Tag Archives: posted by Caroline

Oh What Luck

To find a duck!

Zac walking around the yard after dinner when he spotted a tiny something waddling away from the duck’s nest and towards an increasingly-interested Lucy.

It was a duck baby!

We brought him (her?) indoors for a brief photoshoot, put Lucy indoors for the night so that she wouldn’t be tempted to gobble him up, and tucked our little duck back under his mama for the night. Since Spaghetti-O, the hen, was the one on the nest, it looks like we might have an adorable mismatched family on our hands.

We’ll keep you posted. But this was too cute to not share immediately.

A Day at the Pool

A few days ago, Erin and I drove up to Maryland (are you sensing a pattern?) to spend the day at the Maryland Wool Pool.

Despite what you may be thinking, it’s not a swimming pool full of wool– I’ve already been through drowning in yarn, remember? It’s where all the wool producers in Maryland and the surrounding states are invited to bring whatever wool they have and be paid a fair price for it (more on this later).

By the time Erin and I got there– about 9 am– the pool was already in full swing. Let’s walk through the process.

First, the farmer backs his or her truck up to our skirting/grading table. The fleeces are dumped out of their bags, and we take a look at them. They’re placed into one of five categories:

  • Finewool (for suits, sweaters, and items to be worn close to the skin; $1.10/lb)
  • Mediumwool (for outerwear; $1.00/lb)
  • Coarse / Longwool (for rugs and homewares; $.95/lb)
  • Nonwhite (any breed with a black or red face has a fleece that’s classified as nonwhite, since the little flecks of face and/or leg hair won’t be able to be dyed. These fleeces are used for items that won’t be dyed; $.90/lb)
  • Short (any fleece shorter than 3″. Used for stuffing and felt; $.70 lb)

The price, of course, changes from year to year– the commodities’ market can be pretty variable. The price of wool was apparently down from last year, but still way up from the average price that’s been seen in years past. This year’s highest bidder was the Chargeurs Scouring Plant, which is just north of Charleston, SC.

 

Erin and I didn’t know enough to class the wool– it takes a lot to become a certified woolclasser– but we learned a ton. By the end of the day, Emily or David Greene (Principle Extension Agent Emertius for the University of Maryland, who reminded me of another David Grene, author of one of my favorite books of all time) would turn to a fleece and ask us, “What do you say that one is?”

“Medium?”

“Medium!”

and we’d whisk it away.

It was a little bit trial-by-fire, and we spent most of our time carrying fleeces from the table to different bins, and then carrying the bins across the warehouse (oh my Lord they were heavy when they were full– we’ve got the callouses to prove it! David built them all for the wool pool out of aluminum in the ’60s– something we learned after complaining that they should have been designed to be lighter!) to the five giant piles of to-be-baled wool.

 The wonderful thing about the wool pool, though, was how open the whole thing was. Do you only have 10 sheep? or maybe run a flock of 150? or maybe you sheared all spring through, and ended up being given over 3,000 lbs of “junk” fleeces?

Either way, the wool pool will take what you have to offer (I think we only turned down one fleece; a super-cotted old Lincoln), bale it up, load it up via forklift onto a tractor-trailer, and send it out to the commercial market.

(Side note: I’m terribly jealous of those balers. Zac and I packing our fleeces off to mail to our mills looks exactly like this.)

It touched me quite deeply to see the rows and rows of wool bales, weighing between 300 and 400 lbs apiece, all lined up. Even though, for most sheep producers, wool is a byproduct (the primary product being lamb. A dollar a pound for wool just isn’t enough by itself to sustain the flock, let alone the shepherd!), this is still a year’s worth of physically and emotionally taxing work for a whole state worth of shepherds.

Friends, I was humbled to see it.

That said, we weren’t overly precious about it. Lydia ran back and forth down them; we each hopped up on one to eat our lunches:

But it did make me think.

I think I sometimes forget, if something is sold in a chain store, that it was produced by real people, or that it was touched by human hands at all. In my eagerness to source my food from our own garden (if not farmers’ markets) and my durable goods from hand-makers who produce their goods in small batches (a fantastic argument for which can be found here), I forget about the very-real farmers who do sell to grocery stores, or that any of the Maryland-raised wool that I touched might well end up being sold as sweaters at Target or the Gap (nevermind the infuriating cheapening and appropriation of handmade products that such stores promote).

It’s been too simple for me to look at a mall and sneer at the nearly-identical shops, lobbing easy insults (also, at 23 years old, I’m still a grade-A sneerer)– these shoes are cheapo knockoffs; this dress was industrially produced; I’ll bet that was made in China; this is designed to be thrown away after one season! And while I still believe that homegrown and handmade is better, I don’t think it’s a black-and-white matter of hand- vs machine-made, and I certainly know that I won’t so quickly look past the fact that these goods, however cheap, were produced by absolutely human hands, American and (predominantly) otherwise. In short, I’ll make sure to reserve my disregard for fast fashion, and my compassion for shepherds, craftspeople, and workers of all sorts.

Erin and I drove home tired, sweaty, dirty, and slick with lanolin (although we weren’t nearly as bad as last time!). We learned so much, and I consider myself very lucky to have gotten to see this step in the wool-production process first-hand. All I know is that I’m really looking forward to our next wool field-trip (there’s talk of a wool classing class at Maryland Sheep and Wool next spring)!

 

 

 

Sheep of the Week: Lindbergh

Lindbergh’s been a bit of a surprise for me.

Because he’s a lamb I’m drawn to photograph again and again, you’ve probably met him on several occasions.

He looks a little different from the other lambs because he’s not pure Cormo– his mama, Willoughby, is a Cormo/Southdown cross. He has a brown-tipped nose, lovely amber eyes, and a stockier body than the other lambs, so he stands out from the crowd. He also seems to be a little braver than the others– instead of skittering away from the camera and back towards his mama, he stands his ground and stares right back.

 I guess I’m a little surprised because, usually, our favorite (and most photographed) lambs are the bottle babies– the ones who run up whenever they see you out in the pasture. But it’s good to get to know the sort of sheep you might otherwise not get to interact with all too much.

Most of all, though, I love his sense of humor:

 Although it isn’t as though he’s going around spoiling everybody’s pasture portrait sessions. When Blanca and Fresca noticed that someone who wasn’t them was getting a little extra attention, they ran right over, butted him out of the way, and broke up the party then and there!

I have a feeling that, with his bold personality and distinctive good looks, he’s going to grow up to be one of our very favorites.

 

What’s Growing in the Garden

It’s been a while since I’ve taken you all on a walk around the garden, and, in true Ferris Bueller fashion, I realize that a garden– especially this time of year– moves pretty fast. If you don’t stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it. So let’s go look, shall we?

Can I just tell you how excited I am about these melons? The Seed Saver’s Exchange catalogue describes them thusly:

La crème de la crème of French cantaloupes. First noted in the garden of the Bishop of Rennes nearly 400 years ago.

If that’s not exciting, I don’t know what is.

I’m not certain whether or not we’ll have cabbages this summer– it all depends on whether the weather stays cool or not– but they sure are lovely to look at. I actually just saw a bunch of gorgeous red cabbages growing in planters all around the patio of a restaurant downtown, and was surprised, amused, and terribly gratified.

The corn is TALL, but the beans have climbed right up them, curling up to the top of the stalks. I have a feeling that the corn and beans (and understory watermelons) will be this summer’s unsung breakout stars– they’re going to make so much good food for us!

This is borage– the quickest way to insure the indisputable authenticity of your summer’s Pimm’s Cup, but also, according to the fantastic Vegetables from An Italian Garden, a green that can be cooked and used like spinach, but tastes like cucumber. Have any of you cooked with borage before?

And, just to prove that it’s not all 100% perfect all the time around here, here is a thousand-word picture of a tragedy that befell some goose-nipped Hopi Black Dye Sunflowers. It can be condensed into just three words, however: TIME OUT, GEESE.

(Short ist of things Easier Said than Done: Putting a goose in time out)

We’re also looking forward to little cornichons. Did you know that, as a child, I lived for several years on little more than sweet midgets and ham?

And this is a picture of our small tomato bed. It’s about 40 feet long, and contains about as many plants. It’s a good thing we’re taking July off– we’re going to be working full-time to stay on top of it all!

These little tiger-striped guys, Violet Jaspers, will be purple and green.

But my absolute favorites are these, the classic of classics, the Consoluto Genoveses.

We’ve already sampled the first cherry tomatoes, and I’m happy to tell you that they were perfect. Absolutely ripe, deliciously warm, and definite foretastes of the summer to come.

Jailbirds: A Chicken Update

Remember our baby chicks? Just like the pups, they’ve begun to grow up.

However, unlike the pups, they’ve undergone a dramatic decline in cuteness, as they exchange their baby down for pinfeathers.

Since they’ve grown so much, we’ve been able to move them out of the brooder, and into the chicken coop itself. All of them made themselves right at home. We’ll keep them penned in behind bars the next couple of days, so that they’ll learn that the coop is where they’re safe, where they’re fed and watered, and where they’ll be in the company of other chickens (the adult chickens are able to fly in to the coop over the bars– the panel we’ve put up is about the height of a baby gate).

These 20-odd girls are just raring to go– they just can’t wait to (literally) fly the coop and start exploring the wide world outdoors. I’ll make sure to let you all know when the big day arrives!

CSA Shares: Mid-June

“This,” as I wrote in an email to our vegetable CSA shareholders, “is the calm before the tomato storm.” I am pretty confident that, by next Monday, we’ll be bringing in the season’s vanguard– baskets of cherry tomatoes.

For now, though, we’re harvesting swiss chard:

French Breakfast Radishes (almost at the end of these):

Red Spring Onions:

and bunches of Lavender,

Mint (which we have in ridiculous quantity),

and Flat-Leaf Parsley.

It’s a gentle mix of colors and flavors– soft reds and purples and greens– that’s still more like spring than full-on summer. But as soon as those tomatoes start rolling in– that’s when we’ll know it’s really summertime.

Making Honeysuckle Sorbet

This one’s super-special, you guys, and I’m really excited to be sharing this with you. Honeysuckle has long been my absolute favorite flower, thanks to its sultry, heady fragrance. Because it blooms, in my hometown, from late April and into June, it reminds me of walking out on humid nights, adolescent longing, and the sweet promise of the long summer ahead.

It was in high school, a few days after having made wreaths of it to decorate my friends’ doors for May Day, when I first discovered its culinary application. We’d gone to the just-opened paletería, which was offering Honeysuckle paletas.

Friends, it was a revelation.

“How do you do this?” I asked the proprietress. “How do you make a flower a taste!?” I had to have more.

“I pay some neighborhood kids to pick me bucketfuls of blossoms,” she said. “All you do is pour cold water over them, let them sit overnight, and that’s your infusion. Add simple syrup, freeze it, and there you go.”

 Zac and I went out a few days later and picked a bucketful. But because it was the end of the school year, and, thus, exam time, we forgot about it, and the project really didn’t go anywhere.

It wasn’t until a few years ago that we tried it again– this time with the benefit of actually having a kitchen– and it’s been one of our seasonal favorites ever since.

First, you pick as much honeysuckle as you can find. Then, pick off all the blossoms, and place them in a nonreactive container:

 We ended up with 23 grams worth. Although that doesn’t seem like much, the blossoms are so powerfully fragrant that they provide more than enough flavor.

 Next, pour 4 cups of cold water over your blossoms. If you need a weight– such as a plate, or another bowl– to keep them underwater, then add one. Let the blossoms steep overnight.

The next day, strain them. You’ll end up with 4 cups of a delicious-smelling, light amber liquid.

Add 1 cup of simple syrup, and either 1) pour the mixture into your ice cream maker, and, done! or, 2) if you don’t have an ice cream maker, pour the mixture into a glass baking dish, and put the whole thing in the freezer.

Fish it out a hour later and smash up the crystals with a fork– repeat until your sorbet is finely-textured and thoroughly frozen.

Enjoy! I really like it with a little mint, but I bet it would go really well with prosecco, or, as NPR suggests, a thimblefull of Saute-Buissons.

 

Recipe:

1 oz Honeysuckle flowers

4 cups of water

1 cup sugar

1 cup of water

 

After collecting honeysuckle vine, remove the flowers and weigh them. Remember to remove all of the green parts from the base of the flower as well. Place the flowers in 4 cups of water and weigh them down so that they are submerged. Refrigerate the flowers and water for at least 12 hours. After the flowers have been in the water for at least 12 hours, make a simple syrup combining one cup of water with one cup of sugar. Heat this mixture until the sugar is completely dissolved. While the simple syrup is heating, strain out the flowers and pour the infused liquid into a large casserole dish. Pour the simple syrup in once the sugar has dissolved and put the casserole into the freezer. Leave in the freezer for 1 hour and then stir the liquid as crystals begin to form. Continue checking and stirring every hour until the desired consistency has been achieved. The sorbet can then be transferred to a covered container and kept in the freezer until ready to be served.

 

Sheep of the Week: Emma

I was out on a morning ramble a few days ago, taking a few photos and wondering, a little idly, about who I’d select to be our Sheep of the Week, when, suddenly:

“Choose me!” said Emma.

Emma is hands-down the nicest and most naturally friendly ewe we have.

Most of the time, if you walk into the pasture as a stranger, a couple of things will happen: 1) the guard animals will come up and make sure you’re not a threat to the flock, 2) a goat or two or five will come up to see if you’ve got any food with you– especially if it’s around feeding time, and, maybe, 3) one of the braver sheep, invariably an ex-bottle-baby, will also come up, looking for food. Although the sheep at Juniper Moon Farm are tamer than many other flocks– we hand feed them, and don’t use dogs to herd them– it’s still a little rare for any of our sheep to come up and start nuzzling your legs.

Except for Emma, who’s just so inexplicably sweet!

She was born as a single lamb in April 2010 to Capri.

All while growing up, she was just as sweet and curious as they come.

We bred her to Solomon this past fall, and she spent the Winter and Spring with the rest of the expectant ewes.

Although she didn’t lamb this season, she kept us wonderful company while we watched over the rest of her cohort. In fact, she was such a sweet, lovey-dovey nuzzler all throughout April that we were sure she was flooded with Oxytocin, and right about to lamb. Nope– Emma’s just that nice of a ewe!

So, if you ever come for a visit to the farm and find yourself in the close company of a sweet, lovely ewe, you can probably bet that it’s Emma, and you can probably bet that you’ve got a friend for life.

NEXT WEEK of SotW: Meet the lamb who’s pictured-but-not in the photo above!

NEXT NEXT WEEK of SotW: Let me know in the comments who you’d like to meet!

A Lunchtime Pupdate

We just took the puppies out into the yard for lunch, both so that they could see a little more of the outdoors, and so that Lucy could have a little time to herself.

They especially had a good time with Charlotte.

 

They’re also pretty fond of Zac:

This may be the most obvious statement in the world, but it is so fun to watch them play with one another. I still can’t believe we have SIX!

And although they’re continuing to differentiate themselves, they still mostly look like polar bear puppies:

 

And, Gnocchi, the littlest, the most adventurous, and our far-and-away favorite:

We put some daisies on him.

Happier’n a Dead Pig in the Sunshine

Charley & Churchill are, of course, still with us, but they’d like to remind you to follow their example, and take it real easy today. They think you’d be pretty happy if you would.