September 11, 2009

10:59 pm

2 Comments

Introducing Lazy Fox Farm

Our farm is underway.

Just about a year ago, Chris and I left San Francisco to begin our farming adventure. It amazes me to think of our mindset back then; we were sick and tired of working crappy jobs that barely paid the rent for our equally crappy basement apartment, so we took off. We had heard of WWOOF through several friends, and figured we’d travel around and do farm work just to get by.

At that point it seemed like something we could handle, and maybe even something we’d enjoy, but I don’t think either of us expected to be totally sucked in by it. But halfway through our first semester at Green String interns, before the winter was over, it became clear that farming was IT for us.

Since we finished our internships in May, we’ve been f’real farm employees, working long hours six or seven days a week, and fantasizing about having our own little farm someday. We’re living on one of our boss’s properties, and part of his offer to us was that we’d set up a little market garden here, and get a mini-incubator farm going. But between our long hours (and resulting exhaustion) and a couple broken rototillers, it just hasn’t happened.

Well, it *hadn’t* happened. Now…

Now it’s happening! I can’t tell you how excited I am. We picked out the garden spot (maybe about an acre out of the 110 of the property) almost as soon as we moved in, and Chris has been watering it ocassionally to soften up the hard soil.

We’re going to get the rototiller out here next week (finally!), but I’m also doing a little experiment. I’ve planted part of the space this week with turnips (Chinese red round, Japanese shogoin, and French navet des vertus marteau, ho ho) and Italian sugarloaf chicory, because I have it on good authority that turnips and chicory plants will not only thrive in hard soil, they’ll actually bust it up! I’m going to plant another section with cover-crop varieties of daikon radish and chicory, which will probably do a lot more work on the soil but also won’t be particularly edible. The remainder of the garden will be tilled and planted with non-experimental crops — lots of brassicas, greens, root veggies, and herbs — and we’ll go from there.

If all goes well, we’ll start showing up at the Sonoma farmers market on Friday mornings with some goodies to sell. If it goes really well, we may start up a CSA by spring. Whatever form our little garden takes, we’ll be calling it Lazy Fox Farm, in honor of the adorable little bastards who ate our roosters — and probably watch our every move from the shadows.

It’s difficult to find the time to work on our own project when we’re so immersed in our jobs, but heading out there at sunset to rake, seed, and water doesn’t feel like work. Right now, those 8 rows of seed sitting in our beautiful, sweet-smelling soil feel likes new world of possibilities.

September 8, 2009

11:40 am

2 Comments

Farmy Decimal (Work in Progress)

I’ve been put in charge of getting our growing library at work organized. I used librarything.com to catalog the books, one ISBN at a time. Originally I was going to use the Dewey Decimal system for sorting, but I soon realized it’s not great for small libraries — especially collections that have many books on only a couple topics.

I have this slight personality problem, where I reinvent the wheel whenever possible.

So now I have a new library system, loosely based on Melvil Dewey’s. It’s the Farmy Decimal system.

000 Spirituality etc.
	00 General Spirituality
	10 Philosophy
	20 Religion
	30 Energy
	40 Plants

100	Agriculture
	00 theory & science
		0 schools of thought
			.0 biodynamics
			.1 permaculture
			.2 agroecology
		3 botany & plant science
			.0 diseases & pests
		4 soil science
			.0 minerals
			.1 compost
				.10 compost tea
				.11 vermiculture
	10 agricultural settings
		1 landscaping
		2 greenhouses
		3 urban/small home gardens
	20 crops
		1 vegetables
		2 trees, vines, and shrubs
			.0 fruit trees
				.00 olives
				.01 apples
			.1 nut trees
			.2 vines
				.20 viticulture & wine
			.3 silviculture & forestry
		3 herbs
			.0 medicinal
			.1 culinary
		4 flowers
		5 mushrooms
			.0 medicinal
			.1 culinary
		6 animals
			.0 bees
			.1 chickens
		7 grass & pasture
	30 techniques
		1 pruning
		2 propagation
			.0 seeds
			.1 asexual
		3 grafting
		4 irrigation

200 Sustainable Living
	10 Health
		1 Alternative Medicine
			.0 herbs
		2 Food
	20 Food Preparation
	30 Crafts
		1 Building
			.0 Carpentry
			.1 adobe, cobb, and earth
			.2 strawbail
		2 Tool-making

300 Issues
	10 food and farm
	20 environmental

400 Business & Economics
	10 farm

500 History
	10 Biographies

600 Literature
	10 Essays
	20 Poetry
	30 Children's Books

700 Language
	10 Spanish

So much to do

The other night I couldn’t sleep because I was lying in bed running through all the things I have to and want to do. In an attempt to stop freaking out about it, I wrote down everything I could think of in one ginormous list. Damn.

I’ve already done some of it though.

  • * make English muffins
  • * make a new noteboook
  • get our own place & a dog
  • start journaling regularly so I can remember the days
  • do Aaron’s mobile gallery
  • plant around the house
  • * March newsletter
  • get kitchen knife sharpened
  • work with the high school agriculture program
  • set a standard recipe template for the farm blog
  • Bob’s yarn-spinning lady?
  • ask Bob about hops farming
  • make peanut butter cookies
  • get Aaron to visit
  • in_the_store.xml to Blogger?
  • organize farm workdays
  • harvest/make mustard
  • lead a chicken workshop for kids
  • make granola bars
  • read everything in the world
  • work for Carole on the weekends for $$$
  • get peppermint oil for delicious baking soda
  • brew beer
  • finish Chris’s sweater
  • make oregano mayonnaise
  • make toothpaste
  • bake lots of bread
  • get bristol board from art store
  • clean room
  • make Mom a scarf out of that Cashsoft yarn
  • get a Klezmer book
  • grow hops
  • hatch some baby chickens
  • website insanity
  • learn about having goats & sheep
  • get Dave to visit
  • get Dad to visit
  • * write competition control copy
  • learn to sew
  • go to Italy for the harvest
  • English essays
  • draw my favorite rooster
  • * print/bind calendar
  • greenstringinstitute.org
  • organize workshops
  • knit Chris some slippers
  • sell crafty stuff again
  • visit Hidden Villa
  • volunteer for Petaluma Bounty
  • reorganize the mudroom/tools
  • read the most recent “Best American Science Writing” book
  • go to Point Reyes
  • make Allie a calendar
  • * SLEEP. Man, I’m exhausted.

May 30, 2008

9:45 pm

1 Comment

So long, farewell

I gave my notice at the market two and a half damn weeks ago, and my last day is finally in sight: Thursday, June 5th. I’ll be down at The Fishbowl after work to celebrate with some coworkers, some friends, and maybe even some regulars. You should come!

October 24, 2007

10:40 pm

No Comments

Waaaaaaaaaaaaaah, barista-ing is hard!

Seriously. I pulled one espresso shot on Monday, a zillion yesterday, and five zillion today. I think I’m starting to get consistent, but I still lack a sense for the dosing, the distributing, and the tamping. And milk? Holy crap. Overload. I have a giganto-blister on my finger where I accidentally steamed it today.

Tomorrow’s my last day of training. Color me not-so-confident. Scott, my manager, tells me not to fear the coffee. Respect, yes, but fear, no.

(By the way, I got a new job. In case you hadn’t noticed. If you’re in San Francisco, head up to Divisadero & California and I’ll make you a mediocre drink.)

August 10, 2007

6:20 pm

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Math Magic!

I think we’re scrapping the probability section. But our math magic chapter is nearly done now that I did the comic!

Lisa’s written up the different math tricks, which will make up the bulk of the section. Then we see our heroes again, dressed as wizards and excitedly yelling “MATH MAGIC!”

Then the punchline: “Excuse us, we’re off to confuse the muggles now.”

That’s the best I can do.

July 11, 2007

12:14 pm

No Comments

Another sweater!

I am queen of the raglans these days.

Shannon bought the yarn, I knit the sweater. I think that’s a pretty good deal.

shannon-sweater.jpg

The construction is very similar to the Hogwarts sweater: bottom-up raglan, slightly fitted waist, very nearly seamless. This one has a half-assed sort of boatneck thing going on.

Honestly, I think it’s waaaaaaay to big for her, but she said she wanted it to be the same size as mine.

Next up: long, fitted cardigan (also bottom-up raglan, but this time it ain’t in the round) for my mom. It will be made of the best yarn I can possibly afford.

July 10, 2007

4:37 pm

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First paying gig — maybe?

Loon and I are working with a very passionate Seattle teacher to set up a website for Seattle Green Schools (also occasionally called “Seattle Green Teams”). We’re doing the design now, and I’ll start on the real work once my AmeriCorps term is up — and yes, they might even pay me! How neat is that?

stripey-buckets.jpg gradientish1.jpg gridly.jpg

I can’t tell if I’m getting better at web design or worse. It’s always so painful.

July 9, 2007

5:50 pm

1 Comment

Stick figure adventures in math! Part one: Probability

It’s no xkcd, but I think the comic Lisa and I are doing for our CAP* will be alright.

Completed page one*CAP = Community Action Project. Gotta do it for AmeriCorps. Lisa, my coworker, and I are making a comic/activity book about math with the aim of encouraging middle school girls or something. I dunno, we’re losing sight of the grand scheme and just scrambling to get something done before our term is up.

July 1, 2007

12:18 am

No Comments

Spam

Every one of us poor saps at NWEEC gets the emails sent to info@nweec.org, which is almost entirely spam. Some of it’s hi-larious.

I think this one’s my favorite yet:

Add the inches to your penis like the years to your age.

http://www.ploinan.net/

You hate your penis. Love it with Penis Enlarge Patch.

What do you think, Mark? T-shirt or band name?