Always check your labels

There must be parents or grown-ups out there who have had this conversation before, or a variation on it at least, but it was totally new for me tonight. My children are 14 and nearly 9, and it surprises me that we haven’t had this conversation before.

We were sitting around the table after supper and my husband got up to get a glass of wine for each of us (the grown-ups, that is, of course). He placed a glass in front of me and close to it a bottle which I did not recognize. This really threw me, as I had just purchased a bottle of white wine earlier in the day and opened it to use half a cup in a recipe I was preparing (my perennial favourite, white fish in puff pastry, which I hadn’t made in at least a month), and this wasn’t the same bottle.

Me: ‘Where did you get that?’

Husband: ‘In the fridge.’

Me: ‘Really? That’s not the wine I bought today; I just used it for the fish.’

Husband: ‘Well, it was on the door when I opened the fridge. It’s nice, it tastes just fine.’

Youngest son (after getting up to examine said bottle): ‘Wait a minute. We have a problem. You do NOT want to drink this.’

Me: ‘Why not?’

Youngest son: ‘It says it’s from 2008.’

Ontario wine label

After falling about laughing my husband and I proceeded to explain why wine can be one of the very few food-related things which can actually improve with age. It still amazes me that this isn’t something that we’ve discussed in some way before, as we talk with our kids about almost everything, and methods for making and preserving food and drink is a fairly common topic at our house.

I just hope I can always hear my son’s warning voice in my head; just remembering it now makes me giggle all over again.

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Filed under Modern life, Parenting

A weekend of trees

It’s cold and windy and there are random tiny flakes of snow in the air, but we’ve just come in from planting the last of our mail order trees: three shagbark hickory and three buart nut. It’s been a week since they first arrived, and we have more trees arriving tomorrow, so we just had to get on with the job.

Tomorrow morning our mature Downy Serviceberry is due to arrive, so we have a deep and wide hole ready for its much more established root system. Last year we planted five very mature trees, so it’s a doddle only have to deal with one this year. We’ll also be collecting ten baby fir trees, for which we still have to dig holes and prepare compost. Last year we planted 30 of those suckers, so again, it puts it all in perspective!

At the same time that we’re in full tree planting mode here, our older son will be out with the Scouts collecting donations for tree planting in our community! So from 9 till 12 he’ll be out doing that, only to come home and be handed the post hole digger or a shovel!

In spite of the sudden and heavy-ish snowfall at the start of the week, our newly planted manchu cherries look absolutely fine, which is a great relief. They’ve even retained their little blossoms! Many thanks for the reassurances from our blogging friends.

Young manchu cherry tree just planted

And the dwarf lilacs that my youngest and I planted last fall along the front of our house are nicely in bud and are happily ringed by tulip greenery (those poor tulips are north facing, so goodness knows when/if they’ll actually flower). I keenly remember pushing a wheelbarrow full of compost that I got from down in one of our fields up to the house multiple times so that we wouldn’t be planting those poor lilacs and tulip bulbs straight into clay where they might then be locked forevermore. The plan is to keep adding these little flowering trees and some appropriate companions until the front of our new-build home looks more lived in and natural. It’s the one part of our property that looks new and somewhat barren, which is hard to avoid when construction has recently taken place.

Dwarf lilac ringed by tulips in early spring

After this, I’m hoping we’re kind of done with trees until, of course, our next round of apple orchard rescue.

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A little light

Transom window over a door with stained glass effect

One of the simplest things that we did to save energy on lighting in our new house was to include small transom windows over our bedroom doors and a bathroom door in the ‘sleeping wing’ of our ICF bungalow. We intentionally kept bedrooms on the smaller side and access to them is off a fairly small L-shaped hallway. When we did one of our many walk-throughs after the main floor interior walls had been framed, my husband and I had an almost simultaneous ‘a-ha’ moment, and realized that transoms would ensure that some daylight would get into an otherwise dark hall space; the inclusion of a transom in the tiny but very efficient internal bathroom (ie no external windows) we carved out for our two boys, also means that during the day it isn’t usually necessary to switch a light on in order to use this room.

The very best thing about these transom windows didn’t happen until several weeks after we moved in however; a chance visit to the hardware store turned up a stained glass effect roll-on paper that transformed these windows. At night, when electric lights are turned on, the glowing colours are really lovely.

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Just not what I was expecting

Snow in eastern Ontario on 23 April after a spring that started in early March

I thought I’d been paying attention to the weather forecast; we check every few days at this point to see where the trends are headed and to try to get a feel for when we can plant more outside. Nothing that I looked at last time I checked prepared me for winter white this morning. Yesterday I was in a t-shirt and cords adding compost to the raised beds in our greenhouse.

Rhubarb on snowy morning 23 April 2012

Our rapidly growing rhubarb will no doubt roll with this turn of events, being from Siberia originally (at least I hope so); it is quite sheltered by an overhang next to the house. I wonder what our baby cherry trees, which were just starting to blossom, think?

On the upside, this does count as precipitation, which we’ve sorely needed…

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Mail order trees

Mail order trees in packaging

As I wrote last month, we recently purchased a batch of young fruit and nut trees for the hill directly behind our new house. Lots of aging apple trees here, and loads of invasive buckthorn which we are gradually eradicating. We’ve got a plan for turning the hill that really is our back garden into a place for trees with edible offerings, beautifying and practical at the same time.

The 13 trees arrived by mail order yesterday. The packaging is totally genius and I didn’t think to get a first shot with the camera until after we had removed the twine that bound the sacking around the nested baby trees, creating a parcel that almost looked like a short conical broomstick (handle side up). In brief, the trees are gently entwined together roots and all, the roots are protected and kept moist with damp shredded paper, the whole package of trees is supported with a wooden dowel or stick and popped into a couple of plastic sacks (re-used sacks for wood pellets); the resulting parcel is tightly bound in twine to hold it all together.

Mail order fruit trees inside their packaging

In the past, we’ve tended to order more mature trees (including two apple, two weeping willow and a maple last year) that needed to be collected or delivered by vehicle. We’ve also bought baby fir trees from our municipality where we had to go and collect them ourselves. But we’ve never bought trees by mail order before. This year after some careful searching we found a wonderful supplier in eastern Ontario (ie the part of the world where we live and are growing trees) that has an excellent reputation for successfully shipping baby trees by post, and they carry the types of nut and fruit trees we were wanting to invest in. We can confirm that the method used by the Golden Bough Tree Farm in Marlbank, Ontario is as good as they claim it is.

Mail order trees ready for initial planting

The shot above shows the 13 young trees entwined together after the packaging was removed. Golden Bough’s site is very clear about what to do as soon as the trees arrive: either immediate planting or else gently heeling the combined lot of trees into a shady spot in the garden until planting spots are ready. We gave our trees a temporary home in our north facing front garden until we could plant them properly. Seeing them planted as a single bunch made me smile and wonder who would win if left that way.

Mail order trees temporarily planted in a shady spot

Today we planted the six manchu cherry trees (there are also three shagbark hickories, three buart nuts and one black walnut), which we decided would make a wonderful hedge down the edge of the slope that we use daily to get down to and back up from our fields. We spaced them five feet apart, as recommended by Golden Bough. (Note: lots of buckthorn still to be removed on the hill, but we’re taking it slow and removing only as we get our new trees in place.)

Digging holes for new trees on a hillside

My older son was thrilled to commandeer our latest manual tool, a post hole digger. Like his mother, he’s happiest working outside with a stylish hat – in his case, a black pinstripe fedora.

Teenage boy using post hold digger for trees

Digging tree holes with a post hole digger

We planted the manchu cherries with a mix of fresh compost, some peat moss and some of the soil dug up from the holes (largely clay mixed with sand) and watered them in deeply. We’ll have to take good care of them as they are so young, and the hill they now occupy is very windy, but we have fingers crossed that someday we’ll have a lovely hedge with edible cherries running partway down our hill.

Young manchu cherry tree just planted

We’re so busy outside right now that supper came from a local chip truck. What I’d really love is some recipes using cherries so that I can dream about the future fruits of our labour. Anyone have any wonderful cherry-based recipes?

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Filed under Farm life, Growing food, The joy of recycling

94 acre organically farmed retreat for sale in Eastern Ontario

This is not the sort of posting I normally write, but I happen to know of a really interesting property for sale in my part of the world (about an hour west of Ottawa, the capital of Canada) because of a client I’m working with, and many of my readers are fellow homesteaders like us. If any one of you reads this post and thinks “I know of someone who’d love to know about a property for sale in that part of the world”, that has to be a good thing.

The property in question is 94 acres that includes 37 acres pasture, 37 acres organically maintained farmland, 10 acres woodland and ponds. There are two houses on the property, the main residence and a secondary restored log cabin, as well as barns, outbuildings and a yoga studio. For the past 10 years the owner has operated the New Life Retreat from the location; he is selling as it’s time for him to move on for personal reasons, and he cares a lot about finding new owners who may want to continue the same kinds of activities on the property.

Future uses could include continuing to operate as a retreat or bed and breakfast, a summer camp or educational centre, a farm or market garden, an equestrian centre, etc.

If you know of anyone who may have an interest in finding a property / taking over an existing retreat or establishing a new business in this kind of place, please feel free to point them to the property’s website.

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A cover for our greenhouse

Preparing to install the cover for a Jewett Cameron greenhouse

As I mentioned in my last post, we finally had a calm enough day in terms of wind last Thursday, allowing us to finally get the cover on our greenhouse.

While we found the building of the greenhouse frame really quite straightforward, the cover installation was another matter. The ends were pretty easy – a lot like putting a shower curtain in place, but with a bit more tugging and negotiating.

Grappling with toggles for cover on Jewett Cameron greenhouse

Our youngest son came along at this point and helped out by steadying the ladder and handing tools up to his dad.

Young boy passing parts for greenhouse cover to his father

These two are so alike, and have even broken their collarbones on the same side (about four years apart). My husband broke his in a flukish fall from a ladder, so having his son steady the ladder was very welcome. My son, on the other hand, broke his falling just 12 inches out of bed, so the ladder poses no fear!

Young boy standing on ladder rung

Then it was time to prepare for the main cover over the curved top of the greenhouse. This is where things got tricky.

Preparing to install top cover for Jewett Cameron greenhouse

The instructions provided in the flat-packed box in which our greenhouse kit came were laughably simple. There is a lovely diagram showing three stick-figure men standing jauntily with ropes in their hands, gently guiding the cover over the curved top and down the other side of the greenhouse frame. If only it were so delightfully easy!

Pulling cover for Jewett Cameron greenhouse using ropes

We found ourselves in a similar position, ropes at hand, but also found ourselves having to tug rather than just gently guide, and my husband spent an awful lot of time securing his rope to the frame so that he could go and coax the fabric cover up and over the various parts of the frame on which it kept catching. It turns out that the very minimalist instructions for our Jewett Cameron greenhouse (20 x 12 foot model), really were just way too simplistic and failed to note vital information such as the absence of sufficient ropes in the kit for securing the base of each of the two main sides of the cover. Fortunately, we are rich in rope, and we used up almost all of our reserve rope properly lacing the base of the cover and securing it adequately. This will mean that come canoeing season we’ll find ourselves up a creek without any rope (for securing it to the top of our car), unless we replace the rope that was pressed into service for the greenhouse.

Honestly, I’m quite seriously considering drafting proper installation instructions for the greenhouse and its cover now that we’ve lived through it and submitting it to the company that made our greenhouse. I can’t imagine that they would be impressed however; cheaping out on the important details seems to be the way of these things!

I finally got a shot of the completed greenhouse earlier this evening and will document the raised beds inside another time.

Jewett Cameron greenhouse installed in Eastern Ontario

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Whipped, but not for long

I must confess that is how we were feeling on Sunday. A good whipped, mind you, not a bad one. You know, the gentle but steady flogging of honest, hard work, not the nasty lashes of a universe out to get you. This is farm life, and we’re getting into it more every day it seems.

We had finished coaxing the diabolical cover onto the greenhouse (a story in its own right, but I haven’t the energy for it right now) last Thursday, with the (mostly) very enthusiastic help of our youngest, finally having had a calm enough day for it. That was a big job that took us through the afternoon and until sunset (for my husband, who had the task of finishing off the securing ropes and suchlike). It was tiring but satisfying; we finally had a completed greenhouse.

So, you know, Sunday I felt we didn’t achieve all that much when at 3pm it was time to drop things and head to the hardware store before it would close. We installed the raised beds (that my husband had already framed during the previous two evenings out in the garage) in the greenhouse after raking the ground over, dug up the ground inside each of the eight beds, incorporated fresh soil from an older compost heap into each bed, and planted some of our seed potatoes in a new 20-foot bed adjacent to the greenhouse (the youngest LOVED that job and shared it with me 50/50). It really didn’t feel like very much progress after what we’ve been doing recently and, in truth, it really wasn’t that much work.

But as we drove to the hardware store with the boys, I slumped into my seat and confessed to feeling washed out, in need of a break. My husband – ever rational at these moments – noted that we’ve been doing a lot of physical work on nearly a daily basis while also doing our regular jobs and routines, and that we perhaps had a right to feel tired.

He suggested we get ice cream. Which was absolutely the right thing to do. Ice cream has so many great qualities, including staving off potential mutiny.

Today we broke ourselves in again by hand-digging and tilling a second 20-foot bed next to the potato bed (we’re aiming to have about a half-dozen 20-foot long, 30-inch wide beds beside the greenhouse this year) in the dusk just after supper. We also had a little walk across that same field to a test bed that we planted two summers ago, before our house was built, and talked about how we might use it this year. (It’s a bit far for convenience from the greenhouse and the new beds we’re putting in, but not so far that as to be unusable.)

As the light faded and my younger son helped me to carry some wire fencing across the field to use as temporary protection on our newest bed, he told me that he was made to do this kind of work. He feels most like himself and happiest working outside in this way. And looking at him, I know this is true. I’ve caught myself feeling frustrating recently when I realize that we talk about baking together (like we did when he was smaller, and even as recently as last year) and that we never do. I wonder when he’ll want to bake with me again. But now I realize, that I’m blessed to have one son who does indeed love to bake and cook (he and one of his good friends made lasagna Friday night while my husband and I went to purchase and ferry home the wood for the greenhouse’s raised beds), and another son who comes very naturally to gardening and growing food. How lucky am I?

Before heading up to the house I said to my husband “I guess we don’t need to worry about succession planning.”

I know I’ll be back in the turmoil of parenting and everything else that we’re doing tomorrow and every day after that, but it’s worth it to have these little moments.

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Filed under Family, Farm life, Growing food

Rhubarb baked in clay

Well, it kind of looks like that, doesn’t it?

Rhubarb coming up through clay in early spring

Last fall we found ourselves the lucky owners of three mature rhubarb plants. An elderly friend of my mother’s in the city kindly offered to let us have the plants as long as we came to dig them up. We couldn’t believe our luck, as rhubarb was a gap we’d been longing to fill and we hadn’t been able source any during the last growing season. We tucked them up in our front garden (north facing) along a sheltering wall, and hoped for the best.

We noticed the first of the three poking its leaves up through the soil just over the weekend. It’s amazing how that bed has reverted to hard baked clay on top, and the scattering of gravel from shovelling the walk and driveway in the winter makes it look all the more forlorn. It’s incredible to me that the rhubarb had the strength to break through the clay, but it did. Its nearest neighbour had more of a struggle and we had to uncover it to get the light to its yellowed leaves. After just a few days it already has more of a normal red-green tint, and the third plant has also started to push its way up.

None of this – the early arrival, the strong instinct to survive – is surprising when you realize that rhubarb originally comes from Siberia. This crazy perennial actually loves long, cold winters.

And what a treat rhubarb is, at least to me. I’m so looking forward to rhubarb fool, rhubarb crumble and I’m longing to try a rhubarb version of the raspberry cake that I made several times last summer and still dream about now. I’m looking forward to finding great new ways to cook with rhubarb; if you have any delightful rhubarb recipes, I’d love to know of them!

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Filed under Cooking and baking, Growing food

Triple chip oatmeal cookies

Plate of triple chip oatmeal cookies

I was a bit unsure of what to call these. I’ve had a recipe in my binder of favourites for ever that I pull out whenever I want a good old-fashioned cookie to offer everyone. This recipe is both delicious and hearty and it has elements that make me feel better about giving it to my kids, in that there is some goodness combined with the fat and the sugar!

The original recipe used a combination of white flour, sugars, butter, chocolate chips, nuts and oats. My version substitutes spelt (go, fibre!), cuts the sugar somewhat, keeps the oats and uses three types of chips: semi-sweet chocolate, dark chocolate and butterscotch.

Bowl with ingredients for triple chip oatmeal cookies

Baking sheet in oven with chocolate chip cookie dough

It’s a recipe that’s easy to double or triple to make a larger batch, so I’ll offer the small batch version here:

Triple chip oatmeal cookies
1 cup spelt flour
1 cup oats
3/4 cup unrefined sugar
1/2 cup butter, softened
1 tbs baking powder
3/4 tsp cinnamon
1 tsp vanilla
1 cup semi-sweet chocolate chips
1/2 cup dark chocolate chips
1/2 cup butterscotch chips

Preheat oven to 350 degrees fahrenheit*. Blend softened butter with sugar until well combined. Add egg and vanilla. Mix together flour, baking powder and cinnamon and incorporate with butter/egg mixture. Pour in oats and chocolate/butterscotch chips. (Optional extras could include nuts or dried coconut.) Spoon large dollops onto a prepared baking sheet (either greased or with parchment paper) and bake for approximiately 15 minutes.

* When I make these in the Esse Ironheart woodstove, I get the temperature to the lower end of ‘Very Hot’.

It’s hard not to love this part of the result too:

teenage-boy-eating-chocolate-chip-cookie

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