Hazelnut Harvest

So far hazelnut harvest is…well…really dusty!
IMG_1978.JPG

IMG_1982.JPG

IMG_1989.JPG
But we are finding some nuts among the dirt!

IMG_2005.JPG

IMG_1986.JPG

IMG_1983.JPG
Mostly I’m just really happy I have a cab!

IMG_2025.JPG
More photos to come!

Photo Friday, Neighbors at Work

Well I’m not 100% back, more like a solid 52%.  But even that is up for debate (wow babies take a lot of time!).

But my thoughtful neighbors sent me some photos to throw up on my blog since I haven’t been very diligent about taking photos of all the millions of things that are going on around our farms these days!  More like millions of photos of our little baby Hoot, I’ll throw a few of those in below as well!!

These are courtesy of Brentano Farms.  They are out in their baby filbert (hazelnut) orchards scraping the ground.

20140624_093722_resizedWe have to have very flat orchard floors since the hazelnuts, when harvested, are picked up off the ground.

20140625_110748_resized

Even small indents can hold nuts just low enough that the harvester will go right over them.

20140625_110851_resized

And as you can see the crop is coming along very nicely.  These nuts will be harvested this fall.

20140624_093512_resizedAnd for what I’ve been up to…

IMG_1310photo(5)

The good news though…I taught Yukon how to babysit while I’m at the farm!

20140627-065417-24857211.jpg**Thanks to Dan, Tessa & Remi for taking care of my blog photos this week!

A Crop between a Crop

As I put up last week, we planted a fair amount of our spring wheat with the nice weather.  We didn’t just plant into open fields however, we also planted in between where we put our new baby hazelnut trees this past fall.

IMG_0991Hazelnuts take about 4 years to get large enough and have enough crop on the trees to make them worth harvesting.  So instead of letting our ground sit with no crop on it for 4 years, loosing income, we inter-plant.  In years past we have done a rotation of wheat, followed by crimson clover, then followed by one more crimson clover crop.  After that the trees are a little too big to get into the field with the larger equipment necessary to harvest the inter-crop.

IMG_0993It does get a bit tricky at times, with ways that you can manage the trees alongside another crop.  But we have found that these two crop types, wheat and crimson, do a very nice job.  Beyond the economics that you can get a little income off your ground for a few years, an added benefit is that you don’t have to spray for weeds on the bare ground for 3 years, with a crop on the ground it will help shade out unwanted weeds.

45421_632730056839_3300153_nThis is a photo of our first wheat crop in between hazelnut trees 5 years ago.  The major change was that we had to swath (cut down) the wheat instead of harvesting it while it was standing.  This was because our wheat header was too big to fit down the rows.  At our farm even with 1000 acres to work with, just loosing 27 acres to a crop that won’t be harvest-able for another 4 years puts us in a pinch.  So we do what we can to make sure we are utilizing the land that we have.