Finally the Cambridge Division & Co are delivering some produce. HONEY After a few hours (including several stings) we extracted about 18kg of the sweet goodness from 13 frames. The video above shows the wax being scraped off to allow the honey to be spun out of the frame. The pictures below highlight the Super and Frames and also the excess of wax & honey due to a healthy hive.
Saturday, January 1, 2011
Wednesday, December 29, 2010
Vegetables in January - What to do?
Vegetable sowing and associated new works for January are less than other months. This month is more about harvesting and maintaining existing crops. Our 77 tomatoes plants (Acton Smallholding), for example, are looking very promising. The vines are bursting with fruit. First harvest should be in a week or two. Care on these plants will mean keeping the watering even over the month of January. Without even watering tomatoes can develop split like scabs to the top of the fruit.
What new works can be starting in January? Two very important ones: Silver Beet and Swedes. January is the time to prepare the beds and sow for a winter and spring supply of these two vegetables. Personally I would not 'throw a party' for Swedes but Silver Beet I love.
Silver Beet Recipe:
Wrap a piece of cheese - 'coon' for example - in Silver Beet. Steam till the leaves wilt. Serve with Cape Grim Beef. The cheese melt surprise inside the silver beet has put the smile on many a child's face, including mine when mum served this to us as children.
Both Silver Beet and Swede will occupy the group for about six months. It is therefore important to have a well-prepared and manured soil. Doing so you should expect to provide food for the kitchen for half of the six months these plants will spend in the ground.
What new works can be starting in January? Two very important ones: Silver Beet and Swedes. January is the time to prepare the beds and sow for a winter and spring supply of these two vegetables. Personally I would not 'throw a party' for Swedes but Silver Beet I love.
Silver Beet Recipe:
Wrap a piece of cheese - 'coon' for example - in Silver Beet. Steam till the leaves wilt. Serve with Cape Grim Beef. The cheese melt surprise inside the silver beet has put the smile on many a child's face, including mine when mum served this to us as children.
Both Silver Beet and Swede will occupy the group for about six months. It is therefore important to have a well-prepared and manured soil. Doing so you should expect to provide food for the kitchen for half of the six months these plants will spend in the ground.
Tuesday, December 28, 2010
Ultimate Manure Delivery
We absolutely LOVE a new shipment of manure @ the Cambridge Division. Chicken poo is definitely the manure of choice. After shoveling a ute load you come to understand why the plants grow so quickly once this is sprinkled around them. The stench is astounding, any plant just wants to grow fast to get away from it!
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