NOT Turning on a dime
The dime is stopped in mid-air. For the uninitiated, what am I talking about? The Flood, or more appropriately this year, The Floods. As members and veg lovers who have been with us and other Intervale farms for a while will know, we do get flooded from time to time. Usually it is in March or April when the snows melt and then maybe again in mid to late October, but the late one is only every once and a while. Well, with the extreme snows we all knew we were going to get something, but add the late spring and almost three times the average amount of rainfall this month and you've got some continuing and large floods.
I had just looked at this graph page before I went out and seeded radishes, carrots, parsnips, and hakurei turnips (which are awesome if you haven't had them, a tender sweet turnip you can eat raw. I will include a pic just to have something a little more fun than a graph.)Well, just like the weather, the predictions side of the graph is not always right, in fact you can often count on it being wrong. Despite things being a few weeks late I have a feeling it will still be a very productive growing year. To keep it in perspective, all we have really done at this point is pushed back carrots and early lettuce a week or two, assuming it doesn't rain forever.
It does make perennials look really attractive to me. The rhubarb is looking happy as a clam, and the trees are starting to take off (I planted to more this year (one peach, one plum). With that in mind I have decided to add two beds of asparagus this year, instead of one. I think I will still have a few asparagus plants to give away to members, worry not (extra rhubarbs found a happy home a few years ago).
On a "how politics actually effects me note" it turns out this flood gauge page that I and lots of farmers look at a lot is being shut down for lack of funding. They're asking for donations at the web-page. They should let the military hold a bake sale and let us keep our flood gauge.
1 Comments:
Hello Joshy! I looked at your bottlenecking and I do quite agree - a species begins to have less traits to mix with and therefor becomes somewhat, well, let's just say there's a lot of dogs out there with chronic issues due to inbreeding. I am so happy to revisit your blog! Let me know if the Farm needs some potato planting help. -Jessyloo
ps - getting hits on my "open heart" post from last year ; ) Glad to see your getting googled!
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