Five Years is Enough…

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I give up.  I am calling Uncle.  This place I called garden is not a garden.  It wants to be a pasture.

After five years and so much work and effort and money and labor… it’s just not working out as a garden space.  The weeds win.  The swampy low buggy land wins.  It’s going to become and pasture.

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We put down 20 bales of straw all through this area and it just grew through it in less than a few weeks with all the rain we’ve gotten.  And it’s full of skeeters and weeds and is just oh my gosh…  way too much for me.

So, I finally gave up today and I am so happy!

It was all Jessy’s fault.  I came in after visiting and picking the few things we grew this year…  radish, some straggly green beans and a bunch of zinnias.  And two sad sunflowers.  I gave most of that to the pigs, which they loved.  And then I came in to lament the lost season and the feeling of dread and she said, Mom…  why don’t you pick another area to garden.  Like the courtyard.

I was like, huh?  Give up?  You mean we don’t need a 150 by 50 foot garden?  She was like, yeah, give up.  Retreat.  Try something else.  It’s not working.

She’s right.  I am a pretty darn good gardener, I always have been.  I have pictures of past gardens that were beautiful and productive…  heck, my mobile home gardens won second best home in the park and produced 200 pounds of food for us!  And they were simpler, smaller and very nice.

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The courtyard is an area that we like but there is nothing there.  It’s just grass and overgrown bushes and such.  But it’s a smaller, nicer space.  Doesn’t flood.  Near the house, not so buggy.  It would be a delightful space to put some nice raised beds in and stone pathways.  It would be filled with flowers around the boarders.  And maybe have a nice little sitting area and a little water feature!  Hoorah!!!

I felt like a million pounds had been lifted from my shoulders.  I was so excited.  A new space, a 35 x 35 foot space that I could easily create and manage.  Close to the driveway so that I wouldn’t have to lug stuff all the way out back.  Delightful!  Less mowing!!!

(I won’t lie, everyone liked that aspect the best.  We don’t like mowing.)

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So far, I have a few plans.  I sketched it out and I’m sure to plan and replan it.  I want to get the two beds that I know I won’t change, ready soon.  That way I can use them to house some of my fruit and such from the old garden in the new space.  And I can start to see exactly how the space will work.  I’ll have two spots as well, to start putting the weeds and yard waste from all the clean up in there I will have to do.  Jessy is excited as well, she wants to help.  She never liked the garden out back because she is afraid of barn swallows!  (And they were out there too much…)  Now she can help with it all and that is wonderful.

I’ve been watching some videos on YouTube by a couple called Doug and Stacy.  Homesteaders.  And I really love their ideas and the things they do.  One thing that they have been talking about is preparing your homestead for aging in place.  Making it something that works for you, for years to come.  And I really have been thinking a lot about that.  I love this place and I hope we are here forever and ever. The girls love it as well.  However, after five years, we are getting a pretty good grasp on what works and what doesn’t.  So giving up the big big big, too big garden space really doesn’t feel like a failure.  In fact, it feels wonderful!  There are just three of us.  We don’t need a 150 by 50 foot garden!  Heck, that will serve us better as a pasture, especially for the goats!  They will be so happy out there.  The sheep and ponies as well.  It wants to be a pasture.  I have been trying for the last five years to force it into something it did not want to be.

And let me tell you, Mother Nature does what she wants.

I am just so excited…  we have sold three hog piglets this last couple days and I think that I could skin a wee bit of that to get the wood for two of the first planned raised beds.  It won’t be too much.  And that excites me even more.  As much as I loved the free wooden shipping crates that I was using, they are just falling apart.  They are not designed for long time use.  Thin woods, rough look…  they worked, but they were not great.  I noticed that they dried out pretty fast.  I will build new boxes, better and more efficient!  And close to our water pump so it will be much easier to keep an eye on it all and keep it nice.

I know that this season is pretty much done.  I will transplant a few things and probably get some garlic in a bed… but other than that, I will work to get the infractructure all ready to go.  Beds together, filled with dirt from the other garden beds.  Barriers down to kill the bit of grass here and there and rock fill.  We can work on this all the way until snow flies!  And be ready for spring.

In a day or two, after I move a few plants and check the eastern fence to make sure it’s solid, we will let the goats in to start working on the weeds.  They will be in heaven.  They all stand at the gate when I am in there, drooling and calling to me.  They knew a long time ago that I was fighting a loosing battle.  They wanted this space.  Well, now they are going to get it!  And the sheep will make short order of the grass…  It’s a perfect situation!!!

Isn’t life funny?  When you think you have everything all figured out, you go and learn that it’s not the right path for your journey and it’s time to try something else.  And I know I will be happier…  Jessy and  Maggie will and the animals, too!  And when the time comes, it might just be the perfect place for my yurt… tucked in the corner of a lovely little pasture, all trimmed up and cut down by my own little hooved lawncare staff!  Wonderful!!!

I can’t wait to see my new space develop and become as nice and tidy as my old moby home gardens!!!  I miss them so much!

Here are two videos from our 2 year anniversary of the mobile home!  Talk about flashback time!  I can’t wait to turn the courtyard into a lovely little garden space!!!

 

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Brakes Stop Your Truck! Honest…

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Vehicle problems are everyone’s little problem at some point in life.  And we had been so lucky with our two lovely gals…  not a lick of trouble!  Until, of course, a couple weeks ago.

Jessy and I were returning from the post office.  When all of the sudden, there was a big clunk and as I was backing into our drive way, I realized that we had no brakes.   Just like in the movies, NO BRAKES…  oh my gosh!  I told Jessy to hold on and I threw Tiffany, our beloved F150 Ford pickup, into nuetral and tried to guide her to a resting spot that was not Pewter, our car, or the ram’s field, next to the garage!   Which left our little garage, which is Maggie’s workshop!

It was all so fast, I just didn’t think to try and push the emergency brake (which we discovered afterwards didn’t even work…)  or to throw her into park, because the corner of the garage and one of my beloved lilac bushes stopped us.  With a giant thud and a bit of a cracked brake light!  It was a little scary…  I will admit and I’m pretty sure helped to seal the idea that trucks are dangerous machines of death to Jessy.  She doesn’t like to drive and well, that really didn’t help.  However, she was impressed with my cool demeanor and calm disposition during the very brief event.  She didn’t realize though, that I was a little bit spooked at the thought that this could have easily been on the road at 50 mph and that would have been a real problem.

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One of the very very nicest things about living in the country is how friends love to help out.  We do as well, anything we can do, we do…  and I went in the house, a little panicked as to what to do because we love that truck and use her all the time!   It’s very hard to get hay bales in the trunk of the Taurus!  (Of course, we have had to do that a time or two, so we speak from experience!!!) I just didn’t have a lot of money in the budget and I was really sure something bad had happened.  I knew the brakes were getting worn…  and really should have done something about it sooner, but you know how that goes sometimes…   I promise to never let that happen again!  For certain!

Well, my friend Justin had just IMed me on Facebook and asked how things were at the farm and buddy, I’m pretty sure he probably regretted asking because the floodgates opened up and he just told me not to worry, he and Tim would be down to take a look at it in no time.

And within the hour, they were hear and taking a look at the old girl.  Seems I blew the master cylinder and pretty much broke the front driver side caliper…  sheared off the brake pad!   Wow…  I did a number on her.  I felt pretty bad about it.  Started to do that whole why me thing…

But the guys were like, oh, we can fix this!  Just need a few parts and some 2 x 4s and a couple cement blocks.  Everything takes a couple 2 x 4s out here.  Required safety equipment, apparently.  And just about the time I was feeling a little better, the weirdest thing happened.  The firetrucks pulled up to the crossing right by our house and one of them told us that they were waiting for a train on fire to come by.

What?  A train on fire???

It was about then that I began to realize that my truck issues, however difficult for us, were pretty pale in comparison to a TRAIN ON FIRE…  OH MY….  Of course…  we all had a vision of what such a thing was going to look like, and we rushed to the road to watch.  The firemen had all their hoses out, and were lining up near the crossing…

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And of course, we had no cameras at this point…  but it wasn’t like that picture above.  In fact, it was just a slow train, spraying excess diesel fuel all over the track sides.  Everyone was calm, the train was still moving and we had to really look hard to see the fire.  It was underneath and really didn’t look that bad, I guess.  As trains on fire go.  They sprayed the heck out of it, and it just kept going.  Apparently at the next village crossing, their firetruck was ready as well.  They planned to dump all the fuel, and keep spraying it as it went back and forth.  If they would stop the train, it would be much worse.

DSC_0077Very unexciting, let me tell you.   We went back to working on the truck.  Well, Tim was working on the truck and the rest of us got a pizza and some beer and were basically sitting around, watching the master at work.  And of course, ribbing him and making fun of him.  You know, guy things.

After the train went back by again and then returned, no longer on fire apparently, this fellow with one of those railroad conversion trucks came by.  He had a fun job.  Spraying some sort of chemical stuff on all the little fires on the train tracks from the fire train.

I’m not sure that I could be so calm and collected as that train crew was.  I mean, they were just standing there, leaning out the engine sides, watching and just driving the thing.  Can you even imagine the conversation?   “Ah, dispatch, Engine 3487, we are on fire.  Advise?”   “Ah, 3487, why don’t you just start dumping your fuel and we will call the fire departments along the track to spray you and just don’t stop, okay?  That would be bad, over…”

Hahaha…  I would be like OMG…  just keep driving??????   I guess it does make sense.  You would hardly want to drive a train full of flammable fuel into a depot or yard and then let it blow up…  Like those airplanes with issues, they make them fly around and around to waste fuel before emergency landings…  scary!  I guess it’s always something, eh?

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Yikes, sheared that baby right off.  Time for new brakes!!!

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Maggie was very helpful as well, she would really like to learn how to fix vehicles and such.  I’m sure she would be pretty good at it, actually.  She’s very mechanically inclined.  She helped Tim with the brake line pumping and all that when he had them close to done.

DSC_0091Pizza time!!!  A couple pizzas for the crew!  It was dinner time afterall.  And this was saving us a BUNDLE of money…  Everything, including pizza and paying Tim cost under $200… And I am sure it would have easily cost double or more…  I am so thankful for our friends!!!!   They were done within about 2 hours…  and the hardest part was getting the lug nuts off the tires, they were SUPER tight.  He had her back together and test drove around the big county block and she was good to go!    DSC_0093

And then, he took Pewter, our sedan, home to do a oil change,  and a little tuneup help with a few little issues!  It was like he just couldn’t stop working on cars!  Pewter came back the next morning all cleaned and running like a kitten!  He even fixed her turn signal light, which was out!  My gosh…  from smashing into the garage to all fixed in less than three hours.  What service!!!!   My heros!!!!  :-)  And Miss Tiffany has been wonderful ever since!  Pewter, too!  So nice to have two good safe and sound vehicles on the homestead!!!  (Though Tiffy is gonna need snow tires for the winter…  her tires are a little bald!  We have a little time before that…  gotta start saving up!)

That is the story of the failed brakes and the train on fire.  Just another day on the Windhaven estate.

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Still Here! Friday Night Stroll…

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My gosh, has it been this long?  Like two months, almost?

I am so sorry.  I guess after five plus years of blogging, thousands of posts…  I just needed a little break.  Just a little summer off to catch my breath and sort of get through a busy part of our lives.

Maggie’s loom and fiber tool woodworking business has gone nuts!  She is keeping us all busy…  it is a wonderful blessing and at the same time, sure does eat up a lot of time!

All the animals are doing fine…  just hanging out, growing fiber, eating good, enjoying the warm weather and all the lovely rain we have been getting.  This has be a banner summer for us.  Lots of rain and still, super good green grass and a huge hay savings!   All the grazing animals are super happy and enjoying fresh greens daily.

I promise to start writing more posts again…  I do feel the need to write.  I’ve been fairly active on Facebook, but I know not everyone goes there and that form of social media does not lend itself to rambling posts and thoughtful prose.  Blogging does!

I am also going to try and figure out how to get comments reinstated…  we had a little issue awhile back with getting spam blasted with thousands and thousands of comments, all in a day or two’s time.  Our hosting company disabled the comments section to save our content and to avoid being “turned off” or shut down for this.  Of course, we had nothing to do with it…  but that’s the way things go.

You can always drop me a line here…   sherri@chekal-dot-com…   (You have to make the dot a period…  just trying to avoid all the spammers out there!  The automatic software ones…)

It’s been five years now.  Five years since we started this homestead farm adventure and buddy, it’s been a fun and wild ride.  I think this has been the first year that everything has been routine.  Quiet.  Normal.  Animals being born, summer events, a little fencing and the odd project or two, but nothing huge.  Just treading water and finally enjoying the fruits of our labor.

I was looking at the weather report for the next 10 days and I was very surprised to see highs in the high 70’s…  and a few low 80’s.   Wow…   fall is creeping up on us.  September is just around the corner!  I can’t hardly believe it.

Well, enjoy all these fun pictures of our little homestead…  gardens, critters and more.

I promise not to be a stranger anymore!!!

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