abbie kruse

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since Mar 17, 2019
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Recent posts by abbie kruse

Button pushing successful! All is well- thank you kindly 🌻
Just to be clear- I did not create a new account to purchase the course- it happened automatically, without my input, which is weird and has never happened before
6 days ago
Hi- I’m having trouble accessing the course. After I made the purchase (clicked through from email link) I tried to check out the videos but the page kept crashing. I went to my profile and it was a newly created profile with the username ā€œAbbie Kruse IIā€ instead of my usual account. The course does not appear in ā€œmy stuffā€ in my usual account. I don’t know how to access it.
6 days ago
Hey- I’m not sure where to ask about this so putting it here- I bought the garden master course bundle and something weird happened when I tried to access the material- errors that made the page inaccessible. I also noticed that when I made the purchase, a new user account was created? So the material doesn’t show up in ā€œmy stuffā€ in my regular account. Hoping someone can help.
Great resources! I’ve also been fascinated by shoemaking for a long time. Just a couple days ago I found these amazing felted boots here:
https://www.wayoftheearth.com/ancestral-skillsgallery

I’ve also seen (somewhere?) woven basket-type slippers meant to be worn over felted shoes. Something like that, or maybe a rope sole, with a layer of tough leather for wear-protection would still be nice and flexible. Or maybe combine the felted wool with full-on Japanese straw boots (fuka-gutsu)

The soles do wear out more quickly than we are used to- but no petro chem. I recently read ā€œThe Birch Bark Houseā€ with kiddo, and was interested to read descriptions of how often moccasins had to be made to replace worn ones. Less labor, longer lasting would be ideal… just how to do that with local stuff? Or how to strike a good balance between wearability and longevity? The cool wooden slipper soles would endure, but I’m curious if they are comfy?
2 years ago
Mmm, Caravaggio….one of my favorites.

So many great suggestions- children’s book illustrations made me think of Maurice Sendak’s ā€œOutside Over There.ā€ My siblings and I pored over that book endlessly.

Here are a few painters I haven’t seen mentioned yet:

Amadeo Modigliani
Rene Magritte

And my ā€œsorry, not sorryā€ selection is
Ivan Albright- not everyone’s cup of tea, I know, but if I had a big book of his paintings I’d spend hours with it.
2 years ago
Thank you for being here to share your knowledge and experience! I am very excited to see ā€œno-tillā€ in the title of your book and am curious to learn your methods I watched one of your presentations available on YT that detailed a minimal till method of annual farming- the presentation was amazing, in part because of your scientific approach, but also because of your conversational style. Being able to hear your story and thought process in combination with the numbers behind your results was incredibly helpful (I’m thinking of your soil testing- nitrogen addiction recoveryšŸ˜‚- and crop yields). I just saw that you posted a new YouTube video in June, so I will be watching that! Does this book describe your transition from minimal tillage to no-till? I’d love to hear/read your experience with that. Thanks again
2 years ago
Perhaps someone here has some experience with this, and advice to share...

I’m in Zone 6b, and am trying to care for an approx. seven year old Chicago Hardy fig at a local community garden. I’ve only observed it for the past two years. So far, it has been unprotected in the winter, and died back to the ground each year. The vegetative re-growth has been extremely vigorous, a circle/crown of unbranched canes shoots up 10-12 feet. It doesn’t produce fruit. In trying to figure out why, and how to correct that problem and get some delicious figgy goodness, I found lots of conflicting information online- fruiting on current season growth vs. previous year growth... Finding out now it’s complicated with figs! With their multiple crops and whatnot...
I’ve read about other people having the same problem (no fruit) but also a couple reports of the first year re-growth fruiting but not ripening by first frost.
At this point, my best guess is that each year, the energy our fig has stored in the roots is all going to vegetative growth each spring, and could have been redirected to fruit by pinching the terminal leaf bud of each cane after it grows to about half its usual height?
Yesterday, in preparation for single digit F temperature, we did some winter protection to try to keep at least part of the canes alive, hopefully giving them a head start on veg growth for spring. I’ve learned that with figs, though, longer periods of not-so-extreme cold and wind are worse than short extreme drops in temperature, and noticed yesterday that the tops of the tall canes already appear dessicated.
I’m torn now between pruning the canes back to encourage new growth at comfortable harvest-level (assuming having a head start on growth will help it fruit) and just letting the winter prune them... What i’m thinking is that if I prune them myself, the cuts may be injurious, but it would be easier to fully cover and protect the remaining stems.
Any help/ideas would be greatly appreciated.
4 years ago