Tag Archives: Barbara Kingsolver

June 2008

Monday, June 23, 2008 – The potatoes are flowering

The grass in the backyard (aka 6 acres of pasture) was getting really long, so Brock decided to ask our neighbour Don Fisher to cut it with his tractor rather than trying to mow it with our ride-on lawn tractor. The result: 536 bales of organic first-cut hay, which we’d sold within 48 hours for $5/bale to a variety of horse-owners, hay dealers and cattle ranchers. Who knew we could make money from letting our lawn grow??

The tractor and Don did most of the work – Don has a network of regular customers who buy the hay he bales – but Brock and I helped the customers load their hay, and that was tiring work. It was also REALLY cool to watch the baler, which somehow picks up the loose cut hay, mashes it into a big brick, and ties it up with baling twine before pooping it out the back.

This parable is just one more example of how we’re still learning. Another is the fact that our potato plants are now flowering, which is the weirdest idea since purple carrots. Apparently it’s a normal stage in the potato-growing process, but I can’t get over it. Potatoes grow UNDERGROUND. Everyone knows that. So Barbara Kingsolver blew my mind when she revealed they actually grow green leaves above ground, like normal plants, and Brock finished the job with his news the other day that the potatoes had started flowering. Pretty, purple flowers.

In other news: our Harvest Box Program starts next week! We’ve signed up 12 or so families, mostly either employees of Island Savings or members of our BNI (Business Networkers International) chapter. We expect to have strawberries, lettuce, peas, maybe zucchinis, and garlic scapes (they grow out of the tops of the garlic plants, and you’re supposed to pick them to improve the garlic bulb. They taste like garlic). Our first farmer’s market is this Saturday, and we’re excited since our strawberries are just starting to ripen in multiple-pint quantities.

Perhaps the greatest development on the farm these days is that our home is (almost) finished. My brother Joe is a journeyman carpenter, and he’s been staying with us while finding an apartment and work in Victoria. He sided our house, did the soffits and gutters, and helped pour (and stamp) concrete patios in the front and back. He also built me a huge farm stand for the front area.

Also: my parents, sister and nephew are visiting us this week. Nephew Hollis rode his John Deere around and we loaded it with peas, strawberries, and wild flowers (aka weeds). The adults, meanwhile, are mostly impressed with the stevia. Dad likes the conspiracy theories about how Dick Cheney and the aspartame lobby had stevia outlawed by the FDA, while mom and aunt Sylvia just like the idea of a plant that tastes like sugar.

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Wednesday, June 25, 2008 – Organic farming sucks

Firstly: HAPPY BIRTHDAY Q!!! I can’t believe you’re almost 30. I’d call to wish you a happy birthday, but the elderly need their rest.

Secondly: Organic farming sucks. We picked strawberries from the rows yesterday, to prepare the plants for our Saturday market. (The forecast calls for days of sunshine, so we’re hoping for a big-ish crop.) It was so depressing. We did get about 2-3 pints of perfect berries, suitable for sale, but most were mutant, or too small, or had been sampled by bugs. I can understand why farmers back in the ’50s or whatever were so excited to be offered chemical solutions to their pest and unpredictable-crop woes. I’ve heard from 1,000 people that farming “is hard work,” but the fact is that farming is apparently “hard work with little reward.” How tempting to know that hybrid plants and a regular dose of pesticides would leave me with millions of perfect red berries!

Before I contact a realtor and put our farm up for sale, however, I intend to maintain patience as the season progresses. Brock assures me that the first crop of first-year strawberries can be disappointing, until they figure out how to do their strawberry thing. And we can try a variety of chemical-free pest control strategies — beer traps for slugs, et cetera.

What I have learned from this: if I charge you $5 for a pint of perfect, organically-grown, best-you’ve-ever-eaten, still-warm-from-the-sun field strawberries, it’s worth every penny.

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Sunday, June 29, 2008 – People like us, they really do

We had our first ever day at the Duncan Farmers Market yesterday, and we did WAY better than we expected, considering our minimal crops (due to weather, organic pest control and 1st year learning curve, et cetera). People were so friendly and supportive, and we met more than one young couple who wants to get into farming or have just started farming. Very inspirational and exciting, considering the vast demand out there for organic, local products!

Aside from our successful day (coincidentally also the hottest day of the year so far – whew), the highlight was definitely meeting Tara and Cameron, a young couple who live in Vancouver with their dog, Rex. They’re interested in starting their own farm and came to the Island for a four day “farm honeymoon” to meet farmers and test out the community vibe. We met them at the farmer’s market and invited them to visit us in the afternoon so they could see our farm, and during our subsequent 2.5 hour visit Brock and I fell in love with them. Aside from being Good & Nice People, they are as interested in all the weird “food” stuff that we are — Tara even knew about how mainstream carrots used to be purple, red and white before the Dutch got their hands on them. They’ve been reading the same self-sufficiency books and had visited/worked on the hops farm in Sorento where we bought our hops this year. They actually opted to drink our well water when we sat out on the patio — they love well water, compared to the processed city water they’re used to. They were so poetic about well water “keeping you in touch with your farm” and being “natural” that Brock and I have almost been converted ourselves. We’re excited to see them again. I can’t wait to hear what they think of Barbara Kingsolver’s Animal, Vegetable, Miracle.

In the evening we went to Ladysmith for a decadent seafood feast prepared by my sister Evy. It was exactly the right way to spend an evening after the farmer’s market, drinking wine and being fed amazing food. My family has gone back to Invermere as of this morning, so Brock and I are once again empty-nesters.

Today I decided to christen our farm gate stand, so I set up a shady area, made a sign, and picked five pints of beautiful, sun-hot strawberries. Brock just went to check on the shade situation at the stand, and we’ve already sold a pint. I made $5 while sunbathing on the back porch and drinking iced tea.

Yes, about that.

New favourite thing about living on our farm: nudity. I’ve always wanted to lie in the sun buck naked without having to watch for neighbours. I can now do that. The best part is that I don’t even feel guilty about lolling in the sun on a beautiful Sunday instead of working, because it’s WAY TOO HOT to work in the fields today. Picking five pints of strawberries almost killed me. It’s 30-degrees already and expected to rise. Also, I’ve already made $5 and will likely make more.

And now: I think I will upload our new website . . . . give me about thirty minutes . . . www.makariafarm.com.

September 2007

Saturday, September 29, 2007 – Tired, Homeless Farm Owners in Duncan

If four months ago Brock had said, “Hey, let’s move to Duncan, buy land, and spend every night and weekend for four months trying to make it habitable!” I might not have so eagerly agreed. But luckily we were naive and assumed we could hire other people to do the work for us, with minimal cost, on time, and perfectly. Every step seems to have gone like this:
1.realize we need something else done (e.g. install conduits for the electrical hook-up before we pour the concrete foundation).
2. make up a tidy list of professionals, and call them for quotes.
3. 25% will be too busy to do the work, 25% will not be home and will never respond to my message, and 50% will agree to do an estimate or meet with us, but not for another 2 weeks.
4. we decide to do the work ourselves.
5. we figure out how to do it, by asking Dad or Randy, reading a book/brochure, researching online, watching Holmes on Homes, or cornering one of the older, wiser sales people at Home Hardware (Gary) or Rona (Richard).
6. we do the work. It’s messy, tiring, and it takes us a really long time.
7. we realize that the next step needs to be done asap. Repeat process.

While it’s been frustrating, exhausting, and has taken much longer than we expected, we are now infinitely more capable than we were in the spring. Brock can frame walls, frame and hang a ceiling, and will soon be able to install floors. I can tape & mud drywall (not well, but I can do it), shingle a roof, use a skilsaw and paint a wall properly. We own many, many tools. And they are not new and shiny anymore. By next weekend, we might perhaps maybe be moving in. I’ve already missed 100 expected move-in dates, so don’t count on it, but we are (FINALLY) in the home stretch.

As for the farm . . . I love growing edible things. Who knew? I hate bugs, I don’t like worms, poop is poopy and dirt is dirty, and yet . . . I love eating something that I PLANTED. It’s cool. And it’s mine. Real-estate-wise, I own the tree that grew that apple. Oh, yes, it turns out that the unnamed trees on our property are four apple trees, a pear tree, a plum tree, and a chestnut tree. The apples are different kinds – we’ve diagnosed two: Elstar and Granny Smiths. The pears are brown and really hard until they’ve sit for a few days on the counter. We have MILLIONS of pears. Thousands of apples. It’s ridiculous. Even the plums tasted good, and I don’t like plums.

My real-life experience in our garden and with our trees is being supplemented by subversive literature. I’m reading Barbara Kingsolver’s Animal, Vegetable, Miracle and if I didn’t already own an organic farm, I would want to own an organic farm. She’s inspired me to:

  • raise turkeys. Brock and I had a deep discussion about what we were okay with raising and killing on our property. Rules say that we can’t sell any meat we’ve reared unless we get a professional to kill it. But we can kill our own animals for our own consumption. So what do we enjoy eating enough to actually KILL for? Not chickens. I’ll stick with the frozen bulk bags of marinated chicken boobs from Costco. Pork? No. They have people eyes. The only two meat products I can’t live without / are worth killing for are turkeys and beef. So we will start with turkeys (they’re smaller). And I’ll do it Barbara Kingsolver’s way, with a heritage breed so they are maybe possibly still able to mate and have baby turkeys, and perpetuate my turkey flock.
  • make cheese. I’ve always wanted to make my own cheese. We eat so much of it, it would become our #1 expense if we have to buy it. I’ve followed Barbara’s advice and ordered a starter kit from the Cheese Queen (google it). Soft cheeses are easiest, but we eat mostly cheddar so I will master hard cheese making. Can you make Swiss cheese in the Cowichan Valley? We will soon find out.

Reading this book has reaffirmed my plans to bake our own bread (with a bread maker – I’m not ridiculous), grow our own garlic, and learn how to process/can/preserve/freeze veggies so we can eat them in the winter, and not waste our summer crops. I’m oddly excited about making pesto.

As for Farmer Brock, he is giddy with the thought of 10 acres to landscape. I can barely keep him in the house, to help me with the finishing work. We have a massive pile of quality topsoil in our front yard, waiting for his attention. He’s bought grass seed, determined to make the clay swamp in front of our house a walkable lawn. I bought him graph paper yesterday as a love present, so he can start his landscape plans. In his spare time. (HA!)

Along with our individual goals and visions are a few looming deadlines. We are totally broke, and need to get everything done as soon as possible so we can have the property re-appraised, get our mortgage increased, and pay our bills and our debts. This requires having the property completely livable, with septic, electricity, hydro, a finished house (including siding and trim), and as much landscaping done as possible to boost the value.

We need to have at least two acres tilled and ready to be planted by October 31 in order to claim farm status, and therefore qualify for reduced property taxes ($85 instead of thousands). This will require a tractor, either borrowed/rented/hired.

With the rainy winter season looming, we want to get our greenhouse standing so we’ll have somewhere to plant and pot our seeds and cuttings. Peter the Rabbit needs a safe, dry place to feel territorial about. And we have nowhere for guests to stay (except the pumphouse . . .), so we’d like to get my writing studio built before next summer.

While the list is lengthy, and each step requires many, many others, I’m excited about the whole thing. Our property is stop-and-stare beautiful sometimes. We keep discovering amazing surprises, like the full-grown tomato plants (with tomatoes!) that grow behind our front gate, and were hiding behind weeds until Brock cleared them. Or the mushrooms under our apple trees: I found five different kinds, one of which is probably highly tasty and expensive and will make us millionaires. (Don’t worry, we don’t intend to eat them until we’re sure they’re safe.)

When Hollis came to visit (he brought his mom, grandparents and Great-Gramma Demone), he picked an apple from one of the trees (with Dad’s help).

DAD: What’s that, Hollis?

HOLLIS: Apple.

DAD: Where’d you get it? Did you get it from a store?

HOLLIS: No. Tree.

That was pretty neat. My nephew knows that apples come from trees. He picked one and ate it. Meanwhile, the Safeway ad on the radio yesterday promoted their apples, “fresh from the produce section.” I’m not (yet) a militant farmer, but that shocked me. Apparently, apples don’t come from trees, or even farms – they come from Safeway.

This winter, I look forward to being dry & comfortable in my overly-well-insulated/built home. I will once again have my kettle and tea pot. Peter will have infinite fresh veggies to marinate his insides. Brock will spend his weekends becoming filthy, so I have to hose him off in the backyard. We will browse seed catalogues, I will research turkeys, and we will go on evening drives to find beautiful trees and steal cuttings. Also exciting: the third season of Lost will be out on DVD, so we will spend two weeks immersed, eating popcorn and growing our farm-fat. It sounds quite lovely, but be warned: if you visit us, you’ll have to sleep in the pumphouse.