Here is the update...
Garden News.. Well it started to look bad after the heat of August and September really stressed alot of plants out. I ended up pulling up those things that really didn't fair that well...watermelon, cantelope, summer squash, etc... and started planning for the fall and winter garden season. Yes... I may be nuts but I planted over 50 cabbage seedlings, several beds of various lettuce and spinach mix and a handful of broccoli and cauliflower plants. I still have tomatoes like crazy...trying to take over every available space. I also nursed back a few bean vines that are really producing now and planted some peas. We will see how things will fair as the cooler weather starts to move our way. For now we are still very busy in the garden:) I am beginning to see my spring and summer chores turn into a year round task. I have found it very rewarding...it is a blessing to be able to provide fresh food for the family from only a few feet from the house.
Horse News... There is good news and bad news.... the bad news first. About a month ago we lost our yearling stud colt. He was out in a paddock with his sire and full brother Tank. Our cousins found him dropped dead in the middle of the field. When I came to him it was evident he had been gone for many hours. It was very sad. Such a beautiful colt...we had hoped to do sooo much with. So many scriptures fled through my mind. The mind of man plans his way but the Lord directs his paths... there is a time and place for everything...the Lord gives and takes...etc. We buried him next to Sissy under the oak over looking the beautiful valley in the back of the property. Aaron said it was one of the sadder things he has had to do. But we realize how we have faired really well over the years and haven't lost many horses, by Gods grace. The good news, Camile is doing really well. Aaron has really helped me to realize some of the finer conscepts in horsemanship and I think she is showing the results of that. She has been a joy to ride. I hope that she will be well recieved at the Triangle sale in January. She really is a nice filly. On another note... Moomoo has really shown an interest in horses. She would ride Bella rain or shine, day or night I think if we let her. She likes to brush and bath them and feed them horse cookies ... "with hand flat" she would instruct you. We have gone on several trail rides together ..."up to gwampaws house" and she really like to "chop" (trot). She is very cute:)
Kiddo News... The babies are all growing up. Bowen started school and has really enjoyed it. He calls it all Math, but he does like all the subjuects. Baby Sara has proved to be just as much an outdoor babies as her siblings. She is commonly covered in dirt and now that she is on her feet she runs from place to place. She really is an all terrain baby. Moomoo has been really telling stories these days...she will tell you all about her day and yesterday and "Marrow"... the high topic is usually horses "Bella and Mile" specifically.
Thats it for now...more later, Lord Willing
Tuesday, October 12, 2010
Tuesday, June 29, 2010
The Garden ...or should I say Jungle
Well the garden continues to grow...on its own and as we continue to add to it. We recently added more potatoes and 6 rows of corn. With continual planting I hope to have continual harvests deep into the late fall.
The tomatoes are on the verge of explosion and the 30 or so Jalapenos are waiting to meet them in the food processor for some HOT homemade salsa!!! Wahoo.
In other garden news, the Japanese beetles have been trying to devour my beans ( now over 12 feet tall) and all my fruit trees (except the pears and apples). They are all really trying to put out new growth, some even doubling in size since we planted in the spring. But I am sure the onslaught of leaf destruction by the beetles will set them back a little. I am trying to combat them with a trap and spraying every other evening as the sun goes down (spray in the day causes scorch to the leaves...maybe equally as devastating as beetle bites. Supposedly they have a short adult life span ....A MONTH!! So hopefully, if I can eliminate most of the visible adults I can decrease their numbers... and possible help the plants thrive.
Also, we have harvested a few of our first Ichiban Eggplant. Bowen was thrilled. I cooked my first one chopped in a slew with a roast in the oven... the meal turned out great! It also had a few Bell Peppers from the garden.
Sorry no pictures I am waiting for a battery charger to come in the mail so I can continue to document the garden... although it really just looks like a jungle these days. Hard to tell where one plant ends and another begins...or are there really any walkways in the midst of the green:) Praise the Lord for His kindness...
The tomatoes are on the verge of explosion and the 30 or so Jalapenos are waiting to meet them in the food processor for some HOT homemade salsa!!! Wahoo.
In other garden news, the Japanese beetles have been trying to devour my beans ( now over 12 feet tall) and all my fruit trees (except the pears and apples). They are all really trying to put out new growth, some even doubling in size since we planted in the spring. But I am sure the onslaught of leaf destruction by the beetles will set them back a little. I am trying to combat them with a trap and spraying every other evening as the sun goes down (spray in the day causes scorch to the leaves...maybe equally as devastating as beetle bites. Supposedly they have a short adult life span ....A MONTH!! So hopefully, if I can eliminate most of the visible adults I can decrease their numbers... and possible help the plants thrive.
Also, we have harvested a few of our first Ichiban Eggplant. Bowen was thrilled. I cooked my first one chopped in a slew with a roast in the oven... the meal turned out great! It also had a few Bell Peppers from the garden.
Sorry no pictures I am waiting for a battery charger to come in the mail so I can continue to document the garden... although it really just looks like a jungle these days. Hard to tell where one plant ends and another begins...or are there really any walkways in the midst of the green:) Praise the Lord for His kindness...
Thursday, June 10, 2010
The Camile Update!!
Well my lovely, little filly Camile has been out and about for about a month now. She is looking really good. The rest in the pasture with retiree's and Squiggy was just the ticket. She has grown up a little and gained a lot of weight. I am looking forward to bringing her back up and putting some more rides on her. Her 2 year old tooth on one side is still pretty swollen. Hopefully, it will receed with no big deal. I will probably wait until then to pull her in.
Here is the rascally Chadwick Crew, with Camile (sorrel on the outside, left) and Squiggy (the little guy on the right.
These are a few pictures my cousin took of the flowers that are in full bloom around the garden. I have really enjoyed the color they bring to the garden and hope that they do help with the pesky bugs!
I am still waiting for my sunflowers, which took a hit in the last storm. I thought I planted the "mini" variety but they stand well over 8 ft and are still growing. I lost 6-8 large plants, but still have a handful standing and I am looking forward to their blooms:)
Monday, May 31, 2010
The Garden Update
As the days eek by... with watering prunning and watching the garden is begining to put out a few tastey veggies and fruits. Here is the photo tour of what the garden looks like now...but these will be old before you know it. It is amazing what God does when you water a little and the sun shines down.
This is the entrance to the garden...sunflowers in the front (supposed to be the mini variety), two cherry tomatoes and some petunias.
These are the Sugar Snap Peas and the Snow Peas. We have had two pretty good pickings, about 40 peas each. The kiddos like eating them fresh picked and I used them in stir fry.
These are the green beans... you can't see from the photo, but they have extended beyond their five foot trellis by 12 inches...wow.
These are a mixed variety of peppers and our eggplants. The eggplants have been assulted by bugs recently... I hope they pull through.
This is the Acorn Squash mound and a few little Hubbard squash. Also mixed marigolds in rows. The Acorn's need to be trellised badly as every day the grow more and more...reaching thier feelers out for support.
The next few photos are of our latest expansion. The melon patch!
This is a row of small climbing watermellon with alternating Nestersium.
These are more juvenille beds, mixed with green and yellow wax beans, zuccini, geraniums, nestersiums, and petunias.
In an other garden news we have ripped out our broccoli, and lettuce, and are working on filling their vaccancies with more peppers and tomatoes. They were .25 - .50 cents each so I figured it was worth it. We also harvested, two blue berries. Enough to get a taste:)
Lastly, the flowers are also about to really show there stuff.
Thursday, May 27, 2010
Well it has been a while since my last post, but I wanted to catch up on the adventures with Camile. I was able to catch her, saddle her and ride her down the road without any hitches. Well... she did want to lay down when I was cinching her up...but I rember Little doing the same thing. Hmmm...princess pony syndrome:) Anyway, she went down the road well, through the forrest, across logs and puddles....she did wonderful. We dicided it would be best for her to give her a little more time to mature. She is still very young and being out with a few of her brothers in the pasture would help her physically and mental mature more naturally. Out of all of Gyps babies she has the most tender feet, so pounding the rocks as a youngster will hopefully help.
So we headed out to grain later that evening and decided to take her on out an release her. I was going to walk her...but I like to say...why walk a horse when you can ride it. So I hoped on bareback and followed the truck up the hill. She did great. My boney behind didn't seem to phase her and she flew up that hill. Some long trotting and a lot of loping. Man o'man... riding bareback can sure be a workout. I was pretty sore from holding on with my rarely used upper inside thigh:) But what a blessing to cross another milestone on her before releasing her into the wild:)
She actually didn't want to stay (she probably missed her buddy Bella) but a few encounters with the hot wire changed her direction. After a few days she is just one of the horses in the herd and I think she looks better then when I stuck her out there:)
So we headed out to grain later that evening and decided to take her on out an release her. I was going to walk her...but I like to say...why walk a horse when you can ride it. So I hoped on bareback and followed the truck up the hill. She did great. My boney behind didn't seem to phase her and she flew up that hill. Some long trotting and a lot of loping. Man o'man... riding bareback can sure be a workout. I was pretty sore from holding on with my rarely used upper inside thigh:) But what a blessing to cross another milestone on her before releasing her into the wild:)
She actually didn't want to stay (she probably missed her buddy Bella) but a few encounters with the hot wire changed her direction. After a few days she is just one of the horses in the herd and I think she looks better then when I stuck her out there:)
Wednesday, May 12, 2010
I thought I would also do a separate segment on the orchard, now named the 12 apostles …because of the twelve trees that have started our little orchard. Their introduction is as follows; two apples (granny smith and red delicious), two apricots (both tilton), two pear (both moonglow, an Asiatic pear), 3 cherry (Montmorency, Bing, and Tartarian) and 3 plum (Methley, Bruce and Super Sweet). I have documented some of the fruits already on the trees…what a treat…fruit the first year
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