Friday, February 18, 2011

Remembering Season 1 on the Farm

I am starting a blog to document the exciting goings on that occur at Rogue Fox Farm. It is officially the beginning of our second season here, but let's quickly recap last season:

We were a suburban family trying to learn the ropes of a farm. Given that, I'd say we did pretty darn well. We had a few disease issues - early blight with the tomatoes, some nematode issue with the rutabagas and possibly fusarium something or other with the okra...but I'm still not sure about that one. That being said, we got a ton of produce out of our 'little' garden. We grew a number of things including tomatoes, cucumbers, corn, squash, eggplant, okra, peppers, beans, rutabagas, lettuce, kale, swiss chard, etc.

We also tried our hand at animals...the easiest animals available: laying hens. We built their coop and raised them from chicks. There were 19 hens, 1 rooster. The fox, over the course of the winter, got 2 hens from us and we got the rooster (he had begun to get aggressive).  More to come on that.

And because pictures are much  more entertaining than words will ever be:


Gardens
Here you can see our lower garden through three stages. The dots correlate to the same plants in different stages. Red are the tomatoes (note the fence they're growing on disappear), Yellow are beans, and Blue is the okra.

Here's the middle garden. We only got one picture of it that season...I was lazy. And nevermind the Spanish labels.
  
While we're on the topic of gardens, why not show you our beautiful produce?

Produce
 We got quantity alright!
And variety...
And quality (usually, haha)
 We also got eggs for the first time. Cute ones at that. They are brown, blue green, cream and occasionally pinkish.

  


Chickens
They start out cute.


We made them a little halfway house to live in before the coop was finished.


And finally...there was a chicken coop built with love. LOTS of love.

Here's the montage of the creation and its residents in their full grown stage.



1 comment:

  1. None of these pictures are straightforward. Even the hand holding the eggs of dubious size is strange.

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