Hey--haven't been here much lately, but I've been back for a few weeks.
Since I left, I expanded my gardens and double-dug 4 of my nine raised beds, to the depth of 30 inches below ground. If you don't know this enables every plant to shoot the roots really deep, and you can scoop the dirt out to harvest or transplant.
In 2013, I'll be double-digging the other 5 beds and using new wood to box them in, instead of the next to death leftovers I have been using for those beds. I'm also subdividing and creating two beds that aren't as wide, out of the space for one, and the gap in between beds.
I resolve to study up and learn to use the 2 pressure canners I have. I will need replacement seals, and for any other parts that have worn out--they were used and were gifts.
In 2013 I will be learning how to get off of the grid. We had a power surge one week ago and it fried the tv, DVD player, satellite receiver, boiler, upright freezer, barn light and the barn electric door opener. The power company won't help pay anything, so maybe it's time to change and give them the heave-high-ho in 2013!! Stupid monopoly--ALL of my lines are buried, and we were the only ones without power!! If I had had a forced air furnace instead of a boiler, the house would have been at 22 F degrees the next morning, instead of 50 F, and that's only bc the water in the pipes takes longer to cool.
Don't be too quick to buy meat only chickens. I have been incubating eggs, taking in free roosters for my layers, and butchering the young roosters. The roosters weigh double what the hens weigh, from non-meat birds, and are more meaty than the hens. If you buy meat birds, like Cornish crosses, you have to take away their food for 1/2 a day so as to not let them eat so much that they break their legs. ALSO, I can harvest whenever I want to, instead of harvesting them at ~ 16 weeks old.
2 of my mutt roosters were EE crosses, bc I have olive eggs from their daughters. In 2013, I'm keeping one of the roosters and buying him a harem of 5 EE pullets, so I can get really blue eggs from them.
In 2013, I will FINALLY build the coop and get my birds out of the horse stall in the winter!!