Take a break - you might miss something.
This past week was three long days turning ground, planting, and interruptions to run for replacement parts.
You know that a drive belt never breaks until you use it, right?
And a planter plate doesn't turn if it's jammed.
I was rushing to plant the early crops before a rain on Thursday and another all-day job off the farm on Friday.
This is the time of year that if you get into a hurry, you miss things.
Like
a sunset at the end of a long day, where the shadow cast along the
bottom half of a soft maple tree but the sun illuminates the crown.
You
can find your own metaphor in this but I find it one pauses once in a
while you may capture a memory or two. I would have liked a better
camera/skills to capture it for others.
Stay safe out there and give the farmers a little leeway while they move equipment from field to field.
It's planting season.
The Stranded Tree Farm
Chronicles of an amateur forester.
Saturday, April 19, 2025
Yes, it's been awhile...
Friday, December 22, 2023
Christmas Blessings to you all (2023)
I wish all of you a Happy Christmas as another turn around the sun comes to an end.
Please
don't look upon this Black Hills Spruce and think of Charlie Brown.
This was planted from a 4" seedling about 10 years ago and was doing
well as our Tree of Lights going forward.
Until a buck chose the
tree to rub his antlers on what should have been about a 30" or so
little tree. We plan on bringing the culprit to justice soon.
The
spruce will continue to be our lighted tree until it decides it can't
fulfill its obligations. We don't feel like giving up on it just yet.
There could be a lesson in there but your mileage may vary.
Happy Christmas from all of us at The Stranded Tree Farm
Same tree from 2021 ( a bit smaller though):
Friday, December 1, 2023
If gold could be grown
This
year's popcorn yield was more than double of last year, in part to a
dry August, no late severe summer windstorms and a whole lot of luck.
So,
mostly out of my control, except for the planting time (earlier than
previous years and no spring frosts), manual irrigation, and proper weed
control with a heavy dose of bovine scatological inputs.
Some would still say... luck was the key factor. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
As
the self-proclaimed second largest popcorn producer in my county, we
are expanding for next year --- if I get a new transmission so I could
till the earth. Plus with some mad-scientist crossed hybrids, we will
add a few colorful additions for the snack food consumers here, coming
in fall of '24 and beyond.
In the mean time, winter is the time to shell some of this gold and I'd best get to work.
Sunday, May 28, 2023
The reasons to plant a tree...
Conservation - water, soil, improving air quality, wildlife habitat
Shade - would you rather relax with a favorite beverage in the blinding sun or in the shade of a sugar maple?
For fun and profit - it may take 80 years but that straight walnut log is worth a little money
We added another reason: Legacy Trees.
Some might call them Memorial Trees but these are planted to honor those who are important to us, such as family, friends, and one planted for a group of people. All of them have an important impact on the farm and each tree is a reminder - a part of the legacy we hope to build.
We've even planted a few for other people who don't have the land to grow a maple, oak, or even a non-native species.
If you don't have the room for a tree, we can plant one for you. Contact me for details.
We have two Catalpa trees that were planted from seed collected from our neighbors who sadly passed away before they had a chance to watch them grow. Late Spring flowers are a reminder that they're still with us in spirit and seeds were given to their children to plant their own memorial.
Wednesday, May 17, 2023
Squatter
I don't mind some squatters on the place but I would have liked a better location than my ladder that I store under the eve of the garage.
I'm delaying a new roof until she moves on...
(There's other reasons but now I can blame someone besides myself.)
Monday, May 15, 2023
New Legacy tree
First tree planted in 2023
First legacy tree of 2023
This one is kind of special. Planted for someone who came into our lives a short time ago and this little Norway Spruce will grow in the family reserve above the pond.
He may be small but he's growing...
Sunday, April 2, 2023
Springtime weather report
Last Friday's storms left a lot of damage to the south and east of the farm:
One of the two tornadoes at the bottom were rated EF4 and reportedly started in Wapello County. Lots of roofing tin spread about in ours and the neighbors' fields and I'll walk the acreage to see what else I can find.
No damage (so far) just like a bloviating politician - a lot of wind...
Tuesday, January 24, 2023
Second batch of aronia wine from 2022
We just bottled up our second batch of aronia wine that we started brewing a few months ago. This recipe had two gallons of juice compared to the first batch which had 2.5 gallons, plus we tried a couple of different things to assist in the clearing.
With each batch, we bottle some as dry and sweeten the rest to between a semi-sweet and a sweet wine. We sweetened it up a bit more in search of a good balanced recipe.
Most of my tasters prefer the sweeter end of the spectrum but I do like how the dry turned out last year.
This seems to be the best batch we made from 2022 berries and looks pretty good through the light. Our third batch with another variation in the recipe is almost ready for second siphoning to clear the wine.
#1 son and I drank tasted the scrubs, what we call that last bit of wine that isn't enough to fill a bottle, and it's probably the best that we produced this year.
We might be getting close to the preferred recipe but I'm looking forward to finding out how our third one turns out.
Monday, January 23, 2023
Wednesday, January 4, 2023
Goodbye 2022
The picture below serves as a metaphor of 2022 at the farm: not everything went as planned.
Sure,
we expanded our popcorn planting but late in the ground because of a
wet spring. A dry Summer hampered the yields and late rains ruined a
third of the harvest.
We fell well short of our tree planting because of a meager acorn harvest of the fall of 2021 and this past fall was even worse.
While
we had our best year at the local farmer's market, I'm reminded of one
potential customer's opinion of my "overpriced" potatoes. "I'll take
them all. How much?" she said. I told her to which she replied,
"That's too much." My prices were less than the guy 6 tables to the
north.
It reminded me of a Monte Python sketch.
Back to the tree:
During
my end-of-year cleanup of trash trees like boxelder and dead elm trees,
this 8" mulberry unexpectedly twisted on me, turned 60 degrees to the
right and landed square on this post.
(No one was hurt, including the post)
Just
as in this last tree cut in 2022, not everything went as planned. Is there a lesson to be learned? Will 2023 be better? Will the
questions of the universe be answered?
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
We'll just plug away the best we can, feed some of our neighbors, and plant a few more trees.
Cheers!