Sunday, September 16, 2012

Harley Farms Tour

Stacey and I have been going to Harley Farms for a little over a year now after being introduced to it by Brad and Jamee. We've always just explored the grounds on our own, pet some goats over the fence, and inevitably walked away with a more than advisable amount of cheese. Well Stacey had the brilliant idea of signing us up for one of their 2 hour tours for my birthday!

On the tour you get to learn about the history of the farm and its operation, plus you get to see some areas that you can't go to on your own. It's a pretty small operation, so it mainly means getting to walk out into the fields with the goats, walk through the barn, and through the milking area.

Since the baby goats are bottle fed from day 1, they are SUPER into people. Aggressively affectionate.

Untitled
Happy Goat

Untitled
Our tour guide, Pat, in the milking room

Untitled
Pat making cheese patties

Untitled
Draining whey

Untitled
Aggressively friendly goats

Untitled
Guard lama, Ruby

Untitled
The farm

Thursday, September 13, 2012

Hidden Villa's CSA

We can't say enough good things about Hidden Villa. Last weekend Matt and I went for a quick hike behind their farm, picking a trail that climbed a ridge to a beautiful view of the peninsula. On Monday, we went to a tomato tasting and got to try endless varieties of heirlooms and then vote on which varieties they should grow next season. This week, we got another super fabulous basket of fruits and veggies from the Hidden Villa CSA: tomatoes, cucumbers, lemon cucumbers, eggplants, grapes, collards, parsley, and apples. Last week it was kale, dandelion greens, green apples, tomatoes, red onion, zucchini, carrots, corn, grapes, and basil. I was able to snap a few pictures before it all disappeared:

Untitled

Untitled

Untitled

Untitled

Thursday, September 6, 2012

Russian River camping weekend

For labor day weekend, we packed up the car with our camping gear and headed north to Russian River. We pitched our tent at a private campground, called Schoolhouse Park, which boasted over 30 acres of land for exploring and swimming in the River. Unfortunately, our camp site was a little closer to River Road than we would have liked, but the scenery down by the river and in Armstrong Redwoods State Reserve nearby was beautiful. Here are some photo highlights:


Untitled
Schoolhouse Park modeled itself on a national park, right down to the signage

Untitled
Matt skipping stones along Russian River

Untitled
Sunset over the Pacific, just north of Jenner, CA

Untitled
A short hike in Armstrong Redwoods State Reserve

Untitled
Making dinner under a giant redwood tree

Untitled
Blackberries

Untitled
Wild fennel groves lines the path to the river

Untitled
Purple thistle 

Untitled
Morning dew

Untitled
Sunday morning fog on Russian River 

Untitled
The first of many canoes down the river for the day