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Hans Albert Quistorff, LMT projects on permies Hans Massage Qberry Farm magnet therapy gmail hquistorff
 
 
 
 
Hans Quistorff wrote:Interesting Project.
I spent 9 years in northern Maine so I am familiar with the winter snow. Is that what you are planning to fill the north pond?
From your description the water you show on the SE side must be to low to divert into the ponds.
Is the white line from the north pond to the center pond a water line? Do you plan to put a ram pump on it for a water tank?
I have 25 years experience with dairy goats. You will find if you are working on the land the goats will go with you an forage while you work. This can potentially cut down on fencing. If you are planning to over winter your does I recommend You plant red clover in the bare areas on your land this spring. It grows tall and fixes nitrogen and is easy to cut and dry for winter hay, If it is cut when some of the flower heads have set seed the goat berries will replant it when you take the goats for winter walks. We tested our goats for milk production. With red clover hay, and apple cider vinegar with molasses in warm water inthe winter we got the highest butter fat test.
I hope these ideas help.
If anyone is interested I have 5 acres with a similar slope available here on the Key Peninsula in western Washington state.
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Hans Albert Quistorff, LMT projects on permies Hans Massage Qberry Farm magnet therapy gmail hquistorff
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Trying to achieve self-reliance on a tiny suburban plot: http://gardenofgaladriel.blogspot.com
 
 
 
 
"A society grows great when old men plant trees whose shade they know they shall never sit in."
 
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"...specialization is for insects." - Lazarus Long
Universal Introduction to Permies
How Permies.com works
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Hans Quistorff wrote:Reminds me of the comment by a visitor from N. Dakota at the end of December.
Now I understand why dad wants to live on Puget Sound; you don't have to shovel rain.
Then there was the man from Africa that could not believe we insulated the house by packing snow around it.
Really like the RMH in the bubble around your home.
 It's beautiful and brutal in the same breath. And if the bunnies can deal, what the heck am I complaining about, right?
  It's beautiful and brutal in the same breath. And if the bunnies can deal, what the heck am I complaining about, right?
Bill Erickson wrote:Tristan, all those trees coming is going to be interesting, and I hope your soil has thawed enough to put them in. If not, think about getting dirt and or peat moss, along with shredding a bunch of black and white news print (no multi-color stuff). Figure out a place where you can put all those plants back to sleep. I'd think about expanding the sun room area a bit, if possible, to give you someplace to get you back some dormancy without letting those rootlets get frozen. Use the shredded newsprint as your moisture dump and the soil/peat combination to provide insulation. Clean straw will also work as a way to provide insulation, but you have to watch out for rodent incursion to what they view as an end of winter buffet.
Or if you can, have the place you are getting them from hold them off for another month. I asked a nursery to do that, and they were able to hold my trees until mid-May, since the last killing frost is normally around Memorial Day. I found something from the University of Maine regarding various frost and freeze dates, hopefully that will provide you with some help in regards to what you face.
Unversity of Maine Frost/Freeze information
It included a link to this PDF of Frost/Freeze dates as well. Hope that helps you with your situation.
Also, your videos look good.
 The running plan was to get heal-in areas loosened up by middle April so the soil could drain and warm a bit more. We do have the lean-to style "tarp shed" along the north side of the rig that picks up enough warmth from the sunroom and heater to keep it 10-15* warmer than outdoors at night, plus it's pretty damp and shady in there. Not the best place to be storing the firewood, but should work well for the bare-roots when they initially arrive assuming we're not still looking at Ice-Age Now out there. The strawberries might have to stay in the sunroom though. In an average year, we would have already started "mud season" by now (you know, that thing that happens between winter and fall), but we're at least 3 weeks behind schedule.
  The running plan was to get heal-in areas loosened up by middle April so the soil could drain and warm a bit more. We do have the lean-to style "tarp shed" along the north side of the rig that picks up enough warmth from the sunroom and heater to keep it 10-15* warmer than outdoors at night, plus it's pretty damp and shady in there. Not the best place to be storing the firewood, but should work well for the bare-roots when they initially arrive assuming we're not still looking at Ice-Age Now out there. The strawberries might have to stay in the sunroom though. In an average year, we would have already started "mud season" by now (you know, that thing that happens between winter and fall), but we're at least 3 weeks behind schedule.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 She doesn't yet understand the word "no", but overall she's not much trouble. She came to us paper trained with a preference for the outdoors, which has been a huge plus
  She doesn't yet understand the word "no", but overall she's not much trouble. She came to us paper trained with a preference for the outdoors, which has been a huge plus
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 (not predation and all the others seem healthy and strong) so have 11 now. At this point, we're pretty sure that one is a drake and at least 8 of the others are girls. They haven't been hatch-sexed or anything so we're just going by leg thickness, size and presence of the muscovy "moobies"
 (not predation and all the others seem healthy and strong) so have 11 now. At this point, we're pretty sure that one is a drake and at least 8 of the others are girls. They haven't been hatch-sexed or anything so we're just going by leg thickness, size and presence of the muscovy "moobies"  
 Like I said, very difficult spring/early summer. There's also meadowsweet and a couple types of willow, chives and basil.
 Like I said, very difficult spring/early summer. There's also meadowsweet and a couple types of willow, chives and basil.
 
 Soon will be spinach, kale and a fresh planting of edible pod peas.
  Soon will be spinach, kale and a fresh planting of edible pod peas.
 Our water-in-the-pipe issues have been traced to three main problems: 1) pipe dips in the middle of the bench, trapping condensate away from direct heat in a place difficult to reach, 2) the bench is directly attached to the ground, with no moisture barrier and a high water table, allowing the bench to wick up far too much moisture year round, and 3) burning green/wet wood in a plastic bubble. To correct 1 and 2, we're tearing the bench out completely and underlaying with a layer of plastic followed by a layer of aluminum foil, then ensuring we have a decent angle on the pipe draining out to the far end away from the manifold. We're also extending the bench to include a dead-end along the east wall of the sunroom and running the bench under the overhang of the 5th wheel, placing the stack on the north wall of the cordwood shed. The bench will divide the shed structure into the shed proper and the duck house, providing a warm area for the little guys during our bitter white season.
  Our water-in-the-pipe issues have been traced to three main problems: 1) pipe dips in the middle of the bench, trapping condensate away from direct heat in a place difficult to reach, 2) the bench is directly attached to the ground, with no moisture barrier and a high water table, allowing the bench to wick up far too much moisture year round, and 3) burning green/wet wood in a plastic bubble. To correct 1 and 2, we're tearing the bench out completely and underlaying with a layer of plastic followed by a layer of aluminum foil, then ensuring we have a decent angle on the pipe draining out to the far end away from the manifold. We're also extending the bench to include a dead-end along the east wall of the sunroom and running the bench under the overhang of the 5th wheel, placing the stack on the north wall of the cordwood shed. The bench will divide the shed structure into the shed proper and the duck house, providing a warm area for the little guys during our bitter white season.
 Overall, things are coming along and there's been mixed, slower than I'd like progress, but certainly still progress. Looking back and realizing I've only been here just over 1 year, and realizing how much has been done already, it does put a smile on my face. Over the winter, when you're by necessity doing more "thinking" than "doing", it's easy to lay out all these enormously far reaching goals that you could never hope to actually attain, but after putting in a summer, I do still expect that next year's plans will be just as grandiose and overzealous as this years were
  Overall, things are coming along and there's been mixed, slower than I'd like progress, but certainly still progress. Looking back and realizing I've only been here just over 1 year, and realizing how much has been done already, it does put a smile on my face. Over the winter, when you're by necessity doing more "thinking" than "doing", it's easy to lay out all these enormously far reaching goals that you could never hope to actually attain, but after putting in a summer, I do still expect that next year's plans will be just as grandiose and overzealous as this years were  I figure that if I can finish the peach and cherry "grove" thinning/clearing, plant another 100 black locusts and 20 autumn olives, dig a 4500 gallon frog pond, build/rebuild a 40ft long rocket mass heater bench, build a cordwood shed/duckhouse, prepare all the firewood we'll need for the winter and still have time to make enough money to hopefully, someday, afford a much needed backhoe/loader, all before the snow flies again, I'm doing pretty damned good! If I can tell fellow permies about it all and maybe make a few videos showing what's going on, I'm friggin superman!
  I figure that if I can finish the peach and cherry "grove" thinning/clearing, plant another 100 black locusts and 20 autumn olives, dig a 4500 gallon frog pond, build/rebuild a 40ft long rocket mass heater bench, build a cordwood shed/duckhouse, prepare all the firewood we'll need for the winter and still have time to make enough money to hopefully, someday, afford a much needed backhoe/loader, all before the snow flies again, I'm doing pretty damned good! If I can tell fellow permies about it all and maybe make a few videos showing what's going on, I'm friggin superman! 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Hans Albert Quistorff, LMT projects on permies Hans Massage Qberry Farm magnet therapy gmail hquistorff
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 She's familiar with permies and rather than try to explain all the plans I have for this little piece of mud while she was on the clock, I told her to check out my project thread. If you do, welcome and don't be a stranger - sign up and start sharing! I'm sure I can speak for all the folks around here when I say we'd love to hear the details about the compost heated aquaculture greenhouse fueled by elephant crap
  She's familiar with permies and rather than try to explain all the plans I have for this little piece of mud while she was on the clock, I told her to check out my project thread. If you do, welcome and don't be a stranger - sign up and start sharing! I'm sure I can speak for all the folks around here when I say we'd love to hear the details about the compost heated aquaculture greenhouse fueled by elephant crap  
 
 Next year, the potato stacks all go on top of hardware cloth
  Next year, the potato stacks all go on top of hardware cloth

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 A nice dark plaster would help hugely with solar gain. But hey, it's FAR better than it was last year.
  A nice dark plaster would help hugely with solar gain. But hey, it's FAR better than it was last year.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Tim Arbo wrote:Good Heavens, Tristan.
Wow.
I'm down here outside Belfast.
I'm just hankering to do some work on my 2 acres.
First, the family requires the woodstove installed. That'll take the edge off the oil bill.
How do you like this heat wave?
Sincerely,
Tim
 And if you need clay, come up for visit and help dig our ponds
  And if you need clay, come up for visit and help dig our ponds  
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 I measured a toasty 90*F under the duck butts on some pretty cold nights. The air temp was usually between 35* and 45*, though some of the colder nights (and after the longer stretches of seriously sub-zero weather) we had their water freeze up overnight.
  I measured a toasty 90*F under the duck butts on some pretty cold nights. The air temp was usually between 35* and 45*, though some of the colder nights (and after the longer stretches of seriously sub-zero weather) we had their water freeze up overnight.
 Along the back of this bed, I put in a trellis of bird netting and planted sugar snap peas, morning glories and moon flowers, then just a few days ago kentucky wonder pole beans. Overall, the bed is approximately 40ft long and 4.5 feet wide, though we just recently expanded it up the hill to the side of the driveway, making it technically about 10 feet wide with the path down the middle. This new section is planted with only siberian pea shrub thusfar - soil is all hard compacted clay so we want to give it some time to loosen up under the cardboard and mulch.
  Along the back of this bed, I put in a trellis of bird netting and planted sugar snap peas, morning glories and moon flowers, then just a few days ago kentucky wonder pole beans. Overall, the bed is approximately 40ft long and 4.5 feet wide, though we just recently expanded it up the hill to the side of the driveway, making it technically about 10 feet wide with the path down the middle. This new section is planted with only siberian pea shrub thusfar - soil is all hard compacted clay so we want to give it some time to loosen up under the cardboard and mulch.
 
 In this are planted a couple more roses (dirt cheap - thank you Mardens!), patches of creeping thyme, 4 hardy lavender, a few patches of purslane, several OP cherry tomato plants, OP jalepeno peppers and OP long cayenne peppers. Oh, and some nasturtium
  In this are planted a couple more roses (dirt cheap - thank you Mardens!), patches of creeping thyme, 4 hardy lavender, a few patches of purslane, several OP cherry tomato plants, OP jalepeno peppers and OP long cayenne peppers. Oh, and some nasturtium 
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 I also planted in 7 black locust, 12 autumn olives and seeded with clover.
  I also planted in 7 black locust, 12 autumn olives and seeded with clover.
 That's 25 black walnuts and 10 butternuts, plus roughly 30 black locust and 30 autumn olives, planted over 1.5 acres or so. The soil up there is way more fertile than I realized - no joke, by the time I cleared 1 acre, where I started was grown back in to waist deep with blackberries~!  Just hoping the blackberries don't swamp out the walnuts now!
  That's 25 black walnuts and 10 butternuts, plus roughly 30 black locust and 30 autumn olives, planted over 1.5 acres or so. The soil up there is way more fertile than I realized - no joke, by the time I cleared 1 acre, where I started was grown back in to waist deep with blackberries~!  Just hoping the blackberries don't swamp out the walnuts now!
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 We got around 4 dozen eggs out of the girls before they started going broody, but then even the ones that hadn't gone broody stopped laying. That was three weeks ago. Very strange and a little frustrating with egg prices up like they are.
  We got around 4 dozen eggs out of the girls before they started going broody, but then even the ones that hadn't gone broody stopped laying. That was three weeks ago. Very strange and a little frustrating with egg prices up like they are.
 Better start getting lots of eggs out of these girls, because that's going to be a lot of bellies to fill over the winter.
  Better start getting lots of eggs out of these girls, because that's going to be a lot of bellies to fill over the winter. 3
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 Also started setting posts for the shed rebuild. No pictures or video though...not yet. Will try to do so but it's hard to remember (and then when you do you're right in the middle of whatever and don't want to stop to get the camera).
 Also started setting posts for the shed rebuild. No pictures or video though...not yet. Will try to do so but it's hard to remember (and then when you do you're right in the middle of whatever and don't want to stop to get the camera).
 ...and behind them along the back edge of the old skid trail is the other apx 8lb of jerusalem artichoke
 ...and behind them along the back edge of the old skid trail is the other apx 8lb of jerusalem artichoke
 
 It's really starting to look pasture-y now, which is a far cry from how it looked last year at this time (full of sapling stumps and unrotted slash sticking out of the soil, puddles everywhere and a lot of bare dirt). Clover is even taking this year, which it wouldn't do last year, likely due to high acid. I spread several varieties of wildflower and forb seed around with still not great success, but much of it was in need of cold stratification and I was a little late in getting it out there this spring since May came in *way* warmer than expected - we went from snowmelt to middle 70s in a matter of two weeks, which was very weird. I still have some work to do with clearing around the periphery, pushing back into the eastern forest edge a bit and would like to further thin some of the brushy areas we're leaving, but it's definitely coming along fast now
  It's really starting to look pasture-y now, which is a far cry from how it looked last year at this time (full of sapling stumps and unrotted slash sticking out of the soil, puddles everywhere and a lot of bare dirt). Clover is even taking this year, which it wouldn't do last year, likely due to high acid. I spread several varieties of wildflower and forb seed around with still not great success, but much of it was in need of cold stratification and I was a little late in getting it out there this spring since May came in *way* warmer than expected - we went from snowmelt to middle 70s in a matter of two weeks, which was very weird. I still have some work to do with clearing around the periphery, pushing back into the eastern forest edge a bit and would like to further thin some of the brushy areas we're leaving, but it's definitely coming along fast now  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 btw Laughed a lot imagining you guys sneaking a thermometer underneath a sleeping duck's but
  btw Laughed a lot imagining you guys sneaking a thermometer underneath a sleeping duck's but  
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