Nancy Reading wrote:Hi Frank (belated) welcome to Permies! Hope the purchase went smoothly and you are now at your new home. Well done!
It sounds like you do have a blank slate there. What will be your main challenges: short season, cool winters, lack of rain in growing season? In my case it's wind and shallow acidic compacted soil.
You'll find you want to do everything, but do take time to just observe and sometimes it is surprising what you find out that makes your life easier. Also start small! I'm not one for following my own advice here either, although I did plant my tree field over 7 years or so.
Can I respectfully suggest that with that many animals on 5 acres you will need to buy in a lot of feed, which will make you more dependent on outside inputs. It might be better to concentrate on fewer (say pigs and ducks, or sheep and chickens) and organise barter for other meat if you want. This is said from one who has no livestock and it might be you are already an expert husbandsman. I never fancied the responsibility - where there is livestock there is deadstock and they are a tie than means taking any time away is much more difficult.
Hi Nancy,
The purchase went smoothly! We've been super busy and loving every second of it. Here's what we've done so far:
1) We found a source of wood chips and had four truck loads (each around 6 yards) delivered. I am working on sourcing a grass whip to cut through some areas of particularly high grass where we want our future vegetable garden to be. As soon as this is cut down (with clippings left in place), we'll cover in the wood chips. I've used a bunch of the chips already to cover areas of the property that were particularly barren from past over grazing.
2) We converted part of the shop into a chicken coop and this morning our flock arrived - 12 hens and 1 rooster!
3) We are in talks with someone to have her horses graze the land. This time we'll rotate between the different areas, to avoid overgrazing.
Not bad for 13 days on the land (including moving day!).
To answer your questions, our main challenge will likely be cold winters (there can be cold snaps below -30C. Not for long but pretty consistently 1 - 3 weeks worth spread throughout the winter), and hot, dry summers (we've been over 35C for the last week). For the winters, I think we just deal with this via planting to the hardiness zone. For the summers, I think the wood chips will help to shield the ground and maintain moisture rather than the current situation to date, which has been letting the soil bake into dirt in the intense sun.
I appreciate your advice and I agree. We won't add new animals of our own until next year and then only one species at a time. We are happy with our chickens for now, and if we can get a deal to get horses rotating in the fields, that's a bonus.