Tomorrow is my birthday and last night it dipped down to 20 degrees with wind chills in the teens. In all my years, it has never been this cold on my birthday. Usually, this time of year I have already started planting some cold tolerant plants. I am glad I decided to wait this year and keep it all in the greenhouse because none of it would have survived the night. We are just about out of firewood too. We didn't anticipate having to restock the woodstove this much in March. We did get a little break from it last week, when the temperatures got up to almost 70 degrees and we had several days in the 50-60's. Now we are back to a full load of wood daily. I am using this time to catch up on the farmers market rules, order some greasy bean heirloom seeds (if you've never heard of those, then you don't know beans!) and do a little sewing on the sewing machine I gave myself for my birthday. I haven't tried to sew anything in years because I haven't been able to find the old sewing machine I had. It is packed away, somewhere in the container full of things that I didn't consider necessities when we downsized from 3000 sq.ft. to this 1000 sq.ft. cabin. My husband jokingly calls this place "The Last Resort" but when thinking of a farm name, it just didn't sound right to buy products from the "Last Resort," so I went with a name that signifies this area and native plants. We have Mountain Laurel growing all along this ridge, especially back along the cliff line at the rear of our property. It gets such pretty flowers in the late spring/early summer and the leaves stay green through the winter. It is a wild rhododendron and gets about 15 feet tall here. Little Laurel is also the name of the holler at the base of the cliff line here, identified on the USGS map. It is a tributary to the Licking River. So Laurel Ridge Farm seems like an appropriate name for this place. Getting back to the subject of sewing, I don't really miss that old sewing machine that I can't find in the hundreds of boxes stacked in the container. The machine was heavy and smelled like a burning belt and oil. It also had very few features and often made me really frustrated. The foot pedal was either really slow or pedal to the metal. I am hoping this new machine with 130 built in sewing stitches, 170 stitch functions, build in LED light, LCD display, start & stop button, extension table for quilting and large pieces, free arm option and it threads itself! That is important because my eyes are not as good as they used to be, thanks to all these birthdays that keep creeping up so quickly. Time really does speed up as you get older. I always thought older people were silly for saying that, so I guess I am the silly one now! Here are some recent pictures including one of the finished greenhouse/workshop/outdoor kitchen/bar. It really is a multipurpose structure! We absolutely love it. There is nothing else designed like it that I have ever seen. I put some black plastic down on part of the garden, hoping to warm the ground up and keep the weeds down. My dad gave me a rolling A/V cart he got at a school board auction and it works great for rolling the plants in and out of the greenhouse. Inside the greenhouse, I have some supplemental lighting for cloudy days and I have wrapped the windows with white frost cover to keep the sun from burning and drying out the plants on warm days. The chicken cages I had to build to keep the cats off the seedlings. The cats live in the greenhouse over the winter. It is heated by the outdoor woodstove boiler along with the house, hot water heater and our hot tub. It keeps the greenhouse at least 55 degrees. I start the seedlings on a thermostat controlled heat mat at 70 degrees. We have started terracing some of the garden because we are on a hill and not only does that cause soil loss but you get tired of standing kneeling on a hill trying to garden. It wears out the knees, ankles and hips quick! Tomorrow, I will borrow a friends tractor and start on making some newly tilled areas for my popcorn, squash and melons.
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Laurel Ridge Homestead is located in Morgan County, Kentucky and borders the Daniel Boone National Forest. We are a small family run homestead farm that produces fresh eggs, fruits, vegetables and fire wood in an organic, sustainable and eco-friendly manner. We are experimenting and just getting started. This blog will be documentation to our learning experience as well as a helpful place for others who are trying to start their own small family farm.
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