Blog Categories/Tags
1/2 & 1/2
120
36
3rd Party Certification
Albert King
Ansel Adams
Antibiotics
Antoine de Saint-Exupéry
Art
Art Knowledge News
Audible
baa
Barthes
Basic Lamb Recipes
Baudelaire
Big Food
Big Yarn
Biking
Bill of Rights
Bittman
Blanket
Bolano
Botticelli
Botton
Breeding
Breeding Stock
Buddha
Bullamalita
Capitalism
carnivores
Catskill Merino Hat
Cesare Pavese
Cezanne
Chunky Yarn
CIA
Cicero
Clara Parkes
Cochineal
Colette
Colorant
Constable
Cooking Lamb
Corriedale
Coup de Grace
Coyotes
Criticism
David Foster Wallace
DaVinci
Delanceyplace
Deworming
Discount Code
Dogs
Dominion?
doxa
Drugs
Duck
Ducks
Dye
Eartag 36
Eating Policy
Electric Fence
Employment
End of Poverty
Ewe 159
Exercise
Experimental Dyeing
Factory Farm
FAMACHA
Famous Knitters
Farm Help
Farm Stand
Farming
FDR
Fecals
Festival
Fish
Flaubert
Florence Fabricant
Food
Food Deserts
Food Flock
Food Politics
Food Swamps
Foodie
Frances Middendorf
Francesco Mastalia
Garlic
Garlic Cultivation
Georgia O'Keeffe
Gift Certificates
Goncourt Brothers
Gordon Lightfoot
Grazing
Grazing 2009
Great Expectations
Green Mountain Spinnery
Green turn
Greener Shades
Greenmarket
Greenmarket; Union Square
Hahn
Hand Dyeing
Hand Dyeing Workshop
Hang Tag
Hang Tags
Hannah
Hats
Hats for Haiti
Headcheese
Heather
Heather Yarn
Heatwave
Hemingway
Herbicide
Improv
Indigo
Ink
Intelligence
Interns
Irene
Irony
Jack
James Joyce
James Woods
Jane Austen
Jimi Hendrix
Johnny Cash
Judy Geib
Kafka
Knitter's Review
Knitter's Slideshow
Knitting
Knitting Gauge
La Gioconda
Lamb
Lamb 072
Lamb 427
Lamb Andouille Sausage
Lamb Bacon
Lamb Cuisine
Lamb Gallery
Lamb Jerky
Lamb Recipes
Lamb Sausage
Lamb Sausages
Lamb Stew
Lamb Stones
Lambing
Lambing 2009
Lambing 2010
Lambing 2011
Lambs
Lamb's Quarters
Latin
Lede
Leg of Lamb
Limited Edition
Limited Edition Color
Limited Edition Heather
Little Phrase
Madder
Maiwa
Manure
Marcel Proust
Market
Martha and the Vandellas
Media
Merryville
Metaphor
Michael Pollan
Micron
Mittens
Montaigne
Morning
Movies
Mrs. Dalloway
Munch
Muses
Music
My Base & Scurvy Heart
Nabokov
Nadar
Natural Color
Natural Colors
Natural Dyes
Needs
New York
New York Times
Newsletter
Nietzsche
NYT
Oil
Olivia Sethney
On Reading
Osage Orange
Overheard
Painting
Pasture
Pater
Pattern
Blog Entries by Date
<< Back to main

Workplace

Posted 4/30/2008 8:36am by Eugene Wyatt.

Garlic & silos

Two weeks ago Dominique and I pulled the rye-straw mulch off the garlic.  The shoots were pale, spindly and 2 inches tall, now look at these “little soldiers.”  Garlic will grow 4 feet in height and flower in what is called a scape just before harvest in early July.

In the photo, behind the garlic to the left of the nearest silo is a lean-to shed that we call the shepherd’s room; it is also where we dye the yarn.  Further left of that you can see the boys hanging out in a barren area (sheep will eat grass down to dirt) around a round bale of hay.  This year the grass is slow coming on; it has been cool and dry.  But yesterday, after a dry spell of two weeks, it did rain; in a day or two, when the soil temperatures rise, the grass will begin to grow faster than the sheep can eat it and at pasture they’ll be.

On the horizon, you see silos which are next to the barn where the girls are lambing; they are due to finish up Sunday. On Monday or Tuesday, with eager Poem, we’ll slowly drive the ewes and their baby lambs down the hill to the green pasture at the left of the garlic field where they will graze through the summer months. We got through another winter.

Summertime
And the livin' is easy,
Fish are jumpin'
And the cotton is high.
Oh yo' daddy's rich
An' yo' ma is good lookin'
So hush, little baby,
Don't you cry.

George & Ira Gershwin
Porgy and Bess

0 Comments »
Leave a Comment
Your email address will not be posted to the public and we will not send any emails to the provided address except in direct reply to this comment.




Captcha*

This question is used to make sure you are a human visitor and to prevent spam submissions.

Mollom CAPTCHA
Check this box to receive updates by email when
new comments are added to this item.