It has been a very warm autumn so far. Despite some unusually early light frosts and some more over this last weekend, we have yet to have any heavy frosts or freezes that would put an end to the season for summer crops. While we’ve passed the first harvest wave for our tomatoes, the plants have actually put on a huge amount of beautiful new green growth in the last few weeks and some of the cherry tomato plants are even flowering again! After a weekend with lows of in the thirties, we’re looking at a week with highs into the low 80s several times, a definite oddity for late...
Feast or famine
This year has really been feast-or-famine when it comes to rain and this isn’t the first time that we’ve gone a couple of weeks with no rain followed by nearly two inches overnight. The biggest challenge with inconsistent rain is germinating our direct-seeded crops. We plant in three different ways. Some things are planted via transplant. These seeds are started inside in trays until they are between 4 and 8 weeks old and then are planted out into the field. Transplanted crops range from lettuce heads and kale to tomatoes, peppers, and eggplant. A very small number of crops (potatoes and garlic) are planted from live plant matter. Garlic is...
Fall veggies
We did end up having several light frosts last week as temperatures dipped into the mid-to-low thirties for three nights in a row, a true rarity for mid-September! However, most of the warm-weather crops survived the shock to varying degrees. The basil, which is one of the most cold-sensitive crops we grow, experienced some noticeable damage. Mike pruned off the affected areas last week, so it will be a wait-and-see game before we know if there will be enough regrowth and recovery for harvest this week. The tomatoes, peppers, and eggplant, all of which are quite tall at this point, were largely unaffected by the light ground-level frosts. Even the...
Okra
This is our first year growing okra and we’ve been enjoying it both on the farm and in the kitchen! Granted, the plants are now 7+ feet tall, Mike has to bend them over in order to harvest, and I have no idea how we’re going to mow them down when the season ends, but they’ve been producing like crazy for months now and their flowers are nothing if not stupendous. I had never used okra much before, but have come to cook with it regularly over the course of this summer. Our friends and members of our CSA first put us on to using okra in Indian-style recipes and...
Hot & dry
This has been the hottest summers we’ve had since starting the farm and it has also been an overall very dry year. After the first year and a half, where we had record rainfalls, we’ve received very little rain since last fall. Fortunately, most of our plants growing right now are those that we can easily irrigate. We use drip irrigation tubing, which lies directly on top of the soil and delivers a slow drip of water to the ground. This not only provides the plants with the water they need, but also helps keep the leaves dry, which is an important tool in preventing foliar diseases. One of the...
Summer weather
We’re in the midst of a seemingly endless wave of summer heat and doing our best to work in the cooler hours of the morning and evening whenever possible. With the increased heat comes other changes as well. The level and type of pest pressure starts to shift as we enter real summer weather. Colorado Potato Beetles, which despite their name tend to be more of an issue with us on eggplant rather than potatoes, are coming into their element as one of the most unpleasant-looking bugs of the season! Their small white larvae eat in groups and can decimate an eggplant leave in a surprisingly short period of time....
Hail
We’ve been lucky the last couple of years. We’ve had hail storms throughout the county and some that have even seemed to skip directly over us, hitting locations on either side but bypassing us, but yesterday we were finally the epicenter. Around 7pm, as I was reading to our son before bed, a huge storm blew through, knocking down limbs and trees and power lines and dropping large hail for several minutes. We headed out as soon as we could to look at the damage. The main victims seem to have been those plants with broad leaves. The tomatoes and carrots, with their abundance of small leaves, are showing little...
Fresh Garlic
One of the first farmers I worked for always said about garlic “plant on Halloween, harvest on the Fourth of July” and that has proven almost exactly true for us. Garlic is the rare crop that is planted the year prior and is in the ground all winter before being harvested the following summer. While it’s always exciting to finally get the garlic out of the ground, the garlic harvest also invariably falls at one of our busiest times of year. Apart from the increasing load of crops like beans, cucumbers, and zucchini that need to be harvested multiple times a week, we are also still in the process of...
Update & feedback
We’ve heard from some of you over the past few weeks regarding our decision not to return to the market at this time and you’ve shared your experiences (both good and bad) at the Burke market since it’s reopening. As a result, we wanted to explain our decision to continue to rely on home deliveries at this time and would also like to solicit your feedback. We are a small-scale, family farm in the truest sense. Our farm is literally run 100% by Katie and Mike, from the farm work itself to staffing the market to the business end of things. Sick time is really not an option for us....