Our Home Away From Home Here In The Bear River Valley Of Utah














Labels: animals, chickens, dwellings, family, food production, garden, Jim, landscapes, mom, Peggy, travel
a place to be
Labels: animals, chickens, dwellings, family, food production, garden, Jim, landscapes, mom, Peggy, travel
Some of this fresh-picked organically home-grown food will be on our dinner plates in a matter of minutes. We're having broiled tuna (our friends Mark & Deb caught it) with salad tonight, poached eggs on toast for breakfast tomorrow, and something with eggplant for either lunch or dinner tomorrow.
Unfortunately, you can't see the abundant variety of salad greens in that basket because I kind of buried them under the other stuff.
Labels: chickens, food production, garden, home-cooked meals, organic gardening, self-reliance, simple living
Some of our hens and the recently rechristened Boris Major, a bantam Golden Lace Cochin Rooster, enjoy the chicken yard before the approaching storm hits.
This is predicted to be a major winter storm so I decided to clean out the coop yesterday, laying down fresh alfalfa litter, and refilling the nest boxes with wood chips.
I also consolidated our three stacks of firewood into two, covered them with tarps, cleaned out the raingutters and generally straightened up the yard.
HENSPECTION!Click on photo to enlarge - © 2008 jim otterstrom
One of our Black Australorp hens carefully inspects the nest boxes after I freshened them up.
Everything Seems To Be In OrderClick on photo to enlarge - © 2008 jim otterstrom
The Black Australorp is soon joined by a Light Brahma and a Barred Rock who all seem to approve of the housekeeping efforts.
Food (check), water (check), edible litter (check), comfy nests (check), perches intact (check), OK, let's go back outside while we can!
ME FIRST!!Click on photo to enlarge - © 2008 jim otterstrom
The storm was supposed to hit last night but it was still clear and relatively warm when Peggy & I took our walk at 7 this morning.
It's clouded up now though and getting quite cold so it shouldn't be long now. Let's hope we do get some substantial precipitation, whether rain, or snow.
The chickens are ready...
Labels: animals, chickens, food production, self-reliance, simple living, snow, weather, winter
We got a very nice letter the other day from our young friend, Erik, who lives along Lytle Creek in the San Gabriel Mountains, about 65 miles from here.
Erik and his mother, along with his older sister & brother, have come to see our Native Plant Garden during the Big Bear Xeriscape Tour for the past couple of years, and the kids really love the gardens & the chickens.
This past July they stayed here most of the afternoon picking our brains and endearing themselves to us.
So it was great to hear from Erik, and today I'm mailing off replies to him from Peggy & I, including one of our pine-needle basketry starter kits, and 2 more for his brother & sister.
The kits include a coil of hemp twine, a large-eyed craft needle, a pine-needle guide (3/8"plastic tubing), a chunk of beeswax to wax the twine, a small bundle of pine needles (they have plenty of pine-needles in their neck o' the woods too), and complete instructions on making a small basket/bowl.
One of the most enjoyable things about Earth Home Garden, for Peggy and I, is watching how much fun kids have exploring the gardens and interacting with the chickens.
It's a regular occurrence for kids to come by and ask if they can go in and see the chickens and collect the eggs for us. They're also very interested in the hand pumps on the rainbarrels, the pedal-stone, the solar waterfall/pond, the hand plow, my big eco-friendly ant farm, and all the other wildlife that visits our place.
But it's especially rewarding for us when city kids, who've never had much exposure to country life, or nature, find some joy & magic in our little patch of Mother Earth.
Erik, however, is not a city kid. He's one of the more fortunate ones who lives in the rural foothills beyond the outskirts of town. His entire family has a budding interest in learning about sustainability, about living within nature, instead of upon her, and we admire their thoughtfulness and good energy.
Labels: art, chickens, community, community involvement, crafts, education, friends, pine-needle basketry, sustainable living
;~)
Labels: chickens, food production, sustainable living
Labels: chickens, photography
Labels: chickens, food production, Peggy, pine-needle basketry
Labels: chickens, food production, sustainable living
Labels: chickens, food production, rewarding work, sustainable living
Labels: chickens, food production, mishaps, sustainable living
Labels: chickens, food production, sustainable living
Labels: chickens, food production, sustainable living
Labels: chickens, dwellings, food production, sustainable living
Labels: chickens, food production, Peggy, sustainable living
Labels: chickens, food production, sustainable living
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