Skip to main content

Farm Update - February 2016

January felt like a very short month!  And I managed to have the Australia Day LONG weekend (including the Monday) at home.  Once again we had a bit of rain.  90 mm this past weekend at Kumbia and 30 mm at Nanango.  The new dam is nearly full so we just wait to see if it holds water now.  The forecast was for below average rainfall this year, so we are thankful for every drop we get.



Food and cooking

I got some jars for our honey and started selling 500g and 1kg at work.  Its very popular!  Now the bees just need to keep up production!



Land and farming
Speaking of bees... they seem to have taken up much of our weekends recently!  There has been so much going on I don't even know if I can remember it all, but I do write in our Bee Book every time we open a hive so we don't forget what we saw.  When we open a hive we are looking to see how much brood and honey is in the hive, hoping to see the queen, but if we at least see eggs we know she is in there somewhere, and then we decide if we need to add another super box to give them more space.  Over Christmas we took some brood out of our bigger hive to start a new hive and we ordered a new queen, but we were a bit late putting her in the hive and they had already started making their own queen, so the new queen swarmed.  Pete saw the swarm and managed to catch them in another hive but when we looked in a few days later we found that the queen was damaged (she may have come like that or got hurt during the swarming, but her back leg wasn't working).  We ordered another queen, she came in a little queen cage with 4-5 escort worker bees to feed her until we put her into the new hive.  The end of the cage is plugged with sugar candy that the bees eat to release her.  That hive now appears to have accepted her and the original nucleus hive has a new queen that they made.  We are learning FAST!




Chickens
We put the little chicks out in a chicken tractor already.  They were only two weeks old, which is way earlier than normal for us, but as the weather was in the 30s (degC)  and they were stinking up the brooder box something terrible.  They are fine in the chicken tractor with a heat lamp and we cover the tractor with blankets at night.  They have more feathers now and they LOVE the grass.  Happy little chickies.  Meanwhile last count we had five broody hens and nowhere to put them as all the chicken tractors are full, so they are just taking up nesting box space and upsetting everyone.  I think I will try putting ice under them next weekend....



Cows and cattle
We have plenty of grass again, so the cattle are happy too.  We were worried that the angus steers really weren't losing their fluffy winter coats and were looking quite shaggy.  Traditional farmer wisdom said we needed to worm them.  Well I wanted to sell them and not spend $500 on worming chemical, so instead we started feeding a mixture of minerals, copra, diatomaceous earth and a small amount of copper sulphate.  Diatomeceous earth is supposed to help with worming, and according to Pat Coleby's books, animals with worms are copper deficient.  One way or another this seems to have worked and the steers are starting to look sleek and shiny.

The dairy cows are also enjoying the fresh grass.  Little Rosey (house cow in training) had three day sickness (we think), although it seemed to be a very mild case and cleared up quickly, either that or some other kind of bovine flu.  We were just happy to see her well again.



Garden
Well with all this rain and humidity the jungle continues to grow!  The pumpkin vine is starting to take over, but I don't see any fruit.  The self-seeded tomatoes are starting to produce, you never know what you're going to find and they have sprouted from the compost.  The bugs are also doing well and I got a bit worried by the audible buzz in my garden, so I sprayed neem oil on all the leaves that were being chewed as I didn't want to lose my eggplants.  The bush beans were chewed and mildewed to death, so I've pulled them out and made room for whatever pops up next, as there are plenty of climbing beans to pick.  I'm still waiting for chokos and rosellas.  The pepino bushes are growing like mad, I had to cut them back a bit to keep a path through the garden, they make good compost and I throw the fruit to the chickens.  I got a couple of new herbs - feverfew (pretty flowers below) and bee balm/monarda. And the chillies have started to ripen, so many chillies!





House
We decided a while ago that the window in the old pantry had to go.  We want to put the stove in there and I don't want to have to clean grease off a window.  The glass was cracked so we would have had to replace it.  Also it faces west, so the window was letting in a lot of heat.  We did some demo work and removed the window and replaced it with weatherboard.  Its looking very neat.  Now we are ready to sheet in the pantry.  We are SO close to painting the kitchen and side room, we really underestimated the amount of bogging and spackling that would be needed to prepare these rooms.  The most exciting news is that shed construction has started AND we are not doing the work!!  It looks like the contractors are doing a great job, so I'm looking forward to seeing the finished shed.





Permaculture - Integrate rather than segregate
Here's what I wrote last time I reviewed this principle.  The key points are:
  • Each element of a system performs many functions
  • Each function is supported by many elements
I will use water on our farm as an example.  Specifically our new house yard dam is an element that has the following functions:

  • Firefighting water for the house and yard, as well as a firebreak
  • Habitat for aquatic plants and animals
  • Somewhere for me and Taz to swim to cool off
  • Generating a cool breeze over the house in summer
  • Water for the garden and orchard
If we take the last function, this is also provided by other elements in our systems, including our solar bore, multiple rainwater tanks connected to house and shed and greywater collection.

I could repeat this analysis for every element and function to create an interconnected system.  When adding a new element we always think "what else could this thing do for us?" and design accordingly.




Support me
My latest soap tool is a "soap stamp" which we use on the soap just after cutting the bars when its still a little soft.  I love the spiral pattern.  I got a new cutting guide as well, Pete thought some of my bars were getting a little stingy, so we are cutting standard sizes now!  Stamps and cutting guides are available from Aussie Soap Supplies.



A few new blog this month:

A Hopeful Nature

A Simple Living Journey

My Empire of Dirt Garden

How was your January?  What are your plans for February?

Comments

  1. terrific work and WOW with the honey! i bet folks love it. yay!
    ps yay Taz!

    ReplyDelete
  2. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Hi Liz, I re-read my original comment and noticed all my spelling mistakes so trying again...The honey looks amazing! I have been out lowering shade for my native bee hives to protect them somewhat during this very hot weather. An old bed sheet is working well for now but I will have to look at a more permanent solution soon. Thanks also for the mention of my blog. Meg:)

    ReplyDelete
  4. Hi Liz, Sounds like a good month up your way. Our tomatoes are starting to come in now, and we have Sugarbaby watermelons, Jap and Butternut pumpkins on. However I must say, it is all hand pollination this year. I'm soaking up all your bee information, we have native bees but would like to get some honey bees some time soon.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Oh your bee adventures sound so fascinating! A bee cage - that made me giggle, but of course they need to come in a little cage. We sell Grants woodroaches by the kg through the post also. Loving reading about the farm. Thankyou for linking to my blog. :)

    xx

    ReplyDelete
  6. Another fabulous update Liz. We also received our new Queen bees last week, from Queensland, arrived in the very same little containers. Thanks for the link to the soap supplies, I need one of those cutters and adore that stamp. We also had a bit of rain here since last week so we're very happy for our garden but the grape and fruit growers are not pleased as the fruit is splitting.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Great round up so much going on at your place you make me feel very lazy.

    ReplyDelete
  8. What a satisfying read - I can live vicariously through you :-) Aussie soap supplies...gosh, I could spend up big there.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Thanks, I appreciate all your comments, suggestions and questions, but I don't always get time to reply right away. If you need me to reply personally to a question, please leave your email address in the comment or in your profile, or email me directly on eight.acres.liz at gmail.com

Popular posts from this blog

Chicken tractor guest post

Sign up for my weekly email updates here , you will find out more about chickens, soap and our farmlife, straight to your inbox, never miss a post!  New soap website and shop opening soon.... Tanya from Lovely Greens invited me to write a guest post on chicken tractors for her blog.  I can't believe how many page views I get for chicken tractors, they seem to be a real area of interest and I hope that the information on my blog has helped people.  I find that when I use something everyday, I forget the details that other people may not be aware of, so in this post for Tanya, I tried to just write everything I could think of that I haven't covered in previous posts.  I tried to explain everything we do and why, so that people in other locations and situations can figure out how best to use chicken tractors with their own chickens. The dogs like to hang out behind the chicken tractors and eat chicken poo.  Dogs are gross! If you want to read more about chicken tractor

The new Eight Acres website is live!

Very soon this blogspot address will automatically redirect to the new Eight Acres site, but in the meantime, you can check it out here .  You will find all my soaps, ebooks and beeswax/honey products there, as well as the blog (needs a tidy up, but its all there!).  I will be gradually updating all my social media links and updating and sharing blog posts over the next few months.  I'm very excited to share this new website with you!

Garden Update - July 2013

This month I'm joining the Garden Share Collective , which was started last month by Lizzie from Strayed from the Table , to allow vege gardeners to share their successes and failures and generally encourage everyone to grow more of their own food organically.  This first month, I'll give a detailed update on everything that's growing in my garden, for anyone who hasn't been following for long.  I'll do my normal farm update on Tuesday as well. If you've just joined me, welcome to my vege garden.  I recently wrote about gardening in our sub-tropical climate , so if you're wondering about the huge shade structure, that's for protecting the garden during our hot, humid summers.  At the moment though, the garden is full of brassicas, which grow best here in winter, and are suitably frost-proof.  The garden is about 12 m long by 5 m wide, and surrounded in chicken mesh to keep out the chickens and the bandicoots.  The garden has spilled out around the edg