Tuesday, September 20, 2011

“alpha-alpha” … uh, bravo bravo?

Potatoes! Tomatoes! Cape Gooseberries!  Wedding food! Cyanide poisoning!  All these things are just part of life on the farm…
There are so many stories to tell from week one of my volunteering stint at South Farm in Royston, Herfordshire.  Firstly, though, our household goods arrived late Friday afternoon! It would’ve been nice to have more than one day to unpack before Chris flew to San Antonio and I made my way (granted, only 35 minutes down the road) to the farm for a fortnight (yes, that word is actually put to use here), but we are just really pleased that everything made it and so far seems to intact.  The house already feels way more like home now that we have our couches and bed.  We’ll eventually get around to hanging pictures and organizing bookshelves but aren’t really worried about those details quite yet. 
boxes stacked in the kitchen

Chris is really enjoying his pediatric short course so far and absolutely loves the 95+ degree weather down there in Texas.  I’m crossing my fingers that he’ll actually be on the plane next Sunday when I go to London to pick him up. 
It definitely feels more like autumn on the farm.  The weather has been about 65 degrees and sunny, which is pleasant for tasks like digging but a bit chilly when the rain suddenly comes down and soaks you to the bone (yep, happened Thursday).  Basically, South Farm is a gorgeous wedding venue with its own small orchard, about 6 acres of organically farmed crops that are mainly for the kitchen to use in the wedding food, huge flower and herb gardens, pigs (fewer now than when I started…), about 150 chickens, some runner ducks, a goose, white and traditional peacocks, and a few bee hives.  I’ve probably forgotten something, but the point comes across that it’s a pretty diverse little place.  I envy any wedding photographer that gets to work there!  Katherine was hooked up with them through a volunteer matching service and loved her time there earlier this summer, so I followed suit.   Bart, at the ripe old age of 25, is in charge of the entire veggie section of the farm and does almost all the prepping/seeding/sowing/weeding/cropping/watering/etc by his self, so he welcomes volunteers!  We’re working on a seeds and/or food for labor kind of deal for the rest of the year and I’m learning so much about what and how to plant around here it’s definitely a win-win situation. 


runner beans with the patio in the background



South Farm - the main house (400 yrs old!)




curious Angora goat

Angora goats



little spotted piggie scratching his own back on the tractor... very cute


I’m realizing that you have to be ruthless when farming.  Hacking off the majority of a tomato plant’s branches, trashing about 20 pots of gooseberries all of which still had some un-ripened fruit, and pulling up eggplants that were still producing was distressing!  But I’m told the tomatoes will produce better fruit, we needed more space in the greenhouses to start new pea and bok choy crops, and the eggplants needed pulling to make room for the carrots for next years’ spring weddings.  Even something as simple as harvesting green beans took some getting used to:  At first I’d grab each bean individually, hold the rest of the plant, and gently twist off the bean.  HA.  After an hour that technique gave way to grabbing a handful of mostly beans with some leaves and yanking them off into the basket.  Way more efficient! 
seed tray of Bok Choy


the (newly organized) greenhouse


Golden Crown tomatoes- my absolute favorite


Alfafla (read: alpha alpha) green manure :D

Most of Tuesday and Wednesday were spent harvesting the Picasso and King Edward potatoes.  The potato field actually looked unused because it had been over-planted with green manure called “alpha alpha” (for full comedic effect you have to say it out loud) which I only later realized was a different pronunciation of alfalfa.  Ha!  Anyway, we harvested the potatoes by dragging a digger-thing behind the tractor, then hopping off to grab whatever potatoes came to the surface, then repeating the process over and over.  Comedic relief was in the next paddock over, when one of the angora goatswould start head-butting the piggies, which doesn’t hurt them at all but makes them oink and yell and generally verbalize their displeasure.  After six hours there weren’t any more potatoes surfacing, so we called it a day (PS, my back was ridiculously sore) and left the potatoes to dry in the sun.  (I tossed a few damaged ones to the pigs because I felt sorry for them.) The next day we sorted the potatoes by size and variety and weighed them.  Final weight was more than half a ton!
Picasso Potatoes

I bet most people reading this have glazed eyes by now, so let’s talk about the dangers of vegetables… dun, dun, dunnnnnnn.  Did you know that raw lima beans (aka butter beans) break down and produce cyanide in your gut? Crazy!  Bart gave himself a nasty case of cyanide poisoning last year by throwing some raw beans into his soup and not cooking them enough.  I had no idea of this lima bean danger – is it common knowledge to everyone except Bart and myself?  It seems like such an important little tidbit…
Friday morning I helped Andy with the chickens.  These chickens have it good – they have a huge pen with trees on one side (chickens like to roost in low tree branches) and a field on the other.  We threw a bunch of feed and some beet leaves down (tasty chicky treat) and then Andy taught me how to avoid getting pecked while stealing the chicken eggs literally out from under the hens.  Against all odds, the first egg I collected was a ‘rubber egg’, an exceedingly rare occurrence when the egg shell doesn’t develop at all and you’re left with something that feels like a tough little water balloon.  Eww.  I didn’t really know what to think when I grabbed it… maybe it was just so fresh that the shell hadn’t hardened yet?  (That was my naivety – the eggs should come out hard.) The 78 other eggs collected were all quite normal.  I took home a half-dozen of these eggs and I swear the yolks are almost a florescent orange.  Weird! 
so mean looking!


feeding the chickens

Friday we had a meeting with the kitchen about what we needed to harvest for the weekend’s weddings.  The math made my head spin!  We set out to collect the 300 beet roots, 150 carrots, 80 leeks, 10 kg potatoes, 10 kg tomatoes, and 4 kg of fennel that would go into the guests’ dinner.  This farm thing is a lot of work!  Luckily for me I get to eat amazing leftover wedding food and/or whatever I want to grab from the fridge or pantry or garden.   
There are so many other stories but I'll save them for another day.   If I’ve learned nothing else, it’s that growing food can be insanely hard work. 

Goodnight!  Watch out for lima beans! 
Claire (and Chris)

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Dino's & Donkeys

Well, falling asleep in a tent while listening to the loud braying of donkeys wouldn’t normally be easy (or thinkable really), but after hiking for 6+ hours a day it was effortless!  This past Labor Day weekend Chris and I drove about four hours to the southwest coast of England to hike a little bit of England’s first UNESCO World Heritage Site: the Jurassic Coast.  It’s named as such because its 95 miles of rocks depict 185 million years of the Earth’s history. The Jurassic Coast Path is a tiny section of the Southwest Coast Path (http://www.southwestcoastpath.com/); an epic version of one of the awesome English footpaths I love that literally traces the coast 630 miles around the southwest tip of England. 

On this map we hiked from Exmouth almost to Lyme Regis.


SW Coast Path signage


Sidmouth boardwalk (see the red cliffs in the background? We hiked those!)


Chris looking out over the next few hills we'd have to climb.


We started on the most Western part of the Jurassic Coast in a town called Exmouth, where red cliffs drop off steeply to the ocean’s edge. The cliffs are 250+ MILLION years old, from the Triassic period.  Trekking east on the Jurassic Coast's  95 miles, the rock morphs from the Triassic to Jurassic and then Cretaceous periods.   (Forgotten earth sciences?  That’s the entire Mesozoic Era.)  We didn’t make it all 95 miles in one weekend, so saw mostly the 250 million year old Triassic rock formed under desert conditions (hence not very much organic material so the iron oxidizes and turns red in color.)  

Chris suggested an 'alternate route' along the beach for a few miles...

... I should've vetoed because that alternate route required a rope to get down to the beach...

... at the bottom, Chris points out the light colored bands that indicate periods of deposition in the presense of plant life...

... ugh, walking along the beach wasn't easy because it was made of (fairly large) rocks instead of sand...

.... almost three miles of walking on these (the whole ground gives when you step on them) was tough on the legs!...
...weird clay-like clifs that release all the pebbles/rocks that make up the beach...
.... rocks hanging out of the cliff, ready to fall and make our hike even more difficult...


...dang, we didn't even realize!...





Can you see Chris up on the top there?  Look at all the 'landslips' (landslides) at the water's edge.

Erosion works away the softer rock and leaves the free-standing pillars.


We saw some chalk cliffs from the Cretaceous Period as well – they’re the white ones in some of the photos below.  Next time we trek to the southwest we’re definitely going “hunting” in the Jurassic rock farther east… apparently it’s full of fossils! 
Looking a bit rough...

Typical English countryside.

The trail doesn't stay at sea level, rather goes up and down over the cliffs and hills!


Oh yeah, getting braver!!

White Cretaceous rocks in Beer.  Luckily there were towns like this one along the way that let us take 'pint breaks'...


You can't go hungry along the trail - we always seem to talk about the blackberries but here are some photos that put it in perspective:


Blackberry bushes all along the trail.

Yummy.


We camped near Sidmouth for the weekend.  Our campsite just so happened to be next to the UK Donkey Sanctuary.  I swear the donkeys got louder as night fell… they make some funny noises.  We were freezing, too!  Labor Day and the low was in the 40's... hope all you people that got to spend the weekend on the lake are enjoying the heat for all of us!