KW Homestead

Pasture Raised Poultry & Edible Landscaping Plants Since 2013

Category: our thoughts (page 13 of 13)

our (ochre) wedding on the homestead was a success!

we’re back!

finally our posting will return to our normal 5-posts-a-week-schedule  since we’ve gotten married!

two days ago we got hitched in the backyard, and there will certainly be more information coming soon about just how we pulled it off!

thanks so much to the  many who pitched in and helped us out on our big day (which was everyone who came!!!). we appreciate all of the well wishes  and we are overwhelmed with gratitude and joy.

it was a great, emotional day, and now our married life begins!

homestead wedding prep to do lists

we’d like to say that we’re sorry for posting irregularly the last few weeks. although we wish we had time to post every day, we’ve got a pretty good excuse…

non-stop wedding preparations!

exciting but very busy. a lot has been going on around here on the homestead–too much honestly to explain right now–but we can give you a simple lowdown of what important “to do”s we’ve got coming up this weekend before we say “we do” on the 27th.

here’s what’s in store for this weekend:

  • hanging more mood lighting (i.e. christmas lights) in the basement since we’ll be using the space for the rehearsal dinner and before and after the ceremony.
  • cleaning out the carport (which has lately the become the reject section for stuff that we’re not quite sure what to do with) and relocating a lot of the plants we have in the carport.
  • painting a portion of our basement wall sky blue. this is part of our wedding “guest book.” more on this later!
  • making emma’s garter which is the “something blue.”
  • writing and printing our wedding program (which we’re calling a leaflet in honor of the fall color scheme). we’re really excited about this one and can’t wait to share what we’ve done with this!
  • designing and making emma’s “veil”… which is much cooler than a traditional veil.
  • meeting our hay bale delivery tomorrow (55 bales) and storing the bales. these will seats at the wedding!
  • working on our party favors.
  • weeding and pruning our garden beds and herb bed.
  • killing yellow jacket nests that are right by where we plan to get married!
  • choosing and cutting fabric to wrap our bench boards in and wrapping them. also, choosing all of our tablecloth material.

so that’s where we stand right now! we hope that we can get back into the swing of writing every week day,  but we’re just not sure if we’ll have the time. if we don’t, we will certainly start back up on monday, september 29th (after the big day!).

wish us luck!

.:.

time management during special occasions

well, here’s the thing…

we don’t seem to have great “time management during special occasions” skills, as evident by our lack of posts on wednesday, thursday, and today (well, this is a post, but not a very valuable one!).

we’ve noticed that whenever we have family visiting (i.e. we are having tons of fun and not really in our routine) we just can’t find the time to write a post. and we’ve had family visiting since wednesday.

what we’ve also learned: we need to write our posts in advance so that we can still post them in a timely manner! we plan to do this from now on, and the test will be coming soon: our wedding shower is this coming week and the wedding is  just 3 months away! these occasions will keep us busy and give us the chance to prove to ourselves that we really can be proactive and write our posts a few days early so we can keep up our monday-friday schedule.

here it goes!

.:.

outcome of the rain dance post!

today we saw different weather than we’ve seen for the past few days!

yesterday, jason posted about wishing for rain. he hoped that by posting about it, perhaps it would work as a rain dance and we would finally get some precipitation.

watch the video below to find out if his “rain dance” actually worked…

.:.

harvesting garlic scapes: get the soup pot ready!

in yesterday’s post, jason mentioned our newest version of our savory venison stew. one of the ingredients that really made the stew a success was our homegrown garlic scapes!

just as we harvested chamomile the other day, we also harvested our garlic scapes. not only are the scapes delicious, but they must be cut in order for the garlic bulbs to grow larger and into the garlic bulbs you imagines when thinking of garlic. jason explains why this in the case in the video below, and shows you how to go about cutting those garlic scapes! enjoy!

.:.

harvesting chamomile: aromatic and easy!

we only had a small crop of chamomile this year… mostly because the seeds we planted last year never germinated and stayed in the ground until they came up this year! although our chamomile patch was small, we are still excited to make some chamomile tea out of the flowers.

this video shows just how easy harvesting chamomile can be!

.:.

food forest details: keeping our plants safe and thriving

if you have looked at jason’s post from yesterday, detailing the why and where of our food forest, you know about our plans for planting over 100 fruit trees and bushes on our land.

the below video shows a few of our plant species and explains where we chose to plant them, as well as includes a demonstration about how to add a layer of protection around your own precious trees!

.:.

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a short posting hiatus: family visiting the homestead!

a brief note about the fact that we did not post as usual this past thursday and friday.

we are the lucky hosts of jason’s dad, step mom, and brother, and we’ve been having fun with family, talking about and showing off our chickens, taking tours through the woods, and having snowball fights.

it is always an exciting time to be with family and we always get carried away with activities and sometimes loose track of our homestead schedules a little bit. this includes posting every weekday, and we regret not giving a heads up about our short break from writing.

needless to say, we’ll be back in the groove starting monday, with a post that emma is particularly siked about!

until then, kuska wiñasun homestead wishes you and yours a restful weekend.

.:.

a history of our ochre way

a new year has begun and we (emma and jason) have decided to start this year off with a fresh website chronicling our adventures on our new homestead.

the first (and somewhat different) manifestation of the our ochre way blog/website was begun in 2010 by emma with the hopes of sharing feelings and viewpoints about the world we experience everyday.

we both felt that the name our ochre way was too meaningful a phrase to leave behind and we would like to share with you the history of what it means to us.

the first post on ourochreway.wordpress.com was originally posted on JANUARY 14, 2010:

“our ochre way.

i have been sitting with my cat in my lap looking at my computer for at least a half hour trying to think of what name to use. something about wolves? something about women? no, that could sound too hokey.

something about a maiden and a mother and a crone? no, that reference is too wordy and also too heavily weighted with connotations (positive for some and negative for others) that could place me (or the idea of me) in a strange gray area of your feelings. it might then be hard to fairly determine certain important facts about me: whether or not i am a feminist, or an enjoyer of certain spiritual trends that will be forgotten when the real world comes flapping in, or a female diety worshiper, or someone who is dissillusioned and saddened by young womens’ (my peers’) ideas of self-worth and strength, or perhaps someone who doesn’t shower, or even a crazy character who runs around beating bones together and winking.

i must say, though, that some (though not all) of the above descriptions are indeed true. despite this, though, i think that by naming my collection of writings something about a maiden and a mother and crone i could be unintentionally misrepresenting myself. 

perhaps a title that mentions a ham sandwich (how i do enjoy those!)? no, too digestible. not permanent enough.

or maybe a name that reminds me that i am lucky to have been loved by someone before and to have loved them in return? no, too schmooshy!

so, i think that a more comfortable and meaningfully far-reaching name would be: our ochre way. which, simply, references our way into this short (and very rich) life–and our way out.

some of the earliest burials of the human race involved smearing ochre on the deceased loved one…symbolizing the blood of the birth into the next life. red ochre is an earth pigment made from a clay material; it has been used in ritual and art since before recorded history.

simply put, ochre is a symbol of life’s blood and death’s blood, it is a symbol of our link to all greater energies that move beyond us, and it is a mineral substance that is in our ground, under our feet. it is deep below us under the skin of the earth and it is also smeared on the faces of those who came before us.

our ochre way is the path that we (together, as a human race) have begun. each of us entered this world in the same way, covered in red. we will each walk through many gateways in this life that are either painted in the same red hue, or (at least to our own eyes) look and feel as though they have been. and then, one day when we catch our last glimpse of those that we love we will once again pass back through the ochre way into the great thing that spun us here all those years ago.

and that is our ochre way.”

just recently, on OCTOBER 6, 2013, we revisited what our ochre way means to us:

“and so now we own a home.

a home with red ochre colored soil, just like in my mind.

at first i was not used to this new color of soil and the way it acts when you try to turn ground over or plant; it is different than the dark, softer soil of the city.

different and better.

it is the color of my life and it is full of carolina clay. it stains clothes and stains skin and nails, just like blood.

it is part of this full circle we are living in. red ochre blood coming into this world and red ochre ground to grow new things.

and one day red ochre life blood gone when my time has come.

but that is not yet,

not yet.

we still have a lot of time left digging in this full circle, red ochre soil.”

please join us on ourochreway.com as we share our adventures…

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