Back Issue Vol: 48-1

Asian Jumping Carp

Asian Jumping Carp

We made a startling and educational discovery one year at a midsummer excursion. We had gone to a swimming party at a nearby river and had some unanticipated entertainment. Once we had fully saturated ourselves with sunburns, water up the nose and every kind of dive, cannonball and belly flop that can be demonstrated, we started working out way down river to the access site. As we came into the shallows with kids splashing and chasing each other, the air exploded with flying fish. Flying fish sounds dramatic and that is because it is. It is a shocking thing to see an 18-24 inch fish hurdle out of the water and even more so to see lots of them. Until then we’d heard of, but had not yet seen, the invasive Asian Jumping Carp.

Book Review The Gardeners Guide to Prairie Plants

Book Review: The Gardener’s Guide to Prairie Plants

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On the surface the book’s stated mission was to gather together forty years of research on prairie meadows and gardens with a compilation of information on 145 prairie plants. Though it is suggested and implied, there is no preaching about the importance of understanding and applying prairie diversity to organic and biodynamic farming schemes. The book would seem to be aimed at gardeners rather than farmers, botanists, agriculturalists and agronomists and that is of course fine, but there is a far larger usefulness to this volume. It is the most complete guide to prairie ecosystems that I have ever had the delicious pleasure in owning and perusing.

Candle Light

Candle Light

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Choosing to light our home with candles is perhaps a radical lifestyle decision. To do this successfully, this choice benefits from the company of a few other accommodating choices. Candle lighting is not just a lone choice, it is part of a collection of choices. To help make candle light do-able and affordable, I rarely ever cook after dark. Our home is lit with natural light during the day and whatever cooking and cleaning is done during those hours as those jobs require more light. We also rarely ever have more than 2 candles burning at once. Often we share a lone candle for our evening activities which are usually reading, writing or occasionally a board or card game like Cribbage.

Circles and Squares

Circles & Squares

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In the hand of the intelligent mechanic the square becomes a simple calculating machine of the most wonderful capacity, and by it they solve problems of the kinds continually arising in mechanical work. The blade of the square should be 24 inches long and two inches wide, and the tongue from 14 to 18 inches long and 1-½ inches wide. The tongue should be at right angles with the blade, or in other words the “square” should be perfectly square.

Hay Doors for Gable End of Barn

Hay Doors for Gable End of Barn

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Hay Doors for Gable End of Barn

History of the Miller Valley Produce Market

History of the Miller Valley Produce Market

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On a typical lot the farmer announces “I have ten boxes of number one large tomatoes, we’ll sell them choice, take one up to all of them.” Then he waits for an offer from the buyers. When an offer comes, the seller repeats the number loud enough for all to hear and waits for further offers. When no higher offers come in he repeats the last offer and says “sold” to number x. The buyers catch on quick, and it helps if they are in a hurry to get back to their markets.

Horse Sweep in Action

Horse Sweep in Action

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“We had four different practice sessions. Although we had a person alongside each horse it was difficult getting the horses to walk together. Each horse wanted to walk at different speeds. And then it was hard to get all the horses to stop at the same time. After the first practice, I wasn’t sure it was going to work. With follow up sessions things came together nicely.” Once the horses became acclimated, they worked well together. Henry commented, “After the fourth practice, we simply said, ‘giddy up’ and off they went.

Just for Kids - 481 - Summer 2024

Just for Kids – Summer 2024

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Ferris Wheel Pull Toy • What in the World?

LittleField Notes Spring is in the Air

LittleField Notes: Spring is in the Air

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I don’t recall seeing it coming, but in that brief moment of impact a lifetime’s worth of thoughts tore through my mind. First — I’ve just been kicked in the head! Associated with this sensation was something like the realization of an ever present fear of a lifetime of working with horses, a nightmare-worst-case-scenario made real. I fell to the ground, put my hand to my forehead and felt the warm gush of blood. My future passed before my eyes: I was going to be in a coma; I was going to have to relearn how to talk, how to walk, how to read, relearn how to learn; my memories would be wiped clean. I crashed to the ground and as I pulled my handkerchief from my pocket and pressed it to my mangled forehead, I realized I was still alert, I hadn’t passed out, still knew who I was, and where I was.

Manure A Wartime Fertilizer

Manure: A Wartime Fertilizer

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In addition to nitrogen, phosphoric acid, and potash, manure contains considerable calcium and smaller amounts of minor elements. The amounts vary with kind of animal, composition of feed, age of animal, milk production, and individuality of the animal. For example, about two-thirds of the nitrogen and one-half of the phosphorus carried in the ration of a well-fed, heavy-producing dairy cow is excreted in manure. A well-fed two-year-old steer excretes almost 90 per cent of the nitrogen and phosphorus consumed. The organic matter and bacteria contained contribute benefits beyond those of the plant food.

Narrow Water

Narrow Water

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Narrow Water has defined a border in Ireland from ancient times. I gather a little like your Rio Grande. It’s been a documented border for nigh on a thousand years. This stretch of water where Carlingford Lough narrows to join the Newry River (two hundred yards at high tide; twenty yards at low tide) is a townland boundary; a county boundary; a provincial boundary; a boundary between the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland; and now the boundary between Great Britain and the European Union.

Peggy and Piper

Peggy and Piper

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One day my husband walks in from the barn with a baby pigeon. The poor little guy was hungry, scared and so ugly he was cute. Well, cute may be stretching it. Khoke wondered aloud if we should try to save him or feed him to the cat. These questions were merely a formality, since the bird made it all the way into the house. Khoke knew my answer before he left the barn.

Promising New Fruits 1910

Promising New Fruits 1910

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The original tree of the Family avocado was found by Prof. P.H. Rolfs, now director of the Florida Agricultural Experiment Station, on a place at Buena Vista near Miami, Florida, which came into his possession in 1902. The age of the tree at that time is uncertain, but it was probably 5 or 6 years old. It has the rather unusual habit of ripening its fruit over a period of 8 to 10 weeks. It was because of this peculiarity that the name “Family” was selected for it by Professor Rolfs, it being well adapted to the supplying of fruit for family use.

Stack-Trench Silos

Stack-Trench Silos

Stack-trench silos have been used by Washington farmers for many years. These silos have saved thousands of tons of valuable cattle feed. Now that more feed is needed, many farmers can increase their stored feed by using a silo. Materials for upright silos are scarce, so the stack-trench can be used to good advantage although spoilage in the stack-trench may be greater than in an upright silo.

Testing the Trace Harness

Testing the Trace Harness

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An example of such a hotly debated item in Central Europe is the so-called “trace harness”, also referred as “long gears”. In the bygone time, this type of harness was not only used for agricultural or forestry work, when extra power was required to pull a heavy load, but also in vineyards and in vegetable production. In the first-mentioned operation, two or more horses were hitched “in-line”, one behind the other, and the fact that there was no singletree dragging on the ground prevented the extra lead horse(s) from stepping over the traces. In row crops, the reasons for use were to avoid damage to the crops, by a low singletree, and to be able to turn more easily and very sharply at the headlands.

The Future Begins Now for Working Cattle

The Future Begins Now for Working Cattle

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In March 2024, more than 125 cattle experts, farmers, scientists, historians, archaeologists, museum experts and engineers from 21 countries met in Lorsch in southern Hesse (Germany) for the first World Draft Cattle Symposium. The event was initiated by the Lauresham Open-Air Laboratory, which has been working on the topic of cattle traction for over ten years, and has considered both historic and modern contexts. As a central result of the event, an International Center for Draft Cattle Research and Education was founded, which will be tasked with facilitating joint efforts and creating an international platform for professional exchanges.

The P. & O. Company Canton Disc Plow

The P. & O. Co. Canton Disc Plow

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The P. & O. Co. Canton Disc Plow is made entirely of steel and malleable iron, and strong enough to endure the greatest strain in the hardest and most difficult soils. The Canton Disc Plow is built on lines peculiarly our own, and which have not been successfully imitated, as the essential parts are covered by our own patents, and it is the legitimate result of several years of experimenting in soils where moldboard plows will not work.

The Thought of Nature

The Thought of Nature

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Once shared a wooded homestead with a handful of creatures all of which wanted to be as close to me as I would allow, or so I thought. There on the forested ten acre edge of a pond with goats, Bantam chickens, two Belgian mares, and a few Toulouse geese, I lived in a ten by twelve one room tar-paper shack my father and I had erected one weekend. Completely ‘off-grid’ as is said these days. A shaded spring, source to the pond and my drinking water, an outhouse, an old wood cookstove, a candelabra, one window, a smattering of non-threatening wildlife — except of course for the neighbors over the hill — I was supremely happy even as I was poor and impatient.

Ticks Fleas and Other Uninvited Farmyard Companions

Ticks, Fleas and Other Uninvited Farmyard Companions

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We started to get a bad feeling about what kind of bug year we were looking at when we began picking off ticks in early March. That was not a good sign. Sure enough, the gardens felt the impact of not enough winter-killed insects as the cucumber beetles and flea beetles ate whatever they could find. Meanwhile, the animals were being eaten as well. The main ticks that we encounter here in the midwest are the American Dog Tick and the Lone Star Tick.

What Color was that Old

What Color was that Old…?

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I spoke with a subscriber on the phone who was trying to get a lock on what color the International corn planters were. I immediately puffed up and said “why they were either red, or yellow gold – and blue, or if residual from the merger with P&O, blue with some grey. Then I dug through our archives and found this plate from circa 1910. Huh?

Wildflower Meadow

Wildflower Meadow

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Meadows can look very different, depending on what is growing in them, but the key feature is that the vegetation is left during the growing and flowering season, and then cut. This system provides an ideal habitat for many wildflowers as it gives them time to flower and set seed before the grass is removed. The process of cutting decreases the fertility of the soil and allows plants other than the normally dominant grasses to take their place in the sward. The advantage of the hay meadow to pollinators has to be seen to be believed, the land teems with them, and with crickets, beetles, and bugs of every type imaginable.