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September 2022

As we move into September, it finally starts to feel like we might be able to catch our breaths after a long summer of non-stop work! While the harvest will soon pick up again with the return of cool season leafy and root vegetables, the planting is finally starting to slow down. Today I seeded the last transplants of the fall (bok choi) and in a couple weeks we’ll begin to start planting in the hoop house again for late fall and early winter harvest. Throughout the hot months of summer, harvesting is a major job throughout the week, with crops like tomatoes, cucumbers, zucchini, and okra all requiring multiple...

Summer harvest & new blog format

As the farm (and our son!) continue to grow, I’ve decided to revamp the blog with monthly posts rather than the previous weekly posts. I’ll plan to post at the beginning of each month with a farm update and a list of the items we hope to have available at the market at some point that month. Right now, we’re heavy into the work of both summer harvest and fall planting. The beets, cauliflower, and cabbage are already in the ground and the fall kale and collards will be planted next week. By mid-August, we’ll move back into seeding successions of radishes, turnips, and other cool season crops.  Its officially...

Scapes and cabbage and more

We’re in the midst of another weather roller coaster. After some gorgeous weather last weekend, we’re now into a string of extremely hot days followed by a forecast of much cooler weather coming up. We’re over the hump of summer planting and are now moving into our heavy harvest period. Last week, Mike harvested nearly 300 pounds of cabbage and there’s still more to come in the field! The garlic scapes are in full swing and snap peas will be ready this or next week. Many of you have been asking about carrots, which should also be making an increased appearance over the next couple of weeks. Our first few...

We’re back!

Welcome to another season! This Saturday is the first week of the Burke market and we’re looking forward to seeing you there! (We will be joining the Shepherdstown market starting Sunday, May 8.) The farm is already full of crops, some ready to harvest, some just sprouting. This week’s harvest list is below, but in the coming weeks we will be adding more and more items. As the weather warms, you will see kale, collards, peas, hakurei turnips, and many other tasty options join the market table! One of the most exciting items this week is the green garlic. Green garlic is only around for a few weeks each spring....

Escarole

One of the best parts of farming is having the opportunity to grow and try new things. I had never had escarole until about 10 years ago when I tried it at an Italian restaurant in Philadelphia sautéed, as is traditional, with a ton of garlic. I instantly fell in love and decided that I would grow escarole myself. Since then, my love of this leafy green veggie has only grown. Escarole looks nearly indistinguishable from lettuce, but is most commonly eaten cooked. The best thing about cooked escarole is the way it sucks up the flavors of whatever it is cooked with. It makes an excellent warm and flavorful...

Fall ups and downs

As is usual with autumn in our region, we’ve bounced right back to late summer weather, with hotter, humid weather over the past few days. My body seems to have already moved on to fall and has not been to happy being outside in the heat and humidity. I’m definitely looking forward to the return of cooler weather, although, when the forecast is for highs in the 80s with a chance of thunderstorms, it’s hard to believe that our average first frost date is in just a couple weeks!  If nothing else, the warmer weather will help to give some of the late fall crops a bit of a boost...

Changing seasons

With mid-September upon us, we’re moving into more and more cool season veggies, even as the weather this week seems to want to jump back to more summer-like temperatures and humidity! On the farm, we’ve tilled under the majority of this year’s cucumber and zucchini and replanted the beds in an oat/pea cover crop. While some of the cover crops we use can grow through the winter, oats and peas are sensitive to cold temperatures and will eventually die and form a protective mulch on the bed through the winter months. Therefore, it is ideal to get this cover crop seeded on the early side so that the plants can...

More weather!

Another week, another tropical storm! Today, we’re largely inside as rains from Ida continue to drench the region. We’re lucky that the track of the storm shifted enough that, instead of the original prediction of 6+ inches of rain, it looks like we’ll be getting a slightly more reasonable amount. It looks like the storm will be shepherding in a much more pleasant spate of weather with significantly lower temperatures and humidity, something we are more than ready for. We’re heavy into fall planting at this point, with the first radishes and lettuce set to be harvestable in the coming weeks, so it’s a relief to see that the weather...

Weather

We were expecting to be inundated with rain today from Tropical Storm “Fred”, but instead barely saw a drop and had an incredibly humid, sunny day instead. There’s a reason people used to talk about the weather all the time. Back when so many people were farmers or grew food for themselves, weather was all controlling. We plan our work week entirely upon the weather. Yesterday, we worked like crazy and put in an incredibly long day to try to get what we needed done before the heavy rain. I also always try to plan any planting to fall just before with rainy days so that the new seeds and...

Team work

It looks like scorching temperatures are in store for us this week. With highs at the end of the week topping out near 100 degrees, it will be the hottest weather we’ve seen this summer. This is definitely a challenge as we are at the height of our fall transplanting and it’s a tough choice to decide whether it’s better to hold off on planting seedlings to spare them the heat or risk the heat in order to get them out of the seedling trays that they are beginning to outgrow. Besides just the heat, we’re also struggling with extremely low rainfall. Until a series of thunderstorms yesterday, we hadn’t...

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