Thursday, October 20, 2011

Autumn


P vs. vegetation competing with the seedlings.




Bushes in the nursery continue to get bigger. The new skirting boards and chicken wire are keeping out the rabbits we think were eating the plants earlier.



The forest machine shed aka "barn" has its new roof.


The cottage is partly under roof and we are on track to have it weather tight well before year's end.





We've been getting regular visits by our owl and have been hearing it and a friend in the evening in the alder & cedar woods to the north, and seeing it making low flying rodent runs very near our cottage.


Having taken an early walk up the drive, I captured an image of the rapidly changing sky at sunrise. We've seen few deer. We finally saw one four year old buck this morning up top. Our theory is they are hiding during hunting season though not being hunters, we don't exactly know when the season starts and ends. 

We are looking forward to spending some time going after blackberry plants again, soon.

Dale  



Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Rapid progress

Things gave been moving so quickly that I've skipped posting. A quick update sans photos follows:

Most seedlings planted this Spring are doing well, some already a foot taller. We are leaving in place those few that appear dead knowing some will come back.

The trees planted immediately following the clear-cut are also doing well including most transplanted out of the cleared areas up top. Some have grown two or more feet this year and are taller than I am.

Native bushes in the nursery were attacked by rabbits. Many have survived and now chicken wire is in place top keep them out.

P and hard-working hired assistant Bret Fenstermacher have cleared around trees and mowed considerable area up top.

We purchase little produce now as we have been enjoying lettuce, beets and their greens, carrots, snap-peas, kale and string-beans from P's garden.

The barn/garage/shop has a new metal roof with skylights and a completely rebuilt side-shed.

The eastern half of the cottage has been demolished, the foundation modified including new porch deck and under-slab plumbing. The old brick chimney is gone. There is a new metal roof on the western half of the building and I am reworking it's framing and sheathing. LeRoy Boren and an assistant are to start framing the eastern half anew next week including new porch and inside stairs to what will be the master "suite".

Finally the shallow irrigation well-house gets it's new roof this week.

Next....go after blackberry plants again, update forest mgmt plan and get cottage weathertight.

Stay tuned for some pix.

Dale

Thursday, July 28, 2011

May & June showers bring....

....lots of growth.  First of all, an update on the cedars.   I found what appeared to be a dead one near Paulette's garden and went to pull it out.  It resisted and I persisted and found that the roots were woody and firm.  I looked closely and found some new sprouting green near the soil line.  Then and there I decided to leave all plants in place for the next couple of years regardless of appearance.  Most of the trees we planted this Spring are doing really well and have already shot up as much as six or more inches.  I chalk this up to the unusually rainy weather we have been having.  The rain also made the grass grow like crazy and the now three year old Douglas-firs shoot up a foot or more like this one.  Note the yellow mesh on a branch we thought would be the leader.  Obviously another branch won.  Already many trees are above competing vegetation.  Still, if we can get rid of plants immediately around the trees it would be a big help to their growth.
Speaking more about growth, the ecology of the property seems to have completely changed this last year.  Spurred on by the rain and the invasives abatement, we see tall grass crowding out many weeds and lots of foxglove where the slash piles used to be.  This one is typical.
We had to have a new septic system installed as a condition of the building permit to remodel the existing cottage on the property. While we were at it, we had the installer rough in a driveway to our future homesite up top then I worked on it with our tractor and box blade. You can see one of Paulette's hoop houses in the garden enclosure to the right.
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Last year, no berries.  This year LOTS!  These are the native (good) wild trailing blackberries...very tasty, as opposed to the invasive, European (bad) blackberries....very tasty.
.Inspired by the garden at Good Cheer Food Bank where Paulette has been taking gardening classes, she purchased and added a special greenhouse plastic covering secured by oak lath attached to the end hoops, then framed end walls covered with corrugated polycarbonate. One end has a door and both vents. Window screen is yet to be added to the bottom of both sides shown rolled up.

.And just to show that remodeling has not been neglected, here is to what our new septic system is connected.  This is the lower floor bath with building drain at the bottom of the photo.  This will be inspected along with foundation modifications then we pour concrete.  After that, we will demolish the left half of the cottage to completely rebuild it.  We are saving the right, two story portion of the building and foundation.  This plumbing is in that part of the building.  This will be our new Cora Central, superceding our beloved travel trailer.

Dale


Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Spring



This salmonberry plant outside our travel trailer was left after we mowed down a blackberry thicket over a year ago. This native plant is common on the property and generally welcome. You can see seedlings in the background from the first of this year's three planting weekends. We are looking east toward the Puget Sound in this photo.



Skunk cabbage aka swamp lantern is popping up lushly in all three of our wetlands this year. It has been extra wet and the wetlands are extra happy. The brown dry vines are what remain of the non-native blackberry plants and thickets most of which we removed last year. The gree foliage is more salmonberry. This view is into the little wetland on the north edge of the property at the foot of our hill.



Looking east from our western property line from the back of the property across the larger of the three wetlands you can see some open water. It will dry up in the summer, later this year probably than last given all the rain.

We are hoping for a berry bounty this year.

Dale

Monday, May 23, 2011

60 days after the planting


 Sadly, this tree is not likely to make it.  Notice the blackened topmost branches?  Some trees are all blackened.  Preliminary diagnosis is root rot.  It could be pathogens in the soil or problems during shipping.  It seems that most affected trees were in our third batch and only cedars.   I took samples of whole plants to the local WSU extension who then have forwarded them to a central plant clinic for analysis.   It  could be 100 of 300 trees or more.  We certainly hope not.  The six that I pulled up all had limp roots....not a good sign, and some new sprouts that were already dying back.


  While this tree does not look great, it is probably fine.  Some "bronzing" is normal and tips are green.  Most trees, especially the first planted seem lush and very vigorous, and the hemlocks and spruces are all doing well.   The yellow stuff is the tiller net we talked about earlier.  Deer have learned how to pull it off and I have found a number of munched trees.  I put the net back on what's left and hope new growth will take over.  It seems to slow the deer down at least.  We will post the results of the analysis when we get it.

Dale

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Tree planting mission accomplished...buildings, driveway next


Thanks to our friends, Tree Management Plus, WACD plant materials center (our seedling suppliers) we got our tree planting done you could say ahead of schedule.  Our consulting forester from WA DNR stressed that we should get our planting density up from what it was as soon as possible. 

In our forest plan, we gave ourselves two seasons and he signed off on that while kind of making a face.  It turns out that it is best if you plant all at once or as close to it as possible else, simply stated, the older trees will stunt the younger ones.  The replanting after the clearcut happened in 2007 so we are a little late already.

We had thought to re-plant the lower part of our property only this year and bought trees for that.  We planned to clear many of the alder growing there as it is overcrowded in places.  We decided that could wait and that we needed to stay away with our seedlings from where we will later fell the alder (maybe next year).  Since this area is only alder now, we don't have the problem of older fir trees stunting the new ones.

With the freed up plants we were able to stock up the rest of the property.   I also moved some of the now almost three year old doug-fir seedlings out of where we will clear for our other house.  In the end, we had difficulty finding space for all the trees and still were able to plant some down below in the open areas.  

We dedicated part of the lower area to noble fir trees that we will harvest in 6-7 years and sell as Christmas trees.  New trees will grow from the stumps, making a nearly perpetual sequence of harvests possible.

Leaves are appearing on the bushes in our nursery waiting there to be planted out next spring along the course of our new driveway that we hope to put in soon.  We hope to get our clearing and grading permit any day now.

We are emptying out the barn.  It will get a cement floor.  And the well house for our shallow irrigation well is empty now and washed out for its renovation.   With approval of our clearing and grading permit, we will also get our building permit for remodeling the cottage to start soon.

Finally, I go up today to water the sprouts in P's garden.  7 of 8 beds are raked out and amended and five are planted.  I'll start marking the floor of the cottage for foundation modifications.

Dale

Monday, March 14, 2011

Almost ready to go

Here we are almost ready for the planting described in my previous post.  Paulette is on the other side of the camera.  Everyone is holding planting instructions, do's and mostly don'ts.  You can see the bags of trees behind us to the right already fitted with tiller net for browse protection.  It makes the trees easy to spot as well. 

Dale

Sunday, March 13, 2011

Almost Spring planting

We ordered 500 trees to be delivered in three batches on three successive weekends.  Yesterday we hosted a planting party.  Six of Paulette's generous and fun coworkers volunteered to help with the first batch.  Somehow, instead of 170 trees, we received 230 which was great because we had such a big crew.  We planted 160 western redcedars, 35 western hemlocks, and 35 Sitka spruce trees many in areas not previously planted.  It was rainy (perfect planting weather) while we worked, then dry for the party afterward.  Paulette made a couple of delicious lasagnas.  We christened our new firepit a repurposed dryer drum while enjoying some good old American macrobrews.


Friday, February 25, 2011

Winter means planting and more progress

I waved goodby to the Bayliner last month.  Two nice gentlemen from Hoquiam Grays Harbor came and took her away. They will fix her up and give her to a good friend who lives on a lake in Eastern WA.  They were pleased with her condition and happy to get the trailer too.  That's a big step toward clearing out the barn allowing us to fix it up to better arrange our farming equipment and also receive all the stuff we have been storing in the house.  We are getting closer to getting our clearing and grading and building permit to renovate the cottage.

We went to WACD Plant Materials Center to pick up 100 big leaf maple seedlings.  We hired Jenny Conrad and Pat Beurskens to help us get them in the ground.  The four of us managed it in about 3 hours.  We now have a plantation per our management plan, in the back near our western wetland.  The funny yellow mesh is called Tiller Net, plant protection that seems like it will be useful in protecting most all of our work against the voracious deer that roam the property.


We also now have an enclosed nursery and a good start on the enclosed garden.  Most of the material for the enclosures we have salvaged from fence, wire and treated poles found in the barn or on the property.  We finished the nursery just in time.  25 bare-root high bush cranberry plants arrived to be potted until we plant them next fall after our driveway to the top of the property is in.   I potted the plants during a driving snow storm from the relative comfort of our barn.


Here the pots are heeled-in in the nursery to protect them from the freezing weather and the deer.

 

Four black walnut trees arrived with the cranberry plants.  After finishing with the cranberry, I planted them in back with the big leaf maple. In March we plant 300 more western redcedar, 100 Sitka spruce and 100 western hemlock.  Next Fall/Winter we'll plant more trees in keeping with our management plan.

Dale


Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Happy New Year



As is traditional, New Year's is a good time for resolutions and we've started the year out with a few for Cora.  The resolutions take the form of a project plan broken into four parts; Forest, Garden, House and Barn.  Each "resolution" has a series of tasks.  It is easy to head up there and want to work on everything and get scattered. There is so much we want to do. Now we can easily see where we are, pick a task, head to the property and focus.  Thank you construction project manager Marc for suggesting that we do this, and Paulette for urging me on.

New Year's Day, we located our nursery and set posts to fence off the area.  We plan to baby some plants for a year or two in small containers before planting them out.  Now we  have a dedicated 20' x 20' area in which to do it, a hundred or so plants at a time.  We also took pictures of the old Bayliner we inherited with the property to put on Craigslist.  It and its trailer are soon to go to make room in our barn for more forest related stuff.  Our conifer seedlings are on order as well as some high-bush cranberry, blue elderberry and a handful of black walnut as an experiment.  These plants will hang out in our nursury this year and be planted next.  The walnut will join big leaf maples in their plantation we are planning in the west end of the property.  We are recruiting maple seedlings now.  

We've made application for current use taxation and separately for selective clearing for a septic system in a designated non-forest area.  Our forest stewardship plan has been included in both of these important applications, the latter of which we need so we an get a permit to remodel the little house.  So far, the year is off to a busy start.  The picture above is looking west from behind our barn at the hill in the front part of Cora.

Dale