Saturday, March 11, 2017

2017 is Going to Be Awesome!

Why?

Snowmobile is working in fine form!

Pond is getting ready for some hockey

New varieties of Hazelnuts have survived the drought

Maple Syrup shack is finally being created

Goat shed is almost done.

Successful propagation of Hazelnut plants from along the walkway (source plants were Golden Bough).

I am going to build swarm traps for bees this spring.  New plans and ideas have helped me flesh out this valuable resource.

Water and electricity at the barn.







Winter Solstice and the Birth of a New Year

Sunrise at Yellow Door Farm - Winter Solstice 2016
This is one of the most exciting times of the year for me.  The sun is coming back.  I even made a t-shirt logo - ripped from various web pages of course - to celebrate the day:

What an awesome day. I was energized by the beautiful bright sunshine and the crisp but not too cold day. Life is coming back.  Summer will be here before we know it. The winter break gives me time to sit back and contemplate new goals for the upcoming season and start all over again. It WILL be a better year.

Welcome sun, welcome new year, welcome life!



Monday, January 2, 2017

Items Available

We currently have many items available for sale:

Raw Honey - 500ml reusable bottles $8
Raw Honey - 1kg plastic tub $10
Poultry: Whole Chicken $3.00 lb, Whole Turkey $3.50 lb


Items that will be available:
Apple Seedlings (Fall 2017)
Black Walnut Seedlings (Fall 2017)


Sorry the following items are sold out:
Maple Syrup
Chestnuts
Black Walnuts
Hazelnuts
Hazelnut seedlings
Chestnut Seedlings
Maple Seedlings


Goodbye and Good Riddance to 2016!

source: http://cdn.xl.thumbs.canstockphoto.com/canstock30546904.jpg


What a year to say goodbye to.  I have been saying this a lot lately.  It seems that at the end of each year, we say "Thank god that one is over. Next year has got to be better!

Allow me to elaborate on why it is wonderful to say good bye:

Red squirrels ate all of my nut tree seedlings that I was hardening off in my greenhouse in the spring.


My daughter had appendicitis and had to have her appendix removed


We had an electrical fire in the house;

A weasel ate all of my first batch of meat birds and all of my laying hens for this year (60 in total)

Record drought and heat waves caused the well to almost run dry;
source: https://www.theweathernetwork.com/news/articles/by-the-numbers-southern-ontarios-dry-summer/71061


I was hospitalized with "Beaver Fever" - Campylobacter virus
David Bowie and George Michael passed away, along with Fidel Castro and many other interesting people of note.

My daughter got tossed off her horse and badly hurt her tailbone;

My tractor's steering fell apart

Bears attacked my bee hives - a few times!


Monday, December 26, 2016

All tucked in for Winter

Bee hives at Yellow Door Farm
Winter came with a wonderful snowfall this year.  Luckily I had prepared the hives for winter.  Bitter cold followed the snow and so I hope they are all ready.

I experiment with different types of winter wraps each year. I am trying black tar paper this year. It is fairly cheap, easy to work with and black so it absorbs heat. These are some of the properties that make it useful. You need to apply it early in the Fall as it becomes brittle as the weather gets colder.

Notice the electric fence to the right. It goes all around the hives as we have had some bear attacks lately.  I think we also had a deer walk into the wire late in the summer. The hives were not really disturbed but the wire had been snapped off a pole at one end and the wire appeared to be wrapped around a large animal's leg. The animal bolted, and knocked over another hive.  Eventually the wire was released and the animal took off. If it was a bear, it would have come back and started to eat the larva and honey that was in the hive.  Oh boy the challenges never end!

Swagging

I'm thinking about swaggin again. Don't tell my wife!

Swagging is a term plumbers use to stretch out a pipe to allow another to slide and and then be soldered together. I am always kicking around the idea of running a solar water heater along my roof over my deck.  My wife does not approve of the ugly ideas that I want to have projecting from any surface of the house. 

We use a lot of hot water - it is currently heated using a oil fired water heater. I want to get as far away from oil as possible. A few years ago we had an oil spill in the basement. It was awful. You could not sleep in the house due to the fumes. Also oil is the only going to become harder to get, more regulated (oil inspections, carbon tax etc) and it is terrible for the planet. 

My elegant solution has incorporated a stealthy sneaky solar panel that is mounted along the west facing deck of my house. It receives punishing heat and light late in the afternoon. I am going to run some copper pipe along the lower edge of the deck and cover it with glass or plexiglass and circulate the heat through a large cistern in the basement. The cistern will also connect to my water heater with a copper heat exchanger.  I want to have the water moving constantly as long as the heat inside the solar collector is greater than the heat in the tank. For that, I need to run sensors to the cistern and to the hot water panel.

Another aspect to the installation is the use of our wood stove in the living room. It basically runs all winter and is a main source of heat for the house. The hot water heat collection system will be turned off of the outdoor solar in the winter, and routed along the back of the wood stove during the colder months.

Ahh to dream. I think I spend more time thinking about ways to save money from energy than it is worth. But, it is my hobby. Some people have expensive cars, trips or toys, for me I get a real kick out of getting energy - whether it is a plant, hot water, maple syrup, honey or whatever.

I hope I can piece together this system over the year. I have been planning and working on it since 2014.

New Year's resolution for 2017?  We will see. 

Monday, October 10, 2016

Summer heat.

Slow and steady does wins the race, that is for sure. The older I get the more I realize that life is not a sprint. Life is a marathon, a slow grinding difficult journey at times, and yet a beautiful experience at the same moment. Sitting on my deck last night watching the clouds roll in, feeling a cool summer evening breeze after an excruciatingly hot day, I reflected on how wonderful it is that we have this beautiful world.

My kids were fighting contentedly in the living room, and my wife was out at a concert. A perfect time to kick back and daydream the night away.

Enjoy the day, you may as well.  This is a beautiful time to be alive.