Tag Archives: pigs

This Morning in the Pastures

Cassiopeia

I can’t tell which picture of Demi I like more, so here are both of them.

Charley and Churchill. I just noticed that the tufty tip of Charley’s tail is bright red!

Milkshakes v. Hannah. It’s hard to tell who’s going to win this one.

Brooks & White

Monroe, I think, is trying to insinuate himself into the Luna/Stella family. No word yet on whether this is going to work, but I’ll keep you posted.

Sagitta, laughing at something.

Our baby ducks are growing up, but they are still small enough that five of them can swim in a grain pan.

I love how wildly different from one another their markings are.

Sabine and Gnocchi seem to be sharing a joke.

Forgotten Photos

I was looking through my hard drive for some photos I took this Spring and stumbled on a whole cache of pictures that somehow never got posted.

These are from a trip to our friends Lisa and Will’s farm.

These piglets were just a few weeks old when I took these pics.

This is New Dog. That’s not a description; that’s his name.

I’ll post more of these forgotten pics over the weekend.

Lessons I’ve Learned from Growing Corn

About a week ago, I tasted one of the most wonderful delights of summer. From our county’s Farmer’s Market, Susan had brought home a half-dozen ears of picked-this-morning corn. They were cooked as simply as possible: grilled, with butter, salt, and pepper. These ears were so deliciously sweet that, I swear, instead of corn, I tasted coconut, and toasted hazelnuts. These ears of corn were outrageous in their perfection, and I was happy, because I knew that our homegrown corn would be ripening soon, and that we’d enjoy days and days of the same delights.

However, there’s something I didn’t realize.

The variety of corn that I had tasted, despite being sold at the Farmer’s Market, was undoubtedly one of the modern-day super-sweet hybrids (not the hybrid feed-corn variety maligned in The Omnivore’s Dilemma, but just as guilty, I suspect, of being genetically tampered-with). The variety that we grew this year, Golden Bantam, is an heirloom variety, suited for those who a) want to avoid GMOs and b) are tired of super-sweet corn, and just want that “real corn” flavor.

As someone who grew up on super-sweet corn– actually, on microwaved packets of Green Giant Extra-Sweet Niblets in Cream Sauce– the taste of real corn was a bit of a shock. I was disappointed in myself when I found that I didn’t like it as much.

The real disappointment came, however, in how the corn looked:

Those empty kernels are places were the corn wasn’t pollinated. A bit of corn pollen has to fall on ever tip of every strand of cornsilk– since every strand of cornsilk leads back down to a developing kernel– in order for the corn to fill out properly. They advise that you plant your corn in blocks, not rows, so that the pollen has a better overall chance of landing on the silk. “At the very least,” they advise, “plant your rows of corn 3 plants deep,” which is what I did, thinking that that would be enough.

There are definitely good-looking ears of corn out in the garden, but they’re not the golden and paradisaical crowning glories that I had been imagining.

It’s disappointing (and embarrassing? But I figured I ought to go ahead and tell my story.). I’ve definitely learned a few lessons about how to plant corn (in blocks!), and a very obvious lesson about which varieties of corn to plant (the kind you want to eat, not the kind you think you ought to grow).

I threw the ears out as a rare treat to Charley & Churchill, who, having no prior experience with corn or built-up expectations, chowed down with a pure and piggy joy.

Animal Disapproval in Pictures

Sometimes it seems like the animals know something that I don’t.

Do you ever have the feeling that you’ve interrupted something terribly important?

Or that you’ve said something socially unacceptable?

Or maybe downright distasteful?

“We are not amused,” says Coconut.

Happier’n a Dead Pig in the Sunshine

Charley & Churchill are, of course, still with us, but they’d like to remind you to follow their example, and take it real easy today. They think you’d be pretty happy if you would.

Pigs of the Week: Charley and Churchill

Charley and Churchill may, in fact, be the most personable animals on the farm.

Let me rephrase: Churchill’s little circle of a nose might be the most personable animal on the farm.

Charley was the trailblazer. He came to Juniper Moon Farm back two Septembers ago, because, you know, sometimes you buy a pig. He was all by himself, until it was decided that one was not enough:

Enter Churchill.

They’re best, best friends– they spend all day together. Primarily, they sleep.

The main way you can tell them apart is by the Charley’s white blaze. Charley’s also a little bigger than Churchill.

This past spring, we used them to till up our garden, which worked great, until they escaped.

And ate the whole garden.

After that, they spent quite a few months living in the barn, in partial banishment. Meanwhile, they made good friends with Chanticleer, our second-tier rooster (also living in the barn in banishment– instead of the chicken coop, with the other chickens).

It’s a pretty good life. Still, mainly, they sleep. They snuffle around, investigate you with their noses, and eat any little dropped tidbits of grain they find around the barn.

This fall, they’ve had a second chance, and rooted up a new section of garden for us. It’s completely bereft of weeds, and all ready for tilling, bed-making, and planting– and all thanks to Charley and Churchill.

They’re fantastic. Say hello, everyone!

NEXT WEEK on SotW: We’ve had a request to meet Cox’s Orange Pippin.

NEXT NEXT WEEK on SotW: Would you like to be introduced to anyone at the farm? Just let me know in the comments!