Wednesday, December 31, 2014

December 2014

December was a sad month for us.  Linc's mother died, with sister Gretchen at her side, early in the morning on December 12th.  Linc, brother Bill, and Gretchen had been taking turns keeping Mom company for the past month or so, and I think we all learned a lot from her in those last few weeks, about her, about ourselves, and about life in general.

There was so much about the way that she declined and passed away that was normal and healthy, if that makes sense.  She was surrounded by family.  She was comfortable and peaceful, and knew that she was well loved.  And, there's still a huge void and sense of loss, an aching feeling that is going to take a long time to lessen, and a slow processing of the enormity of what it means to have someone that close to you pass on.


Going through my files, I don't have any good photos of my mother after her wedding.  Mom's photos and files are circulating by mail amongst the family now, so I'll have to wait my turn to scan some of her later years.  For now, I've got these shown above, of her when very young, then 20, then 25, and her wedding photo (age 27).  Below, is a short autobiography that she wrote a few years back.  It covers her life from birth in 1921, up to sometime in the early 1960s.

Autobiography of Dorothy Macomber Vannah

At the request of my granddaughter Rebekah Wilce, I’m writing what I remember of my early life. 

Born July 28, 1921, at 21 Melville Street, Augusta, Maine, to George Herbert and Doris Wilder Macomber.  I was their first child.  I was no joy for my family because babies were all nursed in those days, (they hadn’t invented infant formula by then), and my mother wasn’t very successful at nursing, so I didn’t get enough to eat.  I cried a lot, from hunger.  Dad used to carry me around at night singing “The Merry Widow Waltz” and “I Picked a Lemon in the Garden of Love”.  Nothing worked.  I cried a lot, and I developed strong lungs.  He could hear the neighbors slamming down their windows.

We had live in babysitters when Tom and I were young – Polish girls from out of town who couldn’t get to high school from Chelsea because there were no school buses, so they lived with us through four years of high school, and were paid a small amount in addition.  There were Wanda Lepianka and later her sister, Victoria, then Sophie Trytek (spelling?).  They kept the house clean and washed dishes.  I think they were paid $2.00 a week plus room and board.  Wanda taught me card games.  She played the ukulele and taught me songs I can still sing, like “In Eleven More Months and Ten More Days, I’ll be out of the Calaboose”, etc.  I can still remember the words.  Before television we had to make our own entertainment, and I had many games.  Dad would play if I couldn’t find anyone else, be he really didn’t enjoy it.  Lots of card games, Flinch, Rummy, Slapjack, etc.

Life was safer when I was young.  I could walk about the mile up to the airport to ski or hike, or a mile each way to the high school at night in the winter to skate, and no one worried about me.  My skis had just a strap over the toe of my overshoes, and we took off the skis at the bottom of the hill and carried them back up to make another run.  The ski slope (at “Muster Field”, where the Army used  to muster troops and practice tactics in summer) was steep and long, and the walk back up through deep snow was so slow that we seldom got more than 2 rides down in an afternoon.

I trudged about a half a mile over to the Nash School for kindergarten, behind the Augusta State House, crossing busy Western Avenue by myself (age 5 or 6).  Grades 1 through 6 were at the Lincoln School—up on the hill, about a half mile from home.  Seventh grade was ¾ mile across town at the Smith School; and the 8th grade was in Cony High School across the river, about a mile through town and up a long hill.  Same building as my four years in high school.  I graduated with high honors because the work was easy in those days and we didn’t have as much to learn.

On Melville Street, my closest playmates were Hester Sturgis, who lived in a big house down the street, and the Briggs family and their seven children – across the street.  Mr. Briggs owned the Ford agency and they had a real big turntable in their garage for turning cars.  We could get it revolving and ride on it.  The youngest girl had Down’s Syndrome.  In those days such children were sent to an institution but the Briggses kept her in a padded room upstairs, so she never seemed to develop.  She lived over 30 years.

Mrs. Briggs didn’t believe in doctors, but her children needed one now and then.  George, their son, one year older than I, developed polio after we all went swimming at Summer Haven pond about 1927.  There was an epidemic of polio, and I think some of us had light cases, but George was really striken and had a lot of paralysis that stayed with him until he died in his 30s.  He went to Warm Springs with his grandfather once a year where there was a polio center and he could be treated.  His arms were limp but from the brace he used, he could move one hand a bit so we could go over and play games with him.  I think President Roosevelt was treated for polio at Warm Springs too.  George was an intelligent, upbeat person and loads of friends dropped in to play games with him.

On Halloween, we would go out in the dark and roam the streets, soaping windows of people who didn’t like children – pretty much on our street and maybe one street away.  We were always afraid the gang from French Town would come up to prowl, but I don’t think they ever did.  We were ready, however, with slingshots, etc.

After summer, we played in the street:  “Scrub” baseball, Hide-and-Seek, or Hopscotch, games on my long flight of front steps, what I remember as “Ring-a-Leaveo”, and we climbed trees.  The Briggs had one tree we could climb.  I could get up the tree, but would have trouble getting back down, which was awful.  Most of my friends were boys, as there weren’t any girls on our street that were my age, until Hester Sturgis moved in to the big house on Western Avenue.  She was a tomboy, and could beat up the boys, which was fine with me, as I wasn’t that brave.

I spent quite a lot of time at the YMCA.  The gym director tried to help me improve my basketball technique, but we both finally decided I could play, but I couldn’t think fast enough to be a top player.  I loved the exercise however.

The circus came to town each summer and set up in the big field down below the State House.  It was an exciting time, and I remember the huge elephants lumbering through town at the parade soon after the circus arrived.  Also, the enormous piles of poop they left behind.  But there were horses around in those times anyway, so I guess there was a town clean-up system.

In the summer we could catch a trolley car on Western Avenue at the end of our street and ride over hill and dale four miles to the Country Club in Manchester and walk down to Lake Cobbosseecontee to swim and/or visit my grandparents who had an old camp (formerly the Cobbosseecontee Yacht Club) at the end of Hammonds Grove by the creek that wound its way up to the golf course.   The camp had 3 floors and 5 bedrooms, and lots of porch.  A little footbridge crossed the creek by the camp, leading to the cottages on the east shore, and we could fish from it.  I caught 32 sunfish from it one day till Dad got tired of taking them off my hook and throwing them back.  The lake is nine miles long and has a lighthouse on a tiny island about a mile from our camp.  It had a revolving light on it, as I remember, and we could see it blinking at night in the lake about a mile away.

Our Augusta house was old; not much land around it.  It had lots of nooks and crannies, five cellars and five attics.  In the garage were feeding stations for the horses that used to be kept there, and storage areas for hay.  Also, trap doors in the floor so the manure could be shoveled down through to a cellar beneath.  Dad’s workshop was in the garage too, padlocked.  The shed behind the kitchen was unheated, which was very handy for keeping potatoes and apples we bought in the fall.  Most of the ice chest, and later, the refrigerator, were in the shed.  The door of the ice chest poked through the wall into the kitchen.  The ice could be dropped into the ice chest from the shed side.  The ice man delivered ice, the rag man picked up rags, and another delivered breads and cookies.  Dad owned the house next door in which there were three apartments that he rented out.  We had a small yard down back where I raised lettuce and radishes as a youngster.  I loved to dig in the dirt.  My mother didn’t, but planted a section for flowers she could cut and put in vases.

My brother Tommy (George Thomas) was born on February 10, 1927 – very anemic and requiring lots of care.  I remember they fed him liver – they didn’t have iron pills then.  Dad’s mother Ida Mitchell lived with us when I was a baby.

Dad’s father had died in his mid-40’s, so Dad had to give up his dream of become a chemist, and instead (after Bowdoin College) went into his uncle’s (George E. Macomber) insurance firm (Macomber, Farr and Whitten) in order to support his mother.  She had diabetes before the days of insulin.  She was a fervent Baptist.  After she died, Dad gave up going to church except on Christmas, Easter and Children’s Day.  It was his only day of rest, as he worked at the insurance firm six days a week, ten hours a day.  I remember the celebration when the office agreed to work only a half day on Saturday.

At Dad’s firm, many customers found that Saturday was the only day they could come to the office.  He was a good man.  If any were behind in their payments, Dad paid for them.  Sometimes he lost money this way.  Dad went blind late in life, and instead of complaining, he just said how wonderful it was not to have to go to the office.  His blindness was caused by the doctor not noticing that his blood was getting too thick, so he had blood clots, first behind one eye, and a day or two later, the other.  He was a trustee of the bank, and was at a banker’s convention when his first eye went.  Dad was the soul of goodness, and people referred to him as Honest George.  When he died, even men Mum would meet on the street would weep when they spoke of him.

With a strict Baptist mother, and I think it was hard for Dad to play bridge on Sunday night but he did sometimes.  Dad never took a vacation, but he did take a long weekend now and then to go with “the boys” his age up to Herb Locke’s camp at Bean Pond in Maine to fish.  The Pond is near where Linc and Jeanne’s Stratton house was, I think.  Dad said his job was to row the boat while the others fished, and he loved getting away from work.  He also liked being served Vitamin X (rum and grapefruit juice) when he woke up, and not having to shave and or bathe.

Mum had been the first physical education teacher in the Augusta schools.  She attended Sargent College in Boston for two years until money ran out, and then started work in Gloversville, NY, going to all the country schools – on a bicycle or by horse and carriage.  It was difficult, as she was terrified of horses.  I think eventually that the superintendent of schools drove her around to the schools.  After that, she came back to be the first Physical Education teacher in the Augusta schools, putting on a huge gymnastics show at the City Hall at the end of each school year.

Mum was a busy lady, and she was very resourceful.  As a wife and mother, she was in the Garden Club, on the Augusta Park Commission, and in charge of the Nurses’ Association at the Augusta General Hospital.  She was often called upon to put on suppers at the Congregational Church in town.  There was nothing she couldn’t do.  She and Dad played a lot of Bridge, and had many friends. 

Dad had been through the depression of 1929.  His partner got him to get into the stock market just before the bottom dropped out, so he lost all his savings.  By the time I graduated from high school in 1939, he said he had enough to send me to a junior college.  He said girls didn’t need more than two years of college because they usually got married, and he had enough to send me.  I wanted to work at college, but he said I shouldn’t because I would be taking work away from some girl who needed the job in order to attend school.  I chose Lasell Junior College because it was outside of the city (Boston), they had a crew of war canoes on the Charles River, and I loved the outdoors.  Also, Dad felt I should choose a college away from Maine to “get broadened”.  

My first year roommate named Gert was a neatnick.  One day I caught her showing her mother that I hadn’t hung my clothes straight on the hangers in the closet, and that there was a wrinkle in my bedspread.  Luckily I got a better roommate the second year (Dot Walker - who was a free spirit).  She had a brother in the graduate house at M.I.T.  We would go to Boston to see him, taking an “overnight” permission.  Instead of staying at the YWCA as we had indicated, we came back to the dorm and climbed up the fire escape to our room (my roommate’s idea).

I was advised to take the secretarial course at college, though I would love to have learned what they taught in the liberal arts courses.  I always wanted to learn, and did get a Literature course and a psychology course as hoped.  I was writing to two soldiers from Augusta who served in the 103d Infantry during the war, and got my roommate Dot Walker to write to one of them, John Hughes, from Hallowell, ME.  She ended up marrying him.

After college I worked a short time for an insurance company, but it was in bookkeeping (which I don’t really like).  Afterward, I worked in Chemistry Headquarters at M.I.T. for Professor Hamilton and loved it.  I would rather have been in social work, but Mum got me the job.  I don’t think Mum had much confidence in my ability. 

I lived in an apartment on the fourth floor (no elevator) on Shepard Street, beyond Harvard Square.  I made $80 a month, and lived with the two girls I had roomed with on Bay State Road in a one-room apartment boarding house.  They never gave us enough to eat at the boarding house, so we moved in to the apartment on Shepard Street, down the street from a Radcliff college dormitory.  I paid $15 a month for my share of the rent.

We wore men’s shirts outside our pants so we would look like Radcliff students (it was the style).  On weekends we could take a train to Concord where we could rent a bike or canoe, or we would take streetcars to Boston or to the ocean beaches.  It was safe in those days to ride around on the subways – even late at night.  I volunteered at the Aircraft Warning Center in Boston and came home at midnight, also as an aide at Mass General Hospital where I handed out juice, etc., in the evening.  My office job included working Saturday mornings, then I often took the subway to Filene’s Basement where I spent some of my meager earnings.  One of the graduate students, Munther Fattah, from Bagdad, Iraq, had a convertible so we could get to the beaches or even to the summer music concerts in at the Berkshire Music Festival in western Massachusetts.

We helped at the USO in Boston, and my roommate Imogene Caney, from Gardiner, ME, ended up marrying one of the soldiers she met there.  My other roommate Marguerite Thayer was from Bellows Falls, VT, and married her childhood sweetheart.  I found other roommates and really was lucky to have some good ones.  There were always 3 or 4 of us, making rent cheap.  I was the only one who knew how to cook, because Dad and I had to learn how when my mother fell through a bridge and hurt her knee.  She was in bed for quite a few days.  Many of the veterans were returning from the war to go to college on the G.I. Bill, so we never lacked for dates.  I had 8 offers of marriage, mostly from students who wanted a live-in cook, laundress, etc., but none appealed to me, until I met Bill.

While working at M.I.T., from 1942 to 1948, I met Bill Vannah.  He was a graduate student in Mechanical Engineering at M.I.T. on the G.I. Bill.  We were planning a party at our apartment one night in November of 1947 and needed one more man.  I remembered that my mother’s friend Bessie Vannah had a son, Bill, at the graduate house at M.I.T., and I called him.  He came, and six months later came again and asked me out.  Later, he used to court me by riding his old bicycle over from Kenmore Square in Boston to the apartment I shared on Shepard Street in Cambridge. 

We decided on Valentine’s Day 1948 that we would like to get married and we called my father to get his permission.  He said he thought we would need 2 years to get to know each other, but we got married on Dad’s birthday, July 24, 1948, at the Augusta Country Club.

We borrowed my Dad’s 8 year old Ford on our honeymoon.  Bill had wanted to return to the Shelbourne Inn, a country inn near Berlin, NH that he remembered as being a place the young people enjoyed in his youth.  By the time we arrived, there wasn’t anyone under the age of 80.  Bill remembered that his father had led his family over the tops of the presidential range of mountains every summer when he was young, so he took me to Pinkham Notch, below Mount Washington.  In my shorts and halter and tennis sneakers, we climbed through Tuckerman’s Ravine to the top of the mountain.  It was raining as we went up over the headwall, and we hadn’t brought much for clothing.  Bill’s old sneakers gave out by the time we reached the top, so we swapped shoes, and he returned down through Tuckerman’s Ravine, while I rode down on the Cog Railway.  He drove around the mountain to pick me up at the bottom.

We started out married life in Foxboro where Bill worked at the Foxboro Company.  We had a little apartment on the second floor at 195 Main Street, owned by Percy and Anna Merriam.  Anna ran the hat shop in Foxboro.  We went everywhere on bikes but eventually Dad sold us his old Ford for $800 instead of turning it in for a newer one.  Actually, we made payments until Christmas, then I think he gave us the remainder as a Christmas gift.

I led a girl scout troop for a while – a large bunch of exuberant 11 year olds.  I knew nothing about Girl Scouting and the head of the Scouts wasn’t much help.  My assistant was a sedentary person who liked to do handwork.  I think I lasted one year, but then gave up the troop.

We then rented an old house (200 years old) on Union Street in Foxboro until we got together enough money to build a house down in the woods off Prospect Street (also in Foxboro) on a new little road called Allen’s Way.  Bill helped build it with a part-time carpenter/part-time teacher, still living in his 90’s, named Bob Girardin.  A brook ran behind the house.

Tommy was born at 195 Main Street; Gretchen at the second home on Union Street, and Karen at Allen’s Way.  I was pretty busy, and didn’t know much about raising children but they turned out fine.  Bill worked at the Foxboro Company till just after Karen was born, then got a job in the publishing company McGraw-Hill in N.Y.C. and we rented a 200 year old house, with termites, in Stamford, where Billy was born.  Later, we bought a home on Courtland Hill Street in Stamford, Connecticut where Linc was born.  I heard Bill telling someone he had figured out how not to have so many children – don’t keep moving, because we had a child in every place we had lived.

The Stamford House backed up to the river, and it was difficult to keep Tommy from trying to fall in it.  Sometime while there, Bill bought a small sailboat to sail in Long Island Sound, after which I would go with him and somehow manage to keep the children from falling overboard.  My neighbor across the street, Irmgard Matzen (from Germany), had 4 children, and was a wonderful friend.  She had been a gym teacher and gave super children’s parties.

End of written Autobiography, by Dorothy Macomber Vannah

Thanks for following our Blog.  So far this year (it's now Jan 21st), I've been much better about photo-documenting what we're doing on our homestead.  I'm more and more inspired about what we're working on, what the possibilities are for the future, and I'm suddenly becoming passionate about sharing this information with other people. 

What I want is what I think most of us want but for some reason often think that we're not capable of doing (even though we're doing it by default by living and interacting with the world around us).  I want to change the world for the better through my presence here, as my mother did through her life, (as many would attest even more often as she would deny it), and I want to be as alive and excited and passionate about life as I possibly can.  I also want everyone to know something that I do - that I have the best partner in the world in Jeanne Hergenrother!  Have a great 2015!

November 2014

 OK, that photo should have been in October's entry.  Jeanne, at her Pippi Longstocking best, for Halloween.  She even wore this to her physical therapy job.  Linc dubbed it "Hippy Longstockings".  Go Jeanne!
 We made a bit more progress on the goat barn addition in early November, installing roofing and wall plates.

Also this month, we dug into our potato beds and found mixed results.  One bed provided 10 lbs of potatoes for every lb planted.  Great!  Another bed was only 2 to 1.  Hmm...  Both beds were prepped with the same technique, and grew the same variety.  Linc thinks he remembers that Jeanne weeded the bindweed from the higher producing bed, carefully untangling the bindweed from the potato plants, and that he weeded the bindweed from the poorly producing bed, quickly ripping the bindweed from the potato plants, damaging the potato vines in the process and figuring that they'd recover.  Looks like they didn't!  Well, we still managed to harvest 460 lbs, or about 6 lbs for every 1 lb planted, slightly better than the year before, so we're improving, and we've got lots of potatoes to eat for the winter, again!
The photo above shows our new mobile solar powered vehicle battery charging cart.  This had been used as a solar electric fence charging cart for the electrified poultry netting system we surround our pastured chickens with, until Linc decided to get a larger panel, install it directly on the chicken coop camper trailer, put the battery in the camper, and run a wire out to the fence charger (forgot to take photos of that, will include in next year's blog).  Now the chicken fence always has plenty of electricity (except for when the goats chew through the wires), we don't have to drag this cart around through the tall hay when we move the chickens, and we've got this mobile solar panel and charge controller that we can use to keep batteries charged up on infrequently used cars, tractor and backhoe.  Cool!

Later in November, Linc drove back down to Arizona to replace his brother Bill, who had been keeping Mom company while his sister Gretchen visited daughters and new grand-daughter in the upper midwest.  Mom's health was declining again, so Linc stayed down there at his mother's, getting out occasionally to explore the canyons at the base of the Mogollon Rim by mountain bike.

October 2014

 We had decided to keep Eggplant's three girls from last year, and with them getting bigger, (and more kids planned for next spring), it was time to enlarge the goat barn.  Not the final addition, for sure, since we'd like to eventually have a big enough barn to store hay, milk in, and keep garden tools in (both separated from goat teeth somehow).  This addition will only 6' x 16', and will have a front wall panel of clear polycarbonate.  The polycarb will be removed in the summer, and a mountain-lion proof cattle panel grate behind it should keep the goats safe at night while still being able to enjoy the nighttime summer breezes and moonlight.
 Wow, that red dish towel on the left in photo above IS looking about ready for replacement - darn it, why did I point that out?  Another project was to add a hot water coil in the winter indoor wood cookstove, a hot water tank upstairs, and copper thermosyphon piping between the two, with the eventual goal of having a bathtub/shower with hot water supplied in the attached greenhouse.  Then, the neighbors can no longer feel guilty for how badly we smell in the winter. Why would the neighbors feel guilty?  Because they've forgotten to invite us over for showers recently, of course!
And here it comes - the beginning of a winter's supply (we hope!) of greens from the hoop greenhouse!  Why is there always a woman bending over in my photos?  Because she's the only one that works around here, the other one is always too busy taking pictures!!!!

We also picked a bunch of apples at friends' orchards again this year, dried some, ate a lot fresh, and root cellared the rest, once it became obvious that we weren't going to find the time this year to have a cider pressing party.

Linc's mother, who at 93, has been slowing down a lot lately, took a turn for the worse, and Linc flew down to Arizona for a week or so to join brother's Bill, Tom, and sister Gretchen at Mom's home in Rimrock.  Bill and Linc got to hiking in the Sedona Redrock area, Mom got back on her feet, and the family flew and drove back to their respective homes.

September 2014


 Please ignore the woman in the foreground mooning the camera!  Oh heck, now I've done it - you might not have noticed her otherwise!  Besides that, this is a shot of the greenhouse being readied for moving, by rolling on rail foundation, over to cover the winter greens beds covered by row cover fabric.  This entails unclamping the hoop frame from the rail foundation, hinging up the end walls, getting a couple people to come help push it, then folding the ends back down and re-clamping it onto the rails.  In the spring, we'll replace the winter greens plants with warm weather crops (tomatoes, melons, peppers), prepare another set of beds to the east for next winter's greens, then in the fall of 2015, roll it back to the west to cover those new beds, and let the sun, rain, snow get at the west beds so that they'll be ready for 2016-2017 winter greens.  Nifty!
 Jeanne watched the farm one day so that Linc could join a group for a fall foliage hike up Mt Lamborn.
One of the younger folks in the group decided to do handstands on the summit rock.  There's a 1000 foot drop off the back side of the rock.  Whether brave or silly, it made for a nice photo!

Jeanne harvested 280 bulbs of garlic from the garden.  It turns out that grasshoppers do eat onions, but they don't eat garlic.  Great!

They don't eat tomato plants either as it turns out, but since we'd abandoned the garden to the bindweed and grasshoppers and not bothered staking the tomatoes, nearly all of our tomatoes were eaten by slugs.  Last year, our tomato harvest was over 300 lbs.  This year?  15 lbs.  Ducks eat slugs, and next year we'll have ducks (and we'll stake the tomato plants up). 

August 2014

 The above photo shows our 2014 garden, as seen from the roof of the goat barn.  I shouldn't say our garden, since really it was the grasshoppers', not ours.  After replanting all of the corn, squash, melons, beans, kale, etc., only to watch them eat every seedling as it came up (well, the slugs were out in force this year too, so they helped the grasshoppers with the mass murder of our seedlings), we decided not to bother even TRYING to weed (other than potatoes plants, which seemed to be mostly unaffected), so the bindweed and chicory (neither of which appeal to grasshoppers and slugs, unfortunately) took over.

Linc read that Bill Mollison, founder of the regenerative design philosophy called Permaculture, once said that there is no such thing as too many insect pests, it only means that you need more predators (as in ducks, guinea fowl, turkeys), so we are now scheming on how best to incorporate ducks, and possibly turkeys or guinea fowl, into next year's garden.

Remember when I said that homesteading teaches perseverance?  This was definitely a perseverance-teaching lesson!
 Unfazed by the loss of our crops, we put together another E-bike, this one for Linc to replace the one he'd burned out the previous winter.  Here they both are, a 750 watt Bafang BBS01 mid-drive kit on Linc's bike, and a 350 watt on Jeanne's (the guy's has to be faster than the woman's, it's a rule!)  The single solar panel on the right is part of a separate solar system that will eventually supply power for charging e-bikes, e-car, and a second milk-storage fridge - thanks to neighbor Jack for the inverter, and Zoe and Colin for the batteries for that system.
The photo above says so many things.  It's of Jeanne, happily planting the new greenhouse winter greens beds, as the moon rises over Mt Lamborn and another vibrant colored sunset slowly fades over our homestead.  It got so dark that we had to finish up planting, and installing row cover, by headlamp in the dark.  I think I'll call this photo "Perseverance".  Maybe it should be called "Optimism".  It encompasses the philosophy that we are learning, which is to always focus on what we want to create, rather than worrying about what has gone wrong, or what we might do wrong, or what others might think.  And when we do, (go through the extra effort to get those new seeds planted, even if it means doing it in the dark, and even if they might all get eaten by grasshoppers and slugs like everything else planted this year), we're rewarded by beautiful experiences.  In this case, the beautiful experience was the sunset sky with moonrise that we might have missed if we'd been inside eating dinner.  Later, we were treated to an endless winter supply of greens, and that was icing on the cake.

Another nice thing that happened this month is that friends from New Hampshire, the Anderson Family, drove up for a visit on their way to see Mesa Verde.  Being short on guest space, we brought them up to our neighbor Eric Darby, where they slept in a large room he'd built above his earth ship, complete with a view of the West Elk Mountains out the open east side.  They loved it, and we loved seeing them and chatting about old times and life in between.  Yay for friends, old, current and yet to come!  

July 2014

 July brought an invasion of several billion plant-eating grasshoppers, pictured here sunning themselves as they did each the morning on the north garden fence, prior to embarking on another day's hard work of eating everything we had planted in the garden, (including all of the leaves and buds off of the $500 worth of new fruit and nut trees we'd planted in April).  "Thanks Linc and Jeanne, we're hoppingly happy!" they said, wriggling their thoraxes at us for emphasis.  "I hate you." Linc replied, as he spread out another day's supply of NOLO Bait (an organic, grasshopper biological control agent that appears to have been completely ineffective).  We watched in disbelief as they ate every bean, squash, melon plant that came up, then started in on the kale, lettuce, raspberries and blackberries, rhubarb, onions....  We now know what a true insect plague looks like.   
 We emailed a few friends and let them know we were thinking of trying to put the cover on our greenhouse, and were pleased to have a small crowd gather, swarm up onto the frame like kids on a jungle gym, and despite some wind, pull the cover on and cinch it down in a matter of one or two hours of fun work.  Thanks everyone!
 Now there's just one problem.  The beds that we're prepping are in the west half of the greenhouse area, and the greenhouse itself is on the east half.  Which means that before winter, we're going to have to un-anchor it, and roll it westward on the rails to the newly planted beds of winter greens.  More on that in the fall...
The chickens, living their mobile RV lifestyle, received the addition of a new dust bath trailer (small yellow tented trailer in the photo above).  The old mobile dust bath was a blue plastic kiddie pool that tended to collect water, turning their dust bath into a chicken mud wrestling pit.  Fun for the chickens I guess, but the eggs were getting pretty dirty with all of their muddy feet running in and out of the nesting boxes after the latest henny-penny mud wrestling bout, so we put a roof over the new bath house and the mud wrestling stopped.

June 2014

 As the last of the snow melted off of Mount Lamborn and Lands End across the valley, things really started to green up down below.  Here, our Sannen goat Phoebe appears to be enjoying the view from Robbins Ditch as much as me, with Fire Mountain Canal contouring its way around the Roatcap Creek drainage below.
 Late May and early June brings mornings with Bluebird skies, green pastures, singing birds.  This time of year helps me remember what I'm inspired to create here more than any other time.  Abundance, trees, water, flowers, fruit, happy people, birds everywhere!
 Our neighbor Eric spent much of May and June constructing a two-story, 2400 square foot community dance hall on his property, mostly by himself, with the occasional assistance when needed from his sons and once, a neighborhood work party to move the homemade roof trusses into the building.  I want to have more neighborhood work parties - fun!
The warm weather helped several of our hens remember that they sometimes like to go broody and sit on eggs for 21 days straight so that they'll hatch out flocks of tiny, chirping chicks.
 Linc and Jeanne worked, with help from friends Ian, Dev, David and Colin, on putting up the high tunnel hoophouse frame.  It turned out that the company had sent the wrong instructions and several of the wrong parts, but that didn't stop us.  If anything, homesteading teaches about perseverance!
 Inside the cabin, we replaced a small, chest fridge with a larger one (to handle the increasing refrigeration requirements created by more goat milk products), and squeezed a front-loading clothes washer into the attached greenhouse.  The larger electrical load from these, plus charging electric bicycle batteries, necessitated a larger solar electric array, so we moved the array down off of the cabin roof (hard to keep clear of snow in the winter), increased the size from 600 watts to 1000 watts, and fenced if off from goat hooves and horns.  This array will eventually be pole mounted, with the ability to change tilt angle seasonally to follow the sun.
The alfalfa in our alfalfa/grass pastures got hit hard by weevils again this year, and the goats (not being insectivorous I suppose) opted not to eat from the pastures for a month or so.  Linc borrowed neighbor Ryan's tractor, rented a mower attachment, and cut two of the paddocks (recommended for weevil control).  Also this month, we planted all of our warm weather garden vegetables, including 66 tomato seedlings we'd raised in the cabin greenhouse in soil blocks, and replanted carrots (we still haven't quite figured out how to get carrots to grow here).  Go plants go!

May 2014

 This month, Jeanne went off on a 9 day Vision Quest in the desert with a group of girlfriends.  Here's what she looked like after spending 3 of those days sitting by herself on a rock out in the wind (and it was really windy) and sun without a tent, no food, a jug of water.  She has this "grounded" look to her, I think.
 Meanwhile, back at the ranch, Linc ran around like the proverbial headless chicken, milking chickens, collecting goat eggs, prepping garden beds, planting potatoes, going for bike rides with a friend, work sharing with neighbor Dev (we'd work for a few hours together on my projects, then go over and work for a few hours on his), doing some HVAC load calc work for a friend, etc.  The garden bed prep this year involved loosening weeds in beds and paths with a sharp shovel blade, shoveling weeds from paths onto the beds then covering that with topsoil from the paths, then adding hay mulch to beds and wood chip mulch to paths, then reinstalling drip hose.  Still a lot of work.  Gotta be a better way...
 The goats didn't know what to make of Linc as he went tearing around the homestead trying to do the work of two people, looking a little frazzled due to sleeping 5 hours/night. 

Finally, Jeanne came home!  Welcome home, Jeanne, how was your trip, great, now help me plant all of this chard, kale, beets, lettuce, corn, beans, the rest of these potatoes, and, oh, can you separate out some cream, churn some butter, and make some cheese, cause there's about six gallons of milk in the fridge...
And, we bought a web cam so that we could enjoy dinner time Skype webcam calls with Linc's mother, calling from the laundry room/office of the assisted living home that she shares with a family (the owners) and two other elderly residents.  She frequently enjoyed telling us her favorite joke, "There was one smart fella and he felt smart, two smart fellas and they felt smart, three fart smellas and they smelt...oops!"

Friday, December 26, 2014

April 2014

April brought the usual high winds and louder whisperings of spring.  Linc turned on the new mile long buried pipe irrigation system for the first time on the 3rd. It worked great!  No more herding piles of leaves and sticks down the ditch every spring (OK, actually that part was fun).  No more worrying about the ditch leaking, drying up, or slipping down the mountainside.  Fantastic.

Linc purchased a better electric bike kit for Jeanne's town bike (shown above), along with the requisite fenders and lights, and put together our second e-bike.  This one is MUCH better than the first.  Slightly less power, extremely quiet, with a digital control pad that allows one to set the level of assist desired (can be overridden with thumb-throttle for a quick boost up short hills, passing cars on the freeway ;-)).   Pedaling lightly, she is able to do 22 mph on the flats.  Steep hills are around 10 mph, 14 if pedaling hard.  Jeanne at first expressed only mild interest until one day she decided to take her first ride by commuting to work and back on it.  By the end of the day, she too had EGG (Electric Goofy Grin) on her face when she pulled in the driveway, and her days of driving the car pretty much ended right there.

This month, we planted peas out in the garden, and started warmer weather veggies in soil blocks in our cabin greenhouse.  We also planted 17 dwarf and semi-dwarf fruit and nut trees in the garden.  Planting food-producing trees felt REALLY good.  With time, ONE of these could produce as much food as an entire garden bed.  Its roots will mine minerals from the soil and drop them as leaves in the fall, enriching the topsoil around it.  The flowers will attract insects.  Its roots will pull moisture from deep in the ground and transpire it from its leaves, cooling the air around it, and its leaves will provide some shade and windbreak, both of which we could use a lot more of on our south facing mountainside.  Lastly, the trees will attract and form symbiotic relationships with fungi, eventually creating an information and nutrient-exchanging subsurface network in the garden.  REALLY, ALL THAT?  Wow, why wouldn't everyone drop whatever they were doing right this instant and go outside and start planting trees?  Well, for one, I'm writing this on Dec 31st, and it's 16 F outside...

February and March 2014

No photos!.  I think we were too busy!  We both had work, Linc's mostly being in Grand Junction, doing HVAC/plumbing design/drafting, with some additional engineering and water treatment work from home.  Jeanne continued to work at PACE at the senior center doing physical therapy two days/week, as well as taking care of all of the chores while Linc was away.

Linc's e-bike motor burned out after a month or so of exciting pre-dawn and post-sunset winter commutes across the Grand Valley to work from his friends' home, often in sleet, snow, rain.  Still, he was impressed, and immediately made plans to order a better made kit for Jeanne's town bike.

While on the subject, here's what I like about these e-bike kits.  They're fast, silent (well, the newer ones are), one can pedal as much and as hard as one wants for a work out while commuting or running errands, and if tired or hauling a big load of groceries in the trailer, the motor is always there to help out, or even take over completely if need be.  Uphills and headwinds are no longer an issue, and given the speed boost, it's possible to nearly keep up with traffic, which gives car drivers more time to react to the sight of a bicyclist flying along in the bike lane with a huge grin on the rider's face.  All this, and a 20 to 30 mile battery range, and the ability to recharge (2000 to 5000 times) for 6 cents worth of electricity per charge (if grid tied, free if off-grid solar electric).  Errands (and the associated finding of parking spaces, undoing seatbelts and hauling oneself in and out of the car - all associated with errands in a car), are a breeze.  Cruise up onto the sidewalk, lean the bike against the front of the store, back out in a flash, then whip across town to the next place.  Santa Claus needs one of these!

In February, Linc drove down to Flagstaff, Arizona for a week to visit his mother and sister, and help with Mom's filing and tax prep.

One weekend in February, Linc took at weekend-long workshop in Paonia called Transformation Mind Dynamics, a self-examining, dysfunctional pattern exposing, self-actualizing program similar to the EST trainings that were held in the 70's.  Immediately hooked, he began spouting TMD terms like "I am now RADICALLY HONEST!", or "I'm out of INTEGRITY!" on a regular basis, which amused (or irritated, depending on the day) Jeanne and any neighbors who hadn't already taken the training, quite a bit.

We used up the last of the root cellar-stored apples in late March, and a day or two later, the first Robin of spring started singing outside the cabin.  In early March, we planted the first spring greens, parsnips and beets in the garden.  Not complaining, but WHERE, did the winter go?

January 2014

 Thinking wisely that we should eat what we grew, we continued eating potatoes at a furious rate (well, they tasted good too), along with the usual eggs, kimchi, homemade ketchup, etc.  They usually found their way into breakfast and supper, and if there was soup, for lunch.  Late in the month, we finished off the last of the 400-something lbs that we'd harvested last fall, minus whatever had been given away, and the 80 lbs saved for seed potatoes.  This year, we'll aim for twice that!
 Linc finally got time to pursue his interest in electric-human hybrid transportation, buying a mid-drive electric motor kit that allowed him to pedal up hills pulling a trailer, feeling like Superman.  The motor was operated from a handlebar twist throttle, and a Lithium phosphate battery rode in a rear pannier.  A small charger came with the battery, allowing charging off of our home solar electric system.  The kit was a blast, but cheap.  The motor mount twisted, chain fell off regularly, and it smelled like it was burning out almost from the first day he rode it.  And, he was hooked.
With snow on the ground again up higher, we did our best to get out for the occasional quick ski tour up Tower Hill.  The snow was always good, with the trail head located perhaps 6 miles, and 3000 feet or so higher than home.

Linc received some engineering work to do from home, and Jeanne was hired to do physical therapy work at the local senior center 2 days/week, a dream job for her, being less than 2 miles from the farm, close enough to zip home at lunch if need be to check on the goats and chickens.