Thursday Open Thread 7-6-2017
One of the challenges of learning to run the farm on my own has been learning to see and hear every detail as it happens. Not what I want to happen or expect to happen. Since I have a wide variety of animals it is also become necessary to be aware of how the different animal species view their environment. Cattle, sheep, dogs, humans, etc, each of us have our own Inattentional blindness and focus on specific details.
Our preconceived opinions or intent will skew how we interpret, react and process information.
In other words, what we're thinking about — what we're focused on — filters the world around us so aggressively that it literally shapes what we see. So, Drew says, we need to think carefully about the instructions we give to professional searchers like radiologists or people looking for terrorist activity, because what we tell them to look for will in part determine what they see and don't see.
One of the uncomfortable realities we need to look at is the changes that can be expected with climate change in the areas we each live. This article has a number of graphs that illustrates some of the expected challenges that will occur in various parts of the country.
Farm Report
Lots of grass. The fields are grazed in a rotational pattern and watered to encourage a diverse mixture of grasses, clovers and some weeds. As the weather changes the different species will enter a growth phase and the number of weeks the pasture can be grazed is increased. It results in fewer weeks of feeding hay as the primary source than most of my neighbors. When the animals are let into the fields they will first go through and eat their favorite weeds.
The thunder clouds were a bit dramatic.
Last night's sunset
Comments
Morning studentofearth...
living vicariously through your morning writing about the farm. 'Keep on trucking' and have a great day.
Thanks for checking in
Still yourself, deep water can absorb many disturbances with minimal reaction.
--When the opening appears release yourself.
Your pasture grass looks delicious
Do you irrigate?Edited: reading comprehension, take two. I wonder how much water it takes to keep an acre (or whatever) growing all year through the grass cycles. I guess the answer is "it depends". heh.This morning I took a sunrise walk along the river path, came back vibrating like a tuning fork. Woo nature is busy this time of year, very busy. The native California Bunch Grass in the lot next door has gone full seed, yet the leaves are still green. Green grass without water in California, love it. Looks much better than the dead lawn in front of the house, I think.
Thanks for nice photos and farm report, makes me vicariously happy. Cheers.
peace
Recieve 3-6 gal per minute per acre during the irrigation
I keep my pastures have rates different rates to encourage a wide variety of plants to grow. The field with the clover have the highest water requirements.
Still yourself, deep water can absorb many disturbances with minimal reaction.
--When the opening appears release yourself.
Morning SOE
See the long discussion in MeteorMan's essay about preserving sanity by adopting a rural lifestyle (my characterization). There's a lot of 'farm envy' (including me).
Ominous times all around.
You want a pessimistic assessment...here's an essay worth reading:
'The Last five years of the United States of America - The final Failure' (emphasis added)
https://medium.com/bad-words/the-last-five-years-of-the-united-states-of...
I want a Pony!
The Fall of The American Empire
One quibble. The problem is not a lack of Vision, Mission, Agenda, Plan. The problem is that the only place to find a Vision, Mission, Agenda, Plan is on the outcast left of American politics.
A perfect example is our global climate crisis. A group of climate scientists stated a while back that technical and conservation solutions are available. The problem is a failure of the social and political will to implement the solutions in the time frame remaining to prevent an environmental/ecological collapse.
"They'll say we're disturbing the peace, but there is no peace. What really bothers them is that we are disturbing the war." Howard Zinn
If there is no other plan maybe we should create a plan
national demands Joe Shikspack has been composing.
or goals for individuals to follow daily to have a better life and disengage from major corporations. Similar to theStill yourself, deep water can absorb many disturbances with minimal reaction.
--When the opening appears release yourself.
One can see the exhaustion in the citizens of this
My parents created a better environment for there children to grow up then they experienced. I keep those habits of creating a home environment that keeps me revitalized, an oasis from from the world. As time passes there are fewer people around for me share it with.
Still yourself, deep water can absorb many disturbances with minimal reaction.
--When the opening appears release yourself.
Still rainy here and cool
The road has blind spots because the verge is up to 4' high in places. My drive has tiny hickory nuts all over, poison ivy everywhere. At least I know its various forms. My unmowed "lawn" is also getting high, more over the semi-abandoned raised beds with improved soil.
I should begin to look for seeds to save. But it's rainy. Not a good time. Feeling shaky today, a setback.
Hey! my dear friends or soon-to-be's, JtC could use the donations to keep this site functioning for those of us who can still see the life preserver or flotsam in the water.
The road to health is not a straight line
Still yourself, deep water can absorb many disturbances with minimal reaction.
--When the opening appears release yourself.
One more...Great Tweet
Here:
I want a Pony!
Thanks soe. The application of inattentional blindness in
the various aspects of daily life is something one doesn't normally think of. I need to make a reminder sign, maybe "note the gorilla!". Oddly enough, in his "Book of Five Rings", master swordsman Miyamoto Musashi discusses all the myriad things that go into the sort of relaxed constant readiness needed and one is something of an afocal awareness, being always attuned to one's peripheral vision. It takes a shitload of practice, concentration (at first) and self-reminding, but is unintentionally curative of some inattentional blindness. That's a connection I never made before, thanks for inspiring it.
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
relaxed constant readiness - great phrase
Still yourself, deep water can absorb many disturbances with minimal reaction.
--When the opening appears release yourself.
cool to me, especially el and soe...
my 35-year-old son, a martial artist since 14, now moving into his second phase of yoga certification is at peace with a sword in hand; a door opens everyday, here, and i am the lucky one as we all are in this sharing.
just returned from a get together of a returning friend, gone 6 months on a journey, great fun, camaraderie and acknowledgement that investing in friendship pays life-long dividends.
cheers!
Funk for your day
Thanks for the music
Still yourself, deep water can absorb many disturbances with minimal reaction.
--When the opening appears release yourself.
Resilient protein
So we are hoping to take early retirement and move to rural VT in the next couple of years. I have been researching the many ways to pursue resilience in that setting; much better for the blood pressure than my previous avocation of political junkie. I was recently chatting with the ladies at the town clerk's office of the village about recycling.
Now VT has had mandatory recycling for years to go along with a "waste not, want not" ethos. But in the near future, ALL food garbage must be eliminated from the waste stream, including things like meat scraps and dairy that do not agree with the worms in your compost bin. What to do?
I joked that we could install a municipal pig next to the recycling dropoff, and went home to do some more research. Apparently, black soldier fly larvae will eat up almost anything besides pure cellulose fiber (which you can give to your red wigglers) and are exceedingly efficient at turning it into protein. In the warmer parts of the country, you can start a colony just by providing an attractive space for the adults of the local population to lay their eggs. AND... they are self harvesting, providing a great protein source for your laying hens (to supplement ticks and grubs), fish, or if we are hungry enough, humans.
Edited to try to make the embedded video work properly.
I am going to watch this video, but . . .
It creeps me out. Does it mean raising maggots for food? Guess I had better watch it.
There are all of these sorts of things we need to consider though. Thanks for sharing it.
Marilyn
"Make dirt, not war." eyo
Creepy but Cool
That is a great idea. My chickens would love it and it saves money on feed. We already give the chickens plant based table scraps.
Marilyn
"Make dirt, not war." eyo
@mhagle I haven't tried this
Send all my scraps except citrus and bones to the chickens
Still yourself, deep water can absorb many disturbances with minimal reaction.
--When the opening appears release yourself.
Once again, things to ponder . . .
The first thing I am pondering is, "where are the gorillas I am not seeing?"
And then I almost wish I had not clicked on the climate change with graphs link. Dang. Those always make Texas look like a pretty shitty place to live. When I first learned of the fact that change is happening much faster than previously believed, I immediately got on Zillow and started looking at property up north. Still do for fun. The best bang for your buck anywhere is the upper peninsula of Michigan. However, ever since the big fire in northern Canada last summer (it was 94 degrees the day before it started) I am questioning if there really is a place to bug out to. During the past two years in Texas it has been hotter and colder, and much more humid . . . but also we have had more rain and cloud cover . . . even after the El Nino ended.
And as far as being aware of the climate where you live in relation to small farming . . . I am in a "do nothing traditional" mode. Many of the old rules don't apply. Each person needs to figure out what that means for their location. I am about to plant sweet potato slips and sprouted yellow squash and popcorn seeds. In about a week I am going to start conditioning 6 more round hay bales for planting in August. And I intend to sprout and plant corn seeds again. Will it work? Don't know.
Love your beautiful pictures. Like others have said . . . they take me there.
Edited to add = Gardening pays off . . . slightly green tomatoes, Japanese eggplant, onions, all from the garden sauteed in butter. Wow. The other dish is sliced cucumber, zucchini, onion soaking in salt and vinegar water. Will mix with mayo and sour cream tomorrow.
Marilyn
"Make dirt, not war." eyo
Been looking at farming methods pre-1940 to archeological
Once one gets used to fresh food it is harder to eat fruits and vegetables picked early for transportation or mass processing.
Still yourself, deep water can absorb many disturbances with minimal reaction.
--When the opening appears release yourself.