Sunday, October 30, 2022

closure

the asparagus in my back yard is still green in the majority...
and still producing "berries...
so i was mildly surprised to find the asparagus on campus as far gone as it was...
there was still significant green there...
and a couple of late season spears giving it a go...but there is a bureaucratic deadline in place here...so...
i cleared the bed...
covered the asparagus with compost...
and covered the bed with fabric rather than mulch which, in my estimation, would only complicate things in spring...
the hopi turquoise in my "official" bed has been done for some time...
although i did find a small ear ( which i gave to my daughter because she thought it was "cute" ) as i cleared the bed...
unlike the asparagus, the alfalfa is still verdant...
and still blooming...we will leave that be even if it extends past the dead line...i will cut it back when it decides to die back...there will be "event time" in this bed...
i did clear and cover the remainder of the bed...we will go back after the time change to see what al is up to.

Monday, October 24, 2022

an october ride

my daughter and son-in-law's neighbor Larry farms upwards of seventeen hundred acres hereabouts...crops, if my understanding and memory are intact, including tomatoes, seed corn for companies like bayer, and dense yellow # 2 field corn which is what he graciously invited me to ride along with him as he mopped up the harvest season...so...
i found a seat on the case axial-flow combine and was given a bit more education...
the rows are spaced thirty inches apart and the plants are about six inches apart in the rows...
the combine can cover eight rows at a time and can cover eight or nine acres in an hour...and we were near that since the ride was an hour or so...
since the fields are not exact rectangles the number of passes needed to fill the hopper on the combine vary...
however four hopperfuls will fill the grain truck...Larry said this field wasn't seed corn, but rather would become ethanol...
most of what the combine left in the field was stubble and stripped cobs...as evidenced by the cobs in the road and scattered in the field...
like everything anthropogenic, the combine isn't 100% efficient...there is still some grain in the field...and with rain forecast tomorrow...
there may be some germination going on as there was in the field by the supermarket in 2017 ( although that was a bean field in july that had been a corn field the previous season...rain may come...the germination may wait )...we had some illuminating conversatiions about robotic farming, self-driving tractors, and the ( put politely ) debate over whether sustainable fuel for the air transport industry would be manufactured from corn or soy beans...knowledge gained...thanks for the ride Larry.

Sunday, October 23, 2022

it's been a while

there's usually movement in the yard, however, of late, it has been remarkably slow...things may be picking up though...i was out harvesting teosinte seeds out back...
when i came across a seed in an ear with a green shoot...trying to germinate...
i have encountered this sort of behavior out in the fields of industial corn...this is the first experience with teosinte...
so i prepared a peat pot with compost and worm castings...
and planted him green side up under a grow light...we will keep him watered and lit up and see where we get to...it seems another indoor season may have begun...in the mean time out back...
i have a fair bed of winter wheat going...early days yet...i am less than convinced it will prosper...we are at the mercy of a changing climate here...a lot depends on the timing of snow...
a second generation of leaf cutters hatched out...and declined to re-use the bee house...one hopes the old nurse log a few feet away has some cocoons...
the jerusalem artichokes are done...
they produced some fair sized tubers ( and an earthworm came up with one of them...always pleased to see those )...lunch from the yard...tomorrow may have some interesting events and there will be community garden clean up and continued skewering of garden bureaucrats over the term "event time"...it cannot be helped.