garlic harvest

Garlic Harvest

Early last November, Kristin and I planted out four rows of garlic. Each row was one hundred feet long. Each clove was six inches apart on eight inch rows. For reference and arithmetic, that works out to about six pounds of garlic seed for the whole planting.

We pulled up a few green garlic here and there, took off the scapes, mulched and weeded, but for the most part we left the garlic bed alone.

After watching the leaves die back and change from green to brown, we decided that it was time for the harvest.

We had incorporated leaves and manure into the bed in early October. Our normally dense clay soil was a bit looser at harvest time. The leaf mold and soil fell off the roots fairly easily.

Between the two of us it didn’t take long at all to pull everything up and load the cart.

The longest process was tying up the bunches and hanging them from the barn rafters to dry.

We’ll dry the garlic for a few weeks, trim the stems and roots off then sort through to select the best seed for next year. The rest we’ll eat.

 


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About Trace

Trace lives in Durham, NC with his partner Kristin. They were joined by baby Tennessee Lynn in April 2012.
Trace is not a talker. Trace also thinks it is a little weird to talk about himself in the third person.

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2 Responses to Garlic Harvest

  1. griz says:

    looks great! What variety it is?

  2. Trace says:

    German Stiffneck. You know, like Stefan.

Freedom Farms

cfsa farm tour freedom farms

CFSA Farm Tour – Freedom Farms

Next stop on the farm tour was Freedom Farms.

Freedom Farms

Freedom Farms raises Dexter cattle, an endangered breed originally from Southern Ireland.  Dexters are the smallest true cattle, suitable for a small farm where a mixed use cow is important.  The Dexter is both a milking and meat cow, producing milk that is high in butterfat and a great tasting meat.

If you have ever wondered, we found out that nose rings are required for bulls over one year old if they are to ever enter a show ring.

dexter cattle

Freedom Farms runs a breeding program with their cows and takes them to shows all over the country.  Most of the cows are shown by kids through 4H programs.

Sally Coad

The cows are imprinted within twelve hours of birth, then the cow/calf pair are left completely alone for two weeks.

There are currently only 750 red dexter cows in the world, which highlights the importance of Freedom Farms’ breeding program.  The cows are bred at fifteen months, so the numbers can only increase at a slow increment (although during the birthing season the farm has one calf every ten days).

dexter cattle

Freedom Farms had a couple of freezers full of Dexter beef for sale during the tour.

meat basket

Mike and Noel were all over it, everything from ground beef to liver.

frozen meat

In late breaking news, Freedom Farms is now for sale

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pepper flier

doug jones seeds of change pepper tasting

Doug Jones – Seeds of Change pepper tasting

Doug Jones grows a lot of peppers, so many varieties that it was hard to get through the forty types represented at a recent taste testing.

The first twenty-two peppers were part of a Seeds of Change variety trial.

pepper flier

Triple 4, Ferrari, Cal-Wonder, Celica, Bendigo, Leher, Hershey, Double Up, Sprinter – the list seemed endless.  I ended up cutting some of the peppers for the tasting and found that there was a pretty big difference between many of the varieties.  It seemed some would be better suited for cooking while others were awesome right off the knife.

pepper buckets

Once on the table, the color breaks looked great; various shapes and sizes held to a colorful tablecloth.

pepper tasting

A few dozen people showed up for the event, so I hope that Doug received some great feedback for all his work.

people eating peppers

miles of peppers

The tasting was such a success that there is talk of a pepper festival next year.

sweet peppers

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2 Responses to Doug Jones – Seeds of Change pepper tasting

  1. Amy says:

    It’s still so summery and sunny there. I’m very jealous.

  2. Trace says:

    It is pretty cold now…no need to be jealous.

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