A Rainbow of Eggs!

We have blue eggs! It’s really hard to tell from the pictures, but there are lots of different shades of brown, and one very light green/blue. yeah!
Eggs

Eggs2

Oh! We are scheduled to dig the footers and start pouring the foundation next week! We’ve already gotten two loads of wood for the framing, a load of insulation, and cement and sand on the way!! Progress!!! I love it!

Artemisia’s Apothecary

Filling Jars for the apothecary. This is my good friend and business partner, Nikki, with the help for the herb fairy who was flying around our clinic.
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Toby built us our fantastic apothecary shelves!

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Here I am stocking the shelves… What a wonderful moment!!

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And, the final shelves! We actually need more room, and may have to build more shelves… I mean, we have to have room for the vanilla beans and the cocoa nibs, right?
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Oh, so at least two of the chickens are laying now… Rudy, and we think Faye, but Spike was in there squawking this morning and may be getting ready to pop one out!

Happy New Year to all of you!!!

Our chickens have entered maidenhood!

Look!! We have eggs! Well, 3 so far, over the last 7 days. There was a white feather in the nest, so I think it may be Faye (the speckled sussex) who is laying. Hopefully the others will follow shortly. Here is a picture of the egg. It is the little one on the right. The one on the left is a store bought one. So, they are much smaller right now. First egg

Here’s the egg being cooked. It’s the one in the middle. See how much darker the yolk is…

egg in the middle

Here are a couple of pictures from holiday festivities. Kaia in her new fashion hat, and dressed as a butterfly, singing to her new slinky.

Fashion hatslinky

Well I talked with an expert chicken lady 🙂 and she said that because we live on the north side of a mountain and the chickens are only getting ~10 hours of light a day, that we may not get eggs for another month…  She said that their ‘sisters’ are probably laying already because they live in town, probably get slightly longer days, and may even get a little laying stimulation from street lights.   Hmmm… I hadn’t thought about the difference in daylight times here vs where they came from.

The bees are still alive… Toby went into the hive the other day when it got in the 70’s here and they were hoppin’  Maybe we will actually get honey next year…

I’m having a hard time being at the house right now and sometimes I feel like just selling everything and moving to a house in the city.  I’m feeling pretty clastrophobic.  We’ve been in there for 6 months and I know we have another year+, but I have to admit to myself that I am not a pioneering, camping kinda girl.  I hoped I would be when we moved in there.  But, you know, for most of my life I’ve never lived in anything smaller than 1800 square feet!  (And the houses I grew up in were 3000 and 6000 square feet!!)  So, no matter how much stuff we had we always had room.  Now, we have dwindled our comfort living stuff down to very little, but we still have piles of stuff everywhere.  I feel like pushing the walls down just to get some breathing air.  I think Toby was hoping that this new office space would help ease some of these feelings, but now, all I really want to do is stay at the office.  There is hot water and a shower… lights that I can flick on with a switch instead of having to go out and refill them with gas and then listen to their constant, loud humm while they are on.  Everything I try to do doesn’t take twenty extra steps to complete it.  Kaia keeps asking to just sleep at the office so that we don’t have to go home.  I completely realize that compared to most of the world, I still lead a pretty cush life.  But, it is also a very foreign lifestyle to me and I am trying to figure out how to get myself through the next year without turning into a complete nut case.

products needed

So, I am looking for some hand made products to stock the small retail space we will have at Viriditas.  We hope to have soaps, herbal crafts and body care, slings, handmade journals, pottery, candles, art work, something like “blabla dolls” and handmade fairy wings would be nice too.  If any of you are doing stuff like this, email me!!  I would love to carry things from people I know… blog-wise…

Howdy

I’ve always seen myself as a fairly laid back person, and I dream of the day when I can relax in my tub, or on my couch and just read a book or knit or something. But, I think I have to admit to myself that I am one of those people who never stops going! I love having projects to do! On that note, here’s a run down of our latest happenings.

Well, there’s Viriditas (www.viriditashealing.com). We have rented a house for our space and spent this past weekend painting the whole thing (white walls just won’t do:-)). We hope to open the doors in 2007 for herbal consultations, formulations, and education. We will also have some people renting space (probably a yoga instructor, energy healer, and massage therapists). Today, I put in an order for almost 100 pounds of herbs!! Yahoo!!

The house plans are going well. We marked the site this weekend and should be pouring the foundation in a few weeks. Toby officially quits his job as of Jan 1st and will work full time on the house. Toby is really excited about getting started!
The chickens aren’t laying yet! They are almost 25 weeks old, and I’ve told them that it will be into the fryer with them if they don’t start earning their keep. 🙂 Not really, but I’m really excited about fresh eggs.

I know that doesn’t sound like a lot of stuff, but I feel like the energizer bunny right now!!

Viriditas!

I’ve been learning a little about Hildegard von Bingen! Have you heard of her? What an amazing woman! She was a nun, artist, musician, herbalist, and visionary. She coined the word “Viriditas” (from the latin for green and truth). It basically means that there is presence of divine in everything green. She said that the presence of God was in the plants and that was why they healed. She also felt that we were all a part of a circle/cycle (not something looked highly upon by her church, who believe in the hierarchy of Trinity…Man…animal… earth (or something like that). She thought that the moist, juiciness of the plants showed their health and that if we are all moist and juicy, then we are filled with the presence of God. I’m not very religious, but I love the concept… whether you believe in God, Source, Spirit, whatever… we all hold the knowledge of the cycle of life and death (we just need to get back in touch with it). Cool, eh? I hear Hildegard use to sign all her correspondences with “May we all stay moist and juicy” hehe I bet that drove the church crazy!!

So, we may name our clinic “Viriditas…”

PS no eggs yet…

Happy (Almost) Thanksgiving!

I spoke too soon about Suki and her good chicken behavior. Friday, Ruby got out of the pen and Suki killed her. We didn’t see it happen. Toby came home to find Suki strutting around with Ruby in her mouth. So, Suki is back on her 30 foot lead, we have clipped the chickens wings (although Sweetie still got out this morning), and we are trying to figure out what else we need to do. We have tossed around the idea of giving Suki to a family with lots of room to run, and no farm animals. But, besides the fact that Suki is great protection, I feel like I will have failed her if I give her away, without really giving proper training a good effort. She’s just so stubborn and I am too lazy to follow through.

We had Toby’s dad, brother, and a friend out this Sunday to help cut up some cord wood for the house. I think we are about half way done. Unfortunately, it is too hard to bark the wood right now (it’s much easier to bark in the spring, when the sap is running more freely). So, we will leave the bark on and hope that it will come off more easily after the wood has dried.

We also got the structural engineers stamp for the house plans and we should hear back about final county approval early this week… hopefully.

Nikki and I are having a hard time finding the right space for our herb clinic and apothecary. So, until the right place presents itself, we are working on an official Business Plan, and getting information about funding our little venture. Anyone know of a grant for women business owners, funding a health venture, specifically geared towards women and children???

Borat

Toby and I finally got a little ‘date’ time yesterday. We decided to go see Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan.  We were told by numerous people that it was absolutely hysterical!  I have to say I didn’t care for it.  There was one wrestling scene that I thought was pretty funny, but otherwise, I was kind of offended.  I can understand why Kazakhstan is so enraged.  There were a few jokes here and there at the expense of Americans, but the movie really made kazakhstan look like a country of backward thinking, racist, idiots.  I have to say, I am ready for Americans to be nice to the rest of the world!

certified herb nerd

OK, so I was reading Culpepper’s Complete Herbal… for fun (I know, pretty nerdy 🙂 and I thought I would pass along some of his words of wisdom.  (Or at least those things that got me laughing out loud and confirmed to my husband that I am truly a complete herb geek!)

For those of you who haven’t heard of Culpepper, he was a 17th century physician, herbalist, and astrologer…

In his description about Angelica (Angelica archangelica), he says:
“In time of heathenism, when men had found out any excellent herb, they dedicated it to their god, as the baytree to Apollo, the oak to Jupiter, the vine to Bacchus, the poplar to Hercules.  These the papists following as the patriarchs, they dedicated to their saints; as our lady’s thistle to the Blessed Virgin, At. John’s wort to St. John, and another wort to St. Peter, etc… Our physicians must imitate like apes, though they cannot come off half so cleverly, for they blasphemously call tansies, or heart’s ease, an herb for the Trinity, because it is of three colours; and a certain ointment an ointment of the Apostles, because it consists of twelve ingredients.  Alas!  I am sorry for their folly, and grieved at their blasphemy.  God send them wisdom the rest f their age, for they have their share off ignorance already.  Oh!  Why must ours be blasphemous, because the heathens and papists were idolatrous?  certainly they have read so much in old rusty authors, that they have lost all their divinity, for unless it were amongst the ranters, I never read or heard of such blasphemy.  The heathens and papists were bad, and ours worse; the papists giving names to herbs for their virtue’s sake, not for their fair looks…”

What a funny little man!!I love that he rants about how the herbs are named in his book!

Here’s another one:
“it is called Carduus Benedictus, or Blessed Thistle, or Holy Thistle.  I suppose the name was put upon it by some that had little holiness in themselves”

And of Wild Clary (Salvia horminum) he says:
“Wild clary is most blasphemously called Christ’s eye, because it cures diseases of the eye.  I could wish from my soul that blasphemy, ignorance, and tyranny were ceased among physicians, that they might be happy and I joyful.”

I found this interesting!
Here’s what he says about the Government and Virtues of Burdock:
“Venus challengeth this herb for her own:  and by its leaf or seed you may draw the womb which way you please, either upward by applying it to the crown of the head in case it falls out; or downwards in fits of the mother, by applying it to the soles of the feet:  or if you would stay it in its place, apply it to the navel, and that is one good way to stay the child in it.”

Ok, that’s it for my 17th century herbal education…

Not counting my eggs yet…

Well, the chickens are now 20 weeks old and no eggs yet.  I think that with the cold weather and shorter days, they may not start really laying until the spring.  We’ll see.

Sweetie gets out of the pen on a daily basis.  Yesterday, I found her up in a dogwood tree, trying to entice the other chickens to fly on up!  She is such a rebel!  I am worried that she will get hurt, but Suki seems to ignore her.  In fact, Suki has been breaking into the pen but not for the chickens.  I found her in there the other day… chickens on one side and suki on the other, by the food!  It seems that Suki thinks she is a chicken and needs to eat scratch.  I certainly don’t mind throwing Suki a little scratch if it means she will leave the chickens alone 🙂

Back in the saddle again

I’ve taken a little while to catch up after being gone last weekend! I spent 5 days in Boulder, CO at the American Herbalist’s Guild Symposium. It was fantastic!! My head was so full of information when I left that I had a hard time relaxing! The first day I went to an intensive with Rosita Arvigo and Shelley Torgove, about Maya abdominal massage for displaced uteri (is that the plural of uteruses?) Then I went to another intensive with Amanda McQuaid Crawford about Women’s Herbs. Both were outstanding, but Rosita’s left me wanting to get trained in Maya Abdominal Massage! (Uh oh, Toby… more schooling for me!)

For the next three days, I sat in talks with famous herbies like David Winston, Jonathan Treasure, Mary Bove, Aviva Romm, James Snow, Matthew Wood, Eric Yarnell, Leslie and Michael Tierra, Roy Upton, and many more. I felt like I was absorbing knowledge by just sitting there 🙂 I learned about Bringing Spiritual Practice into Clinical Practice, Pediatric Herbs, Eclectic Treatments for URI’s, and so much more! By the time the day was over, I wasn’t worth much and usually went back to the room to go to sleep. I did get out to see Boulder a little and enjoyed the city. It reminds me of Asheville, except it is much more brown (not a lot of lush green like I am use to).

There were 7 students from Aviva Romm’s Women’s Educator Course there. So we all got together for lunch on Sat. It was nice to finally meet Aviva in person and to meet some of the students behind the course.

On the shuttle from the hotel to the airport, I sat next to Mary Bove. We had a great time talking about cats, skiing, Eclectic herbalists, raising kids, and more. It was really neat to meet all of the people who wrote the books that I have learned a lot of my herbalism from, and whose books helped me through all of Kaia’s early illnesses.

At the airport I met up with Aviva and her family again. (Aviva’s husband, Tracy, and two of their daughters were also there. Really sweet family!) I have a great time talking with her. She is very easy-going, and she and her husband both have such warm, welcoming personalities. Oh, and they homeschooled all of their kids (they have 4), and are still alive and sane! So, I have hope 🙂

Speaking of Kaia, she is loving school. Sometime, I think too much! She goes there and learns how to behave like a ‘good girl’ then comes home and rebels. She is challenging my authority left and right! That perfect little angel who we have been able to take out to restaurants since the day she was born spit water on me the last time we went out for sushi!! She is also rebelling about the potty training thing. She concentrates so hard on what she is playing with that she refuses to stop and go potty. So, she ends up going in her pants way too often. We have finally resorted to the “sticker reward chart”. Everytime she tells us that she has to go to the bathroom and doesn’t go in her pants, she gets a sticker. After 10 (or what ever number we choose) stickers, she gets a treat (preferably not candy!). It’s working fairly well so far.

What else… no eggs from the chickens so far… they are 19 weeks old…

We turned our house plans into the county and they said we need to get them stamped by a structural engineer to prove they are sound. Toby is going to meet with one on Tuesday. If all that goes well, hopefully we will have ‘approval’ to start the building process.

The storage building is done and all of our stuff is moved in. I don’t have pictures yet, but it is really cute!

Girl time

It’s been a fun filled few days! Toby is away at a wedding, so Kaia and I have taken the time alone to do anything but house projects! We have played, gone to the mall(!), snuggled up in bed and watched movies! It’s been really nice for both of us to have a little down time. I will be at the AHG symposium next week and I hope Toby takes the time for some down time too!

We did have a great find for the house though. Kaia and I visited a building that use to house a marble/granite cutting school. The school moved and left all of their granite… free for the taking. SO, we loaded up the Jetta with everything I could carry (probably enough to do a marble kitchen counter top and bathroom sink) and plan to head back there when Toby is in town so we can get the heavy stuff! There were some pieces that are 6ft by 9 ft in perfect condition! It’s just that it would take a crane to lift them and very strong truck to carry them. I can’t wait to see what this house looks like when it is done!

We tried to turn the house plans in for code approval on Thursday, but there was one paper we still needed to fill out. So, hopefully next week!

Today I attended a class on 5 phase theory and how to apply it to my clinical practice, as well as in my own life. For those of you that don’t know, 5 phase theory is Chinese based and stems from the belief that everything in this world is a part of the ‘one’. Broken into 5 non-stagnant phases there is Water, Wood, Fire, Earth, and Metal. They are all a part of us, and often times we may have imbalances in them. This class really helped me see how they all embody certain aspects of life and that they are in constant motion. Hard to explain in a blog, but really cool stuff!

Roots Fest!

Here is the info on the Roots Fest for those of you near the Asheville area:
Saturday, October 14th from 11-6 in the French Broad Food Coop lot. There will be a kids booth, interactive booth, free classes, vendors, and lots of herbal information.

And here are my recipes:
Scrumptious Root Recipes
(Taste tested and approved by Kaia, age 3)

Granny’s Root Beer:
-Place 2 Cinnamon sticks, 1 Tablespoon Anise seeds, 3/4 oz Sarsaparilla root, and 1/4 oz Sassafras root into a pot.
-Cover with 3 cups of water.
-Bring to a boil, and reduce to a simmer.
-Simmer until the liquid is reduced by half (i.e. You have 1-1/2 cups left).
-Strain off the herbs and add 1 cup Honey to the liquid, mixing well.
-Store this syrup in an airtight jar and refrigerate.
-To use: Place 3 tablespoons of syrup in 8 oz of sparkling water, mix well and enjoy!

Old-Fashioned Ginger Ale:
-In a pot, add 2 cups fresh, chopped Ginger root to 3 cups of water.
-Bring to a boil, and reduce to a simmer.
-Simmer until the liquid is reduced by half (i.e. You have 1-1/2 cups left).
-Strain off the herbs and add 1 cup Honey to the liquid, mixing well.
-Store this syrup in an airtight jar and refrigerate.
-To use: Place 2-3 tablespoons of syrup in 8 oz of sparkling water, mix well and enjoy!

June, I like your recipe! I use to use my juicer too, but now that I have to crank the generator for electricity, I decided it might be easier to make a syrup 🙂

Homemade Marshmallows:

(From Lesley Tierra’s “A Kid’s Herb Book”)
-Preheat the oven to 275 degrees
-Separate 2 eggs, keeping the whites. Beat the whites until very foamy, and not quite stiff.
-Beat in 1/2-teaspoon vanilla.
-Slowly beat in 1/2-cup sugar, 1 teaspoon at a time.
-Beat in 2 tablespoons of Marshmallow root powder (Althea officinalis).
-Drop mixture using a teaspoonful at a time on the cookie sheet.
-Bake one hour.
-Remove from the sheet and let cool. Eat and Enjoy.
-To store, tightly cover and place in the refrigerator for several days.

A little Root with your sweets?

Kaia and I spent today preparing for next weekends “RootsFest!” that I am helping with. In celebration of the first annual National Herb Day (Oct. 14th), we (the NC chapter of the American Herbalists Guild) are putting on a festival. I am working the kids booth for a little while and wanted to do more than just have them color or something. So, I made up some Ginger syrup, “root beer” syrup, and home-made marshmallows (with Marshmallow root). I am going to let the kids try all of them and talk a little about how marshmallows, ginger-ale, and root beer all use to be made from herb roots. I thought it would be fun. I will post the recipes when I type them up.

The storage building is going up much more quickly than the cabin did. It is also a 12×16′ structure. Last weekend Toby and Eric worked on the foundation.

This weekend, Toby and his dad worked on the walls. It’s ready for the roof and siding now! Yahoo!!

We spent this weekend with some wonderful friends from Chapel Hill. They called last minute to see if they could come up, hang out, and help with the house! We really do have some amazing friends! We did a little of the siding, but Toby is getting really tired of it, so we decided to start on the storage building. We weren’t planning on building one, but Toby’s mom offered to help build one as Toby’s b-day gift. So, we figure, now we will have a space to keep our tools (which are getting rusty out in the elements), and put all of our stuff that we are currently paying to keep in storage. I’ll post pictures later. But for now, for your viewing pleasure, I have some lovely ladies who would like to say “hi!”


On the left is Faye, our Speckled Sussex. Ruby, the big ol’ mean Delaware is the white one


This is Honey, one of the Americaunas.


This is Sweety, the friendliest of our chickens, and the one who comes to get us when she wants to go to bed!


On the Left is Spike, our Buff Orpington, and Ruby again.
Missing are Rudy and Ralph, the black Australorps. They weren’t in a photographic mood.
Kaia said, and I quote, “We should name our Australorps ‘Black’ and ‘Black’, since they are black” 🙂

I went out for a walk the other evening and spotted some new mushrooms. The first one was under a dead tree in a large orange patch. I believe it is called an orange peel cup fungus (Aleuria aurantia), also called “orange fairy cups”. It’s supposed to be edible, but I am too chicken to try it.

I think this is a Pigskin Puffball

I don’t know what this one is. I think it is a polypore of some sort. It was growing out of a dead tree and most of them had no visible stem, or offset stems.

Ceremony and chickens

I spent this past weekend at the South East Women’s Herb Conference and had a wonderful time. This was the second annual conference and had StarHawk as the keynote speaker. I’d never seen her speak before. In fact, I stayed away from her books when I was a kid because I got tired of everyone ‘witchy’ changing their names to things like Raven Silvermoon and Phoenix wild Fire. I just wanted to understand what different religions meant and got turned off by anything that seemed fake. Anyway, I really enjoyed StarHawk’s speaches and ended up buying her most recent book, The Earth Path. She seems like an amazing woman who has been able to bring about change in fantastic ways through reconnecting with the earth.

During the rest of the weekend I took classes on stuff like “digestive health”, “Cordials and Elixirs”, “fermented foods”, helped out at my School’s booth, and went swiming in a lake! It was really amazing and what always makes it so great is the strong sense of community that these ceremonial conferences have and the sense of sisterhood that is there. I wish there were something like this for men so that they could beging to reconnect! With all the male screw ups in higher ranking places, I think they could greatly use a sense of brotherhood, connection, and community!

On a silly note, one of our chickens is an escape artist, and also very friendly and smart. Sweety is an Ameraucana. She’s a little small compared to the rest of the chickens, too. Anyway, the other day it was starting to rain and I heard this annoyed ‘bocking’ sound. I figured Sweety was out again, cause she does that when she has gotten out and wants back in her run. So, when I looked out the door to see where she was (she always hangs out by the chicken run fence), she was headed my way, toward the house, up the steps over the porch, and to the door. She saw toby standing at the door and turned around and led him back to her coop. She then stood there for him to pick her up and put her back in. She was basically saying “look, I’ve been out all day and now it is raining and getting dark. I’m ready to go to bed. Can you help me out here?” It was so cool to see her waddling up the steps to come and get us! 🙂

The Mushroom

Well, the mushroom is in the boletus family, but I can’t figure out which one. It looks like so many of them. It doesn’t bruise when broken, and the spores aren’t red, but it is somewhat bitter to the taste. So, I am not going to eat it until I figure out more about it.

I’ll let you know…

Addendum
OK, here it is: Bitter bolete. I spoke with the mushroom man here, and he says it is probably a ‘bitter bolete’. It is edible, just bitter in taste. Not poisonous. Maybe I will give one a try…

Picture update

9/15 – Here are a few pictures of our latest accomplishments.
We are doing lots of design work on the main house and hope to pour the foundation next month. In the mean time, we are trying to finish up on the siding for the little house. It’s been taking forever ’cause it is usually just one person at a time working on it. But, if we can get a team of three, it goes really fast. So, I have put together a “work/party day” for Toby’s birthday. What he really wants the most is to have some of these projects done. So, tomorrow we are going to try to finish up some of the siding, winterize the house, and cut up more wood for the cord wood walls in the main house.

Kaia starts at a Montessori school (3 days a week) next week and we are all very excited. She has really been getting the shaft with all of our work and no play. So, we think school will be really good for her and give her some time to be a kid. We still hope to home school, but it’s just not feasible right now.

9/17 – OK, so we didn’t finish up the siding, but we did put in the stove chimney and enlarge the chicken run area (to ~1600 sqft!!!. So they are pretty much free range now. Hey, how do you get them to stop sleeping/pooping in their laying boxes?? I put up netting and they tore it down.) We also put up a porch yesterday!!!! Wahoo!! A bunch of people showed up to Toby’s “workin’ birthday”, so they decided to throw up a porch in an afternoon! It looks great and makes this place feel so much more like a ‘home’. We spent this morning relaxing on the porch and even hung up the hammock.



Kaia’s friend came over yesterday, so she was occupied the whole day while the working was going on. At one point, they both came out of the camper with huge smiles on their faces and not a stitch of clothes on! They collectively decided that it was nudey time. 🙂 The place was completely trashed, with toys everywhere. But, they had a blast and kept themselves very busy.

Here’s a little fairy house that Kaia decided to make. She wanted to see if she could entice them with yogurt covered raisins and chocolate peppermint.

And look who can write her name!!!

Here is an ity bity mushroom I found. I can’t identify it except that it is a polypore and looks like a porcini. I will have to bring it to my mushroom friend and see if it is edible.

Yay for Habitat!

We hit the jackpot at the Habitat for Humanity Home Store yesterday. I have put it on my list to go by there and check as often as possible because they get in so many good home building supplies. Well, yesterday we took home 15 medium to large windows!! Brand new and low-E!! So, that brings our window total up to ~20. All for ~$150!! Yahoo! That should be enough to outfit the whole house!

After the rains…

It’s been raining off and on for the last few weeks in large downpours. Last night was another one of those. So, now we are having a great mushroom bloom! I know some of these are edible, but I’m not daring enough to try them.






Roots Festival

The herbalists here in Asheville are putting on a Roots Festival for National Herb Day on October 14th. We are making t-shirts that will say “Root Diggin’ Herbalist” on it and will have this picture (painted by one of our own!)

If anyone would like a t-shirt, let me know and I can order one for you. They are $18, and come in women’s and men’s styles and all sizes. I think they are going to look great!!!

Hey, are any of you out there going to the AHG Conference in Boulder this year??

And life goes on…

We had a little tragedy at our house yesterday. Suki killed Buffy, one of our Buff Orpingtons (and our favorite chicken who liked to sit on my lap, roost on my arm and climb on my shoulder!). I think she was near the fence sticking her head under for some food that rolled and Suki grabbed her out. When we screamed at Suki “NO!” she immediately dropped her, but by that time, Buffy’s neck was already broken. It was a good opportunity to talk with Kaia about the circle of life and death, but I was having a hard time not bawling! Kaia was consoling me! We had a little burial and said thanks to Buffy for the short time that she was with us. Now, we have to decide how to work this out with Suki. I am thinking that building her an enclosed space is the best option. No, that means she can’t have the run of the land, but will us wanting to have other folks up here who are also wanting to homestead, it’s probably a good idea for Suki to get use to having an enclosed space.

On a happier note, I have found a bunch of new herbs on the land… all volunteers in my garden!! I have found some Mullein, St. John’s Wort, what I think is a type of Lobelia, and a Reishi (Ganoderma Tsugai). Cool, eh?

The rain is also doing wonders for the garden and the shiitaki logs! This is a shot of a small shiitaki bloom. Right now, I have one log that has ~40 shiitaki growing!!!

And check out this Phallic tomato!

So far, I have put up only 4 quarts of tomato sauce, but I have many more quarts ahead of me!

My herbs are doing well too. I harvested some boneset to tincture and dry, as well as Holy Basil, Skullcap, and red clover. Doesn’t my herb corner look nice?

Things are also going well at my school. I have been asked to continue on as a core staff member and teach for the Level 2 herb students this winter!!

“Dee Flowers”

OK, first of all, The Rebelles show was absolutely fantastic!!! I have already decided that I want to try out the next time they have auditions! My burlesque name will be “Dee Flowers” and I will be the hippie-hooping girl 🙂 It was so much fun! I went out the next morning and got my mom and dad tickets to the show this Friday! (I was almost hoping that they didn’t want to go so that Toby and I could go again!)

Anyway… it looks like the trashy trailer just below our land is about to be hauled off. There was a fairly nice, though slightly unstable guy who lived there and collected junk. Now, when I say collected junk, you may picture a few toys and cars in the yard… but, I’m talking a full acre of total crap in his yard: at least 50 tires, a 4 foot pile of vodka bottles, old roofing tin, broken “no-harm” animal traps… the list goes on. So, the land is owned by the mother of the guy who lives there. After a few fines by the county, she decided it was time to clean the place up and the only way to do that was to evict her son. So, hopefully the junk will go soon too!

The chickens are doing well, although we think our Delaware, Ruby, might be a boy. The comb on her head has gotten more pronounced recently and her chin is starting to get some color too it. We’ll see…. Their favorite foods to date: pineapple, mana bread, tomatos. Dislikes: Seaweed and comfrey (what’s wrong with them?)

Toby and I have a preliminary house design. It is a 16 sided cord wood house, ~40 feet in diameter. There will be a second story 8-sided structure above for the “master suite”, woo woo! Toby has also started taking down some poplar to cut up for the cord wood siding. The bark that comes off of the poplar is amazing! I am hoping to figure out how to make something out of it, like bark baskets or something. OH, we hope to have some pretty bottle designs in the house too. So, if you have any bottles with cool shapes or colors, please save them for us! (Red bottles are especially rare because they have to use gold to make the color, so save ’em!)