Showing posts with label christmas trees. Show all posts
Showing posts with label christmas trees. Show all posts

Monday, March 21, 2011

Trees


The tree plantation regularly needs attention. When the snow finally was gone we cleaned/mulched the whole field and applied fertilizer for the first time. Now they are ready for another growing season - and at least six more years to go in Slovakian soil.

Monday, January 10, 2011

Growing Christmas trees or weed management..


Managing weeds is one of the main issues when growing Christmas trees. Our Nordman trees especially need attention in this field since they are slow growers and weeds aren't. Last season weed management was a failure. Too much other things needed our attention. With snow slowly disappearing our trees are slowly reappearing. No signs of frost damage or or having suffered from being slightly overgrown. However next year weeds will be kept under control with Arnold's weed terminator mowing machine.

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Trees


What happened with our Christmas trees? They survived -20 degrees Celcius, failing weed management (to be improved) however some had a serious problem with being inundated for months (last picture) since we had a terrible wet summer, however the majority is doing fine.

Thursday, May 27, 2010

Weeding


With most camp site facilities finished we now take turns in weeding our Nordmann trees.

Sunday, May 16, 2010

Soaking wet

Last year our trees were suffering from drought, this year they are almost drawning.

Saturday, February 20, 2010

Hide-and-seek

Snow is vanishing, Christmas trees are peeking out from under a thick blanket.

Friday, February 19, 2010

Spring!!


We still have snow on the fields however the animals start to show signs of coming Spring! Geese have started laying eggs and our horse is losing it's winter coat.
I cant wait to see our Christmas trees which are still invisible under the snow, how did they cope with this long and cold Winter? We took a risk planting them here, they are normally grown in less cold countries.
I have learned that growing winter hardy vegetables is pointless when it gets as cold as minus 24 degrees Celcius. Kale and leek did not survive this Winter.

Friday, January 15, 2010

Fence


To protect our christmas trees from deer, rabbits and other animals (including free range goats) the entire field is fenced and so far it seems to be effective.

Thursday, December 17, 2009

Plastic is not fantastic in a christmas tree

From Get farming - Australia.
pictures: our trees 11-'09

Buying a plastic Christmas tree leads to the emission of more than double the greenhouse gases than getting a natural Christmas tree, new analysis by sustainability experts has revealed.
New analysis has found that the greenhouse gas emissions generated from a plastic tree are in fact up to more than 2.5 times more than of a cut tree. The majority of emissions from a plastic Christmas tree – around 85 per cent – come from the manufacturing process and materials, which include PVC, steel and in some cases, lead.On the other hand, you have a real tree that requires a plastic stand, has used some water in the process of growing and has been transported over a shorter distance than a plastic tree; countered by the fact the tree has also sequestered carbon during its four years of growth.

The CO2 emitted from a natural tree is calculated at around 3.1 kilograms per year. In comparison, an artificial tree will emit 8.1 kilograms per year or 48.3kg over the entire life span. A household would need to keep their plastic tree for at least 20 years just to balance out the effect of green house gas emissions!

One of our Nordman trees - December 2009

Monday, July 6, 2009

Looking for a Christmas tree?

Our trees are doing well. Reservations for Christmas 2017 can be made with yearly visiting arrangements on appointment!

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Weather forecast: Tomorrow rain!

Since the beginning of May the weather forecast predicts rain for tomorrow. Every day has a tomorrow and at the end of the day tomorrow becomes today. And today it doesn’t rain, because it will (eventually) rain tomorrow. We start to wonder when it finally will be tomorrow since we really really need rain today (or tomorrow)!

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Rain


We still live in the Sahel like we did last ten years. Watering five thousand precious trees with a motorpump and garden hose is a lot of work. Our neighbour deepened our watering hole with a digger so we do not have any water shortage. However a nice shower would be very welcome.

Saturday, May 9, 2009

Monday, May 4, 2009

Drought



Weeks without rain. Our field starts to look like the Sahara. We are watering our trees who try to keep their heads up withstanding the burning sun. Today the meteo predicts rain in the whole of Slovakia except in a tiny, beautiful southern part of the country......

Planting



We got them planted. All five thousand. In our very dry loamy-clay soil with loads of stones, within four and a half very hot days. The trees absolutely got a temperature shock, we hope they will survive.

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Our trees have been delivered

Trees from Georgian seeds, grown in Denmark came with a Polish truck to Slovakia for two crazy Dutchmen! Hurray to globalization…


We got a phone call today: “There is a very big truck in Cerovo with your Christmas trees and he doesn’t know where to find your house”. This was a bit a surprise since we didn’t expect them to arrive before tomorrow. Luckily half of our village knows about strange Dutch people who want to grow Christmas trees so they knew who to phone.

And a very big refrigerated truck it was! No-way that he could reach our house. So we unpacked the ten boxes with our precious trees on the roadside and drove them home with our orange ‘tractor’. Tomorrow planting will start!

Saturday, April 11, 2009

Tillage stage two



After been ploughed last week, today the cooperative came with a huge cultivator to crummble the big clumps of earth.
So far the cooperative has been extreemly helpful, reliable and cooperative!

Monday, February 16, 2009

We're gonna farm!


In Slovakia, a vast majority of agricultural land is leased, only a few owners mange their own land. Slovak farm size structures, which formed as the result of transition, are amongst the largest in Europe. On average, Slovak co-operatives manage about 1500 ha and corporate farms roughly 1190 ha. Individual private and household-plot farming remained a rather marginal activity occupying just 7 % of total agricultural land with an average size of 7.7 ha.

The co-operative, or Drustvo, of our village Cerovo, manages 2500 hectares including the land of all our neighbours and 6 hectares of ours. They have been using our land since 1993 when Slovak Republic and Czech Republic separated. So there we are, freshly arrived westerners, and we want to begin farming our own land. We’re starting a reverse revolution!

No leasing or other contracts were binding us to the Drustvo, however local customs should be respected. We want to live in harmony with the people around us, and since the Drustvo is owned by all of them, claiming back our land had to be done with diplomacy.


we would love to have a small campsite for nature lovers





After five months of living in Slovakia, our Slovak language skills are still to basic to have a normal conversation without pantomime playing and our dictionary playing the leading part of the drama. Therefore we asked Siggi to accompany us when meeting the Drustvo’s president. He is German and has been living for over six years in this little big country and understands both our background and the culture and customs of rural Slovakia.

We we’re a bit stressed before the meeting since we had heard all kind of stories from other immigrants ("you will never get your land back"), and the president of the Drustvo most certainly must have heard negative stories about offensive foreigners as well. However, when our intentions were explained and we said we wanted to do it in concord with the Drustvo the sky cleared up and the atmosphere became positive and understanding. It seems that we have to write an official letter, get our land surveyed and then, from 1 October 2009 on, we can use all our eight hectares as we want.

What we want to do is to keep, pigs, goats and tourist on our land as well as growing Abies Nordmann trees. The latter will take eleven years from seed to marketable Christmas tree. The first three years will be spend in a nursery in Denmark, the last eight over here on our land. This is a long time involving many risks, including frost damage, browsing by game, diseases, infestation of insects and nematodes and a fluid assets shortage of the growers. Therefore, the earlier we can plant the seedlings, the better. The Drustvo has decided that they have no objections with us already planting 5000 plantlets this spring.

It’s a big thing for us, making big investments and taking high risks (it is officially slightly to cold to grow Normann over here!), and it is already the talk of the town. Before even telling it around, our neighbours were informed that we are gonna farm our own land! They said it with amazement. We hope they like it and they like us, two Dutch people just trying to make a living of their land in harmony with people and nature…..