Monday, January 24, 2011

Elephant Seals and Alpacas



So what does a 1000 pound elephant seal have to do with organic farming? Nothing that i know of, but they are just awesomely huge animals. We visited Ana Nuevo along the CA coast to see the elephant seals that are currently pupping and just starting into the breeding season. It always amazes me how you can walk among the sand dunes and find these enormous creatures tucked in about every hollow and dune. Then when you crest the final dune at the shore line, hundreds of these lumbering giants pack the beach. I do have to admit one of my most favorite sites was not at the rookery, but back at the meeting station where there were a display of skulls. Below is a photo of the head of a full grown male elephant seal.






For most of you who read this blog, you know of my interest in skulls and skeletons. For you i have a mystery skull picture (below). I few clues: The skulls next to it are sea otter skulls. This animal use to live here in Ana Nuevo, CA but hasn't for a long time. It spends most of its time on land. Now, it is time for you to guess.




Going from the ocean, we headed up into the hills to Candi's vineyard and farm. There is a small herd of alpacas and a few lamas. They are very elegant animals with incredibly soft hair.

Candi was good enough to wrangle one of the younger alpacas so i could have the opportunity to hold one. I was trying to figure out how i could maybe fit this one in my truck and get it back to PA.

Sunday, January 23, 2011

Farmer's Market Califorina Style and Tara Firma Farm



It is the off season for the Mt. View Farmer's Market, but it is still at least four times as large as the Head House Market at home in Philadelphia. The weather is warm and sunny so there are plenty of shoppers. There are a variety of vendors; mushroom, heirloom organic veggies, honey, seafood, oysters, artisan breads, dates, flowers, prepared food from several different countries, fruit of all types, dried kale and the list goes on. Each booth is beautifully presented and there is even one vendor that reminds me of Colton, a one of a kind farmer in PA.




Later in the day, we headed north to Petaluma, CA to visit Tara Firma Organic Farm
http://www.tarafirmafarms.com/. They are primarily a meat farm but also have a veggie CSA. Only two years old, without any farming background, they read Joel Salatin books and have been following his guidelines ever since. They even went as far as having Joel come out to visit for a 12 hour consultation, which they said was a big help. Below is a photo of one of the latest models of the chicken tractor. This model is designed to be able to sit on sloping hills (though in this picture it is on relatively flat ground).
Every farm i have visited so far have gone out of their way to talk with me and show me around. And most, as we are saying our fair wells, sends me off with some of their produce or meats. It has been a wonderful experience.



Friday, January 21, 2011

Fencing






Post pounding is nothing knew to me but today when installing a fence around an enclosure you have to be a bit more exact about your efforts. The fence is to contain the 23 California Red sheep and containing is the key word here. Though they are not as strong as cattle, they still have the ability to escape. Plus, you have to remember that there will be cute little lambs soon and things that might find lamb especially tasty. As we set the post, we have to make sure they are straight up and down and in a precise straight line. These are all critical when you begin to tension the fence. None of the rolls of wire are long enough to make the whole run, so there are wonderful tools for joining two sets of fence.
It takes two days to get the posts set and the fencing spliced and rolled out. Tomorrow will be welding the support posts and hopefully Sunday the fence can be stretched. Unfortunately, i leave tomorrow for San Jose, CA, and will miss getting to see the sheep in their new pasture.......... plus all the cute lambs that are soon to arrive.
Stopped at Silva's organic orchard and bought a basket of Myer Lemons. They come in all sizes and have a slightly different taste than the lemons often found in the grocery store. They are a little milder with a twist of zest to them. It was a warm day today, so i made a glass of lemonade with the lemons. Yum!

Thursday, January 20, 2011

A Sunny Day Off



The sun has finally made its way through the clouds and it looks like i have the day off today. I take the opportunity to explore the farm. But first, breakfast out in the sun. During my basking in the sun, i get my first peak at a real live gopher. (I had found a dead one.) It is pushing soil up in a mound around its hole. It pops its head up and down out of the hole. I can't figure out what it is really doing, other than digging a hole.... but, why? A hawk flies over and the gopher does not reappear. Finishing my granola, i head to see what the sheep are up too. On the way i see my first blue bird in the vine yard, mustards and calendula blooming a long a wall, and last falls coyote mellons dotting an irrigation ditch. Spring is well under way here.



I am almost to the sheep pen, when the snake, i was about to step on, warns me off. It looks like a rattle snake but i am not so good at identifing snakes. I watch as it slides away under the rocks and see that it does not have a rattle attached to the "none business" end. Looking it up, when i get back to my computer, i find out that it is a gopher snake. Every thing around here seems to center around the gophers.


I watch the sheep for a few hours, they really are beautiful creatures. They do poop and pee a lot...... theirs is supposed to be one of the better manures for gardens and farms. The sheep were going to be pastured in the olive orchard but when they decided the olive trees were just as tasty as the grass, that was the end of that. Maybe, when the trees get a little older, they can try again.

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

WWOOFing in the News

You just never know what is going to happen. Today, we had ABC 30 come to the farm and interview and film us. The story is to be about WWOOFing. Matt is combining the perspective of the WWOOFer, the hosting farmers and the person who started the WWOOFing program. I get to be the WWOOFer in the piece. We were filmed trellising the olive trees and then we came back to the house to see where i was staying. The story is supposed to air in a week or two. I will add the link when .......... and if it shows. It was fun and Matt and his camera guy were very nice. It took up most of the day, so we really couldn't get started on any thing new.

Tonight is cooler and turkey soup and cornbread are being prepared as i write. Yummm!

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

California Reds




Besides olive trees, there is also a small herd of California Red sheep at Casa Rosa. They are a cross between a wool sheep and a meat sheep. They have a long Romanesque face bathed in a warm rusty red. The breeding of the ewes is mostly complete for the season and last years lambs are getting close to market size. Before the ewes lamb for this year, they will be shorn. Their fleece are a combination of wool and hair. To me, they all look like big puff balls of wool on little skinny legs. Currently they are mostly eating alfalfa cut from on the farm. The new pasture fence is almost complete where they will be moved to graze for the rest of the year.
Through my travels, every once and a while i pick up some new little item that i find very useful to me. Today, i learned about a new tool sharpener! It has been kind of one of my own personal quest to find the ulimate tool sharpener. This tool by Corona is fantastic! It is small and can put a very nice edge on your blades in a matter of seconds. I am just going to have to remember to keep count of my fingers after sharping my clippers .

Monday, January 17, 2011

Olive Trellising and Pruning - 102

The words "unskilled labor" has an interesting meaning. Today while trellising, i learned that there are some people who are much more "unskilled" than others ............... but, how is that possible if everyone is unskilled in that field of work. As i began the day, i figured i would be finally finishing the olive trellising, but it seems that who ever it was before me that trellised had a very different idea as to what trellising meant. So, it took me 4 times as long because i had to untie everything that was done. Then try and figure out how to correct the pruning. So, today i as night begin to descend, i was able to completed just one row. If i had had a skilled "unskilled" person doing the work before me, i am pretty sure i could have completed 5 or 6 rows. Luckily, I had another person working in the field with me today and we did complete the job........ until after the harvest and then the pruning and tying starts all again.