I decided to do the rounds and see what's in bloom now, weeds included. I know the Hemlock's in bloom, because I've been wading around in the thistle and stinging nettles trying to pull it all or at least pinch the flowering tops off before it goes to seed. I think I'm becoming immune to stinging nettles. Sort of. Okay maybe not. I did send Homero over the fence into the neighbor's pasture with the gas powered weedeater. He got most of it on that side.
The clover is in bloom, both red and white. The blackberries are in bloom. I spoke to a beekeeper who posted an ad on Craigslist looking for somebody with at least an acre of blackberries to place a few hives and pay them in honey at the end of the season. I called him and told him I wasn't sure about the acreage, but we had a blackberry hedge 400 feet long and twelve or fifteen feet wide. He said he'd come over this weekend, but I haven't heard from him yet. Dang, I'd love to get some local honey to put up.
My tomato plants are in bloom. They aren't looking too happy in amongst the weeds, but maybe I'll get a few tomatoes. The potatoes have not bloomed yet.
The oxeye daisies are in bloom. The roadsides are covered in them, I love it. The butter cups are in bloom. The foxglove is in bloom. A lot of stuff that I don't know what it is in bloom.
Here is Storm Cloud, looking like he might be in bloom. He's big enough to really keep up with the herd now. Up until a week ago, he'd usually lie down in a patch of tall grass and wait for his mama to come back to him, but now he grazes alongside everybody else. He tries to jump and climb with the other babies, but they are way ahead of him. He sure is pretty.
Speaking of pretty. Poppy is just getting more and more gorgeous all the time. She loves to play with the goats, jumping up and bucking and nipping them and then running away, circling back, doing it all over again. The goats don't really get into it so much. Poppy is growing like a weed herself. She's not only going to be tall, she's going to be strong. Look at the hindquarters on her! She's got a nice chunky butt. Maybe her papa was a quarter horse. Who knows?
On this longest day of the year, things are going well. Everybody's healthy - except for Xanadu, but she's slowly getting better. The kids are happy, the chickens are laying, I'm hanging in there and this old world is spinning along right on schedule.
Blessings!
Hello, Aimee :)
ReplyDeleteI followed your name link over from Ethicurean and I have to say I am jealous of your gorgeous little goats! Mmm chevre...
Oh cool! I love the ethicurean site, I learn so much there (most recently, about plant genetics, go figure). Nice to see you here.
ReplyDeleteWow Anastasia, I just went over to your web site. Thank you so much! GMO's are an important issue to me, but I realize how hard it is to find unbiased information. I appreciate your doing so much sifting and clarifying. I know I'm going to become much more educated on the subject as a result of your page. I'm also sending it to my uncle, a retired professor of some sort of Ag subject at WSU who is interested in keeping up on the latest research into GMO's. Also, he was once a journalist and gets very excited about integrity of the press and of scientific journals! Our family will be reading your site.
ReplyDeleteAimee - Thanks for sharing your "state of the farm" - makes a lot of sense w/ what you shared about the vibrancy of summer solstice. there is so much aliveness on your little farm! Congrats on the feta project.
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