Yeah, I know. I'm supposed to be posting about hunting and fishing. So sue me. My blog, my rules. Besides, I was doing some early deer scouting and hunting up berries, so I counted it as a hunting excursion. I'm posting this now, just before New Year's Eve, because I just gave away a pile of jam for Christmas presents and thought to include this story.
The blackberries were thick this past summer. I guess we had just the right balance of sun and rain at the ideal times for fruit production. I've never seen so many really good berries on the farm. Anyway, I'd decided to make homemade gifts for family and friends this year. I'd already been working on cucumber and watermelon pickles and have always thought blackberry preserves are summer in a jar, so.......
This large patch was in a fence row between the back hay field and the place where we store round bales for the winter. Normally, there's no fruit along this fence because cattle are in this field, but the past two years they've been in other pasture. Over two days, I picked a couple of gallons of fruit, made an awesome blackberry cake (recipe here), and started canning preserves.
I put up the preserves in small half cup jars so more friends could get a taste of blackberry come December. Then I entered them in the judged exhibits at our local county fair, along with some photos that included hunting shots. The judges must've liked the looks of my canned goodies. Not to brag, but those ribbons are all for my stuff. Country living is good. Jeremiah Johnson was advised to move down to a city to avoid the trouble he had with Indians in one of my favorite movies. Robert Redford expressed my feelings perfectly when he replied, "I've been to a city."
Thursday, December 29, 2011
Tuesday, November 15, 2011
Food Plot Progress October 18, 2011
Ten days post planting, and some gentle rain since has gotten things rolling on the small plot planted on the 8th. Rye and peas are up, plus some rape and turnips. Looks pretty good, although I'd like it better if the leaves hadn't fallen in the interim...probably didn't help with germination rates.
Friday, November 11, 2011
Food Plot Panting Part Two October 11, 2011
We worked ahead of the rain today to finish planting; this time the bigger food plot. Another bag of Pennington seed, then over-seeded with five pounds of inoculated turnip seed, along with lime and 10-10-10 fertilizer. We'll see how she does.
The six foot tiller on the Kioti prepares a really smooth seed bed. Metering the seed was difficult with the yellow seeder on the John Deere. Turnips, rape, and clover are tiny, winter grasses are bigger, and the cowpeas are very big. Spreading this seed with any shot at even coverage was an excercise in futility. We finally settled on a setting of "7" for fertilizer and "8" for the seed. Next year, I think we'll make a small seed pass and a peas pass if we're still broadcast planting.
A quick drag with the small chain harrow behind the mule, and we're done. On these small plots, this rig is a whole lot easier to drag with than a tractor with the big harrow. Wish we had a cultipacker though. The rain started as I dragged the plot, and kept up nice and gentle all night. Some seed had sprouted within 3 days.
Thursday, November 10, 2011
Food Plot Planting October 8, 2011
I was late getting fall plots in, just as I'm late posting up these notes. This is a small, secret spot. Managed to turn the tractor enough to till it, but planted the plot by hand, with a push spreader.
1 bag of Pennington Buckmaster's Feeding Frenzy, two of 10-10-10, and some lime. October is at least two weeks too late, but we'll see. This mix includes rye, wheat, oats, austrian winter peas, red clover, radishes and turnips..
1 bag of Pennington Buckmaster's Feeding Frenzy, two of 10-10-10, and some lime. October is at least two weeks too late, but we'll see. This mix includes rye, wheat, oats, austrian winter peas, red clover, radishes and turnips..
Saturday, October 8, 2011
Busted!
Jack made a break from the pen after dinner the other night. He's only supposed to chase rabbits. Anybody need a beagle that thinks he's a foxhound? A few sessions with the E-Collar ought to fix this.
The first shot nabs Mr. Fox hightailing it along the trail.
A minute later, it's a damning smoking gun shot of Jack doing what Jack's not supposed to do....namely, chase foxes. Goofy beagle.
The first shot nabs Mr. Fox hightailing it along the trail.
East end of a Westbound Fox |
A minute later, it's a damning smoking gun shot of Jack doing what Jack's not supposed to do....namely, chase foxes. Goofy beagle.
Numbnuts |
October Trailcam Photos
Completely missed early ducks this year. Work killed three days, and then realized too late last night I hadn't picked up my duck stamp yet. Oh, well. Some days chickens, other days feathers. Let's try making up for it with some trail cam pics.
Lots of doe action...few bucks |
These guys visit this spot almost every morning |
This one turned out to be a nice surprise |
Another coon came by 10 minutes earlier |
Thursday, September 29, 2011
Still in Velvet
Checked the game camera today. Guess I know where I'll set up opening day. Don't ask...I could tell you where, but then I'd have to kill you...
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