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Archive for October 2011

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Our egg stand is finally open again!

This has been a good week for eggs. Our older hens seem to have finished molting, this year's hens are finally laying, and we have ten guest ISA brown hens who are also contributing. Thank you Rohan and Khosrow for bringing us your peri-urban hens. Our newest additions spent their summer as part of a peri-urban farm jointly run by Backyard Bounty, Futurewatch and the Salvation Army. They have come to winter here and add to our egg output.

The upshot of all this is that the "SOLD OUT" sign is finally down and we're open for business! Come and get your free range All Sorts eggs!

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$100 Food Forest in the running for Innovation prize

Carrot Common in Toronto is an anchor in the health food store landscape in Toronto. There is a charitable foundation branch called Carrot Cache. Carrot Cache is a well know supporter or organic, community, and alternative food systems. Every year Carrot Cache sponsors an Organic Farming Innovation Prize. Past years have seen this prize give credit to some incredible ideas that may have otherwise been overlooked.

Last years winner, Bob Balour of The Fresh Veggies, created an open source computer program for vegetable growers. His program enables farmers to select crops, decide how many weeks they want it harvested, the quantity per week, and the price. The program then generates a succession plan,  seed order, greenhouse, field planting, transplant, and harvest plan.

 

This year we submitted out $100 Food Forest to be considered for the Innovation Prize. Check it out!

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Perennial "potato" harvest

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Sunchoke harvest of 2011.

This year was the first crack at our perennial root harvest. They aren't quite potatoes, but almost. These tubers are known as sunchokes, or Jeruselum artichokes. Really they aren't artichokes at all but the perennial sunflower, Helianthus tuberosus.

Two or three years ago (I can't remember exactly) we planted the sunchokes with the hopes of getting a yearly harvest. For the first couple years they were just left to populate the soil. We didn't want to over harvest them for fear of harvesting viable populations of tubers too fast. First rule of foraging, only take what can be sustained by the system, even if it is in your own back yard!

So we left them, and left them another year. Finally, the third year, we could harvest. Tim is very happy about this as he just LOVES sunchokes. When we first bought tubers from Whole Circle Farm he was very sad that we couldn't eat them. But we did manage to keep them for the winter and plant them in anticipation of yearly harvests down the road.

And here it is.  This lot came from perhaps 3-5 foot area square. Just a small space. We thought this was a great harvest from such a small space, especially compared to growing potatoes in a similar space. It was only a fraction of what we could have harvested as you  see.

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Sunchokes harvested.

We have two areas of sunchokes. One beside our annual gardens in a kind of sun trap. It is beside a large erratic boulder brought in during the ice age. It is a warm little spot at the edge of some tall spruce trees.The second plating is along the front fence of the house. We wanted to ensure that we had a sizeable harvest every year, to test different growing conditions, and to provide a visual barrier from the road.

Sunchokes are very versatile. Not only can we eat them, but they can be used as winter feed for animals, as a silage feed, and have potential as a biodigester crop. Talk about a top 10 permaculture plant!

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Stems from the sunchokes, a lot of biomass.

So we harvested this lot. Of course we aren't in a position to create silage and don't have a biodigester so what do we do with the stalks?

The best stalks were picked and are drying in the greenhouse. Maybe they will make good wood substitutes for simple fencing, as bowdrills for fire making, or who knows. Not too sure how they will be used, but I am sure we will be able to find SOMETHING to do with them.

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Sunchoke stems drying.

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