Weather | 10/27, cloudy, 48°, 65° | 10/28, 0.05" rain, cloudy, 45°, 52°
| 10/29, 0.69" rain, cloudy, 44°, 55° | 10/30, p. cloudy, 33°, 54° | 10/31, sunny, 30°, 58° | 11/1, 0.05" rain, cloudy, 39°, 46°
| 11/2, fog, hard freeze, 25°, 51° |
- Monday, 10/27: Parsnip Wine & Garlic Garden Prep
- The pecan trees were messy with squirrels this morning. I shot one squirrel.
- Bill and I checked the parsnip wine. The specific gravity was 1.070, so sugar content increased from soaking the raisins. The pH stayed the same at 3.5. We created a yeast starter from Red Star Premier Classique (Montrachet) yeast. Late at night, the specific gravity was the same, at 1.070, when I pitched the yeast into the brew bucket. As usual, it smells wonderful!
- Bill left mid-afternoon for his apartment.
- I mowed tall grass in the near far garden and put grass mulch on the first two rows. Mary plans on planting three rows in garlic as soon as she adds compost and turns the soil over.
- Mary picked a few more pecan nuts from the ground under the trees.
- The colors of autumn are slowly creeping in. Fall is late this year for us.
- Katie texted Mary, "I'll be helping do damage assessments on villages affected by the typhoon with my regular job."
- Tuesday, 10/28: Quail, Deer & Webex on Bats
- In the morning and evening, we experienced misty rain.
- When we walked the puppy first thing this morning, a covey of Bob White quail burst from under the cedar trees next to the lane.
- I chased away three squirrels from the pecan trees with .22 bullets. I never hit anything.
- Around noon, while on a dog walk, Mary turned to face me and realized that two young deer were just a few feet away on the other side of the hazelnut bushes. They weren't too concerned about us, walked away with their tails up, then stopped to eat. In the evening while putting chickens to bed, Mary had a doe deer near her just outside of the chicken yard.
- Mary picked a few pecan nuts that dropped to the ground.
- The parsnip wine is slowly bubbling and emitting a wondrous odor.
- I ordered a 50-pound bag of oatmeal and after searching for the best price, ordered a roll of newsprint paper from Staples. The paper is for starting fires in the woodstove. We're almost out of our newspapers that once was a high stack.
- I watched a Missouri Department of Conservation (MDC) Webex about bats. One bat will eat 600-1000 insects in one night. Less than one percent of bats have rabies. You have a better chance of getting rabies from a domestic cat or dog. The MDC employee lecturing on this topic from Joplin, MO, said she once saw a snake hanging from the top of a cave opening catching bats as they flew out of the cave.
- We watched the seventh Harry Potter movie.
- Wednesday, 10/29: Pecans & Pear Wine
- We saw a doe and a partially grown fawn around 10 a.m. on the lane.
- Mary picked pecan nuts for most of the day. After picking several off the ground, she got on a ladder and used a garden rake to release pecans from branches above the grain bins. It worked very well.
- I worked on pear wine all day. First, I cored and sliced up Bartlett pears, putting the pieces in a ReaLemon/water solution. This year's pears are significantly larger. In year's past, I used just over 100 pears. Today I only used 70 pears to get 31 pounds of fruit. Another difference was the weight measured in the past was prior to coring the pears. This year's weight was after cutting out cores. I chopped about three pounds of black raisins, which included two partial boxes of raisins, one of which was golden raisins. I juiced 15 lemons that produced a quart of liquid. The fruit and raisins went into two nylon mesh bags. Smashing fruit with my fist produced about two gallons of pear juice. I added the to the brew bucket:
- 1 quart of lemon juice.
- 2 gallons of water.
- 1.1 grams of Kmeta
- 5 pounds sugar for a specific gravity of 1.073.
- no acid blend, since the pH was 3.1.
- The brew bucket went into the pantry for an overnight soak.
- Winemaking activities went late into the night. At one point, I accidentally poured lemon water down the front of my pants while moving the largest stainless steel bowl of cut up pears to the sink to pour out the liquid. From that point forward, I walked with a sticky, crunching sound across the kitchen floor. Mary helped me by moping the sticky crud off the floor after I finished.
- I had to move the parsnip wine to a smaller brew bucket in order to use the larger bucket for the 6-gallon batch of pear wine. The parsnip wine's yeast is leisurely fizzing along. The specific gravity was 1.050.
- I watched a webinar at 5 p.m. hosted by Anderson Windows on tips for installing windows and doors. It actually involved listening to three architects complaining on how hard it is to get construction crews to follow their directions on window installations. I did pick up some good information, such as only using windows that open and close in strategic locations and using solid glass windows in other spots, because solid glass windows are less expensive. Most people think they want UV reflective windows until they realize colors viewed through the windows are altered. Sliders and double hung windows leak air much more than casement or European windows. Cut WRB (water-resistant barrier) an inch from the rough window edge, so that tape is applied correctly for strong adhesion.
- Thursday, 10/30: Winemaking Activity
- I saw three deer when I opened the curtains on our bedroom windows this morning. A big doe was staring directly at me while two other deer walked along the far garden fence.
- We were a bit lazy today, due to the lateness of getting to bed last night.
- Mary gathered more pecans that dropped to the ground under the trees.
- I shot a squirrel while facing north at the burn barrel.
- A check of the parsnip wine 12 hours after the last test revealed a specific gravity of 1.040.
- I added 7.5 teaspoons of pectic enzyme and 3 grams of diammonium phosphate to the pear wine. Then I worked up a starter batch of Red Star Côte des Blancs yeast that I added pear wine must to throughout the day. Twelve hours after adding the pectic enzyme, a test showed the specific gravity still at 1.073, so I added another pound of sugar to bring it to 1.082, which is a similar level to past pear wines I've made. I pitched the yeast into the brew bucket exactly 24 hours after creating the pear wine must.
- We watched the eighth and final Harry Potter movie.
- Friday, 10/31: Pecans, Peppers, Pears, & Pumpkin
- I moved the big 10-foot step ladder to under our main pecan tree and picked nuts while Mary grabbed pecans from under the tree on the ground.
- I went through all of the pears that are wrapped in newspaper in the upstairs landing chest of drawers and threw out bad ones, which almost filled a 4-gallon bucket. We have enough pears for me to make two more 6-gallon batches of wine, but we don't need that much pear wine! Then I wrapped the Kieffer pears that Mary collected and put them in the chest of drawers.
- Mary chopped up and froze sweet peppers, placing 23 packages in the freezer for grand total 72 sandwich bags of frozen bell peppers from this year.
- The specific gravity of the parsnip wine was 1.020. I'll need to rack it tomorrow. The pear wine is fizzing and foaming, so the yeast is doing it's job.
- Mary made a chocolate zucchini cake...YUM, YUM!
- I carved an owl Jack-o'-lantern for our Halloween pumpkin (see photo, below). I got the idea of a BBC wildlife article.
- In the evening, we ate a salad from our winter greens, two huge pears for each of us, some chocolate zucchini cake, and finished it off with a bottle of spiced apple wine.
- Katie treated herself and bought a piece of Yupik loon artwork made by a UIC (the company she works for) shareholder (see photo, below).
- We watched the 1993 film, Hocus Pocus.
- I researched and then ordered an Anker power bank, a charger, and a cord to help us if and when we have an electrical power outage.
 |
| Our owl Jack-o'-lantern that I carved. |
 |
Yupik loon artwork that Katie recently bought.
|
- Saturday, 11/1: Oven Element Fire
- We picked more pecans off the ground and from branches I reached with the tall ladder.
- While preheating the oven to cook some pork loin meat, the lower element suddenly burst into flames, shooting up an eight-inch shot of fire. Mary, who was in front of the oven, immediately turned it off. I tried ordering a new element. Today and tomorrow is a youth deer hunting season and our neighbors on the land west of us are here. We can always tell when they show up, because they soak up all of the bandwidth off our cell towers resulting in extremely slow internet service. It took me 40 minutes to work through an appliance parts website for me to finally check them out when I didn't notice the normal https secure protocol for using a credit card online and found out they provide very poor service. I quit the order. I'll order in the future when we have a stronger signal.
- We built an outdoor fire and cooked the pork loin outside. In the middle of that, light rain started to settle on us. We ate quickly, then went inside for a potato cooked in the microwave.
- Mary took down the Halloween tree and decorations.
- She then popped garlic cloves for planting. Mary got through four of the six varieties. Popping garlic equals sore fingers.
- I racked the parsnip wine for the first time. The pH stayed at 3.5 and the specific gravity was 1.010. Liquid filled a 3-gallon carboy, a gallon jug, and a 750-ml wine bottle. Mary and I tasted the remains. It was sweet, earthy, and resembled the taste of grapefruit juice...weird!
- A quick check of the pear wine showed that the yeast is fizzing, producing a good amount of foam.
- Rain fell off and on through the afternoon, wrecking my plans to cut firewood. I shot a squirrel and sent a couple more away, chased by bullets. When it's raining, the east end of the machine shed is a good place to sit, just inside the edge of the drip line off the roof.
- At dusk, we covered the tubs of winter greens with blankets, since a hard hard freeze is predicted for tonight. By bedtime, the outdoor thermometer showed a temperature of 32.
- Sunday, 11/2: First Autumn Hard Freeze
- Our first hard freeze of autumn put a layer of white frost on everything outside. We also saw dense fog in the morning.
- I ordered an oven element. It's an original GE part, instead of an aftermarket knockoff.
- Mary and I picked more pecan nuts. Occasionally we find clusters of 4-6 nuts. When grabbing nuts while using the tall ladder I'm noticing that some husks still on the tree opened enough to shed the actual nut.
- A check of the pear wine gave me a specific gravity of 1.063, so the yeast has a ways to go. I squeezed the two nylon mesh bags of fruit and stirred the must.
- I cut firewood from small dead oak and ash trees just north of the machine shed. It's close enough for me to use a wheelbarrow to move the wood. One load went inside next to the woodstove and the other went into the woodshed.
- Using the Stihl trimmer with the metal blade, I cut trails to the ash pile just beyond the far garden, to the Boys' Fort Deer Blind, and to between the ponds.
- While knocking down the trail to the ash pile, I saw two young deer run away that were eating on garden vegetation piles that Mary created while removing plants from the far garden.