I don’t always like to link to international AG news. I have to draw the line somewhere. But I liked this story in the York Press about a free range operation in the UK that started out with six hens and now produces a million free range eggs a week. Yes, a week. That’s aContinue reading “Goal to Feed a Family Hatches a Farm: A Lesson in Starting Out Small”
Category Archives: Uncategorized
New Yorker Reporter Tries to 'Eat Local' in NYC
When you have a few minutes, check out this piece by Adam Gopnik in the New Yorker partly about a Just Food program to proliferate community gardens with egg-layers. Adam is trying to only eat food grown locally, including chickens raises in NYC. It’s illegal, so that adds a little extra drama to the article.Continue reading “New Yorker Reporter Tries to 'Eat Local' in NYC”
Traffic Milestone…
Not that I’m counting or obsessively checking site statistics…but I was happy to see that Virtual Farmgirl has reached a milestone with more than 5,000 visits. No telling how many of those were me from different computers. It’s a nice number nonetheless. Not exactly Wall Street Journal dot com numbers, but for a blog IContinue reading “Traffic Milestone…”
Farmgirl Hero/Survivor Embraces Grass-Fed Methods
After cleaning up three floors of flooding thanks to my bathroom obsessed child, I found inspiration in the story of this cancer-surviving Alabama farmgirl: Melissa Boutwell. Having trouble finding quality red meat to boost her red blood cells and wanting her family to eat healthier, she delved into organics…moving her family to a farm nearContinue reading “Farmgirl Hero/Survivor Embraces Grass-Fed Methods”
100K Honey Bees Shacked Up in Indiana Home
Have you wondered where all the honey bees have gone? Well…about 100,000 of them were in an abandoned house in South Bend. According to Fox South Bend, the city had to hire a bee keeper to smoke out the bees. No worries though, the bee keeper intends to give the Italian-Russian bees a new homeContinue reading “100K Honey Bees Shacked Up in Indiana Home”
CSA 'Clients' Feel Flood Impact
There is such a thing as too much rain. The water in my basement last week is one reason I know this to be true. But my veggies, flowers and grass don’t seem to mind. Farmers have been far less fortunate, especially in flooded southern Minnesota and western Wisconsin. This AP story in the LaContinue reading “CSA 'Clients' Feel Flood Impact”
Straw…Not Just for Animal Bedding Anymore
Loved this story on the front page of the Washington Post about the “Little Pig’s Law of Construction” focusing on straw bale houses. Apparently straw building isn’t limited to the Great Plains and American Southwest anymore. Folks in the Washington, D.C., area have the bug to build out of grain shafts…including a school. Still, theContinue reading “Straw…Not Just for Animal Bedding Anymore”
Mini Backyard Harvest
A cool rainy day is perfect for a lazy afternoon, catching up with the family and cooking. It finally cooled off enough to break out my mother’s famous tortilla soup recipe. The best part was that we could enjoy our own little backyard harvest for the recipe…using some of the peppers I planted for theContinue reading “Mini Backyard Harvest”
Hoosier State Fair Bans Trans Fats
Just a quick post this morning to note my pride that the Indiana State Fair has banned trans fats.There’s lots of coverage about this, but the Indy Star notes that the ISF is the first state fair to make such a healthful choice. More details in this USA Today piece, including a trans fats primer.Continue reading “Hoosier State Fair Bans Trans Fats”
A Glimpse of the Hoosier State Fair
Two correspondents in one week! A 4-H Hoosier Farmgirl I know submitted this photo of the Cheese Lady while she was sculpting at the Indiana State Fair. I couldn’t convince her to take money for the shots, so she’ll have to settle for getting published. I’m told that the Cheese Lady put on quite aContinue reading “A Glimpse of the Hoosier State Fair”