The New Dog Run

Basil is a sweetie but there are times when a dog simply needs to be outside by herself.  Labs are very devoted to their pack, and they will follow you around everywhere…. ALL THE TIME!

So in order for us to do all the painting and repairs needed on the house, between snowstorms Aaron and I  built a dog run for her highness.

We discovered in the process what kind of soil we have here as well.  According to a local fencer it is sand with about 20% clay.  It is incredibly well drained but it also hard packs under pressure.  The post hole auger helped but it was back breaking work!  The end result turned out well.  Basil hates it, but too bad, sometimes we need a moment sans puppy!

Doggy Prison:

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Before and After, How it all Began

(Jon)

JAZ Farm has been an evolution.  While many plans, visions and dreams rarely turn out exactly as you thought they would, JAZ Farm was inevitable.  From as far back as age 17, I had an amazing disdain for cities.  All through college, all I could think about was wanting to live somewhere “in the wilderness”.  At the time this was something of a naive belief that one still actually could move to the mountains and somehow live off of the land.  What they don’t tell you  in your Jeremiah Johnson fantasy is that the mountains don’t provide much in the way of edible assets that don’t need to be shot first.  Now that isn’t an ethical issue as much as it is a scarcity.  I am a fair bowhunter, and a pretty accurate shot.  Considering how much time I spent in archery, I better be.  No the problem is that 1. There is a regularly scheduled hunting season.  Hunting out of season is a great way to get you into a whole heap of trouble and 2. There really is only so much Deer and Elk you can eat; not to mention the fact that greens are hard to come by.  I did live with ranchers for a lot of years and did learn the ins and outs of cattle, but there too, Walden had a growing season of about two and a half months.  I even experienced significant snowfall at that elevation (8200 feet) in July!

In seminary, while living and working in ranch country, I became aware of the moral and ethical dilemmas surrounding our nations’ food system.  The Green Revolution was starting to wreak havoc on the local farmer.  Thousands upon thousands of our “food creators” were being told to “get big or get out”.  A tradition, and ultimately, the most efficient way to produce nutritious food, was being decimated.  This is a topic for another time….. but believe me…. there will be many discussions about this.  We have screwed things up in some of the worst ways imaginable and it must be changed.  JAZ Farm is trying to be a part of that change.

As Aaron grew up and he found his own interests and our archery fascination slowly wained, we began getting into Xeric (water efficient) landscaping in the front yard of our Westminster home.  As I learned more and more about what poison industrial food is I started a quest for some sort of independence from that system.   The first attempt was hydroponics.  I built a hydroponic grow room in our basement.  It was a rousing success but it was in no way large enough to create enough produce to sustain a family.  However, it is absolutely possible to grow all of the salad greens one could ever need in a couple of hydroponic grow tables lit with some T5 florescent lights.  In fact, given how hot and arid our climate is, that is likely how I will always grow lettuce.  You have never seen green lettuce until you have raised it in a nutrient controlled environment!  It even has taste!

The grow room now is primarily a seedling starter room.  It also may be the room that the newly born chickens are brooded in.  The started seedlings were initially intended to provide the plants for the first part of the JAZ Farm…. JAZ Urban Farm.  Our back yard is an Urban Farm.  We have 25 raised beds and it has been astounding how much of our produce we grow in the summer and how much of it we have available through canning, freezing and dehydrating throughout the winter.  Of the 45 tomato plants I grow out back each year, we NEVER have to by any kind of tomato products except for an occasional can of tomato paste.  The taste is second to none!

JAZ Urban Farm was our attempt to create something similar to a family we found on the internet – The Dervais Family.  If you do a You Tube search you will find these folks living not too far from the Rose Bowl in Pasadena California.  On a postage stamp sized lot in the city they raise and sell produce, eggs, and goat’s milk year round.  Now, they are fortunate to not have the season we fondly refer to as winter, but given the restricted growing season out here, we achieved an amazing success.

Growing in Colorado presents some challenges; the least of which is the short growing season – The biggest…. water.  One learns very quickly how to conserve water and, through the use of different kinds of mulches, keep the water sequestered in the beds instead of evaporating off into the stratosphere.   It isn’t inexpensive to get started, but if you spend the money to build the beds, put in the drip systems, and as I did, put mini-greenhouses over all of them, it is simply the net present cost of all the produce you won’t have to buy.  This isn’t for the inactive.  Just as we learned when we got Basil the dog, one doesn’t buy a Yellow Lab if you want to be a couch potato.  Gardens, too, don’t grow themselves.  Leave them to their own devices and you will find a weed patch just happy as can be to choke out your Roma tomatoes.  My rodent control is a little less than conventional.  I try to be organic with pest control, and I do the necessary weeding, and use drip irrigation.  However, when them little brown varmints with the big fuzzy tails come around and they threaten to put bite marks in my gorgeous Oregon Spring slicing tomatoes…. sucker’s gotta go!  They usually meet with some unfortunate demise where they get a hole in them and fall off the fence….. “honest officer I think it just slipped!”

James Howard Kunstler, an author, wrote a book entitled, The Long Emergency.  I would recommend it to everyone.  Suffice it to say that we cannot have infinite growth on a finite planet.  Kunstler is someone pigeon holed as being a “peak-er”, someone who researches and believes that we have hit the peak of the easily accessible fossil fuels on the planet.  From here forward it will be more and more difficult, and more and more expensive, to extract oil from mother earth.  He wrote a phrase that I believe completely, “The creation of American suburbia has been the greatest mis-allocation of resources in the history of the world.”  It is not possible to do much in a suburb that doesn’t entail jumping in a car of some sort and motoring off to somewhere else.  If we are indeed at peak oil, and our food travels some 15o0+ miles to reach our plate (and often ridiculously longer miles – like 90% of our garlic coming from China!), then food is destined to get amazingly more expensive and scarce.

Armed with that information, the desire to grow our own food and somehow live off the land and become more sustainable, we began a search for somewhere to homestead.  We don’t have any delusions of quitting our day jobs and becoming Green Acres, but having someplace away from the suburbs that offers infinite opportunities for us to experiment, and sometimes, simply to sit and contemplate our navels, the peace of the country has already been recharging.  As a financial advisor, I work in the heart of the insanity of our “capitalist” system.  As much as I love my clients, I hate what I am having to defend them from.  JAZ Farm allows me to feel like I have some control over other aspects of my life that don’t involve my career.

Our astronomy club has a dark site for observing in Deer Trail, Colorado.  It is out I-70 on the eastern plains.  It is beautifully desolate; grain fields as far as the eye can see.  On our way out to the site, we would take side trips to the little bergs along the way.  Because of the housing bubble and financial collapse, a lot of the small homesteads were coming on the market as foreclosures.  To make a long story short, the first one we found fell through.  This one happened shortly thereafter.  Physically, it was a complete mess.  I will post some pictures of the interior before and afters.  It was built in 2006 and we got it for a song.  The problem was that it it didn’t look like anyone had ever cleaned it or much less cared for it.  We had to repair windows, put on a new roof, completely redo and repaint the interior, fix water damage, and generally get it so that it was liveable and not look like a slum.  The previous owners evidently had dogs that had the run of the house.  They must have smoked.  The dirt inside was unreal.  Thick to the point that a rag would simply make mud.  When we had the carpets steam cleaned they literally changed colors.

The fortunate part was that it was just what we wanted.  The months after the closing have been a non-stop fix up.  We are finally seeing the end of it.   The JAZ Farm projects can now focus on…. the actual farming!  40 acres, a well, a house, a chicken coop, a garden, an astronomy space, and a barn. This is all very exciting for us.  Thanks for looking!

BEFORE:

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AFTER:

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Chicken coop face lift

Chicken coop face lift

Very Photogenic

Here is Basil today out at the farm looking very queenly.  She LOVES it out here.  While we are out working on projects she is tearing around like a crazy woman sniffing everything she can get her nose to.  Of course, if there is one thing on the entire 40 acres you would rather she not get into, that is precisely what she’ll find…. i.e.  the pick-up sized piles of manure that were left from the previous owners (fertilizer!).  Not only is it soft and stinky she can play “queen of the castle” on it as well!

Pretty girl

 

Dog Royalty

Dog Royalty

Pandora’s Lunchbox

One of my most recent reads was a book entitled, “Pandora’s Lunchbox”.  I thought I would put in a plug for it and also post a link to an interview with the author.  One major reason for the JAZ Farm’s existence is an absolute revulsion over our current food system.  If the weak links in food production like GM crops and animals raised in CAFO’s (Confined Animal Feed Operations) isn’t enough to wake you up one only has to turn to the processed food industry.  This book is a great primer, along with another I just finished entitled Salt, Sugar, Fat.

Vitamin D in milk from wool?  Really?  We have got it all wrong.

Occupy the Food Supply!!

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/bettina-elias-siegel/pandoras-lunchbox_b_3085974.html?utm_hp_ref=@food123

The Farm Dog

Right around the same time that we purchased the farm we also found Basil.  She is a pure bred Yellow Lab.  Basil was born in Wichita, Kansas on September the 11th, 2012.  It didn’t take long for her to win over all of our hearts.

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My Beloved Uncle Henry

“I went to the woods because I wished to live deliberately, to front only the essential facts of life, and see if I could not learn what it had to teach, and not, when I came to die, discover that I had not lived. I did not wish to live what was not life, living is so dear; nor did I wish to practice resignation, unless it was quite necessary. I wanted to live deep and suck out all the marrow of life, to live so sturdily and Spartan-like as to put to rout all that was not life, to cut a broad swath and shave close, to drive life into a corner, and reduce it to its lowest terms, and, if it proved to be mean, why then to get the whole and genuine meanness of it, and publish its meanness to the world; or if it were sublime, to know it by experience, and be able to give a true account of it in my next excursion.”
— Henry David Thoreau[3]

It would be negligent of me not to post from one of my favorite American philosophers – Uncle Henry.

The launch of JAZ Farm Blog April 17, 2013

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This is the beginning of the photographic, written, and philosohical journey of the development of our homestead and living true to our worldview.  This is JAZ Farm.  In this blog we hope to not only chronicle the development of our life in the country and our work toward a more self-sufficient and sustainable life, but the reasons for its creation.  There will be simple entries about what we have done to the place and photos of the progress, but as importantly, why this is something that has allowed us to “live true”.  JAZ Farm is a dream come true; but in every sense of the meaning it is a continual work in progress.  For those who have expressed an interest in its development this is for you.  For those of you who know us there will also be some hard hitting critiques of our country and our world that have made the JAZ Farm project so important to us.  Feel free to pick and choose through your favorite sections.   We decided that in a desire to write and to put our words out into the world, this was the best avenue from which to proceed.  We hope you enjoy the diary, the photo albums, and the philosophy of the most wonderful place on earth for our family…. JAZ Farm.