Monday, June 11, 2012

Late Winter through late Spring happenings

Early Spring we hired Dale Strickland Dirt Movers to make a huge mess around the cottage to bury conduit and pipe for the utilities.  Ditches were open for several weeks and everything seemed to be a sea of mud.

We decided that Korean Nut pines would be a great addition so Dale planted 30 along the driveway and sun corridor's sunny sides.  They will grow to be as tall as 40 meters, not 40 feet as I originally thought and should bear pine nuts in 6 - 10 years.  Our favorite blue tubes now protect them from the deer.

A portion of the pine nut orchard.

We got to do the hook-up between buried pipe and the new and very expensive water meter.

I got to help Potelco make connection to the new meter socket I set on the wall of the cottage.  Installed power panels in both cottage and barn and got everything inspected before arranging for the relatively inexpensive conversion to underground connection that was formerly overhead.  Then using Cora's trusty tractor, filled in all the remaining work pits.


We fretted over color selection for the cottage with the help of some of the finest pros in the the color industry (Jane Brown) and consulted authoritative texts (Designer's Guide to Color 5), searched our souls then painted large panels before arriving at the cottage's color scheme.  The trim sort of pulled the whole thing together.  Actually, Cesar Gutierrez the painter pulled the whole thing together.  Coincidentally the scheme is not unlike Cora's truck. The front door is a dummy and not the snappy red orange one that will be hung after a little more work is done inside.  

So while I concentrate on the inside of the cottage, Paulette is protecting trees with tubes.  Time to order another couple boxes of 200.    300 + covered and hundreds to go before September when the bucks will be at it again.

Dale

Sunday, January 15, 2012

Blue Tubes


Paulette's invention
Stuffing tree and branches into the tube.

Protection started along a deer "highway"
 This last Friday we teamed up to install more blue tubes using a loading device that Paulette invented using some white corrugated sleeving originally intended as protection itself, and one of the blue tubes.   The sleeve acts to hold the trunk of the tree and most of the branches, the balance of which are then wrapped up in the tube.  While the first person holds this contraption closed, a second person wraps a blue tube around all of it and fastens it, then the contraption is pulled out the top.  It works very well.  It is nearly impossible to hold branches up and compacted, then wrap a tube around the whole lot, any other way.  We got good at it and installed about 50 tubes in a couple of hours (more like four).  We ordered another 400 tubed that are on back order as a start at covering the most vulnerable trees and hope to have almost all but the smallest trees done this year before buck rub season starts again.


Dale

Sunday, January 8, 2012

Bad bucks and weather-tight cottage

As found
Our application to have our tree farm recognized by the county for tax purposes was approved and we accepted the terms that will reduce our property taxes.   It seems that the effort and cost of having a tree farm far outweigh the tax benefit. It is nice in any case to get some financial relief for our work. 

This year we saw tremendous growth in the seedlings planted this last Spring and several feet of growth in many of the now three year old trees planted immediately following the clearcut.  We also saw dozens of trees severely rubbed by the bucks that roam the property.  This tree was not the worst of them.  Some had obviously been charged and broken off.  Where only rubbed on one side and some vertically continuous bark remaining, it is possible to protect them with a water-based bark healing compound.  It doesn't really heal anything, it just protects the raw center of the tree and edges of the remaining bark which eventually can grow back around the tree.  

Tree wound compound applied
Ironically, the competing vegetation we cleared from around many of the trees seems to protect them.  The damage is so extensive, easily 100 trees severely damaged, that we considered a couple of extreme options: opening the property to hunters and electric fence around all 10 acres.  Neither of these sounded very good, so we have settled on a labor intensive option of placing translucent tubes around all of the trees subject to rubbing which is most of the ~2000 trees.
The tubes are milk-blue, 4" in diameter and 3' long.  We decided to buy 100 to try them.  They come flat and are wrapped around the tree and closed by engaging punched tabs.  We will show this process in a later post.  The material is back-ordered so we got the last 87 tubes and think we like them so hope they come available soon so we can put them on this Spring and Summer. 

We plan little planting this year and have ordered only 70 plants, mostly native bushes.  We are considering perhaps adding 50 Korean Pines for eventual pine nut production.  We also are behind on alder thinning and will be looking into harvesting a truck load or two of merchantable trees if we can get a logging plan put together.  It is time to update the forest management plan already.

Finally weather-tight, colors TBD
While trees were growing and bucks rubbing, we  managed to make some significant progress on the cottage by hiring good help, LeRoy Boren Construction, a local talented construction firm.   We are happy with the result.  The next steps that we plan to do ourselves are to get water and power to the little house and electrify the barn.  After that we will do the installation of a hydronic heating system mostly ourselves.  We will need help with poured lightweight concrete that will encapsulate the heating tubing on the ground floor.


East quarter & well house (looking NW)

That's all for now.  Stay tuned for the next installment.

Dale