Saturday, November 14, 2020

Good Rest, Garden

 As the leaves make their way off of the maples, and the last crisp leaves hang, rattling upon the oaks, it is time to tuck the garden away for a long winter's nap... well, sort of. While we could just leave it all- limp, frosted plants blackened and wilting, tomatoes dropped from vines, earth cooling under nights that dip into the 30s with blazing stars overhead- it is better to take the time now to plan for next year's bounty. 






The vegetables have been harvested, and any remaining plants have been cleared away to the compost pile to start breaking down for next year's bounty. Weeds have been cleared, and several beds are now tucked in under a rich pile of shredded leaves. This will insulate the soil a bit, and keep microbes active longer into the season, as well as add nutrients back to the beds that worked so hard all spring and summer. After years of doing this, the soil in this garden is rich, moist, and truly grows more than we can eat. Another step in the fall is planting rye. This cover crop will also enhance the nutrients available next year, with an added bonus: carbon sequestration happening in winter months when so much else is dormant. It turns out the garden isn't completely "napping," after all- much work is still happening, even if it is beyond our line of sight.

So, while it might be tempting at the end of a long season to just walk away and leave it all until spring, the added work now will pay off next year. Not only will there be less mess to pick up when the sun has finally warmed our northern soils enough to plant, but there will be less pests, fewer diseases, and more microbes. What do microbes mean? Rich soil and better nutrition in everything we grow, and carbon being drawn down into the earth where it belongs. These  simple steps reward us and help our earth in our own, small way. Now that's an idea worth sowing.

Thursday, August 27, 2020

Goat Treets

Here at Sunny Acres, we have goats who enjoy their treets to eat. Yes, we know how to spell, but we literally are feeding out... tree(ts). Here are some photos showing goats' enthusiasm for browsing. Sure, they'll happily turn mixed-grass forage into a meal any day, but give a goat a brushy area to clear, and suddenly that meal is a very happy one- because... it's full of treets! 



Where a corner of a field has been lost to a variety of shrubs and understory growth, and a large pine is being crowded badly, the goats were called in to work and enjoy a day of brush-munching. 



Downed tree? No problem. The goats will make quick work of the leaves in no time! They even clean up poison ivy. The only itchy rash that results from that is when a friendly goat rubs her urushiol-covered self on you as a manner of saying hello. Farm-daughter here may be speaking from personal experience on that one, but I digress. 


They aren't termites, so there will still be some cleanup to do, but why waste all that great growth when goats will happily make a meal of it?


In the end, the field boundary is back to the original location, the pine tree is opened up a bit, and the goats go to bed with full... rumens. And that, dear reader, is a happy ending. 


Thanks for taking the time to check in on Sunny Acres!

~M.McIlroy,
Farm-Daughter, 
Goat-Midwife, 
Collector of farm stories