Tuesday, May 19, 2026

Plans change and a hose needed repair

It is rarely a bad idea to have the lead photo in a blog-post be a picture of a happy dog.

Overall notes

Due to Mrs ERJ's mission-of-mercy, I had to stick close to home yesterday. The nature of the mission changed several times through the morning as the other party panicked. Unable to do the things I had planned, I found other things to do.

Early in the morning, Quicksilver and I made a trip to the greenhouse. It was closed.

Then we went to the playground next to Old Athletic field and she played for about 40 minutes. 

Then we went to the ice cream store. It was closed.

Then we went to Quality Dairy and bought a bowl with a single scoop of chocolate ice cream and two spoons. We walked down to the river to eat it. Oddly enough, she didn't let me hold the bowl but I got my share anyway. 

I planted 100' of rutabagas yesterday and (with Quicksilver's help) 30' of Blue Lake pole beans. Shortly after we got the seeds into the ground we picked up about a half inch of rain.

About that help in the garden...

Quicksilver insisted on helping me in the garden yesterday. She was not taking "No" for an answer.

I was planting green beans. Quicksilver considers herself a professional bean planter. She had planted beans into Dixie cups in her play-date group.

Her spacing was good even though she doesn't know the difference between inches and moon-pies (a metric unit, to be sure). However, in spite of my instructions to NOT push the bean seeds down into the soil, she was sure that she knew better.

Her fingers got all gooey with mud so I hosed off her hands before we went into the house and then we washed them off with soap-and-water once inside.

Normally, I am not paranoid about mud, but I had used water from the duck's swimming pool to flood the trench where I planned to plant beans. I had not anticipated Quicksilver kicking off her sandals and stuffing her feet into her "farm boots" and chasing me outside.

In spite of my frustration about her not following instructions, I am very proud of her.  She is a "do it" kind of kid and she really wants to work.

Progress-to-date

There are two plots of ground that I am gardening in Eaton Rapids. Both of them are about 4000 square-feet. One is fenced in. The other, called the potato patch, is not.

The potato patch is the most planted. I am figuring about 1100' of row. To date, 650' of potatoes are planted. 50' of onions. 100' of rutabagas. The remaining 300' will be planted to assorted vegetables like beets and sweet peppers. By my calculations, that puts the potato patch at about 70% planted.

I think it is worth mentioning that I ran the main travel aisle-way right up the middle of the length of the garden. Vegetables that produce multiple pickings or earliest crops (like sweet peppers and beets to be eaten through the summer) are staged in rows next to the aisle-way while late potatoes that get harvested all in one "go" are in rows that are farther away from the aisle-way.

The fenced-in garden is much less planted. So far it has 24' of tomatoes, 24' of broccoli and 30' of beans planted in it with 100' of cabbage planned. It also happens to be where the ducks are patrolling. Their primary mission is to eat snails and slugs. Their secondary mission is to lay eggs. 

I may end up planting half of the fenced-in garden to buckwheat or red clover. 

Mrs ERJ's mission-of-mercy escalated. She was gone until five. No trips to Caledonia for me...at least not yesterday. She has appointments in both the morning and this afternoon, so Caledonia is unlikely for today.

Equipment maintenance

There are two kinds of equipment on a working farm. Broken equipment and equipment that is about to break. You better get good at fixing/maintaining things if you don't want to find yourself dead-in-the-water.

This hose had an encounter with a frustrated raccoon.

The hose was severed about 5' from the end so I decided to not splice it but to simple move the end.

I removed the old end for re-use (not the first time this hose has been repaired) and cut the damaged area flush with a pair of by-pass pruning snips.

 
Then I soaked the cut end in very hot water to soften the vinyl.

Then, before pressing the barb of the female end into the hose, I slipped the screw-collar over the hose and goobered some liquid soap inside of the hose  abd smeared it around with my pinky-finger. I did the same with the exterior of the barb of the female end.

 

The last step is to slide the screw-collar up over the end of the hose where the barbed-end is pressed in and to tighten the screws.

Zeus approved the repair

11 comments:

  1. Good point about aisles, ERJ. That is something I need to add to The Allotment now that things are taking shape a bit more.

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  2. I have ducks that are eating up leaves of yard plants and worry they’ll start eating the seedlings I have planted in the garden. Have you had this problem? I never owned ducks before finding these ones along a roadway ditch last month and don’t know their habits yet.

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    Replies
    1. I am pretty new at keeping ducks, so I don't have a good answer for you.

      I am feeding them "Broiler starter" chicken mash and I add extra calcium because two of the ducks are laying eggs. By volume I add a little bit less water than the volume of feed I am giving and mix it into a paste. The ducks seem to waste less of that then the finely ground powder when it is dry.

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    2. A pvc pipe-chicken wire "Duck Tractor" (aka Chicken tractor) is an excellent way to guide your ducks into eating those things and bugs you want them to eat.

      Yes, they LOVE your newly planted seedlings (and berries and).

      More mature plants like cabbage and potatoes are well protected from cabbage loopers and potato beetles by a duck patrol.

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  3. Ducks patrolling the garden, made me think of Gene Gerue's Chicken Moat.
    https://www.motherearthnews.com/homesteading-and-livestock/garden-pest-control-zmaz88mjzgoe/
    What will you do with 100' of rutabagas? This is a serious question.

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    Replies
    1. Ah eat them? They store very easily in a cool dark dry place. It's a common veggie in Eastern Europe.

      3 cups are your daily vit c which isn't a small thing. A cup of cabbage and a cup of rutabagas is your daily requirement. Cabbage again easily stored in cool dark dry place.

      One cup (about 170 grams) of cubed rutabaga (cooked, boiled and drained) contains approximately:

      Calories: 51
      Total Carbohydrates: 11.6 g
      Fiber: 3.1 g
      Sugar: 6.7 g
      Total Fat: 0.3 g
      Saturated Fat: 0.05 g
      Polyunsaturated Fat: 0.16 g
      Monounsaturated Fat: 0.05 g
      Protein: 1.6 g
      Sodium: 8.5 mg (0.4% DV*)
      Vitamin C: 32 mg (36%–43% DV*)
      Potassium: 367 mg (11%–14% DV*)
      Phosphorus: 69.7 mg (10% DV*)
      Manganese: 0.2 mg (9%–11% DV*)

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    2. Rutabaga is one of the non-negotiable ingredients to a traditional Upper Peninsula pastie. The other non-negotiable items are potato, some kind of meat and lard-crust.

      https://youtu.be/GwIbYxCFu48

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    3. Ok, thanks! I don't think I've ever (knowingly) had rutabaga before but I can see how it's used.
      I appreciate your time folks, it helps with my education.

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  4. In the past, I've planted big blocks of things like buckwheat or clover to build the soils in my gardens, but now I like to broadcast cheap beans from the grocery store (pinto beans, black beans, blackeyed peas) so that theoretically I could harvest some sort of food from a cover crop.

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    Replies
    1. Rich - That is not a bad idea. I am in Year one of my gardening at my community garden allotment; that sounds like a cheap and easy way to build soil.

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  5. Sounds like a productive day, and Quicksilver got to get dirty! What's not to like? ;-)

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