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The blooming season

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What a joy have I felt when I have seen the trees blooming - it was a confirmation that the newly planted trees have been successfully planted and that we will have a great production from the old trees, since the trees were full of flowers. Seeing all these flowers, I could have bet that we would have a tremendous production, but as the old saying goes "Never halloo till you are out of the wood", I couldn't enjoy the blessing too much, because just one month later, we had a snow (very unusual in late April, early May) which destroyed all the flowers, so in 2017 the trees didn't produce more than 200 pounds. This was a lesson for me, therefore this year I am planning to be prepared and use some of the branches we cut to make fire from place to place if it will happen. Also, I'll have to pray that everything will go well, I know praying works most of the times, but for a reason I don't know, I didn't do it last year.

The next great step: fertilizing the freshly planted trees

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After a short and mild winter, me and my dad started to do some pruning on the old trees and also carried some good natural organic fertilizer - straight from the stable - to the freshly planted trees. My grandpa still owns a cow (in the past he used to have 3-4 cows, one or two pigs, a small sheep flock, many chickens and turkeys), therefore we had plenty of natural fertilizer that my grandpa stored next to the stable in the past 2 years. So, as I said, we started to add that fertilizer to the trees: I carried the dung using a really old trolley from my grandpa, and a shovel much older than me. The dung was laid between the rows by some guy with a horse and a cart, but I still had to carry it to the trees. As you can see, it was kinda difficult to carry that old heavy trolley on the plowed surface - this made me think of buying a tractor, which I did 10 months later (stay tuned, I'll post about the whole process of buying a tractor, and I'll upload

How all started

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I come from Romania, and I'm proud of this. We have a beautiful country, filled with everything man needs: mountains, sea, flat fields, forests (even though the greedy businessmen are trying to diminish it) and much more. Most of my childhood I've spent with my grandparents, so I got to touch trees, grass, hay and eat lots of freshly vegetables and fruits. My grandparents from my mother's side had a 4 acres apple orchard, the place where I've spent almost every summer at - this is the reason why I can't get out the nature from my head, it's like I need it to live on. So, I've decided soon after getting married at a young age (23) that I have to start investing in the apple orchard my grandpa gave me, so the first step I did was to buy 300 new apple trees and revive the old apple orchard. I didn't wait much to start doing what I had in my mind, so in the late fall of 2016, together with my father, I've started to plant those 300 apple trees (50Golde

Prologue

Maybe you are asking yourself  "how did I end up here?!", but I'm sure this is no mistake. I am clearly addressing to a specific fraction of the visitors, and that is the fraction of those who already started to think about being a farmer, or at least, moving away from the technology.  I have started to learn how to code at a young age, when I was in the 8th grade, just before going to high school. I could tell anyone back then that I want to be a programmer (specifically a web designer - which now I know, it doesn't require much code skills). I ended up becoming a full stack developer after 4 years of high school and another 3 of college, celebrating next summer 3 years of coding for the so called "client". I am currently working as a MarkLogic developer, something related to enterprise NoSQL, semantics and millions of documents - something that I've never thought I would do, but I'm grateful that I am learning loads of things, which I couldn'