Working the Beds after the Weekend Storm

Author: Meera, February 12, 2015

 

High wind and rain make for a slick road in front of our farmette

A “Pineapple Express” rainstorm with gale-force winds blew out the power and made for slick roads as well as ponds in our clay soil

 

 

The weekend storm is still a vivid memory, what with the fence along one side of my property beaten down by high winds and pounding rain that also brought a power outage on Friday night.

 

 

But today with outside temperatures in the 70s Fahrenheit, I cleaned my strawberry beds. Somehow, mint had crept in and I don’t want mint with my berries although I like it served that way for dessert.

 

 

 

strawberries lg em

 

 

 

My neighbor’s relative, who’s visiting from Lebanon where they grow apples in his mountain village, share a suggestion for digging dried chicken manure around the bases of my trees. The high nitrogen will get them off to a great start and my trees have already broken bud (which is attracting the honeybees).

 

 

The wild bird population seems to have exploded and I see signs of nest building starting. The five suet cakes I hung in trees for the songbirds, blue jays, and woodpeckers last month are down to a fraction of their original size.

 

 

I extended the chicken run with poultry wire high enough to keep the my heritage girls from flying out. Now, they’ll have plenty of space on both sides of the chicken house to forage and out the beds I’m working.

 

 

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Helping the Wildlife Make It through Winter

Author: Meera, January 13, 2015
The finches add brilliant flashes of yellow color to the garden--so drab this time of year

The finches add brilliant flashes of yellow color to the garden–which is drab this time of year

 

 

 

Our farmette has been experiencing traffic congestion from the wild birds flying in to dine at the feeders that I’ve recently filled.

 

 

I’ve also hung seeded suet cakes (especially favored by the Nuttal’s Woodpecker who knows exactly where the snack is hanging on the back fence).

 

 

 

The Nuttall's Woodpecker adds a dash of brilliant red and black and white stripes to the wood and bark of trees

The Nuttall’s Woodpecker appears as a dash of brilliant red with black-and-white stripes wherever it perches

 

 

There are hawks doing fly-overs and blue jays flitting from the bushes to the trees.

 

But I especially love the little wild bird we call Crew Cut, a black phoebe that is building a nest in one of my apricot trees. And today, I spotted a Western bluebird on the fence at the front of our property.

 

 

This time of year when there is little for birds to forage on, I believe in providing bird seed, suet cakes, sunflower seeds, and peanuts for our feathered friends. I love to see them at the feeders and hope they’ll stay around to build nests in the spring.

 

 

 

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