Tanglewood Hollow

Our West Michigan Homestead

Archive for the ‘General’ Category

Why Amish businesses don’t fail

Posted by Jeremy Marr On May - 10 - 2010

It’s because they have community.

Want to find America’s most successful entrepreneurs? Skip Silicon Valley and Manhattan; head to the rural Amish enclaves.Amish businesses have an eye-popping 95% success rate at staying open at least five years, according to author Erik Wesner’s new book, Success Made Simple: An Inside Look at Why Amish Businesses Thrive.

via Why Amish businesses don’t fail – May. 4, 2010.

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Call me Mr. Fixit

Posted by Jeremy Marr On March - 19 - 2010

My fridge died yesterday. Just over six months out of warranty. Figures, huh?

Amy called a repair guy to come out, but he only has a voicemail that he checks once a day. I’m not a patient man when my food is spoiling.

A few trips to the stinky basement fridge with the perishables later I considered waiting it out. I had plans for the night (needed to make some beehives). But my friend Jason convinced me to at least take a look. I’m glad I took his advice.

It was pretty easy to figure out what was wrong. There are two fuses on the circuit board that runs the fridge. The main one had blown from an electrical surge. My house seems to get these regularly. I’ve already lost a couple computers.

The thing is, they put the damn fuses on the board by soldering them in. I can hear the repair tech now, “Sorry sir, it’s a bad computer board. I can have one ordered in three days. They cost about $200.”

It’s not that I know how to solder really. I’ve done it on a totally different scale doing stained glass, but never on a circuit board that I can remember. But I figured it was worth trying (carefully). If I couldn’t do it I’d bow out to the repair guy’s expertise and cringe while writing the check.

It was rather easy. I just heated up the pins while gently pulling on the fuse (with J’s assistance). It slid right out. Today I took it in to an electronics shop (Ken’s Electronics on Lake Street in Kalamazoo) and he fixed me right up with a replacement fuse. Grand total was $4.24 or so. He was a beekeeper too! He started back in the 40′s and at his height he maintained a few hundred hives. He said he has three now.

I didn’t need to add any more solder. Heated up the pins and they slid back in and held strong. I’m currently freezing the 5 gallons of chicken stock that Amy made out of our rooster in it. More to come on Amy’s first butchering job in another post.

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Mycorrhizal Networks

Posted by Jeremy Marr On March - 7 - 2010

This is quite good. More support for the theory that forests are dependent upon the fungus that grows in the soil. Great stuff.

Fungal Networks

Dr. Suzanne Simard is a professor with the UBC Faculty of Forestry, where she lectures on and researches the role of mycorrhizae and mycorrhizal networks in tree species migrations with climate change disturbance. Networks of mycorrhizal fungal mycelium have recently been discovered by Professor Suzanne Simard and her graduate students to connect the roots of trees and facilitate the sharing of resources in Douglas-fir forests of interior British Columbia, thereby bolstering their resilience against disturbance or stress and facilitating the establishment of new regeneration.

via Botany Photo of the Day: Mycorrhizal Networks.

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Tappin that thing

Posted by Jeremy Marr On March - 1 - 2010
A tap in a sugar maple tree

One of the taps I put in today.

Got’s me a sugar bush tapped.

Sounds dirty. Let’s rephrase that. I put taps in a bunch of sugar maple trees today.

Gregg Marr tapping maple trees

Da tapping a tree.

The sap was flowing nicely. Seems like winter still, but the trees always know what’s going on. And they were acting like it’s spring.

The snow is still pretty deep out at my folk’s house. It’s wet and tough going when you are slogging through it. It’s melting though and evaporating away. Hopefully the cement pad that we set up with a tarp will be cleared off by next weekend. As long as I can get the van to at least the edge of the woods we’ll be good. We keep fantasizing about getting a four-wheel-drive quad or something. One of these years I hope we break down and get one.

I still have to cut, haul and split a bunch of wood; clear out the ole evaporator and get the jugs on the trees. I’m also going to have to come up with a food grade barrel to hold the sap in. Two would probably be better.

We tried to keep the taps closer to the main path that winds through the woods and on the fence row on the south edge of the treeline. A tree that grows on the north side of a field will have a bigger crown and produce a lot more sap.

A winter scene of a corn field

The corn field to the south of the woods.

You’ll often see long lines of big old maple trees growing on the north side of the east-west roads around here. People planted them to harvest the sap back in the old days. They get big crowns that way.

Aside from my muffler falling off, it was a very good day. Getting out in the woods always does that for me.

Well, I got an incubator made today too. At least I can say that I got some things accomplished. I even posted an entry in the ole blog. Woot.

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Dreaming of evaporation

Posted by Jeremy Marr On February - 27 - 2010

Now this baby would make some serious syrup.

The Leader WSE Evaporator is designed for the hobby maple syrup producer that is serious about turning sap into syrup quickly and efficiently. The WSE Maple Sap Evaporator is a combination of two stainless steel, tig welded pans sold as a set, and a Fire Box called the Arch. Each Leader WSE Evaporator is customized to fit the needs of your maple operation.

A professional maple syrup evaporator.

via Leader 2×4 and 2×6 WSE Wood Fired Maple Syrup Evaporator.

I’m amazed at the complexity that the professional maple syrup evaporators exhibit. Makes me want to build a sugar shack, buy a pick-up, 4-wheeler and a serious set-up and do this for profit. But eeh gads, the expense!

Anyone want to invest in a syrup business? haha.

If you just want to build yourself a relatively cheap set-up, check out Homemade Maple Equipment topic on Mapletrader.com. Amazing ingenuity there.

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Michigan Winter, enough already

Posted by Jeremy Marr On February - 27 - 2010
A TBH in the Michigan winter.

A TBH in the Michigan winter.

OK. Uncle. I give. Enough already!

I am hereby extra-ready for spring. I know it’s just around the corner (or at least the weather guys at work keep assuring me so), but I’m becoming a little impatient.

Don’t get me wrong. I mean hey, I did move back to Michigan from Florida, so I can only blame myself for having to put up with winter. But I’ve had enough this year. I need some sunshine and some green. The monochrome thing is stale.

At least winter is a time to plan. Big stuff will be happening in the garden. The chicken moat will be finished. Some raised beds will be made. And we have sugarin just around the corner in the next couple of weeks. Gotta get the seeds started soon too and get the lights set up.

I can’t help feeling sorry for the chickens though. They sure to look cold, even if they have “down coats” on. They rarely venture out of the coop. Every so often I see one poke its head out and peck at the snow, as if it hopes to scare it away.

Apparently the snow is not scared by chickens. Go figure.

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Honey Ants

Posted by Jeremy Marr On June - 7 - 2009

Being so obsessed with honeybees of late, I stumbled upon the honey ant. Amazing creatures. I highly recommend reading this article.

Image from the post by Randy C. Morgan

Image from the post by Randy C. Morgan

Myrmecologists, naturalists and bugwatchers have long been fascinated by honey ants. Colonies of these amazing insects develop specialized workers, called repletes or honeypots, with tremendously swollen abdomens for nectar storage.

via Honey Ants.

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Foot powered

Posted by Jeremy Marr On April - 3 - 2009

The simplicity of these complex foot powered machines is amazing. They are brilliant.
Treadle saw
Treadle Power.

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Sugarin’

Posted by Jeremy Marr On March - 10 - 2009

One weekend down, more to go. We’ve been sugaring.

I was able to work from home last Friday (woohoo) because the Internet was wonky at the office, so I snuck off to start boiling (in all honesty, I did work while I was there – yeah for wireless). We ended up getting just over a gallon of syrup. Yummy stuff.

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Setting up the sugarbush

Posted by Jeremy Marr On March - 1 - 2009

It’s early March in Michigan. The temperature is starting to get above freezing during the day before dropping back down to the low 30′s at night. The snow is starting to burn away in the spots that are getting sunlight.

It’s the season for making maple syrup!

This past weekend we went out to my folk’s house to set up the sugarbush. For the uninitiated, a sugarbush is the group of sugar maple trees that you tap for making syrup.

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