My Milieu & Soil Prep

Preliminary work has begun in the gardens with the first and second tilling accomplished. This will undoubtedly bring some weed seeds to the top, but it will remove others which have already sprouted. Weeds! Just learn to love them because they are ever present. Next the laying and staking of fabric begins. This step cannot begin until the winds die down as these strips of fabric are over 100 feet in length. Many eight-inch staples will be used to hold the fabrics in place.

Two of many gardens with fabric and stakes positioned awaiting layout and staked placement.

The re-usable, black fabric helps to hold in moisture and keeps down the weeds while providing a cleaner surface on which activities can be performed ie: planting and weeding and harvesting. There is still plenty of “dirt” to go around, but having this water-permeable fabric helps immensely in cutting down the volume of soil which gets embedded into pants and boots.

Country Antrim Ireland . . . our family milieu for many “greats” involves farmland

This weekend some of our children, who just arrived back in WNC from a visit to our restored Ancestral Heritage Home in Ireland, have traveled to Southern Illinois to our Centennial Family Farm of Origin to view the upcoming Solar Eclipse.  Another will be arriving at the family farm on Sunday via Texas and the St. Louis Airport after meeting up with my Colorado sister’s family arriving back in the States from a visit to Peru. Still other family members are traveling from Chicago and Wisconsin and California(?) to go to the farm for the Total Eclipse Family Reunion. They planned all of this a year ago.

Centennial Family Farm of Origin in Southern Illinois

Robert and I were invited, but of course, this is not the time of year when we can head out!  There is too much to be done in the field and too many seedlings and transplant babies in our greenhouse which require daily attention. I trust the clouds will clear enough that they can see something–or not–as it will be dark!  My brother-in-law says we might possibly experience some of the event here in Fairview. Regardless, I do not think a few minutes of darkness on April 8, 2024 will affect our harvest season! I have taped a National Geographic television program as a backup to the out-of-doors viewing for our WNC location. Honestly, sometimes being tied to the land and the plants and the vegetables and home is very comforting for me–notice, I did not say relaxing as the CSA farming season is in progress! My Illinois farmer brother and nephew understand!!

Our WNC Fairview CSA Family Farm from a drone’s view