Sunday, June 21, 2015

critter cam collection

Here are a bunch of pictures collected from my critter cam. The camera has worked fine, except for when the batteries died over the winter. Now using rechargeable batteries, and hoping for better results.





The images labeled 2012 are really April 2015.












And the last three are a mystery. Any ideas?

Friday, June 12, 2015

let there be solar

Finally got to build a solar panel and celebrated with light.
This is the one everyone has seen from Harbor Freight.
http://www.harborfreight.com/45-watt-solar-panel-kit-68751-8527.html

The cleared out shed seems to be the perfect spot.



Now I just have to remind myself why I want power.


As nice as electric light in the cabin is, it feels like the change to the space is too great. Or maybe I just need to get used to it. But charging batteries - now that I will like.
-- adding picture soon --

Sunday, April 12, 2015

April 2015

It's winter, it's spring, it's, it's...


the Catskill's in April.
The morning I arrived the tree's for miles around were gilded in ice, making the drive to the site a ghost-like passage through a shimmering grey desolation  - a feeling that only the end of winter can give.
The next day was 60 degrees, followed by a deep frost overnight and wicked winds the following sunny day.

Another reason to be there was to clear out the shed - it had been years, and the build up of stuff, mice, wasps, and other intriguing creatures had built up to a crescendo of wasted space - a place where I would quickly deposit or withdrawal items.

Such a disgusting wasted space that I couldn't even take a picture of it at it's worst. this is about half emptied:
Imagine the things I found! Many items from before I even designed the cabin - assorted windows, insulation, doors...
All went to the dump, where anything worthwhile was scooped up by others who will use it or do what I just did.
The guy at the dump was great and he took the time to direct what I was bringing down to the right people / places. So not all was landfill. This however...


Sometimes a picture (or in this case three) tells a thousand words.
The only heartwarming part is that I had seen red squirrels in here last year, so at least it was a native varmint. 

And then, presto chango, a clear shed.



Sunday, December 28, 2014

On Dan Barber's "The Third Plate"

This has very little to do with the cabin in the woods, except for the possibility of farming there. I just read "The Third Plate," and no, it is not about baseball.
I recommend reading the book, and this post is more a links page than a review. Barber wrote about many farmers and thinkers. Here are some links I found on my own:
https://attra.ncat.org/interviews/martens.html
http://www.lakevieworganicgrain.com/meet.html
http://www.ansonmills.com/biographies
http://www.stonebarnscenter.org/about-us/staff/jack-algiere.html
http://www.bluehillfarm.com/
http://www.stonebarnscenter.org/about-us/staff/craig-haney.html
http://www.milkwood.net/2011/12/09/eliot-colemans-fertile-dozen-recommended-reading-for-organic-growers/
http://www.laverstokepark.co.uk/info/about.aspx
http://www.fourseasonfarm.com/
http://www.polyfacefarms.com/
http://connection.ebscohost.com/c/articles/9205251407/hands-willem-kips
http://www.highmowingseeds.com/blog/seed-grower-profile-frank-morton-an-agent-of-change/
http://sustainablefoodtrust.org/team/thomas-harttung/
http://www.natureandmore.com/growers/growganics
http://joansgarden.org/
http://library.ucsc.edu/reg-hist/cultiv/cantisano
http://www.landinstitute.org/
http://web.missouri.edu/ikerdj/papers/Albrecht%20Lecture%20-%20Healthy%20Soils%20Healthy%20People.htm
http://journeytoforever.org/farm_library/howard.html.
http://www.brownetrading.com/products/fresh-fish/veta-la-palma-seafood/
http://www.vetalapalma.es/index.asp?LG=2
http://css.wsu.edu/people/faculty/stephen-s-jones/
http://www.motherjones.com/tom-philpott/2013/10/radical-chefs-launch-seed-revolution
from
Irene Hamburger
Vice President
Blue Hill | Blue Hill at Stone Barns
630 Bedford Road
Pocantico Hills, NY 10591

914 366 9606 x224
917 447 4212 (cell)
irene@bluehillfarm.com
@bluehillfarm


Angel Leon and the Almadraba (in Spanish)

The Perennial Plate on Eduardo Sousa

The Perennial Plate on Glenn Roberts

Dan Barber’s Ted Talks:

Sunday, June 8, 2014

critter cam

This past March I installed a motion trigger camera to see what critters come by. Do you know that wind is motion?
Do you know how many windy days there were between March and now?
After scanning 2000 images, I think I need to tweak the settings.
Here, without the wind, are a few critters - help is needed on the last one.
Dreaded House Cat

Peter Cottontail!

Hop

Hop!

If no one can help, I will make something up.
Pterodactyl?
Snowy Owl?
Bald Eagle?


Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Fire!

Many a night I have dreamed of sitting around a roaring fire with friends, feet up on the stone wall, finding topics of conversation in the embers.
We finally made it happen. With help from many friends, we built a nice sized firepit - about 8 feet across and 18 inches high.
First, my nephew Max and I gathered field stone from the many rock walls dissecting the property. Pretty much all the property is on a slope, so after pushing up a few choice barrows full of stone from below the firepit site, it occurred to me it might be easier if we took the rock from above the site. And it was; the only thing to watch out for were run away rocks as the momentum built along the downward paths.

This is one of the two piles we gathered
Max having a well deserved rest after the rock gathering.


the enchanted forest

The following weekend Margaret and Larry came up to help me put it all together. This is code for getting out of Larry's way while Margaret took pictures.

I get out of the way and Larry gets busy


I did fill the pit with sand - about a ton of it. Thank goodness it was in small bags!
In a shocking (to me anyway) 3 hours we were done.
starting the sand
 Fire in order!





Monday, June 17, 2013

It must be Spring

Ahh, it is that time of year again - Grounds Maintenance!

There has been plenty of rain this spring, which means the driveway and the field look like one.
I have been giving the driveway an annual spray with herbicide. Last year I used a 1 gallon sprayer and Ortho GroundClear 2 gal. Concentrate Vegetation Killer. The herbicide worked great, but the single gallon sprayer was foolish - fill, pump, lift,  spray for 10 seconds, set down, pump, repeat. As I'm sure many of you remember, this driveway is over 600 feet long. It took days to do the entire driveway this way.
This year I bought a better pump - a Chapin 61700N SureSpray Deluxe Backpack Poly Sprayer, 4-Gallon, and a different herbicide - I had forgotten I had used Ortho, and instead bought Roundup 32 oz. Concentrate Extended Control Weed and Grass Killer Plus Weed Preventer. I know, supporting the devil, but the job was done before I remembered. The Roundup only promises 4 months, and the Ortho promised 12 months. With winters up here I'm not sure how much of a difference that makes, but we shall see.

Last year I also sprung and bought a Toro 2-Cycle 25.4 cc Curved Shaft Gas Trimmer - this allowed me to trim out both sides of the driveway in near record time. Okay, it was record time - it only took 3 days of fighting 3' high grass, as compared to weeks using the scythe. As much as I love using the scythe (and I really do), getting the driveway DONE was a real pleasure.


And remember the last post about being able to count on rain? Yep, another rainy year - back to Mudfest! Last year was a break, but the year before... ugh.
A local business delivered 5 cubic yards of mulch, so I spent some time trying to change the texture of the trail.
Before:
 
After:


Didn't get it all done, but simple enough to do. Now if would just stop raining so I could enjoy it!

Saturday, May 25, 2013

rain water collection

A good thing about the North East is rain - we seem to get plenty of it.
Over the years I have been successfully installing rainwater collection systems - gutters and drains that lead to a 55 gallon drum with two spigots - one for draining and one for overflow. I have done this to the shed and the outhouse, and this year the studio.
 The studio roof is roughly 12' by 16', so I will be able to harvest more water than I will ever need. I had bought gutters to put on the cabin, but realized the maintenance of gutters 22' off the ground would be difficult, if not impossible.

 I attached the down spout to the rear wall and pitched it into 55 gallon drum. The drum was used for tomato paste, and I buy the empty drums from a tomato sauce factory near by. Yes, there is such a thing as a tomato sauce factory. The picture doesn't show the lid, but I cut an opening and lined it with mosquito netting - I'll take a picture on the next visit.
 The height is new for me - this is 4' off the ground. I built it with four 4" by 4" lengths of pressure treated lumber, capped with 1" by 6" pressure treated lumber on both the top and bottom. 
Why four feet off the ground? To pipe into the sink of course!
everybody needs a sink!

The sink is attached to a drainpipe that is about 15' long and connected to T junction with 10' of drilled pipe. My hope is that this will spread the water out.
So now I wait. I have been busy working downstate, but have heard of mighty rains this Spring - I will see if this is successful on the next trip up.

The cabin on a glorious spring morning May, 2013

the view from the cabin, early spring 2013

Wednesday, January 2, 2013

New Years visit

We made a quick visit to the oasis on New Years. Unlike last year, we needed snowshoes to reach the site. About a foot of snow had fallen two nights before.

The snow showed signs of someone walking their dog along the drive, but they don't go beyond the fence.
There were animal tracks everywhere - I could ID rabbit, deer, and dog, but I think there were a few other animals out there too.
MJ's studio is holding up well...
As is the cabin...
Note the 'snow hole' giving access to below the deck. MJ said she saw something shoot away as we walked by - about the size of a cat; all she saw was the tail. It was so fast she couldn't ID beyond that. (At least she saw it, more than I can say!)

Always lovely to visit, but too cold to stay!