Blog Update!
For those of you not following me on Facebook, as of the Summer of 2019 I've moved to Central WA, to a tiny mountain town of less than 1,000 people.

I will be covering my exploits here in the Cascades, as I try to further reduce my impact on the environment. With the same attitude, just at a higher altitude!

Wednesday, December 31, 2025

Growing Microgreens in a Lettuce Container

Aerogarden
When the Christmas tree comes down, the Aerogarden goes up!

A couple years ago, I bought an Aerogarden to grow food inside during the cold winter months and, mostly, to cheer myself up during the bleak January and February months when the snow outside starts getting tiresome and the desire to see pavement again takes over. And, let's face it, the Aerogarden lights act as sort of a light therapy even though they are a weird, alien hue.

This year, I'll be adding something new to the mix. I'm going to try growing microgreens in an old lettuce container. I looked into growing microgreens for sale last spring when I was running my farmstand. Long-story short... trying to keep vegetables from wilting at the farmstand and/or keeping them in a cooler just resulted in a lot of vegetables I had to throw away. So I just stuck with baked goods. 

Packets of microgreens seeds
Anyhoo, I bought some microgreens seeds to play around with but never used (I've got another packet hiding around here somewhere). What better time but the present! My plan is to use one of those plastic lettuce containers with the lid as a little greenhouse to get things started. I may even bust out my seed warming mat for good luck. I'll use a seed starting mix and keep it moist until it sprouts, and then harvest when they are about 2 inches tall.

For those of you who saw my posts on the indoor mushroom growing thing a few winters ago, let's hope it goes better. What happened with the shiitakes, you ask? Well, I quickly learned no one in our house likes shiitakes. A crime, I know! But I, personally, just couldn't force myself to eat that many and didn't want to go through the trouble to dehydrate them for later use when no one likes them. So they ended up growing something... unnatural. Well, probably natural in the fungus world, but not something I wanted to eat. Not that I wanted to eat them in the first place. But, I did produce a ton.

Which is to say - I'm hoping to not experience some extra weird growths with the microgreens! I'll do a follow-up post once I've run this experiment. And, I'll post on how my Aerogarden is doing, what I like to grow and what successfully grows. Because, if history repeats itself, I'll have a bumper crop there as well.


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Here are the Aerogarden and other stuffs I'm using:

Aerogarden Bounty Basic - Indoor Garden with LED Grow Light
Aerogarden Mixed Lettuce Seed Pods
Aerogarden Pesto Basil Seed Pod Kit (the basil grows like crazy)
Vivosun Durable Waterproof Seedling Heat Mat - These work like a charm (I have 5 of them for my seed starting rack)

Monday, December 29, 2025

Digging out of the snow - when to call for help

14" of snow
We got 14 inches of snow the other night. They had predicted 1" - 3" so I wasn't fully prepared for the level of digging required. Normally, if I know there's going to be a ton of snow, I'll start parking my car closer to the street. But, oh no, not Friday night. I figured it was safe to pull closer in towards the house.

Saturday morning, we woke up to a surprise. Well, around here, a foot of snow isn't too surprising. Usually my son can help but he had to go to work, so the focus was digging out the car he drives and getting him down the hill using the first pass the city snowplow made. 

So, while he did that (apparently, I was in the way), I worked on shoveling the deck, the stairs, the walkways and, finally, my own car. Fortunately, the snow was light and fluffy so it could have been a lot worse. About midway through, when I realized that I still had a looooong way to get the driveway cleared to the road, I decided to, basically, just get everything ready to be plowed by someone else. No sense in breaking my back hand shoveling when I could hire someone to come and do a job that would only take 10 - 15 minutes using the right equipment. Plus, the city plow was due to come by and create the street side berm of ice and snow that is notoriously difficult to move.

If Henry were around, we probably could have made short work of it. And, even if we both shoveled for another hour or so, it wouldn't resolve the issue that we'd be pretty much berming ourselves into 2 narrow parking spots. So, when the hired big guns arrived later that night at 5 pm (basically a truck with a plow attached to the front), I instructed them to push all the snow to both sides of our double lot, creating a massive parking pad. This way, if we get more snowstorms, we're not trying to shovel above our piles, like has happened in the past.

Plowed to the other lot
I don't own an expensive diesel chomping snow-annihilator like some of my neighbors. I have a super environmentally friendly, battery powered snowblower that works on powdery snow, less than 3 inches deep. And, honestly, it really only works well on flat pavement, not on sloped gravel. It's actually less physical effort to hand shovel than use this thing. This is where I get punished for being an environmentalist. But, it's one of the trade-offs for living in the mountains. The city has been good about clearing and sanding the roads. As long as you can get to the roads. (The street berm is another story.)

Which leads us to the final point... why don't I just park in the street and then move the cars around when the city snow plows? Because doing the vehicle shuffle is far more stressful - you never know when the plow is going to come by, and I'd rather suffer with shoveling to have access to my driveway up to my house by putting in the effort. I just chalk up the 1 - 2 times a year I need to call for help as a cost of living here. It can get rather pricey (this year's was pretty high compared to previous ones), but considering it was expedited and they had been plowing since 5 am (with another 10 houses to go), I'm not complaining one bit. 

P.S. I really was tempted to title this blog post, "Getting Plowed - 14 inches of the good stuff", but I figure I already get enough Web traffic looking for weird content than I need.


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Once I get my act together, I'll be putting out our Heat Trak melting mats, once I can find the power unit (no one seems to know where it ran off to). But these are the ones I use and they work amazingly well to keep down the shoveling! Oh, and BTW, I bought these over several years as they aren't cheap but they work better than the inexpensive ones.

Sunday, December 28, 2025

Where have I been - again?

Hallo! I can't believe it's been over 3 years since I last posted. Time really flies when you get distracted doing other things. For those of you who don't follow me on social media (primarily Facebook - and not that I've posted much on there either), here's a bit of a rundown on what's been going on in my life:

Kouign amann
1. I started up a cottage bakery and farm stand, selling mostly bread and cookies and some other bakery doo-dads that I felt like making (like the Kouign Amann pictured to the right). I did this in fits and starts for a couple years. It was very popular, but I found it to be challenging to physically meet the demand in my home kitchen, especially during the summer months when it got too hot. So... I've sunset that business in the past few months.

2. I'm still homesteading, preserving, growing and canning as much as I am able to and when I have the gumption to. I'm hoping to blog about some of the improvements my son and I have made to our garden space.

3. Both my kids still live at home. It's been a blessing having them here with me and I appreciate their company and help. I'll be posting about the benefits of having adult kids living at home (22 and 23), both from a financial perspective and others as well as the social criticisms. More on that later.  

4. A few years ago, I started the first draft of a book, Rusty Quail Farm: Losing My Mind in the Mountains, about my adventures out here in the mountains of the Central Cascades. It covered how challenging it is to grow food in this environment, particularly in light of the weather and animals. My publisher told me that that kind of book just doesn't compete anymore with the like of video content and wasn't what they were publishing these days. I feel a bit like I missed the boat, but to be honest, I have a lot more content to add since I started the draft and I might just self-publish. I think it's pretty freaking hilarious so maybe I'll jump back on that bandwagon.

Honestly, I haven't been blogging much because I really felt like there's not much reach with blogging anymore. Obviously, things have changed since I started back in 2007 and YouTube and social media have altered the landscape of how people get information. 

But, that said, even though I don't post anymore, I was surprised to see that my blog still gets over 70,000 hits a month. And, that's just on my old, crusty content. So, perhaps there's an appetite for my nonsense mental meanderings after all. 

Stay tuned...