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  1. Dan
    Posted December 12, 2008 at 2:30 pm | Permalink
    1

    Where can I get some young Beltsville turkeys? I had a small flock. My Grandfather had a flock for the government back in the 40’s . I lost my tom and was left with four hens so I need new blood desperately.

    Thanks,
    Dan

  2. Posted January 5, 2009 at 6:40 pm | Permalink
    2

    John,

    Your article in December about life being really hard hit home with me. This is the reason I continue to question, “who is the one who feels this?” This separate “me” is the reason. The genesis of suffering begins as soon as we identify with a me and an other. There is this little me, and there’s them or IT, causing me pain? Really?

    And exactly where is this pain? And who is in the center of it? The shift many of us are waiting for is already happening. The Body of Christ is already here, before we have a chance to think about it. Your pain might be your identification with you as a separate entity.

    I love what you are doing. I can see your passion and commitment. Lets go the road together, walking the mystery road to nowhere.

    Craig

  3. Molly
    Posted February 17, 2009 at 1:52 am | Permalink
    3

    Hello,
    I came to your site via the beecharmers site which I loved!

    Your seed project also sounds amazing. I am living in Rwanda and one of the things I am talking about with some folks is starting a national seed saving program. There are NO seed saving skills here among farmers and most of the seeds that you can buy in town are single generation monsanto seeds. It is such a shame, and the audacity of a company to sell single seeds to people who cannot afford to buy them every year. Ugh.

    Anyway, I am contacting you because I am working with some beekeeping associations (who work with beautiful tree-trunk hives around one of the national parks) to get some of their honey into a national market so they can generate some income and keep their beekeeping tradition alive. Though I am not sure we will ever pursue organic certification, we would like to have our trainings include organic methods and record keeping. Where can I find organic standards for apiaries if there aren’t really any organic standards? What standards do you use? And for record keeping, are there some good samples of record keeping for organic hive management. Currently there are no records being kept and so we are starting from scratch. I would really appreciate anything you can pass along. I hope when I come back to the states I can visit you. It sounds like you have some amazing and important stuff going on!

    Many thanks,
    Molly

  4. Gary McDonald
    Posted February 24, 2009 at 6:07 pm | Permalink
    4

    I just read your profiles. My how that heard of 4 rabbits have grown! I am still available to show you the process of controlling there numbers

    I hope that you both are doing well and can’t wait to hear what you both have been up to.

    My Hazelnut Trees are doing well and I am planting Chesnut tree this year as well.

    Take care,

    Gary

  5. zach Burke
    Posted April 9, 2009 at 10:55 am | Permalink
    5

    I’m a California State Park Ranger and I would like to use the bee hive photo for my interprative presentation. Can I have your permission?

  6. Peter Baye
    Posted April 10, 2009 at 1:43 pm | Permalink
    6

    Hello, Theo & John -

    Thanks for chatting with me yesterday. I am really delighted that you have set up shop, and I’m already recommending you to gardening friends. I’ll shop with you before I spend shipping $ on Seed Savers and multiple catalogs!

    I tried to send an e-mail with attached photos to the address on your card, but it bounced. Photos were the different flower forms of Datura stramonium (jimson weed) that occur in the river bank and gravel bar, and silt spoil piles, right below your store; also, the pale pink European Saponaria officinalis, soapwort or Bouncing-bet. Saponaria is not listed in the CA flora; it’s probably a stray or relic from an old riverbank garden. Datura, as you know, is a potent psychotropic (and toxic) plant, widely used in N. American native initiation rituals and European witches’ brews; it’s also famous in literature (Faulkner), and quite ornamental. Soapwort is an herbal detergent, also a fish poison (used like native buckeye, Aesculus californicus).

    The “heirloom” tomato I mentioned as having exceptional seedling vigor (of interest for breeding) is ‘Thessaloniki’, which I found in the Totally Tomatoes catalog (www.totallytomatoes.com …pretty interesting selections). Another trait it is claimed to have, also coveted for breeding, is fruit rot resistance after full ripeness. I have a couple extra seedlings you are welcome to try rather than order and start this late.

    If you want to test the sales waters for natives with ethnobotanical/herbal uses, or some hard-to-find native seeds, I’d be happy to “dump” my bulk-collected seeds that I tend to collect but can’t really use. Some of the natives include Oenothera elata ssp. hookeri (evening-primrose, from Pacifica; seeds have some herbalist use), Lilium pardalinum (leopard lily, rarely sold, easy from seed; my stock is from Gualala River, very nice forms), Clarkia amoena from Pt Arena area and Jenner, and Cynoglossum grande, hounds-tongue, our native version of forget-me-not. California bay (a tree), Umbellularia californica, has potent antifungal/antimicrobial oils, and bears seed crops every so many years. I could go on….

    One last compulsive gardening neighbor offer in the spirit of over-the-fence exchange of cuttings: If you have any interest in some very hardy fuchsia shrubs that are resistant to gall mites (that cause growth deformations in most cultivars), I’ve bred quite a few and have many (potted up, rooted) to give away. After they are a few years old, they require very little water to survive near Caz.

    I wish you the best of luck in growth of your start-up enterprise, and I’m excited to have serious horticultural neighbors! Feel free to contact me if I can help with any botanical or horticultural inquiries. I’m sure I’ll see you again.

    Peter Baye
    Annapolis

  7. scott hills
    Posted May 16, 2009 at 10:42 am | Permalink
    7

    I have been working for the wrong people recentally. I would like to work with other like minded people and do more of my part in the world. I have a strong able body and am use to lots of work. I also have 2 horses, a camper and 2 horse trailers. I’ve done 15yrs of ranch work and horse training useing natural methods. Gardening is another pasion of mine. please call if you’d like me to posibly be a member of your comune. Thanks Scott (719)5774853

  8. hailey
    Posted June 25, 2009 at 8:06 pm | Permalink
    8

    looking for like minded individuals in australia please contact me if interested.

  9. Austin Salter
    Posted December 8, 2009 at 1:53 pm | Permalink
    9

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