#carnivore Cinnamon Toast Crunch: image Pork rinds, melted butter, salt, cinnamon. We are calling it Skin-a-mon Toast Crunch. #grownostr #porkstr #butter #foodstr
My wife made a sausage roll up today. I don't know what else you'd call it. It's a layer of bread dough covered in sausage, rolled up, and baked. Here is a cross section: image I then turned it into a grilled cheese sandwich: image #grownostr #dinner
Proof of #kids: a little path into a clump of raspberries so they can reach more. Little things like this will be missed when the kids grow up. image #parenting #homeschooling #kidstr
Here is one way I'm stacking functions here at our farm. I finally got the #biogas system up for this year, and it's starting to bubble away and I'm finally got enough pressure to supply a trickle of gas. I haven't tried to ignite it yet. This is the Homebiogas 4 anerobic digester. image I've been feeding it cow and pig poop. image The "main" output is biogas, but the other output is this effluent rich in microbes (in the 5 gallon bucket), which goes into the worm bin for production of worms and castings. image I'm hauling the effluent to the worms by hand every couple days, but I set up the anerobic digester purposefully uphill of the worms so eventually I can gravity feed the effluent to the worms automatically. #grownostr #permaculture #biogas #vermiculture #worms
Let's talk tree #propagation in your #nursery by hardwood cuttings. Like @Nunya Bidness had mentioned... this is like printing money out of nothing, but we're printing value through biological processes and our own resources. Hardwood cuttings are pretty simple. You just cut a dormant branch into a size you want and stick them in the ground, literally. Make sure they are the right side up!!! Trees such as poplars and willows can be propagated by this method. Here are some basket willows planted from 8" cuttings to get you thinking. I use them as a wind break: image About a month ago, I planted some 1' OP-367 Hybrid Poplars. Here they are planted into some landscape fabric to keep down the weeds, about a month ago: image Now here they are 1 month later, I'd say average 2 stems, each 18" to 2' tall: image Here are some Silky Willows (Steamco) I planted last Thursday. Already putting on growth. Planted in 3' wide landscape fabric with drip irrigation under the fabric. image That's a black walnut in the background. Printing more trees via propagation from nuts. Now let's look at the economics. 1 month in I have 4x'ed my cutting length on the poplars, which I bought for $2.50. In the fall if they grow no taller than they are now, I have $10 worth of cuttings. This is the 2nd year for those basket willows. I cut them down to the ground in March and they've put on 7-8' of growth already on conservatively 30 stems on each plant. Say conservatively we have 210, 1' cuttings. So now I have $500 worth of cuttings per year possible from that one plant. Let's say we pot them up and sell them like "fastgrowingtrees.com" does for $86.95 a plant! Now we have our single "parent" plant making us $15,000+. At this point it's a marketing game. Or all you chicken and duck farmers, use these plants in your chicken and duck yard for cover for your birds as well as to soak up the nitrogen in their poop. The birds will weed the trees for you and help them grow faster. Stack functions in your businesses and life. Also as an aside.... these cuttings should go in the ground earlier than July! But they still work. Pretty forgiving. #permaculture #grownostr #propagation #nursery #business #plantstr #garden
I wanted to share a little on the potting soil we use for the plants in our #nursery: image What we are looking for is a medium that drains easily, yet retains moisture. The cost is also a factor. Since we pot mostly perennials, I also am looking for a fungally dominant potting mix vs. bacterially dominant as you'd have with fresh compost. Wood chips around here are easy to get by the truckload, and I use well rotted ones for the basis of my compost mix. And by "rotted" I mean "rotted": They look like soil and are completely broken down by fungus, it takes about 2-3 years. image On top of the wood chips I add about 5% by volume charged biochar. About half of this is sifted to 1/4" + and the other half of the biochar is right out of the leaf vacuum I use to crush it up. The biochar is charged with azomite, sea minerals, worm casts, and effective microorganisms (EM-1). We make the biochar right here on the farm. It serves both to provide and retain nutrients and moisture as well as provide drainage: image Then worm castings sifted to 1/8" and finer at around 5% by volume. I also raise the worms for the casts, the current system involves growing them in 4'x8' Waste Management Bagsters: image Finally about 1 quart of activated EM-1. This is 1 oz Terraganix EM-1 mixed with 1 oz blackstrap molasses in 30 oz of water: image This all gets mixed up by hand, and then we use it to pot our plants. I mix it in a gorilla cart which will provide enough for about 25-30 trade gallon pots. #grownostr #permaculture #fungi #plantstr #garden