.
Its not about what I can not do. If I
was to keep looking at what I can't do, I would never move off the
couch. No, its about what I can do, and what I already have.
The rest is just patience, persistence,
and proper motivation.
As I determine how to best accomplish
my goals, I will update with new posts, pictures, and thoughts along
the trail.
Any first hand knowledge is welcome,
and may be posted so others can learn from your experience. Whether
its a success or failure, there is always something to learn.
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