• Post Format Gallery
  • Extraction, Illustrated

    Lughnasa                                                                      Honey Moon

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    The colony as honey highrise before extraction.  Kate’s homemade super covers are on the ladder.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

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    The equipment washed and ready.  From top left, uncapping tank, extractor barrel, five gallon pails with our three filters, extractor stand in process.

     

     

     

     

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    My handy wife at work creating a stable platform for our indoors extracting.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

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    The extractor in the kitchen.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

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    Kate’s dextrous work with the uncapping knife made extraction much easier.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

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    The result, two pails this full, plus some left yet in the barrel and in the uncapping tank.  Our hair dryer innovation pictured here.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

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    What are mommy and daddy doing now?

     

    This gallery contains 11 photographs in all as   photograph etc.

  • Americana

    Lughnasa                                                                      Honey Moon

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    Two slices of Americana, one yesterday and one today.  The first pictures are from the Fabric Outlet Store, a place owned by a funny Jewish guy who liked my hat.  The second are from an event that happens not 6 miles from our home every August, but to which we went for the first time today, the Nowthen Threshing Show.  I’ll let the pictures speak for themselves.

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    This gallery contains 11 photographs in all as   photograph etc.

  • Lilies, Leeks and Lumber

    Summer                                                       First Harvest Moon

    Today, again, harvesting trees.  This time black locust, a thorny tree that grows fast and germinates easily.  In olden days fence posts, foundation posts, anything requiring a sturdy rot-resistant wood were common uses of the black locust.  This tree will get used as firewood for the great Woolly ingathering here on Monday.

    Other hardwood trees like oak, in particular, but ash and maple and others as well, require a year or two of drying to get their moisture content below 20%.  Black locust is a low moisture wood even when it’s alive.

    In felling this tree my directional cut was at a slight angle and the tree came down on our vegetable garden fence.  But.  Fortuna was with me.  The main branch that hit the fence landed right on top of a fence post, square cedar. It didn’t mind at all.  May have sunk a bit lower in the earth. A slight dent in the gate where a smaller top branch made impact, otherwise, the fence came through fine.  Whew.  Felling trees is art as well as science and I mishandled this one.

    Early this morning I sprayed Enthuse, a product to generally spiff plants, give them an energy boost.  That was over all the vegetables and the blooming lilies.  The lilies are my favorite flowers by far and almost all of the varieties that I have I purchased at the North Star lily sale last spring.  These are lilies grown here, hardy for our winters.  Here are pictures of the current state of the gardens and preparations for the Woolly homecoming.

    This gallery contains 5 photographs in all as   photograph etc.

  • American Prairie Reserve and its conceptual partners

    Summer                                                             First Harvest Moon

    Make no little plans.  Daniel Burnham

    The American Prairie Reserve fits Burnham, a macro-thinking architect of Chicago.  This is a plan to knit together lands under public management by a private foundation’s purchase of lands from willing sellers.  The goal:  an intact grasslands eco-system, 3,000,000 acres in size, the size conservation biologists estimate is necessary to preserve what was once a dominant ecology in the middle and western U.S.

    They’re well on their way as the maps below can show.

    A similar idea that I recall from a NYT magazine article years ago is the Buffalo Commons. And the wikipedia information. Apparently it still has some life, too.  It was in part a response to the unsustainable agricultural practices in the mapped area.

    And, there’s one I hadn’t heard about, the Western Wildway.  See maps below.

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    a grassland reserve of THREE-MILLION acres – a wildlife spectacle that rivals the Serengeti and an AWE-INSPIRING place for you and your children to explore.

    Imagine helping to
    build a national treasure.

    Two maps, the bottom map is current.

     

    This gallery contains 5 photographs in all as   photograph etc.

  • The Fruits of July

    Summer                                                                             Solstice Moon

    A cooler morning beckons.  Mummies to pluck off the cherry and plum trees.  I’m going for manual disease control of a fungus peculiar to stone fruits, brown rot.  The best way to cope with it is good hygiene, i.e. cleaning up infected fruits after they fall.

    I’m going to try to get ahead of this by picking infected fruit off the tree before they fall to the ground.  Moisture and heat, especially as the fruit ripens increases the spread of brown rot so removing the fruit early should help.  I can do this because I only have four effected trees, two cherry and two plum.  This would not be effective for a larger operation.

    A week or so of consistent warmth, if not exactly summer heat, should boost growth.  A week from today I begin the next phase of the International Ag labs program.  I’m looking forward to completing the year, then having a full year with it next year.

    Here’s a fruit gallery from our orchard on July 1st:

     

    Blueberries

    Pears

    Apples in a bag

    Elderberries

    Plums

    Currants

     

    Quince

     

     

    This gallery contains 8 photographs in all as   photograph etc.

  • Bee Diary: June 29, 2013 An entry for Ruth

    Summer                                                                          Solstice Moon

    A set of photos for Ruth, my bee helper.

    Ruth, I was sure glad you and Gabe and your Mom and Dad came to visit.  I’m going to be putting those stones in place for steps in the fire pit as you suggested.  You might also be interested to know that we got the lights working for the playhouse.  A little late, but soon enough that your grandma plans to hang the chandelier crystals.

    Here’s a few photographs to explain what happens next with the bees.  You might remember we used the smoker, right?  The smoke calms the bees down.

    We also used the hive tool to separate the frames and to lift up the hive box to check for swarm cells.

    This week, a week after you and I checked the bees (well, a week and a day), the nectar flow is about to start.  That’s when the bees make honey to store over the winter.  Lucky for us they make way more than they need.  That’s why we can harvest honey in September.

    To collect honey to harvest in our honey extractor we first have to put on boxes called honey supers.  They have frames smaller than the hive boxes that you saw.  Here’s a picture of both of them.  Which one is the honey super frame?  The one on the left or the one on the right?

    The honey super is smaller than the hive box.  It’s half as big.  How many honey supers would make up one hive box?  Here’s a picture of both of them.  Which is which?

    This is a picture of the colony (3 hive boxes) with two honey supers on it.  It’s as tall as you are now!  In some years we can put as many six or eight honey supers on.  Imagine how tall that would be.

    Here’s Grandma and Grandpa saying we love you all!!!

    This gallery contains 6 photographs in all as   photograph etc.

  • Images of Home

    Beltane                                                               Early Growth Moon

    A few current photos.  Two for Mark, who wanted to see the fire pit.

    Note:  these last two show off the seamstress skills of Minnesota Grandma.

    This gallery contains 8 photographs in all as   photograph etc.

  • Another Country

    Spring                                                               Bloodroot Moon

    A few pictures from my trip to Mt. Vernon.

    Before the pictures though.  Here in Washington and at Mt. Vernon the early history of our nation has a presence on the street, among the documents, in the traditions, and by shaping the forms of architecture from government buildings to residential homes: the brick homes, the limestone greco-roman revival government buildings and monuments and the cobblestone street in Alexandria, Virginia.  The constitution and the declaration of independence lie entombed in the Archives not far from where I write this.

    Each place you go some element of our history peeks around the corner, waves. Says, “Psst, want to see some history, kid?”  I remember the same sense when I was on the Capitol, the sleeper train that runs between Chicago and Washington.  Once we got into central Pennsylvania the architecture changed.  We passed places I knew mostly from history books.

    Here’s the thing.  I’m a Midwestern guy born, raised and never left.  A heartlander.  This does not feel like my country here on the east coast.  When I think of Minnesota from here, it feels far away, up north and filled with pine trees and lakes.  Which, of course, as most of you know who read this, it is.  Pine trees and lakes are in a large part of the state and they do define our identity as Minnesotans.

    This feels like the old world, Europe to our heartland new world.  A place so built up and fought over and crusted up with money and power that it has a different tone entirely from the one at home.

    Sure, we’re all subject to the same government and fly the same flag, speak the same language and send our kids off to the same military.  True.  But the east coast, like the south, the West and the Left Coast are different enough to be different countries in Europe or Southeast Asia or Africa.  You know this, I’m sure, but I’m experiencing it right now and it unsettles me in some way.

    Here are the pictures.

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  • Denver and Running Aces

    Lugnasa                                                            Garlic Planting Moon

    Kate at the Track

    Kate consulting the handicapper/race analyst at Running Aces

    Ruth, looking beautiful, like her Grandmother on the Georgtown Loop Railroad

    Gabe, responding to the train whistle

    Jon and Jen

     

     

     

    This gallery contains 6 photographs in all as   photograph etc.