Archive for Gardening

Long Awaited Photos – Wordless Wednesday

Guess what I found at the townhouse on Saturday…..yes! The cord for my camera to connect to my computer! Yay! Here are some long awaited photos from the summer through yesterday and a peek into our lives:

Clouds over Mrs. A’s Farm.

This was when we just started planting out in Mrs. A’s field in the spring!

Early morning at Mrs. A’s Farm.

Some of these photos were taken by my 8 year old son.

Hairy little man. These next couple were taken by our oldest.

Thought this one was cool. We think our 9 year old took it.

Lefse making.

Hairy man loved lefse making!

Pretending to fish.

Lefse.

Rolling out lefse.

Happy boy.


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Ticks a Bug in Our Flesh

We have been having some problematic encounters with ticks at Mrs. A’s farm. I could tell you some pretty funny stories about reactions, but I don’t think my children would appreciate it. I will tell you that most of us get itchy just talking about ticks or bugs, as I scratch my neck mid-type.

As you all know, we try really hard to stay away from chemical insecticides, the very reason we are organic farmers. Therefore to combat the ticks, fleas and insect bites we have been using Purification, Peppermint, Lavender and Cedarwood. The ticks just tend to fall off, unless we happen upon a stubborn one because the ticks supposedly breath through their skin and the hinders their breathing when dropped on them.

Purification contains Tea Tree Oil (Melaleuca alternifolia) , which is good for a variety of things including: rashes, insect bites, nail fungus, dermatitis, ringworm, thrush, head lice, sore throats, boils, congestion, arthritis, cold sores, fatigue, useful for a wide spectrum of infections. It has high germicidal value. Scent: Sharp, spicy, warm with medicinal tones.

When I came across this comic, I couldn’t help but laugh. If you only knew! :-)

 

 

Copyright © Mark David. All rights reserved


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Skrub’a Gloves Review

Faith and Family Reviews received the following product in exchange for writing a review. While we consider it a privilege to receive free products to review, our reviews are our honest opinion and thoughts of the product.

Don’t pick up that veggie brush or peeler until you see these gloves.  Fabrikators has a product called Skrub’a Gloves.

“Skrub’a is a line of practical, multi-purpose scrubbing gloves for removing dirt and loose skin from fresh potatoes, carrots, and other vegetables. Did you know that 50% of vitamins in vegetables are located in the peel? This is lost if you use a peeler.  Skrub’a cleans without removing all of the healthy vitamins, and the gloves are hygienic, practical, and fun to use for both kids and adults!

– One size fits all : flexible fabric fits men and women, kids gloves fit ages 4-12

– Internationally patented

– Made with durable nylon, machine-washable and dishwasher-safe

– FDA approved

– Danish Design

For adults they come in (Pictured above)

Potato (Black) –  “Removing dirt, loose skin, rinsing, and cleaning fresh potatoes, baked potatoes, and many other vegetables”

Veggie (Green) – “Removing dirt, loose skin, rinsing, and cleaning any kind of vegetable including beets, radishes, leeks, mushrooms, corn, etc”

Carrot (Orange) – “Removing dirt, loose skin, rinsing, and cleaning carrots, parsley root, turnips, and many other vegetables”

Kids gloves come in Potato (Black), Pumpkin (Orange with Pumpkin Face), & Carrrot (Orange).

They can be purchased on many online retailers and you can look up your state to find the nearest store.  Their website is http://www.fabrikators.com/

My Review:

I received the Veggie Skrub’a Gloves and used them on mushrooms and they work!  They feel a little weird on your hand.  Kinda like a plastic scouring pad, but much softer.  I haven’t put them in the dishwasher yet.  Yes, they say on the tag they are dishwasher safe!  I would put them on the top rack if you try it.  I found just washing them well under the faucet worked well for me.  Once I get more veggies from our CSA, I will be using them much more, but so far they are working for me.


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* CLOSED* Planting Time: Week 4 and Final Giveaway of the Scott Naturals 4-Week Test Drive

Winner of Week 3 Scott Naturals 4-Week Test Drive Giveaway is……….

Erica!!!!!!!!! Congratulations!!!!!!!!!


Thanks to all who entered and to Scott Naturals and TheMotherhood for sponsoring this giveaway! Erica was chosen because she was the only one to enter.

Please note this week’s giveaway ends on  our usual Thursday night instead of the weekend due to having to get next week’s giveaway winner’s info in by next Friday, May 6th!

Sorry, I battled a headache yesterday and was out all day on Saturday. Then today had school stuff to deal with so I am posting this really late.

Planting Time

I don’t know about your area but here it has been pretty wet and raining for most of April. So much so that it hindered our organic farmer from getting much into the ground. May looks a little more promising so the next two days, if the weather cooperates, we will be working full speed ahead on planting all those transplants we planted in March in the greenhouse. I am looking forward to being outside and getting more active (walked a couple of times over the weekend and today…yay!)

We do not plan to plant too much here at home since my work at the farm is entitling us to two CSA (Consumer Supported Agriculture) boxes of fresh organic produce each week. However, if we manage to get our perennials moved around, the children may plant a seed of their choice. We do have blueberry bushes, strawberries, raspberries and rhubarb that should return, as well as oregano and chives. So that is quite a bit in our small garden plots. I am sure the raspberries and strawberries will need thinning. Sure wish we had more land so we could plant them in bigger plots!

Feel free to tell me in your comment what you are planting in your gardens this year, if you are planting one.

Week 3 Winner

Winner of Week 3 Scott Naturals 4-Week Test Drive Giveaway is……….

Tamara!!!!!!!!! Congratulations!!!!!!!!!

 

Thanks to all who entered and to Scott Naturals and TheMotherhood for sponsoring this giveaway! #12 winner chosen by Random.org.


Week 4 and Final Giveaway of Scott Naturals 4-Week Test Drive!

 

A 12 pack of toilet paper, a 6 pack of paper towel, a package of napkins and flushable moist wipes.  Cool, eh? Yeah, we thought so too!

You may also choose to participate in the Scott Naturals 4-Week Test Drive between now and September 30 and enter to win a Ford Fusion hybrid car!  Once you pledge to take the 4-Week Test Drive, coupons for each product are available -http://www.scottbrand.com/community/savings/scott

 

 

Scott’s Press Release says:

According to a recent poll, one third of consumers believe eco-friendly products don’t work as well as “regular” ones. That’s why Scott Naturals is on a mission to get people to rethink their notion of environmentally friendly products. As the world’s first line of “hybrid” paper products, including bath tissue, paper towels, flushable moist wipes and napkins, the Scott Naturals brand combines the green benefits of recycled fiber with the quality people want, making it easy to take a green step forward. If every American pledged to use Scott Naturals for four weeks, it would save two million trees. Starting on April 4, as part of the “Take the 4-Week Test Drive Sweepstakes,” Scott Naturals began challenging Americans to test out its line of hybrid paper products for four weeks and enter for a chance to win a new hybrid sedan.

Our Review of Scott Naturals Paper Napkins

This will be very similar to last week’s review of Scott Naturals paper towel in that we were satisfied with the performance of Scott Naturals paper napkins. They are comparable to other brands we have used.  They function well when used for cleaning.  They do not seem to tear too easily.

Overall we are very satisfied with Scott Naturals paper napkins.

The Giveaway

Enter to winScott Naturals paper products!

Mandatory Entry: Tell me which products you want to try the most from Scott!

Extra Entries (Please be sure and leave a comment and link for extra entries):

5 Entries: Visit http://www.ScottBrand.com/4WeekTestDrive to help increase the amount Scott Brand will donate to National Wildlife Federation. Scott Naturals will donate $1 per unique click to the NWF, up to $25,000. You can do this as many times as you like!

1 Entry:Follow Faith and Family Reviews On Twitter

1 Entry:Like/Friend Faith and Family Reviews on Facebook.

1 Entry: Like Scott Naturals on Facebook and leave a comment on their wall saying- Faith and Family Reviews sent me.

2 Entries: Follow Faith and Family Reviews on Google Friend Connect (on the our right side bar).

2 Entries: Tweet about this giveaway. Up to three tweets per day. Include a separate comment for each and your tweet url with your comment. You may write your own tweet or use this one:

Enter Week 4  #ScottNaturals paper products! http://bit.ly/ScottNaturalsGiveawayWeek4 @faithfamilyrevw! Please share! #ScottTestDrive #Win

5 Entries: Blog about this giveaway and link back this post.

1 Entry: For every comment you leave anywhere else on this blog, but please leave a link with your comment!

Details:

This giveaway will run from May 2nd, 2011 to May 5th, 2011 (Please note that it is a short giveaway!) at midnight CST. The winner will be chosen through Random.org. Scott will send one winner their prize. Winner will be contacted via email on or before May 6th, 2011 and will be asked for their contact and other pertinent info. Winners will have 48 hours to send me their e-mail at [ffr] [giveaways] [at] [gmail] [dot] [com] (without spaces and parenthesis). Please note: This giveaway is offered to USA only.

Thanks and have fun!

Faith and Family Reviews received the following product in exchange for writing a review and is being compensated by Scott Naturals andTheMotherhood. While we consider it a privilege to receive free products to review and compensation, our reviews are our honest opinion and thoughts of the product.



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Saturday! Go to Lowe’s & Starbucks!

Celebrate Earth Day with Lowe’s and Starbucks!

Lowe’s (www.lowes.com) is giving away one million trees On Saturday the 23rd!  Before you leave the house grab your reuseable mug and on your way to Lowe’s stop by Starbucks for a free coffee or tea! (http://www.starbucks.com/blog/happy-earth-day/993)


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“Garden Sleeves” or KitchenKuffs

Faith and Family Reviews received the following product in exchange for writing a review. While we consider it a privilege to receive free products to review, our reviews are our honest opinion and thoughts of the product.

 


When I started in the greenhouse last month it was annoying to wear my jacket while planting because my sleeves would fall down even when I yanked them up nearly to my elbows.  Yet most days it was still pretty cool in there so I needed a jacket on to keep warm. Then enters a nifty little product called KitchenKuffs (or as you can see by my title “garden sleeves”).

The KitchenKuffs have either have an adjustable cord or an elastic top that you slip over your arm and the result is your sleeves are held in place while you garden or wash the dishes or even clean the toilet. (I’d have a separate set from the kitchen though! Just my humble opinion!)

I really do not have anything negative to say about them. If you use the adjustable ones, which are the ones I prefer you can get a perfect fit for your arm. They come in a couple different styles, colors and sizes. I think KitchenKuffs are a great little product and highly recommend them for keeping those sleeves in place.

 


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Recycling Coffee Grounds: Health and Garden Tuesday

Article Credit: Audrey Miller

Recycling Coffee Grounds

Here are a few tips for recycling old coffee grounds in your garden:

Add used coffee grounds to the pots of indoor plants.

Work used coffee grounds into your garden soil before seed planting. After your plants start to emerge, work in coffee grounds near the plants. Used coffee grounds are said to repel snails and slugs as well as adding nutrients to the soil.

Increase your carrot and radish harvest by mixing seeds with dry coffee grounds before planting the seeds.

Use coffee grounds to repel ants.

Keep cats from using your garden as a kitty box by spreading used coffee grounds and orange peels throughout flower beds.

Keep bait worms alive by mixing coffee grounds into the soil before you add worms.

Grow mushrooms on old coffee grounds.

Fertilize plants. Old coffee grounds are nutrient-rich for plants that thrive in an acidic soil.

When you come in out of the garden, remember washing your hands is a great defense to prevent infection.

Defending you and your family from germs can be a full time job. According to many health experts, your first line of defense is handwashing, and according to the Mayo Clinic, hand washing is a simple habit that can help keep you healthy.

Young Living makes products so pure, you can eat them. All three soaps use the power of Thieves essential oils to clean, yet they are gentle to the skin. Thieves Foaming Hand Soap, Thieves Waterless, Hand Purifier, and Thieves Cleansing Soap are effective, non-toxic, germ-busters you will want to stock up on. This personal testimonial comes from Leslie Stoddard of Idaho Falls, Idaho, “Many times when we have experienced symptoms of a cold or flu virus beginning, we have used the oils and our symptoms have vanished quickly and do not return.”

Please click here to read additional information regarding the Thieves line of powerful and versatile household products.


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Take Advantage of the Outdoors: Health and Nutrition Tuesday

Credit goes to Audrey Miller for this compilation.

Spring has arrived and it’s time to head outdoors. Yards to clean up, flowers to plant, and parks to visit invite us to soak up every ounce of daylight.

With a few essential oils and some novel tips, you can prepare yourself and friends for the perfect outdoor experience.

In the Garden

“Insects will be repelled from your garden – in a standard size spray bottle, fill almost full of water and then add enough Thieves cleaner to color the water. You will know you put enough Thieves cleaner in the bottle when the insects scatter when you spray your vegetables and such. I grow tomatoes – in Florida – and no worms and no aphids and the grasshoppers leave too. This spray also works on rose bushes and squash plants. Then wipe down your kitchen countertops with the same spray. Happy Oiling.” Karen VanSchenck

I enjoy using products that I know are safe for me and for the environment. Here are some suggestions about using Young Living’s products outdoors and you can rest easily because you will know that these products are safe:

OILS THAT DETER CRAWLING INSECTS: peppermint, lemongrass, lavender, thyme, geranium
FOR BEE STINGS: a cold compress with Roman chamomile
FOR WASPS STINGS: cider or wine vinegar and lavender and Roman chamomile
FOR SPIDER BITE: 1 teaspoon alcohol, 3 drops lavender and 2 drops Roman chamomile
HERBS THAT REPEL MOSQUITOES: cedarwood, clove, eucalyptus, frankincense, thyme, rosemary, geranium, lemongrass, peppermint, basic, cinnamon. Combine 7-10 drops of one of the essential oils from the above list with 2 tablespoons vegetable oil. Dab on the skin or clothing.
FOR ITCHY BITES: The Sierra Club of Canada suggests coriander or Purification Oil for itchy mosquito bites.
Source = the Essential lifestyle Magazine Vol.3 No.3.

From its humble beginnings, to the reigning world leader in essential oils, Young Living’s continued success starts with its 100% natural farms. From pH-balanced soil and top-quality seeds, to the patented distillation process – Young Living Farms are what make the difference in the quality and purity of the essential oils.

For more information, visit: http://ht.ly/4ooyd


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Orchids and Greenhouses

by David Niblack

“We have someone new!”

The leader’s voice broke through the speakers. I had crept in late, hoping no one would notice me.

“Stand up and tell us your name and where you go to school!” the speakers boomed.

“My name is David and… I don’t go to school— I’m homeschooled.”

“What was that?”

“I said, I am homeschooled—I am taught at home.” I replied.

The leader squinted, trying to place me. After a pause, the voice resumed. “OK, cool! Did you say `homesachooled?’ Let’s give an applause!”

After the lesson, the assembly broke apart, drifting into little groups bubbling with laughter and exclamations that rose over the background music. I knew nothing of Jennifer Knapp and had not been to the high school football game. I was clueless of the upcoming prom or the latest air-filter add-on for 4×4 enthusiasts. My peers spoke a language that was nearly incomprehensible to me. Quietly, I escaped out the side door.

I didn’t realize at the time that what was causing my awkwardness in the popular youth culture would build a sanctuary for my faith. As a pioneer homeschooler I was “weird” to my public school counterparts, but little did I know I was on the front edge of a movement that would give a radically new freedom for young people to live out their faith.

Homeschooling has provided my generation with a greenhouse for their faith. Greenhouses are different than conservatories. In conservatories, plants grow all their lives indoors because they are never able to withstand life outdoors. Greenhouses serve a different purpose. The gardener places the plants he wants to grow strong into the greenhouse where fragile limbs and roots can grow form. When the plant is strong, the gardener can confidently move it outside where the plant will withstand even the harshest conditions.

After high school, I attended a liberal arts Christian college in southern California where I met Nathan. He was a greenhouse homeschooler. Raised in a logging town in northern California, I could tell he was more comfortable in the woods than in the trendy sunglasses-and-palm-tree life on campus. He wore plaid shirts, a big belt, and wire-rimmed glasses. His straight-leg blue jeans ended right above his ankle, creating an awkward gap between the hem of his pants and the top of his hiking boots.

I assumed he was a “sheltered homeschooler” until the day I slid my meal tray next to his in the cafeteria and spent half an hour hearing his story. Politics were his passion, and he had worked in elections and interned at the state capital. He had a vision of life that transcended the whims and trends of youth culture. Beneath his unassuming exterior was an articulate man of courage who as a freshman in college was already having a godly political influence in our state. I saw that he was out of tune with the popular youth culture; he simply played in a different orchestra.

The “independence” of today’s adolescent is a misnomer. So often breaking away of the emerging generation is not fresh independence but simply a transfer of the old dependence; from family and parents to the popular dictates of the youth culture. Few are free to be who they really are, and I had met no one as free as Nathan. As I listened, I realized that his plaid shirt and too-short blue jeans were not a mark of oddity, but a badge of freedom. This young man was free. Free to wear what he wanted, free to act as he wanted, and most importantly, free to live his faith unhindered by the pressures of the popular youth culture.

The next spring I discovered how God used this same freedom in my life. I was invited to speak to the staff at a summer camp the week before camp started. The staff lounge was quiet, and my hands were trembling as I awkwardly opened my Bible to give the message. Camp counselors intimidated me; they were often the loud, popular types, full of energy, jokes, and spiritual savvy.

I was nervous, but started speaking. Stillness came over the room and I noticed the counselors’ expressions change. Their faces are unforgettable; the deep look in their eyes, brows furrowed in thought, and I could tell something was stirring a deep spiritual hunger. I closed with a prayer. The room was quiet and hushed. “So that is what they are teaching you at Bible school, eh?” one of them asked me. What a hard question.

I only said, “Yes, I have some very good classes and I’m learning a lot.” But the answer was hollow. I wish I could have told him that in fourth grade my parents took me out of school and taught me at home because I was bored with the tedious pace at school. I wish I could have told him what life was like growing up in an environment set apart from the world of my peers. I wish I could have told him how, when camping with the Boy Scouts, I was so shocked at the locker-room jokes and stories of the other boys that I buried my head in my sleeping bag clutching my little New Testament close to hide my tears for friends that did not know God.

I wish I could have told him how difficult it was getting older and reaching the place where I was starving for an identity, rejecting the identity of my parents, and yet unable to find one with my peers or my school and being driven to find the purpose of who I am in God. I wish I could have told him what it was like being homeschooled in a house with no TV and being clueless of Seinfeld, Friends or Jim Carrey, and instead discovering Dickens, Shackleton, and John Piper.

I wish I could have told him how it felt to hear the stories of high schoolers – their stories of proms, of dating, of honor classes – and to go home and do school work that night with my parents. I wish I could have told him what it meant to have a life where God had drawn me to live away from what was popular so that I could learn to listen to Him long enough to find the freedom of being different. Homeschooling may have made me “weird” but it gave me the chance to find joy in the voice of God. This is what gave me the heart to preach; Bible school gave me the tools to make it possible.

At a volume unparalleled in history, our world screams with distractions into the lives of young people. Under the mask of “be independent!” and “be yourself!” is a machine-like pressure to conform to cultural norms set by TV, advertising, and peer pressure. Add to this the educational “success-at-all-costs” philosophy of a materialistic worldview and my generation is driven to live lives of shallow busyness that produce spiritual deafness to the voice of God.

We have loud worship music, dynamic youth speakers, and engaging cell groups, but where is the place of silent isolation where the heart can yearn for the presence of God? The explosion of homeschooling in America, with now over a million participants, can create that sacred ground, and is doing so in the lives of hundreds of young people in my generation.

But this explosion doesn’t mean homeschooling is a quick-fix fad. In fact, the trend is thousands of years old. King David was homeschooled. His brothers attended the King’s the best generals. David was taught by the bleating of sheep. But between the lectures of sheep and the whisper of the Judean wilderness winds, David learned to hear something else. He learned to hear God.

He grew so strong in the greenhouse of the lonely pastures, that when he went to the battlefield not even Goliath was a match for his fibers of faith. The author of the best-selling devotional book of all time did not attend a prestigious Bible school and was not accepted by his peers. But he had learned in the wilderness what it meant to hunger and thirst after God.

Two years later I was invited to speak in the youth group. I preached my heart, and to my surprise the kids listened. Eyes wide open, brows furrowed, and that same yearning depth dancing across their faces. I later overheard one of the kids talking. “Whoa, we normally go to youth group to have fun, but he made it so real it was scary…” His words were satisfying. I felt I had connected. Almost like a mini homecoming. I chatted for a while before I left. And this time I used the main doors.

This article was republished with permission. David Niblack is a homeschool graduate and now a Chicago area pastor. You may read more about David Niblack at his website: http://davidniblack.com/site/?p=21


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Organic Farming and Garden Supplies

The older girls and I attended an organic farming conference (MOSES) over the weekend as a part of my duties as a Growers Group Facilitator. Yes, this is another “job”/client of mine. To be honest, it was great and really did not seem like work. Just gives us more yearning to farm. So in honor of the farming and gardening bug that we have, we thought we would share with you a garden special at Gardener’s Supply Company-Copper Snow Gauge

Gear up for Gardening Season and Go Green with Gardener’s Supply Co.! Get all of your houseplant solutions, composting, gardening tools, and plants and seeds at Gardener’s today! Plus, now through March 9th, receive free shipping on orders over $75 with promo code XNET8320! Now through 3/9/11


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