Hello everyone! So glad it is getting warmer, spring is finally here.Here is what’s going on at DAY SPRING FARM. Princess lollipop had her calf on Feb.21, a healthy bull. He is adorable, bouncing about in his outdoor calf pen and drooling on customers fingers. We recently found out that two more of our cows, Fawn and Dolly are expecting calves l. Dolly in October, Fawn on Christmas day! We will let you know when they are born.Gardening, gardening, gardening! I think that is all we do now that it is warmer. Peas are being planted in outdoor rows. It is normally too cold outside to plant anything in the ground but since we have a plastic mulch layer, it warms the soil to the proper temperature for warmer weather loving crops. The proper temperature is about 60 degrees Fahrenheit. Broccoli and kale are steadily being planted under row cover. TIP: If you don’t want to buy row cover (in my opinion it is well worth the buy) you could use bedclothes. We have spread lime to raise the PH. of the soil as the PH.[of the soil] should be 7-7.5; chicken manure and fish meal to be followed by greensand and potassium to replace nutrients. We planted potatoes a week ago. We tilled a swath about 7 feet wide and 150 feet long and planted them, eyes up, every twelve inches with rows twelve inches apart.We have tomatoes growing out our ears! Roma, Striped German, Big Beef, Black Cherry, Clementines: you name it, we have it. They were planted in the middle of March and will be planted outside on the first of May. Cucumbers are planted in soil blocks. Soil blocking is potting soil that is watered and then pressed firmly into a metal frame, then ejected. The seed is then placed in a small indentation in the top of the soil block. The advantages to soil blocks are that
- it reduces the use of plastic.
- it air prunes the roots when the root reaches the edge so the plant does not get root bound.
- it is very good for transplanting cucurbits(squash,cucumbers,watermelons etc.) because they DO not like their roots disturbed
We are trying a new kind of cucumber this year. The name of is West Indian Burr Gherkin. I won’t write anything about them yet as I don’t have any experience with them yet. But Pam Dawling who gardens 3 ½ acres in central VA has a wonderful article about them at a website she writes for. You can find it at: www.growingformarket.com.Just recently a friend gave us a little garden cart that needed a face lift. It was 36in wide and 48in long.I and my sister tore it down to the bare metal frame and rebuilt it. We used reclaimed oak fence boards and a few 2x6 boards. It is now 50in wide and 60in long and very sturdy. We chose the dimensions so it would carry fifteen 1020 flats without any room to jostle around. I have included a few pictures below.