Archive for September, 2009

Wood Stove Maintenance

18 September 2009

Today I partially disassembled the wood stove to clean and inspect the catalytic converter.

The good news is that the catalytic converter looks like it’s still in good shape. The bad news is that it was 60-70% blocked by a layer of ash sitting on top of it. Also, one of the retaining clips that holds the plate in the back of the stove was off, which was probably allowing smoke to bypass the cc. ALSO, the channels for smoke exiting the cc were at least half blocked with ash. So put all that together and we were getting very poor results from our stove when directing smoke through the cc, which was pretty clear when we tried to do that and the fire just died.

The longest the cc is supposed to last is 7 years, and we installed the stove in 2002. However, since it’s been blocked, it wasn’t really being used, so I’m reasoning that it might have some life left in it — at least another year.

That was the first time I took the stove apart and looked at the cc, so that was 7 years worth of ash that was built up in there. That’s something I should do every year, and will do so from now on.

Why anyone would make a stove with a cc in it, when designs exist that can meet EPA requirements without one, is beyond me. I suspect the profit motive, and a desire to continue the income stream by selling replacement catalytic converters. I would never buy a stove that used a cc again.

Also, swept the chimney.

Peppers

12 September 2009

D with red peppers harvested today. I plan to dry most of them. They’re quite prolific and trouble-free, and these are definitely the best peppers I’ve ever grown. They probably average about baseball-size. We grew these from seed.

IMG_0769

Also experimenting with ways to eat wheat berries without grinding. Brought these to boil in the evening, then put them in the haybox overnight. Brought them back to boil next morning. Had some dried, sweetened cranberries in there — quite good.

IMG_0768

Today I also dug 5 gallons of coffee grounds into the 20′ of the first potato row that has been dug so far.

D keeps wanting to swim in our little plastic pool while wearing underwear, so he goes through a lot. I washed a bunch today using the bucket and plunger method to make sure he doesn’t run out before laundry day. It’s not too bad, as long as you sit down and keep the bucket between your legs — it’s actually kind of relaxing. Trying to do it while standing up is painful.

Moving the Onions

9 September 2009

Moved the onions from the lawn (where they’d been in the sun for three days) to the basement onĀ  a shelf where they can dry for another three weeks. Then they go into bags. Cut off all but about 1 1/2 ” of leaves.

Had to water the garden (peppers, new bed of kale/swiss chard/beets/kohlrabi, butternut) because it’s been so dry for the last 2 weeks or so. Beautiful weather, but it’s definitely dry.

Beginning of the end

6 September 2009

Chopped off the approx 29 corn plants at ground level and chopped the stalks into 6″ pieces with machete so they’d rot faster and left them in the garden. Dug 5 gallons of coffee grounds into ground where the corn had been. Found another 3 smallish ears, bringing total to 33 ears.

Dug up 60 medium-to-large onions from the 2′ x 8′ onion bed and spread them out on plastic on the lawn. Intend to let them dry in the sun for 3 days per Carla Emery, then store them. Got all the perennial weeds out that I could, mostly dandelions.

Dug 15 gallons of leaf compost into the ex-onion bed. That should be about all I have to do — next year that’s going to be the purslane bed. Wonder if I should buy seed or just depend on the seeds I know are mixed into the soil already.

Watered the swiss chard-beet-kohlrabi-kale bed. It’s been quite dry for last ten days.

I also watered the butternut up by the house. There are some very nice squash there — if we could have another ten frost-free days, I think we’d get some beauties.

Dug the last 8 feet or so of the first row of potatoes — not much yield in there, getting over close to the silver maple tree in the neighbor’s yard and its shade. Some potatoes had finger-sized pits eaten out of them, apparently the result of thin, 1/2″ long white worms. Don’t know what they are.

More Corn

2 September 2009

Picked another 6 ears of corn today, the last of it, making 30 ears total. Not much, but didn’t plant much — have to count the plants and measure the rows.

A few days ago, I pulled up all the blighted tomato vines, after picking lots of green tomatoes with the intention of letting them ripen. No such luck — they all have the blight fungus inside of them and are all rotting.

Got the ex-tomato area all turned over with a shovel, mixing in 7 gallons of coffee grounds and quite a few grass clippings. Then put another layer of grass clippings on top.

I’m planning to compost all the rotten tomatoes. I can’t get rid of all the blight in the soil, it’s already widespread in our garden, it will be another 21 months before we use the compost, and I don’t know what else to do with them. We’ll be looking to get blight-resistant tomatoes in the future plus adopting some blight-fighting cultural practices (mulching, wider spacing, training the tomatoes on structures to keep them away from the soil).