This was one of those mildly frustrating weeks where it
certainly felt like we accomplished absolutely
nothing.
While this wasn’t exactly true, we did get some important
things done. But, in all honesty, I cannot say it was one of our more productive weeks. It
was a “holiday” week, which always confuses things (particularly since we don’t
get any time off), the weather was uncooperative and we made a couple of trips
to the hospital (scheduled tests, not to worry).
a beautiful morning |
moon over mbrk |
we spent Labor Day processing broilers |
As we watch Hurricane Irma pound the Florida Keys, and the
images of vast destruction continue to come in from the islands, the powers of
nature continue to astound, if not horrify, everyone.
Here in the Valley, we’re more than 200 miles from the
nearest ocean beach. So, you wouldn’t expect that hurricanes would ever affect
us. However, this is far from the truth. Recollections of the destruction caused
by Camille, Agnes and Fran (just to name a few) linger in our collective
memory. When the remnants of these storms hit the Valley, they caused massive
flooding, mudslides and damage that was visible for years. Lives were changed
forever and during Camille alone 113 people in Virginia died.
In 2003, hurricane Isabel passed directly over us while
still a category 1 storm. (tiny by comparison to Irma) As we huddled in our
living room in the middle of the night and watched by the exterior wall eerily swaying
with the wind, I found myself wishing (perhaps out loud) for a basement. That was
the only time I have had absolutely no appreciation for our little hilltop
home. However, our experience pales in comparison to what the folks of Florida are
facing. At this point, all we can do is watch and pray for family and friends
facing the fury of Irma.
Irma is a storm of historic proportion |
The storm is taking an odd track and it doesn’t look like it
will impact our weather to any great degree. Early in the week, there were dire
predictions of gale-force winds and torrential rains. Neither of which would be
welcome at this time of year by any of the farmers in the area. It’s too early
to do much harvesting and since much of the cropland is located in the
low-lying areas, any flooding would be disastrous. Personally, we were facing
the dilemma of potentially re-scheduling our lamb processing trip. (I wouldn’t
want to attempt to haul a small loaded livestock trailer up the interstate during
a hurricane! It's taxing enough in good weather to jockey around the tractor trailers and traffic jams) That could prove more of a logistical nightmare than you might
imagine. Although, at this point, it looks like those concerns were misplaced.
Even though we weren’t facing hurricane preparations, the
weather still played an enormous part in our week here on the hill.
chilly, cloudless morning |
everything is wet |
the last batch of broilers is still in the brooder waiting for the potential storm to pass (and getting fatter all the time) |
spiderwebs are prolific |
although when the sun does come out... WOW-EE! |
Numerous rains in the past week have interfered with everything.
Nighttime temperatures have dropped considerably. This combination means that
the mornings are very cool and damp. Not good gardening weather. Any warm
weather crop production has slowed to a snail’s pace.
the tomatoes are looking pretty sad (but, they still taste delicious!) |
keepin' it real spent cukes have been overtaken by weeds |
But, then…they can’t. Not exactly. There are weeks (and
weeks) left before the Market closes for the season!
Providing a variety of produce up until Thanksgiving is
going to be a challenge.
production has definitely slowed |
I’ll be perfectly honest here. This has been a hard season.
Really hard.
We’ve had more than a few serious setbacks. And, going into
the fall and the winter “off-season” things look far different (read, less
certain) than they ever have. I don’t want to get all introspective and
depressing here, but some things are going to have to change. I think we’re
probably in for another shift in our evolution as a farm…and, no, I don’t know
exactly what that means in the long-run.
But, looks like a good butternut squash crop! |
That being said, the Saturday Market was great! It was a
beautiful day, we had some excellent entertainment and once it warmed up, the
people came out in droves.
I hope you’re having a Happy
Sunday!
I felt bad for the customer who spilled all the cherry tomatoes... |
Thanks for stopping by. Come back and “visit” again real
soon.
I'm glad to hear that it looks like you won't be seriously affected by the hurricane. -Jenn
ReplyDeleteI shall keepcoming back Barbara because I find such inspiration in your posts. I hope that the forthcoming months go well for you and that you are back again next year - both of you fit and well and that there has been no great life-changing effect on your lovely home.
ReplyDeleteFingers crossed that Irma doesn't give you any more than a nuisance display. That monster has more tricks up it's sleeve than a shyster lawyer! Those butternuts look amazing. Hope I can find some up here for soup. Take care. Kris
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