It’s hard to believe that this Saturday will be our last farmers market of the 2018 season. It honestly doesn’t feel like that long ago that we were preparing for our first market (pictured above). Reaching the end of our market season is both a sad and happy benchmark for us. We will miss seeing all of our wonderful customers at the market for the next several months, but are also looking forward to a much needed break (and to a few months of getting to sleep in past four in the morning on Saturdays!) The farm is certainly starting to look like the season is at an end, with...
Nearing the end
After a long season of hard work, it’s difficult to believe that we only have two farmers markets left this year! With a heavy freeze last week on Thanksgiving night and temperatures dipping into the mid-teens, almost all of our harvest at this point is from inside of our hoop house, but there is still plenty growing in there! (See below for our full harvest list.) With most of the outdoor beds now done for the season, we’re moving on to mowing those down and putting in the last bit of cover crop. While we might not get much early winter growth off of the cover crop at this point...
Happy Thanksgiving & a tasty recipe!
Happy Thanksgiving! We hope you all have a wonderful holiday and that, if you’re in our area, you manage to keep warm! We’ve spent much of the early part of this week preparing in various ways for the extreme cold front we have coming through. Temperatures are predicted to drop into the low 20s Wednesday night, not rise above freezing on Thursday, and then drop to a shocking 18 degrees on Thursday night! I’m double- and triple-covering beds in the hoop house and we’ve also taken various measures to try to keep the outside walk-in refrigerator where we store all of our crops post-harvest from dipping below freezing and causing...
Winter storm
Weather in November is always a bit of an unknown, but with a significant ice storm in our forecast for Thursday, this week is definitely taking the weather ups and downs to the extreme. In advance of the storm, we’re harvesting off much of the last of our crops that are growing outside of the hoop house, including the bunching kale and collards. Living in a rural area, we are reliant on electricity not only for inside our house, but also for our water which is pumped from our well with an electric pump, so we’ve spent the day preparing for a possible power outage by making sure we will...
Garlic time!
Halloween week is always an extra exciting one on the farm as it marks the planting of the next year’s garlic! This Tuesday, we put in about 1,350 cloves of garlic, all planted from the biggest heads that we saved from each of our three varieties when we harvested them this past July. The smaller cloves were planted in a separate section and will be harvested next year as green garlic to further supplement our early spring offerings. The biggest and best of the cloves were planted to provide next year’s full-sized heads of garlic, as well as the seed garlic for 2020. Along with the two varieties of garlic...
Frosty weather
It’s official- last Friday morning we got our first frost of the fall, followed by another on Monday morning. While first frosts are frequently fairly light, both so far this year have been quite heavy frosts, not clearing until well into the morning. While this marks the end of the “summer” season, plenty of crops still grow through and even benefit from early fall frosts. Brassicas in particular have a unique way of protecting themselves from freezing. As the temperatures drop, these plants increase the sugar content in the water inside the plant, which acts like antifreeze to lower the temperature at which the water inside the plants freeze. This...
Fall to winter photo shoot
This week at the market: Salad mix Head lettuce Baby kale Arugula Winter salad mix Spinach Scallions Radishes Beets Purple-top turnips Bok Choi Escarole Salad turnips Kohlrabi Rainbow chard Kale Collard greens Eggplant Sweet peppers Onions Potatoes...
Finally fall? And arugula salad
The heat we have been experiencing the past two weeks has provided both benefits and challenges. We’ve definitely gotten larger harvests off of the kale, collards, and eggplant than we would have if temperatures had been more typical of this time of year. Both the peppers and the tomatoes in the hoop house have been loving the heat and coloring up accordingly, making it a shame that the outdoor tomatoes were done in by the wet summer as they would have been loving this late heat wave! More problematically, this is the very time in the fall when we are putting in the plantings that are supposed to see us...
Warmer weather
Despite last week’s cool, rainy weather, overall we have had an unusually warm fall. Normally, we would be preparing for our first frost of the fall in the coming weeks (our average first frost date here is around October 15). Instead, we’re looking at forecasts of temperatures as high as the 80s with lows only in the 60s until at least the end of next week. Fall is always a tricky time for planting as the weather can vary in this totally unpredictable manner and the continued heat has provided us with both challenges and benefits. We’ve been able to add in a bonus outdoor planting of salad mix, a...
Cole slaw and other greens
Fall is definitely in the air around the farm. Last week, we tilled in a huge chunk of the spring beds and put down a winter cover crop of rye and vetch, which the very rainy weather over the last few days has already helped to germinate. The fall spinach in the hoop house is putting on it’s first true leaves and the last bed of outdoor salad mix is beginning to grow in the field. As the weather cools and the days grow shorter, more and more fall crops are appearing on our market table. Last week marked the first harvest from both our broccoli and cabbage plants. Cabbage...