Homesteading, Organic Gardening, How to Farm, Preparedness, Self-Reliance
A group for Canucks and others living the Canadian farm dream. A place to share info and experiences distinctly Canadian - suppliers, regulations, markets, communities, weather, you name it!
Members: 27
Latest Activity: Mar 19
Started by Heather S. Last reply by Carolyn McBride Oct 13, 2012. 3 Replies 0 Likes
We're just about to move to our place in NS and already have a massive list of infrastructure and other things we'll be wanting and needing to do - we'll have to take it one step at a time but I'm…Continue
Tags: loans, start-ups, grants, government, Canada
Started by Carolyn McBride. Last reply by Carolyn McBride May 18, 2012. 2 Replies 0 Likes
In just 2 months, I'll be moving to a piece of property north of Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario. Right now, very little grows on it, and even that is in scattered pockets. I will be inheriting this…Continue
Started by Heather S. Last reply by Heather S Apr 1, 2012. 8 Replies 0 Likes
Hello fellow Canadian farm dreamers! To get us started I'd love to know about your planting times - what sort of frost free dates are you working with where you are - and what (if any) crops are you…Continue
Comment by Samantha Belley on July 4, 2012 at 2:38pm Thanks Heather! Good Luck! We moved to our property 3 years (4 summers) ago it just took us that long to get the house in order for the humans. Now it's time to make a wild forested lot a mixed pasture / forest lot. Fingers crossed!
Comment by Heather S on July 4, 2012 at 2:40pm Sounds great and sounds like you're approaching things the right way. We've had out place 2.5 yrs and have work to do on the house and the barns and the land.. our 1st pigs arrive a week after we do :-0
Comment by Samantha Belley on July 4, 2012 at 2:43pm That is so exciting! What breed of pigs did you decide on and what made you choose them?
Comment by Heather S on July 4, 2012 at 2:49pm Yes we're pretty excited :-) We've gone with Tamworth X Berkshire. We're keen on Tams but we figure the Berks will give us a bit more speed in maturing - and we should get good bacon from this combo. We actually don't live that far from the birthplace of either breed, here in England (in Gloucestershire, where the Glou Old Spots come from - which we like too, esp the temperment though they tend to go to fat easily..). Anyway, my partner has a thing for Tams and we want pigs with good long snouts to dig up old ground and that are good on pasture - so there you go! How about you?
Comment by Samantha Belley on July 4, 2012 at 3:00pm We are looking at tams or tams x something too. The question I have that no one wants to fess up to is how well they will do in the winter here. How much housing I have to build up for them. We are in the snow belt here and it's not uncommon to have 3 feet of snow and -40C outside for weeks on end. I'd hate them to be cooped up in a box through the hard winter.
Comment by Heather S on July 4, 2012 at 4:43pm So much snow - sounds like it could have good insulating qualities if their housing takes advantage of that? I went to grad school in Toronto, those are cold winters! There's a couple pasture raising pigs in Ontario, I can't recall where precisely but they're quite well known. I've emailed her on occasion (Tara). Their place is called 'GreenBeing farm' - they might have some advice for you? Another person who is quite famous in the pastured pig community is Walter Jeffries, he's in Vermont and I know his pigs are outside year 'round - he's reknowned for offering advice. Do keep me posted!
Comment by maria print on July 13, 2012 at 8:45pm hi i am new here just looking around. love the house, miss being by the sea.
we are moving in a few weeks to a bigger property hoping to get some dexters, sheep and pigs, we already have 3 goats,4 horses, 5 dogs and a few cats :)
sorry didn't know where else to write.
maria 
Comment by Samantha Belley on July 16, 2012 at 7:58am Welcome Maria! I look forward to hearing about your new additions and your existing animals adjustment to the move. Good luck!
Comment by Rua Lupa on August 13, 2012 at 12:01pm Hi there. I am on Manitoulin Island hoping to soon get myself some land to do some forest gardening no till farming. I currently have indoor potted plants on the go in my apartment and an outdoor garden under my apartment stairs growing some sunflowers, pumpkin, sweat peas, peppers and chick weed. Indoors I have a lemon, clementine, manderine, and chives (some other perennial herbs that have yet to start too). Will be in the market for land in about a year or so.
I'm continually working on the Ehoah website that has a lot of sources for permaculture, forest gardening, and urban farming, including natural homes - http://ehoah.weebly.com/food.html
Comment by Heather S on August 17, 2012 at 9:32am Hi Rua and thanks for sharing the weblink, that's a great resource! There is a group very near us that has started recently - the Blockhouse School Project. They recently put off a permaculture course, we weren't around to participate but it seemed to go over well.
Make a comment!
Cara Randall replied to Tamara Suber's discussion Hello Friends! Looking for advice on getting funding to start a sheep and goat farm!!!© 2013 Created by Dusty Bottoms.
You need to be a member of Canadian Farm Dreamers to add comments!