After The Wolf Moon

Last weekend’s Wolf Moon marked the turning point in the season. No more dormant trees and frosted over lettuce leaves. The days are lengthening and the temperature increasing. I am seeing more bird species in my yard and I recently saw a swarm of ladybugs (above pic).

It therefore seems a perfect time to start germination. Each year I try to be in rhythm with nature when I cultivate. Seeds and starts seem stronger and nature does a load the work. With that, I have thrown myself into the outdoor work in an attempt to catch up with Spring in all her glory. The results:

Major “landscape remediation” project to the front yard. After a summer of significant home remodeling, the front lawn was destroyed. I never loved it anyway. So I decided to attempt a more natural landscape of “no mow” fine fescue seeds with spatterings of wildflower seeds. I may have gone nuts with the Crimson Clover on one section. I’ll find out in a month or so.

Virgil cooling his, uh..heels.

I began my rabbit breeding program. I was waiting for the colder months to pass before starting. In preparation I read about how to prepare and what to expect. There is a simple but helpful series online called the Better Farming Series. I was expecting the pair to be shy and reserved for a few minutes, at least. Apparently the timing was right, no introductions, no delays. A successful connection was made and I expect to have a litter in 28-31 days.

I am also raising two pullets (young hens) to swap out two older hens from my flock that seem to have slowed, or entirely stopped, laying.

I will place the shallow honey frames I removed from the hive for the winter back on. I’ve had the bagged frames sitting in my chest freezer to kill off any moths or other bugs that may have inhabited the honeycomb.

Now I am running off to work on the very unglamorous chore of pulling weeds, lots and lots of weeds. Sources of inspiration: 1) Oakland Public Library’s audiobooks on mp3. I am now listening to my first Ivan Turgenev novel. 2) El at Fast Grow the Weeds and Stefani at Sicilian Sisters Grow Some Food.

5 Comments

  1. stefaneener

    Those ladybugs are tres cool. Totally. And the front yard looks great. I’m still a little squeamish about the rabbit project, but hey, I don’t have to do it. The chickens? Do you find that your flock gets weird if you change things? I’m thinking that I’m going to go for wholesale replacement in the future, and just have a time of relying on frozen eggs instead. They get so crazy if the pecking order is disturbed.

  2. clow

    Let me know when you plan to do the deed with the hens. If we’re around and you want help I’m willing to learn!
    Those ladybugs look super cool. I’ve never seen that before!

  3. Kevin Braun

    Wow…rabbits and hens and landscaping – all interesting – I am planning a major landscaping project too – I will be doing most of it myself – looking forward to it.

  4. AlizaEss

    Yay ladybugs!

    I don’t know if you can ever have enough crimson clover.. I would dry a whole bunch for tea!

  5. Esperanza

    stefaneener- Yep, the flock dynamics change when new birds are introduced. It can be tricky. I manage the flock according to their needs.

    clow- you got it.

    AlizaEss- I had no idea I could drink it! Even better. Love your blog!



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