Saturday, May 24, 2014

Low Energy Garden Maintenance

The following images shows two ways we regularly maintain the orchard and garden at Die Manchmal Gruene Weide.

Plum and Apple Trees in Orchard
Above you can see the lower half of the orchard where we planted and maintain two apple trees, two European Plum Trees, one North-American-Native Mexican Plum tree, which produces rosa-green tinged soft, mildly sweet plums. There is more room below here in which we plan to plant pear trees next year.
Peach Trees and Blackberry bushes (to right)
Above we planted six (of which one died from deer eating it to death) peach trees. I named the healthy one in the lower right corner, "Inge's Peach Tree" because when I trimmed the other peach trees she insisted I not trim at least one tree and thus this tree remains untouched by any cutting implements. It is also the healthiest peach tree which Inge repeatedly reminds me that its healthy state directly results from its untrimmed state. 
Special Deep Cycle Truck Battery powers water pump for orchard watering.
First order of business after feeding and watering Herbie the donkey was to water the garden. I purchased a 12V battery powered pump a few months ago and used my truck battery to pump water for the orchard as you can see in truck picture below.  Originally I left the truck running, wasting gas. The battery didn't last long under the strain of using the pump, so I replaced the dead battery with a special deep cycle/cold crank dual purpose battery. Now I can water the garden with the battery alone (no truck running) and all our water barrels (only two of five brought and used today) for over an hour and the truck still cranks and charges the battery. I have all the supplies I need to build a solar powered battery charger but I haven't wired it up yet. Future project.
Water measuring containers for pump test today.
Today I decided to measure how long it takes to pump the well empty and measure how much water returns after 10 minutes of rest. It has not rained much this winter, far below average, so the water table is very low. I pumped the well empty after only about 62 gallons (235 liters) which just filled up the water trough. Last year I emptied it pumping about 80 gallons (302 liters). I waited 10 minutes and pumped it dry again which only took 1 minute and only pumped 2.5 gallons (9.5 liters). That gives a recharge rate of 1/4 gallon per minute - very very slow. When we had abundant rain I had roughly measured a recharge rate of about 4 gallons per minute so it appears the drought also affects the recharge rate as well, which makes sense.
After 10 minutes pumped well empty on 2.5 gallons water - not a strong refresh rate!

Overgrown Garden area and low power tool - a Sythe!
 We planted few vegetables this year because we plan to travel to Germany this summer and we don't have all the water we need to effectively care for the garden. We grow Asparagus, Green Beans, Jalapeno peppers, and lots of garlic this year. Above the non-planted area has become overgrown so I pulled out the scythe to trim out the garden. Two pictures showing before and one after scything images follow. Hot sweaty work but the tool works quite well. A mower is far more efficient at cutting to a uniform height, but there is a great deal of satisfaction in demonstrating that in a world of very high fuel prices, I have the wherewithal to maintain the garden without needing fuel.
Another view of Greenbeans and overgrown area we didn't plant this year.

Garden after sweaty scything session.

Saturday, March 8, 2014

Die Weide Photographic Creek Survey

I get lax about writing in the blog over winter. We visit every weekend to feed Herbie, but not much of import takes place. However, there is news on the bee front. In December, the hive had so few bees that I didn't think it would survive winter. I saw several times that robber bees would come around when we put sugar water out. But last month I was surprised to see the hive very full of bees! I learned though that these may be different bees than the original because they were much more aggressive around the hive than before. But I saw lots of combs filled with fluid so we have hope of getting honey this year!
 
Liquid seen in combs - soon to be honey?

On to the topic of the day. I planned a short visit to feed Herbie, but remained for over two hours because the temperature, though cool, was pleasant and the grey skies lightly sprinkled me with rain. I decided to explore and along the way found new donkey-created paths near the creek. It was then I decided to follow our wettest creek (last to dry and first to fill) from property entry to property exit, snapping pictures along the way. Part of the inspiration was seeing many fish in the pond, some longer than my middle finger. Given the pond dries out nearly every summer, I was astonished to see so many fish there. Reflecting on the size of the fish made me realize that the pond has been filled for a longer period than any time since I bought. Die Weide. The land looks vibrantly alive in early spring when enough moisture is present.

I present the following photographs in geographical order, from the west fence entry into the property, through many turns, into a pond, around a sharp bend and on to the exit out the north property fence. I hope you enjoy this photographic survey of one of Die Weide creeks.
West Fence Creek Entry (upstream facing West)
West Fence Entry inside ~20ft (downstream facing East)
Near creek junction (upstream facing West) Notice riffle section similar to previous pic
Creek Junction. (downstream facing ENE) Same spot as previous pic reverse direction.
Taken on Pond Dam (upstream facing SSW)

Pond Dam with overflow (upstream facing WSW)

Pond Dam with overflow and creek (downstream facing ENE)

Big Creek Bend (downstream facing ENE)

On top of Big Creek Bend gully (downstream facing North)
 To the North of this area a bramble jungle surrounds the creek. After the time spent listening to rain falling in the creek, I know our next bramble hack attack will be to make a path next to the full length of the creek.
Deadfall on creek (downstream left-to-right, camera facing NW)

Creek exit North Fence, low angle from gravel riffle. (downstream facing North)