Friday, July 9, 2021

Wild Blackberry picking / eating on the farm July 9, 2021

Last week I picked a gallon of wild blackberries, they were used to make blackberry jam.

Today I picked and am picking more blackberries.  We have had a little rain this week which has helped the blackberries, the best (large, plump, juicy, black) wild ones are presently in partial shade along the edges of the woods.  

We also have a few blueberry bushes growing in our garden area and some of the blueberries are now nice and large and plump and blue and I ate my first blueberry of the season today. 

Pro tip:  if you want a really nice crop of wild blackberries, dump some horse manure at the edge of the woods and wait two years and allow nature to do some magic and you will be rewarded. 

Friday, July 2, 2021

Sourwood Spotting Hike Piller Farm July 1, 2021

We have kept honey bees on the farm for several years, we first tried the natural approach and eventually ended up with no bees.  Unfortunately this is a familiar story for many beekeepers.

In April of this year we purchased two packages of bees, with southern Italian queens, from Walter Kelly / Mann Lake in Clarkson, KY.  The bees have been doing very well, and this year has been good in terms of nectar flow and pollen for our area according to local beekeepers.  

We are learning more about beekeeping, and part of this education is online and from youtube. 

I have watched several youtube videos from Bob Binnie, he runs Blue Ridge Honey Company in northeast Georgia.  Here are links to a couple of his videos regarding sourwood honey and sourwood trees:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=puBmwJ69nWY 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jEkJmvutinw

Wikipedia link with a map showing the natural range of sourwood trees:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxydendrum

Sourwood honey is considered by some to be one of the best types of honey in the world. 

I am familiar with many types of trees, but not the sourwood tree.  I started to learn about sourwood trees, and I have been looking around for several weeks hoping to see a sourwood tree.  Yesterday morning I noticed that some white flowers had appeared on a tree about 100 feet from our house, in between the house and the barn, at the edge of the woods, with southern exposure.  I grabbed the binoculars and saw that the leaves and flowers matched perfectly with the information I had looked at for sourwood!  The white flowers were shaped like miniature bells, hanging down in a row from drooping stems.  This was exciting and unexpected, we have lived on the farm for more than 10 years and I never knew that we had sourwood trees here, or that I would be interested in them because of honey bees.

This particular sourwood tree is sandwiched in between several other trees, it is behind and above a sassafras tree that we put a rope ladder in many years ago, with black cherry and oak trees behind and beside and above the sourwood tree. 

I went on a sourwood spotting hike, with pups and meows joining me, carrying a camera, binoculars, flagging tape, and white tree marking paint.  I found a few sourwood trees in the opening at the bottom of the driveway, and then more along the edge of the woods from the barn to where the bee hives are located, pictures below were taken yesterday July 1 on the farm.  I also saw a patch of sourwood trees on the south facing hillside across the road from our farm. 

Sourwood trees like full to partial sun, the trees are medium sized, they lean and are not straight, and the bark is deep and divided into rectangles.

I chewed a couple of leaves from different sourwood trees and it does indeed have a very nice sour taste. 

I checked on the ground below a couple of sourwood trees and found some fallen sourwood seed pods still attached to the stems, the opened seed pods were split into 5 pieces.  I believe I found some young sourwood trees, and I will try to learn about propagating or growing sourwood trees.  

I plan to do some work around a few of the sourwood trees I marked to remove a bit of competition and provide them with slightly more favorable conditions.

This weekend I will continue to look around and see if I can find more sourwood trees on the farm, I now know the types of places it will grow and it is easy to spot at this time while it is in bloom.

The sourwood is blooming here at just about the same time that some of the blackberries are ready to be picked.






 

Wednesday, June 23, 2021

50 degrees F June 23, 2021

 Beautiful clear night last night, bright moon, 50 degrees F for the low this morning, low humidity, bright blue sky today.    Basically a picture perfect day.

Monday, May 31, 2021

41 degrees F May 31, 2021

41 degrees F at 6 am on the farm this morning Monday May 31, 2021.

Very clear beautiful star filled sky last night.

Friday, April 23, 2021

31 degrees F and frost April 23, 2021

 31 degrees F and frost this morning.


Thursday, April 22, 2021

26 degrees F April 22, 2021

 The temperature was 26 degrees F at the farm this morning, the region had a freeze warning in effect.  I saw 25.7 degrees F at one point but it could have been a little lower, I'll just say 26 degrees. 

Saturday, April 3, 2021

24 degrees F April 3, 2021, Holly tree cleanup

 I saw 23.8 degrees F here on the farm this morning.

Took another hike with the chain saw, accompanied by pups, doing some timber stand improvement (TSI), cleanup on aisles 22 - 27 :)  

There is a lot of holly growing in some places on the farm, it's kind of invasive, it can grow just about anywhere, it seems to out compete some other more desirable species.  I have been cutting and cleaning up a good bit of Holly recently.

It's hard work, but after a while I work up a sweat and then it's time for a nice relaxing enjoyable break.

Friday, April 2, 2021

25 degrees F April 2, 2021

 Third morning this week with temperatures below freezing, low was about 24.8 degrees F, it was a hard freeze.

Saturday, February 20, 2021

17 degrees F February 20, 2021

17 degrees F this morning.

Horses were happy to get a spot of grain, hand fed, they had some frost on their backs.

Wednesday, February 17, 2021

17 degrees F on February 17, 2021

Very cold day yesterday, cloudy, windy, snow flurries, below freezing all day and the temp dropped to 17 degrees F at 9pm.  

Temp went up a couple of degrees and then was back at 17 degrees F this morning.

Sunshine and no wind this morning is very nice.


Sunday, February 14, 2021

Farm forest stream hike Feb 14, 2021

 Went for a long hike in the forest and to some waterfalls on White Oak creek this afternoon, accompanied by pups and meows.  

It was 34 degrees F and spitting a little when I returned to the house, apparently some weather is headed this way.

Brought a pair of loppers and a file and did a little cleanup on the hike.







Saturday, December 26, 2020

8.6 degrees F December 26, 2020

 Crisp and cold 8.6 degrees F this morning December 26, 2020 on the farm.

 We were not expecting single digit temperatures today.

The good news is that the forecast says the temperature will climb above 32 degrees and it will be sunny today so that is helpful with respect to the water drinkers for the animals.

Friday, December 25, 2020

Snow and Cold for Christmas 2020

 We received about 2" of snow on Christmas eve, it was 19 degrees F Christmas morning and the temperature remained below 30 degrees F on Christmas day.

As of about 10 pm on Christmas night the temperature is 12 degrees F, so far the coldest air of the season.

The outside air is still and calm and quiet and cold, the sky is clear with a bright moon and stars, and the snow on the ground is reflecting the natural light and making it easy to see.

I just returned from the barn, the snow / ice is solid and crunchy under foot, I wore my headlight but did not need to turn it on.

It is actually quite pleasant outside.


Wednesday, December 2, 2020

17 degrees F December 2, 2020

 Coldest temperature of the season, 17.1 degrees F this morning on the farm.

Two days ago on November 30 it snowed for several hours but the temperature was just above freezing, the overnight temp dropped to 30 degrees F and yesterday morning we had about half an inch of snow which has since melted.  It remained cold all day yesterday, below 40 degrees F.

Monday, November 2, 2020

27 degrees F Nov 2, 2020

This morning was the coolest yet for the season, I saw 26.5 degrees F here at about 7am.   Calm, still, clear sky, bright almost full moon overnight, sunny morning.

Saturday, October 17, 2020

Frosty morning, 31 degrees F, October 17, 2020

I saw 30.6 degrees F this morning here on the farm.  

Frosty morning, frost on the grass and cars, saw several deer last evening and also this morning, they are loving the clover in the pasture.  The clover leaves turn to face east in the morning and west in the afternoon.  

The water hose was frozen this morning for the first time this season.