CSA week 9

Please take 8 items and PYO Basil and 2 pink tomatoes and 4 green tomatoes

  • Carrots

  • Green Beans

  • Beets

  • Cabbage

  • Kale

  • Kohlrabi

  • Sweet peppers

  • Jalapeños

  • Sungold tomatoes

  • Potatoes

  • Eggplant

  • Red onions

  • Celery

  • Chinese cabbage

My mom has a history of bad eating habits here at our place. It seems as though because we are a farm she assumes everything on our property is edible and straight up as it is. There was the time I caught her munching on the decorative climbing beans I had growing near our wash station that were certainly not edible. Then there was the time I noticed the greens in the salad we were sharing were a bit leathery and I asked her where in the garden they had come from. She indicated an immature broccoli plant assuming it was a new kale variety. My favorite was when I though the grilled summer squash she said she harvested tasted tough, and it became clear that she had picked a green butternut squash and grilled it skin and all.

Most recently Kyle and I were able to sneak out for a late afternoon hike and dinner and came home to my dad saying there had been an incident. He told me downstairs so I could get all my laughing out before talking to my mom. She had been in our tunnel with both kids and eaten a whole jalapeño. By the time she got to the end of the tunnel she had collapsed in a deep sweat and was shaky with severe stomach pain. She called my dad to come get the kids and he started looking up heart attack symptoms quickly learning they can mirror hot pepper ingestion symptoms. She recovered fairly quickly and by the time Kyle and I got home was comfortably sitting on the couch helping Joni get ready for bed. I don’t know why it made me laugh so hard to hear the story, I laughed again in front of her which she was fine with. I think it was just a classic example of her unbridled farm eating habits that finally had (thankfully a quick) serious consequence. Anyway… the jalapeños are HOT and probably would be best chopped and cooked in salsa or a full dish. Enjoy.

C.S.A. Week 7

The big blue dragonflies found their way to our lawn yesterday afternoon. There are a few weeks every year where hundreds of them congregate in the evenings swooping around the yard. We went outside to be with them. Kyle and I sat in the grass, Ryah wandered around oblivious, and Joni tried to count them but quickly decided there were too many. The dogs rested. In his younger years Homer used to try and catch them but is either too tired now or knows better. I wondered how the dragonflies didn’t run into us, them moving so quickly, but we made contact with none, just watched. We had some farmer friends over for an outdoor dinner yesterday and while we were with the dragonflies waiting for arrivals, the clouds kept turning threatening shades of grey, occasionally dropping some sprinkles on us, but the storms held out until late evening after our gathering. We exchanged stories of odd farm lighting strikes as we watched the sky while eating, and laughed at the absurdities of farming together and felt grateful for long friendships.

The heat has messed with our green successions, there is a healthy crop of lettuce and Chinese cabbage coming soon, and I seeded all of our fall greens today, so look forward to those in a couple of weeks.

Please take 8 items and PYO basil and 1-2 pink tomatoes

  • Sungolds

  • Red onions

  • Carrots

  • Zucchini/squash mix

  • Cukes

  • Potatoes

  • Beets

  • Kale

  • Parsley

  • Celery

  • Chard

  • Kohlrabi

  • Cabbage

  • Red Radishes

C.S.A. Week 5

The garden has reached its peak. There are a few weeks in July that everything looks its best; green, strong, loaded with fruit, and the sunflowers reaching over 7 feet high. Their blooms follow the sun around the field as it rises and sets every day. And then sometime around now as things like carrots, eggplants, peppers, and tomatoes are just coming into their prime, other plants are beginning to decay. Influenced by the shortening of daylight hours, the onion tops are beginning to brown, their process of dying back. We will watch for when the tops have tipped over at the necks and pull them into the Seedhouse to dry for fall storage. The potatoes have passed their flowering stage and are tired from battling leafhoppers and potatoes beetles and now are focusing on sending their energy to the tubers underground. We will begin harvesting them now, but most will wait until October, the cool earth where they have grown is the best holding place for them for now. The first round of summer squash and zucchini plants are yellowing, having produced hundreds of pounds of fruit they are now succumbing to the cucumber beetles and squash bugs that have been nibbling their leaves and roots. Some of the beets are acquiring the fungal disease that thrives in high humidity causing their previously beautiful dark green leaves to spot and shrivel. It is the normal progression of the summer garden and although the perfect visual is fleeting, there are exciting things about this garden shift. With the passing of the peak, we are pulling out beds and transitioning them to fall cover crops which means, that much less space to weed and water. Soon tiny sprouts of oats will come up in newly bare ground, In just a few short weeks they will be a healthy, maintenance-free, sea of lush green. Hot loving crops are producing now, and our time and energy has shifted from planting and weeding to primarily harvesting. It’s always a welcome change that we get to experience in the form of crates loaded with food. The literal fruits of our labor.

Please take 8 items and pick your own basil

  • Squash/zucchini mix

  • Cucumbers

  • Fennel

  • Butter lettuce

  • Kale

  • Red onions

  • Green beans

  • Cabbage

  • Kohlrabi

  • Sungold tomatoes

  • Beets

  • Carrots

  • Chard

  • Parsley

  • Eggplant

  • Potatoes

  • Beans

Not a formal recipe today, but Kyle and I have been making “Hummus Pizzas” Simply take pita bread or naan or make your own pizza crust. Add hummus, cheese, and summer veggies like tomatoes, basil, peppers, and grated squash carrots, beets. Then bake briefly and enjoy.

C.S.A. Week 4

The life of a small farmer always includes the time-consuming attempts to keep other creatures out. We have learned over the years what works and what doesn’t. Our electric fencing system, knock on wood, has been extremely effective at keeping the deer out. We did learn a few years back that deer can swim. I had decided it would be nice if we didn’t have to fence the pond-side of the garden and instead fenced directly into the water on both ends. After several weeks of seeing deer tracks appear in the garden, and a nagging feeling they were not jumping in, I finally set up a game camera facing the water. On the camera feed we watched a doe easily swim out beyond the fence, around, and into the garden, then swim out again to leave a few hours later. We quickly went back to our old set up. There was a year when the squirrel population exploded in New England and without enough nuts to go around, we had desperate squirrels stealing large amounts of beets. As there is no good way to fence out a squirrel, I ended up trapping over 50 of them in a matter of a few weeks. Last year a family of geese walked out of the pond and into our field soon after we had planted our fall cabbage. They quickly ate about 100ft of new cabbage plants, leaving muddy incriminating goose footprints all over our beds. This spring when the geese came again, I did some reading and learned they like to walk from a water source to food in the evenings. We added non electrified flexi-net along the pond side, and in addition to some close encounters with our dogs I am pleased to report the geese moved on from our pond before deciding to settle in, permanently nesting and hatching their young. Our latest creature has been a porcupine visiting and eating the Swiss Chard. It has been coming off and on for several summers, always favoring the chard, or when not available, the beet greens. It doesn’t do a whole lot of damage, so our efforts to trap it have been minimal. Our fencing does not seem to deter it, and it has ignored the “have a heart” trap baited with everything tasty I could think of: corn, chard, strawberries, apples, peanut butter, and salt. We did set up a camera that sends alerts to our phones, but the porcupine seems to time its garden visits for nights we decide to turn off cell notifications. The nights when we are extra tired or have a very early morning preparing for markets. So we get regular photos of the porcupine in the night, sometimes really close up shots of its quills, and I continue to hope one of these nights we will be able to rush out there and stuff it into a trash can and take it to a new home.

In the share: Please take 8 items

  • Squash/Zucchini

  • Beets

  • Carrots

  • Scallions

  • Kale

  • Cabbage

  • Fennel

  • Radishes

  • Green Beans

  • Sungold Tomatoes

  • Eggplant

  • Sweet Green Peppers

  • Fennel

  • Parsley

  • Chard

  • Kohlrabi

C.S.A. Week 3

Beans are flowering and we ate the first sungolds for dinner last night so those will be added to the list hopefully next week as well as peppers

please choose 8 items

  • Beets

  • Chard

  • Lacinato Kale

  • Kohlrabi

  • Fennel

  • Cabbage

  • Red Radishes

  • Green onions(yellow)

  • Green onions(red)

  • Summer Squash/Zucchini

  • Lettuce- first come first serve, the heat is limiting our lettuce, more available again soon.

  • Parsley

In addition to the 8 items you may pick your own Basil, ask and we will show you.

Fennel and Kohlrabi Salad

Ingredients

  • 1 small bulb fennel well-cleaned and trimmed

  • 1 small tender kohlrabi, peeled and trimmed

  • 1/2 red onion sliced thin into half-moons

  • 1 cup minced flat leaf parsley

  • zest of 1 lemon

  • 1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil

  • 2 tablespoons lemon juice

  • salt and pepper to taste

  • pinch of red pepper flakes

  • fennel leaves

Instructions

  1. Julienne the fennel and kohlrabi. Toss with the red onion and parsley. Combine the olive oil and and lemon juice, drizzle on the dressing, and add a few pinches of salt and tons of pepper. Taste, adjust salt and acid levels. Plate and give each serving a good squeeze of lemon juice, a pinch of red pepper flakes, and garnish with parsley and fennel leaves.

C.S.A. Week 2

We usually plant in blocks, all the beets together, all the carrots, the beans, the squash, the brassicas, and so on. We do this out of habit and for ease of rotating the crops the best we can. Each type of plant has different nutritional needs, different diseases, and different pests. On a scale so small as ours it’s hard to know how much the rotation matters but we do it anyway.

. Last year was just so wet, both Kyle and I found ourselves dragging our feet this winter about garden planning, our 2023 farming depression spilling into the winter. I found myself thinking about the section of beans that submerged on July 4th last year, as well as the ends of the cabbage beds that sat amongst semi-permanent puddles and wishing the damage and been spread out more a bit. I also thought about this one beautiful kale plant last year that somehow snuck itself into the bed of zinnias and how it avoided the fall aphid onslaught the rest of the kale falls prey to seasonally.

So, this year we decided to spread things out, to see if would help slow down pests that jump easily from our first planting to the next successions, and to hedge our bets against any weather-related problems. It made prepping the garden a little more complicated and it still to be determined if the pest or disease pressure will be less, but the garden is awfully pretty to look out right now, I’m enjoying the varied visuals immensely.

Please choose 8 items

  • Broccoli

  • Summer squash/Zucchini mix

  • Kohlrabi

  • Kale

  • Butter lettuce

  • Beets

  • Chard

  • Scallions

  • Basil

  • Parsley

C.S.A. Week 1

Here we are at the first week of the C.S.A. The garden has made the transformation from empty brown dirt and flattened cover crop to rows and rows of green. There is a magical moment when the energy of the farm shifts, when plants have graduated from their fragile stage and entered the period of explosive growth and production. I look forward to this point in the year when we can trust the plants and our job is to more simply support them in their growing. We give them little tweaks here and there; a trellis, water, weeding, but they no longer need us to hover, catering to their every tiny need. The tomatoes are growing about twelve inches a week now, and I spend an hour or two in the greenhouse every seven days or so pruning suckers and clipping them to their vertical support strings. By late July they will have reached the cross beams in the tunnel, and I’ll give up on taming them and their fruit heavy tops will start to lean back down towards the ground. Soon the first round of broccoli will start heading, we will harvest them and turn their stalks back into the ground. Tiny carrots are getting bigger by the day, the most tedious initial rounds of weeding are behind us. We’ve cruised through almost all the plants now at least once, our hands brushing up against them as we pull competing crab grass and purslane, giving them that encouragement towards growth.

In the share

Please take 8 items (there will be more choice as more food comes in over the next few weeks)!

  • Baby summer squash and zucchini mix

  • Baby beets

  • Curly Kale

  • Romaine Lettuce

  • Butter head Lettuce

  • Yellow Scallions

  • Purple Kohlrabi

  • Garlic Scapes (From Mountain Heartbeet Farm)

  • Swiss Chard

  • Bok Choi

May News

The killdeer came back to the garden a few weeks ago, and their presence is welcomed by all of us here at the farm.  I like to think they are the same individuals as last year, maybe even last fall's chicks now back in adult form.  They are up to their same old tricks.  They do their broken wing dance in front of Moon and then quickly swoop out and around the garden leading him away from an invisible nest, finding safety in the dirt of the garden knowing he is not allowed in.  Moon enjoys the excuse to run, although chases them a bit half-heartedly this year, maybe knowing how it always ends where he is forbidden to enter.  Joni knows how to spot the killdeer now, listening for their telltale noisy scream and ground running behavior. She watches for them on our walks down to the pond where she has taken a liking to making echos and throwing rocks off the dock.  The echoing works best on cloudy days and requires several seconds of silence to hear.  Any moments of silence are hard for Joni and often the echo is lost but the pond seems like a perfect place to get loud energy out.  Ryah doesn't understand the echoing but thinks watching excessive noises coming from Joni is worthwhile entertainment and the splashing of rocks into water is great fun.   
 
The garden is filling up, one long bed at a time.  The pre-season garden is always the ugliest time of year to me, the large expanse of brown when everything else around us is turning green is an unfortunate scar of human cultivation. Long layers of plastic mulch that have been laid to help us control weeds and moisture make the scenery worse and leave us having repetitive conversations about the benefits and downsides to its use on our land.  But those tiny plants are going in, and soon they will shoot up and leaf out, drawing the eye away from the ground and to the amazing growth of life that occurs in such a short amount of time. The tree line along the pond has slowly leafed in, allowing us to still see the sparkling blue of the pond but obscuring the Hosac ridge that we are treated with in the winter months. 

We marvel yearly at the sudden flush of life in spring, a phenomena I hope will never feel old.  We see it in the daffodils getting fuller and thicker each year, the bumble bees and honeybees dancing around the flowers of the almond tree making it sound alive.  We see it in the delicate white violets sprinkled amongst the dandelions in our un-mowed yard, the sounds of the tree frogs returning in the evenings, and the songbirds in the mornings.  

We are still farming in small children mode.  Joni is more eager and able to help for some amounts of time this year, although the help is slower and involves much more chatter.  Ryah is walking (almost running) both eagerly following Joni around and often determined in her own independence.  Kyle and I take turns in the garden and with the kids, one of us often planting in the morning, the other in the afternoon.  It has made us change work strategies, and although we are missing time in the garden working together, it spreads out the load on each of our bodies in a silver lining kind of way.  We have one volunteer who we realized has been working with us since Joni was born, and she has been an incredible support to us during these harder years.  This season she has already helped us get hundreds of plants into the ground.  

April News

GREENS!!!

We have a planting of greens maturing in our high tunnel and will be attending Bridgton Farmers Market on Saturday April 20th.  The Market is located in the Masonic Hall Lodge in Bridgton near the golf course and runs from 9am-12pm.

If you would like to pick up greens from the farm next week, please email us to arrange a pickup time and indicate what you would like to order from the list below.  We can have orders ready for Friday the 19th or Saturday the 20th.    
-Arugula (bag) 6.00
-Baby Kale Mix (bag) 6.00
-Spinach (bag) 6.00
-Radishes (bunch) 3.50

The tunnel survived last week's storm, the snow piled up high on the sides and helped defend the plastic against the gusty winds.  Kyle ended up shoveling the roadside of the tunnel twice during the storm. The way the wind comes off the pond causes most of the snow to build up quickly on that side, and once it reaches above the height of the hip boards the top of the tunnel will no longer shed snow and is in danger of collapse from too much weight on the plastic. 

Although the storm temporarily dampened a little of the spring energy we were feeling, the rain and warmth of the last few days have revealed most of the bare ground again, although in a bit soggier condition.  The daffodils by the front of the house seem to have easily shaken themselves off after the dumping of snow and look no worse for the wear, almost ready to bloom.  All the signs of actual spring are now here, the small patch of crocuses bloomed this morning, the magnolia is toying with the idea of opening its petals, and we are back outside doing our normal spring garden tasks. 

We have been treated to an explosion of flocks of robins, red wing black birds, and brown headed cowbirds over the last few weeks. They gather in absurd numbers on our lawn and in the trees pecking for worms and bugs.  Joni has been trying to count them, pressing her face against the window trying to keep track of their numbers before something spooks them and they flutter away.  The redwing flocks must number in the hundreds, they spend most of their time down on the pond, but occasionally fly back and forth between the trees in our yard, allowing us to watch them from below as we do the yearly spring repetitive walks back and forth from seed house to tunnel, moving and watering baby plants. 

The seed house filled up with the first rounds of plants, and we moved onions out to the high tunnel earlier this week. We made good use of the remaining snow and used Joni's snow sled to drag the trays out, which saved a couple of trips.  I seeded our brassicas that same day, and the seed house filled right back up. The timing of seeding and moving plants is always a carefully managed dance between weather and available heated space.    

It really seems winter is over now, although it's always possible to get another big April snowstorm in Maine.  We certainly have planted Onions and Leeks in years past to then watch them get a dusting.  Although the snow cover was inconsistent at best, all types of winter fun and tasks were had this year: Joni wore ice skates on the pond and enjoyed some epic sledding adventures at my friends place on a big hilltop in Effingham.  I managed to get myself out cross country skiing both here and further up in the Whites several times with some skiing over rocks and exposed streams of course.  Kyle shoveled the roofs and the greenhouse multiple times (impressive considering the tunnel didn't have plastic for most of the season).  We are ready for spring.  

March News

Our tunnel's plastic blew off in December's windstorm.  It was a sight to see, we watched it happen from the windows that overlook our field in the space we call the "loft" above the garage.  We had recently replaced the plastic as the lifespan is about 5 years and we had ours on for 6.  The old sheet had acquired many holes for various reasons, and the wood anchoring the plastic at the "hips" of the tunnel were rotten and in need of replacement.  Kyle and I tried a new off-brand system of wiggle wire, and in the retirement of our 1st farming season with two kids we rushed the installation of the new sheet wanting to see it done.   Once installed, the new plastic was saggy, as a 40'x100' sheet is hard to get perfectly straight and tight, especially with only two sets of hands.  I was vaguely depressed looking at it, bummed that I would have to accept its imperfect look for another 5-6 years when we would get a chance to do it again right.  It felt like an appropriately disappointing finish to what had been a soggy disappointing summer.   But then a little under 2 months later it blew off.   During the storm I saw the far corner on the pond side of the field lift up and then quickly the sheet gained momentum lifting the hip boards off that entire length and it was flapping wildly in the air for about 30 minutes before rather gracefully and uneventfully sliding down the other side that still remained attached and stayed there for the remainder of the storm.  In the moment I had visions of the entire sheet lifting and either ending up high in a tree or a sinking gigantic piece of trash into our pond.  There was nothing we could do during the storm about it, Kyle went out to the tunnel and got some impressive video footage up close, the plastic ragging wildly in the wind like some kind of shipwreck on a desolate shore.  The next day or two we cleaned up, which felt good, removing the evidence of the failure, and although it took some time, we started to appreciate the bright side of the loss.  Our tunnel was in desperate need of a water flush, as salts from fertilizers accumulate on the artificially dry soil surface, so the rain and snow of the winter months provided the deep moisture the tunnel needed.  Although the big snows never came, Kyle was relieved to have the tunnel removed from his shoveling list, as the sides need to be frequently cleared of snow during big storms to allow the roof to shed.  This winter/spring has also felt windy, and we had many moments during the windstorms we were happy to not have the plastic on our worry list.  

We did some research and switched plastic anchoring systems to the RIMOL greenhouse company, their sales team talking us through the transition and assuring us they are designed for high wind loads.  The first salesperson I spoke with said the size tunnel we have has more plastic surface area than all of Columbus's ships' sails combined, to put a visual to the amount of force behind the piece of plastic during the storm and to emphasize the need for secure anchoring.  Kyle worked over the last few months switching the hip anchors to all metal RIMOL tracks that are double bolted to the greenhouse bows, and as he worked, became increasingly aware of just how flimsy the off-brand was in comparison.  Our previous track had lifted the screws right out of the wood hip boards on one whole side during that big storm, the wind force on the plastic just slowly working the screws loose. 

Finally ready, we lined up help from some friends and family and covered the tunnel for the second time.  It was a relief to have extra hands and the plastic although of course never as tight and perfect as I would like, came out just about as good as you could ask for.  Looking back, we've been laughing a bit about our previous attempt.  We were exhausted, rushed, and trying to save money, never a good combination.  This recovering has somehow slightly re-energized us both for the season ahead.  It went well, it looks good, and the help from family and friends made us feel grateful to all the people we have connected with in our years being here.

Kyle headed off to a friend's farm later that same week and helped them to re-cover two tunnels they had lost, one in the same December storm. It was a windier day than when we did
ours and he said the whole experience was wild, funny, nerve racking, and somehow illustrated the often-felt ridiculousness of farming.  Us tiny humans constantly trying to modify and tame nature with varying degrees of success and failure.  

As good as we feel about our new tunnel covering, we've already lost sleep on a couple of very windy nights, and don't love seeing the 40mph gusty forecast.  But we have done the best we can this time, and just have to let the weather play out and now hope for the best.  

Year End Newsletter

July 5th was my last farm newsletter.  It's the first season I didn't blog weekly C.S.A. notes to our members.  I had every intention of at least getting something out weekly, but summer farm life set in, and a new baby born in the spring gave me the perfect excuse to fall off the regular newsletter writing wagon.  I thought if I skipped a few weeks, I'd be able to get back into it, but once I stopped it was just so easy to not start up again, and the literal dark clouds that hovered over Maine for much of the summer made writing about farming this year extra unappealing. Now here I sit looking back, trying to adequately capture into words a season that was somehow both a whirlwind and a drag. At many points during the summer people would ask us how we were doing it, how were we getting it all done?   I didn't have an answer, and really still don't.  But here we are having completed our 9th farming season in Cornish.

 Kyle and I functioned this summer like some sort of bizarre single human unit: Wake up, kids, water plants, harvest, kids, go to markets, plant, kids, wash, eat, kids, bed, repeat. We were always swapping each other in and out from farmer chores to childcare, and some mix of both when moods and circumstances aligned.  We had regular help from our parents with childcare, and several friends and season long volunteers who helped us with things on the farm. I think by necessity the big things got done faster and easier than they ever have. Our systems have now been perfected many years into this farming adventure, and the child driven scarcity of time has made us more efficient.  The summer kept rolling, and we just kept doing.  

We anticipated an extra hard year due to a new child but the excess rain this summer added an unanticipated difficult dimension to the farm. The rain started in late May, and really hasn’t stopped since. Record setting amounts were dumped, and our growing season definitely felt the impacts of too much moisture.

We plant several crops successionally, so that we have a continuous harvest spanning the C.S.A. and market season. In both the green beans and summer squash/zucchini, the near constant cloud covers delayed flowering on our first plantings causing them to mature at almost the exact same time as the second and third plantings (despite being seeded a whole month apart). This shortened the times of harvest for these vegetables, and we then had them in excess for a very brief period of time.  

The clouds and rain also impacted the productivity of many of the vegetables, reducing the overall yields by an estimated 20-30%.  Our soils became saturated around the end of June as the amount and frequency of the rainfall increased, and it really never dried out.  Plants need oxygen and nutrients to their roots and when the soils are waterlogged it impacts their ability to literally breathe and to uptake those necessary nutrients for healthy growth.  The lowest spots in our field became so saturated that after July 4th, almost any amount of additional rainfall would cause puddles to appear. The puddles were (mostly) contained to the aisles as we shape raised beds. They would recede over the course of several days and then fill back up with the next storm.  Frogs laid their eggs in some of the puddles. I thought it was a bold and faulty place to lay offspring, but sure enough those puddles persisted long enough for us to watch tadpoles hatch weeks later. 

Our brassica plantings were mostly on high ground, but the last 20 feet of so of the beds sloped down pretty severely into a low spot close to the pond.  I was never able to weed this section. I’d be out there traveling down the length of the bed with a hoe, hit the puddles and then be forced to return back up to high ground. I tried the first time to hoe through the puddle and quickly realized this was a useless pursuit.  That section grew a weird collection of water grasses I'd never seen before. I worked on not looking directly at that area on my morning and evening laps around the field as it visually ruined my gazing at the garden. Finally in September, in a fit of defeat and annoyance I finally made my way over there with the weedwhacker and cut them all down. 

On one harvest day it was raining so hard that Kyle and I conducted an informal experiment on the best outerwear.  I wore a raincoat and Kyle wore a bathing suit.  The results were inconclusive. Most summers I find a raincoat to be oppressively hot and movement restrictive and opt to be sprinkled on instead, but this year the downpours had me in my rubber jacket more often than not. I got used to the sound of mud sucking at my feet and seeping in between my toes as I traipsed around the garden in sandals, decidedly the best farming foot gear for the year as I could just hose them off when coming and going from garden to house. 

When the final big harvest time rolled around in the fall, we encountered the next challenge left from all the rain; carrots and potatoes that were extra time consuming to dig, were stuck in soil that had adopted a cement like quality. Usually, we are able to lift the carrots out easily by their tops, but this season they all had to be gently pre-loosened from the soil’s tight hold with a garden fork. The potato harvest was a finger damaging chore as we had to pry back dense mud from the tubers, a task Kyle amazingly accomplished 90% of on his own as the potatoes were grown at our lower Hosac fields too far for me to accompany him during kid nap hours. 

Our Onions grew into beautiful round globes and then were hit with a collection of diseases that decimated their healthy green tops and storage reliability in a matter of weeks.  All of the diseases they acquired thrive in high temperatures with many consecutive days of humidity. Once the “leaf wetness” took hold, the diseases spread. Usually, daytime sun and heat in July quickly dry the nighttime dew off of plant leaves, but this year the sun didn’t come out often enough, and the onion plants sat wet for days on end becoming perfect hosts for the disease spore to set and multiply. 

All of this aside, we just kept going, kept farming because that’s our job and our life. Here we sit now in December with some distance from the season trying to reflect, absorb what we learned, and muster up the energy to move forward to try it all again. Next year is almost sure to be different, but it’s possible it’ll be the same. With farming we are at the mercy of the weather and just have to do our best to adapt and react with the land. The arrival of the coming years seed catalogues that always start filling our mailbox in late November managed to ignite the first hint of a spark I’d been missing, although it didn’t last.  As we get deeper into winter and I further settle into my daily woods walks and skiing with the dogs, I’ll recharge and my farming energy will return, it always does. 

Some end of year harvest totals for a positive perspective, these numbers don't include what went out for our summer CSA, farmers markets, or wholesale, they are just winter storage numbers.  

Onions: 500lbs
Sweet Potatoes: 900lbs
Beets: 600lbs
Potatoes: 1400lbs
Leeks: 300lbs
Kohlrabi: 200lbs
Winter Squash: 600lbs
Carrots: 600lbs

Onions in July Looking Good Before Disease

Beans under water after July 4th Storm

Beets Looked good through July!

C.S.A. Week 2

Joni has a book about a little girl meeting up with a Unicorn. The girl and the unicorn live in separate worlds. In both worlds it has been raining and raining, and they haven’t seen the sun in who knows how many days. Both the unicorn and the little girl believe in each other and the sun, and when they wish hard enough, they are united in unicorn land with sunshine and rainbows.

I have been thinking about sunshine and unicorns alot these past few days. We were feeling pretty ok about the weather until Sunday night really tipped the garden over the edge. Monday morning had us looking at puddles we usually don’t see past April in both the pasture and in low spots in the garden. Most of the vegetables look really good and the puddles are contained, but we really need a weather turnaround, or we may start to loose things due to disease and rot. Grateful for the sunshine today, but we certainly need more of it. Feel free to take yourself on a garden walk about when you come and admire our plants, both the ones doing well, and the ones that are super soggy. The reality of farming is we are at the mercy of the weather.

Items: Please take 7 and 2 of something if you’d like.

  • Scallions

  • Garlic Scapes

  • Radishes

  • Kohlrabi

  • Baby Beets and Greens

  • Fennel

  • Parsley

  • Basil

  • Sugar Snap Peas(take just 1 box please) from Mountain Heartbeet Farm

  • Lettuce

C.S.A. week 1

Kyle and I met working for the Appalachian Mountain Club’s Professional Trail crew. I started my first season in 2009, and he started the year before. 2009 was a very wet summer, and the sights and smells of this year’s rain have been triggering many memories. Each season we would start by patrolling the entire AMC White Mountain trail network, over 400 miles of trail and clearing them of fallen trees. Then we would move into “woods weeks” where we split into crews and camped for 5 days in the woods somewhere near whatever work site we were assigned. This is when the “wet” really would set in. The few items of clothing we brought with us quickly became saturated with sweat, rain, and dirt. I remember sitting down for dinner under a dripping tarp setup haphazardly wherever in the woods we happened to find a semi flat space to set up camp. I learned from the more experienced crew members to scrape the mud caked on the knees of my pants off each evening with a pocket-knife blade, in the hopes that removing the bulk of the slop that the pants might be dry-ish by morning. The less than appealing sensation of pulling on wet socks, boots, and pants became an expected daily ritual that season. The last few days here on the farm have been foggy, with a slight (maybe imagined) hint of sea salt smell to the air. It has brought to mind my favorite weeks of that wet 2009 season where I worked on top Mount Eisenhower to install new rock water bars meant to improve the trail drainage. We commuted each day from the Naman tent site, a 2 mile walk each morning and evening, unable to camp closer in the fragile alpine zone. We listened to the Mount Washington observatory’s morning weather report on a radio carried in the hand of our crew leader while hiking. The radio broadcaster shared daily that the trail conditions were “wet slippery rocks with run-off” and we were every hopeful to hear the forecast shift. Salty ocean air reached our noses via the mist some days, and lunch was always on Eisenhower’s bald top near that giant summit cairn. We tucked ourselves on whatever side kept us out of the wind. Only ever so often did the clouds break during those weeks temporarily to treat us to a stunning view. I think fondly back on those memories, and when we are out working the farm this rainy summer, I imagine I can still hear my crew leader singing sea shanty songs from somewhere up higher on Eisenhower veiled by mist and fog.

Vegetable Selection, you will be able to choose 7 items including 2 of something!

  • Baby Beets with Greens

  • Butterhead Lettuce

  • Romaine Lettuce

  • Scallions

  • Kohlrabi

  • Parsley

  • Scapes

  • Radishes

  • Fennel

  • kale



Roasted Baby Beets and Greens

Take bunch of baby beets, washed well with tops. Cut off the tops, and place the beets in a roasting pan, toss with olive oil and add rosemary sprigs. Roast at 375 for about 30 minutes. Remove skin while warm, and cut in half. Meanwhile saute the beet greens in olive oil and add a splash of balsamic vinegar. Season with salt and pepper and place on plate, top with baby beets.

Grilled Lime Scallions

Trim 1 bunch of scallions and toss with 3 tablespoons olive oil, 1 teaspoon salt and a pinch of cayenne. Grill until charred and beginning to wilt, about 5 minutes. Drizzle with lime juice and more olive oil and serve with lime wedges.




April 2023 Farm NEWS

The spring birds seemed to make a sudden overnight reappearance after their winter absence. The red wing black birds arrived first, or at least their large numbers made their presence most obvious. I started hearing them early one morning last week on my trip out with the dogs to feed the big animals.  On another morning a male redwing flew from branch to branch ahead of me along the road on my way back from a walk in the woods.  Usually, they stay fairly confined to the water and tree line along the water's edge.  Seeing one as far out as the road I wondered how the birds feel about returning home to find their pond still frozen, the tussock grasses they nest in just barely emerging from the snow. 

Along with the birds, return all the other smells, sounds, and signs of spring.  The snow melts along the sunny side of the field first, revealing flattened grass and hints of the garden beds.  The ground is saturated from the snow melt, and puddles collect in all the low-lying places growing larger then smaller with each round of rain and sun.  The mud sucks at my feet as I walk which makes pushing the full wheelbarrow from the barn to the compost pile each day feel like an Olympic sporting event. A test of both physical endurance and the waterproofing ability of my boots. Looking at all the mud I always wonder how in just a few short weeks the earth will dry enough for us to prep and plant, and soon after that the field will be a moderately tamed jungle of color and green.  

Seedlings are being sown into trays according to the planting calendar we have tweaked and perfected over our years here. I look forward to early mornings and cloudy days spent with my fingers in the potting soil, making small depressions in the trays for each seed, and carefully maneuvering growing plants from outgrown cells to larger ones. In another week or two, hardy seedlings will move out to the unheated greenhouse to make room for more tender starts and our morning watering chores will expand outward.  There comes a point in late April where it feels like half of each day is spent watering plants in trays, walking back and forth showering them until saturated, and then sometimes watering again in the evenings the trays easily dried out after an intensely sunny day.  And then its May, time to start transplanting all the seedlings out while our watering chores dwindle and our focus shifts to the summer tasks of weeding and harvesting.  

A good spring rain, a few more warm days, and we and the birds will wake up to see the pond transformed from white to blue.  The puddles will expand and contract threating to keep us off the garden forever until suddenly they will just disappear completely.  Seedlings will grow and outgrow their containers until making their final move into real ground.  We await the start of another growing season, reminding ourselves to be patient, to enjoy the slowness of the spring freeze and thaw.  Soon enough we will be in the thick of it enjoying the excitement and productivity of the garden, complaining about the endless weeds and heat, living in the glory and the misery of it all.  

Notes:
 -Baby girl "Ryah" was born here on the farm 3/16/2023. We are adjusting/re-adjusting to baby life again in preparation for the summer season.  

-If you are looking for seedlings to start your gardens, we suggest you check out our friends at OLD WELLS FARM who do amazing seedlings for sale.  They are in Limington Maine.  You can pre-order on their website. Old Wells Farm 

-We are Not doing a Earle Farm pickup this year.  

-We are not doing early high tunnel greens this year as we are focusing on family time until the real season begins.  Friend Joanne at Mountain Heartbeet Farm does incredible early greens and often offers pop up shares in April and May.  Find her on instgram or website Mountain Heartbeet Farm

Winter 2023

Winter 2023 Farm News
The anticipated pace of winter has finally set in.  The warm weather and our winter C.S.A., along with various house projects have kept us on the go into the new year.  This fall it felt like we had piles of food stored everywhere, each according to its specific temperature and humidity needs.  The walk-in was full to the brim with beets, carrots, cabbage, and kohlrabi, while the potato room was close to overflowing. Onions were stacked on pallets in our cramped basement, and my parents had to put up with boxes of squash and sweet potatoes sprawling around the loft space that they use when visiting.  We are now down to a few hundred pounds of each. Beets and potatoes are set to go out in our final winter CSA distributions, and just enough squash and sweet potatoes left for winter home eating.  The greenhouse has one small row of kale left that we’ve been picking daily for dinner. 

The morning of our first real snowstorm, I found Otto, one of our sheep, down in the stall when I went in to feed the big animals.  He hadn’t been looking so great for about a year, so it wasn’t an unexpected find, but it’s never easy.  He was close to 11 years old, having been a lamb when we worked at the Earle Farm that many summers ago. He maxed out the expected lifespan of a male sheep.  The Vet came out, Kyle dug a hole before the storm, and we said goodbye to a good sheep.  Stetson(horse) and Ginger (other sheep) seemed relatively unconcerned by the whole ordeal.  I’ve witnessed animals exhibit emotional loss, so it left us wondering if his death felt expected to them as well, or if there was some other factor to their calmness beyond our human understanding. 

With an old farm animal life ending, a new farm pup, “Moon,” came in November.  We weren’t looking for a second dog this year, but he fell unexpectedly into our laps. So far Moon has added both an extra layer of work as well as enjoyment.  I have been out doing regular puppy sized walks slowly increasing in length trying to use the winter to show him how to be a good dog.  He and Joni have been a mix of funny and infuriating together. The first few weeks were challenging; teaching a three-year-old how to properly interact with a puppy, while teaching a puppy how to properly interact with a three-year-old.  Homer watches it all like an old pro and must wonder what all the fuss is about. 

The dustings of snow have at least provided us enough cover for a few weeks to get some good sledding in without adding the burden of shoveling yet.  Joni is fearless sliding down our one and only hill by the side of the house. She starts at the giant ash tree and sleds down between the three old apple trees, sometimes crashing into one of them. It’s a short run, but for now its enough and has been keeping her busy for hours at a time. 

Seeds and fertilizer are here, other supplies to follow.  Before we know it, we will be firing up the heater in the Seedhouse and pulling out trays and soil to start all the summer plants. 
 

C.S.A. Week 14

Last week of Summer C.S.A. 2022

Thank you to all our members for participating with us this year. Many of you have been doing the C.S.A with us since we started, and also have been long time Earle Family Farm patrons!

Keep an eye out for pop up fall shares in the upcoming weeks and consider checking out our cooperative winter C.S.A. at www.thefoothillfarmallaince.com to eat locally all winter.

Sorry for the last-minute item changes last week, we subbed yellow onions for leeks, and threw in Autumn Frost Squash. For those of you who are still wondering its very similar to a butternut.

The rain we had been craving all summer long is falling now in September. Buckets and Buckets of it rained down last Thursday while I worked in the greenhouse, transplanting a bed of winter greens and pulling out the rest of the tomatoes. I started work with a podcast on, but by mid-day the rain and intermittent thunder were so loud amplified by the tunnel’s plastic roof that I had to turn it off. Making many trips to the compost pile with wheelbarrow loads of heaped tomatoes plants, I was soaking wet by midafternoon despite mostly working in a protected space. I was done, craving some dry clothes and some quiet time, my ears needing a break from the sound of the rain. By 5:30 the rain was clearing, and a perfect rainbow formed over the field in the setting sun. Kyle took Joni out to see it, and she asked where it was going, and as it disappeared, where it went and if it was broken. The next morning, she talked about it again, and by chance I sent the photo of it to my friend Joanne at Mountain Heartbeet Farm in Effingham NH. She immediately sent back a matching photo of the other end of it at her farm from the evening before. It pleased both of us to think of the rainbow starting and ending over our respective farms and Joni was able to see the entire thing in photo form.

In the share:

  • Sweet Dumpling Delicata

  • Honey Nut Squash

  • Leeks

  • Carrots

  • Beets

  • Sweet Peppers

  • Sweet Potatoes

Right end of the Rainbow at Hosac Farm

RIght end of the Rainbow at Hosac Farm

Left end of the Rainbow at Mountain Heartbeet

Stuffed Southwestern Peppers

4 large Peppers, sliced in half and seeds and stem removed

4 oz your choice cheese

1/4 c diced red onion

1/4 c chopped cilantro

1/2 c roasted corn kernels (thawed, frozen corn works fine)

1 minced garlic clove

Salt and pepper to taste

1 – 2 T heavy cream or half and half

Combine ingredients, fill peppers on a baking sheet and bake for 15 minutes at 425. Serve

One of our members send a link to a Kohlrabi Slaw recipe, we have not tried this one yet, but it looks really good. Kohlrabi Slaw

C.S.A. week 13

It’s here, it’s happening, the season is coming to a close. Just one more week left, and our summer CSA days will be behind us for the year. We spent the weekend harvesting squash and sweet potatoes in our cooperative Albany Town Forest location. It was a whirlwind of a weekend. I rushed up for an impromptu squash harvest on Friday expedited by a frost warning for the Conway area. 5 of us spent a beautiful breezy cool day clipping plants, piling squash, and getting it all boxed and out of the field safely before the cold night touched down. Saturday was market day for all the farms. Kyle went back up to Albany Sunday with Ebyn who has been working with us all summer to prep the sweet Potatoe area for harvest. Luckily, along with the other farmers, a crew of volunteers showed up making the workload manageable. Sunday was the hardest day; clipping and removing the dense sweet Potatoe vines from the field, lifting up the plastic covering each bed, and rolling up landscape fabric we set out in each of the 5, 400-foot aisles to keep the weeds at bay. They succeeded in the clean-up, and with Joni in school for the day all three of us met back up there this morning for the tuber harvest. With the digger attachment going on the tractor and many hands again, we were able to bag up what we calculated to be about 4,000lbs of sweet potatoes. Our share of the potatoes is now happily curing in our seed house for the next week until their skin has hardened for storage. We made it out just before the heavy rain, all of us tired, including Homer who spent the day hunting and eating significant number of mice out of the loosened dirt.

In the share:

  • Spaghetti Squash

  • yellow onions

  • Broccoli

  • Celery

  • Kohlrabi

  • Sungolds

  • Bok Choi

  • Autumn Frost Squash

STIR FRIED GINER BOK CHOI

Ingredients

Deselect All

1 tablespoon olive oil

2 cloves garlic, minced

1 tablespoon minced fresh ginger

8 cups chopped fresh bok choy

2 tablespoons reduced-sodium soy sauce

Salt and ground black pepper

Heat oil in a large skillet over medium heat. Add garlic and ginger and cook 1 minute. Add bok choy and soy sauce cook 3 to 5 minutes, until greens are wilted, and stalks are crisp-tender. Season, to taste, with salt and black pepper.

CSA week 12

         We’re at that point of the season where we’ve clearly crested the peak and begun the steady descent into the fall. The garden has shrunk significantly, much of it having been put into cover crop. The Summer share has ended and the full share members have only three weeks of pick-ups remaining. The greenhouse is being slowly transitioned from tomatoes to winter greens one bed at a time. We’re scheduling our last few major harvests of winter squash, potatoes, leeks, carrots, beets, and cabbage. School has started back up and the farmers’ markets have slowed. There are faint shades of yellow amongst the trees on Hosac Mountain as the colors of fall are on their way. We’ve been cleaning out the storage rooms making space for all the produce that will be filling them up and slowly distributed throughout the winter. Our resident bees will be packing up, soon to be transported back to their winter home for safe keeping. The pastures have put on significant growth with recent rains, but the rate of growth is slowing. The animals are looking forward to the end of harvest season, when we turn them loose on the gardens to clean up any scraps or seconds and extend their grazing season on some of the cover crops. With all of this, we as the farmers fall into a slower rhythm as well. It feels like we’re just waking up out of the blur that was another busy summer gone by. We begin daydreaming of late fall and winter activities. Plans to spend more meaningful time with friends and family. Anticipating that time to rest, recover, and plan for the next year.

In the share:

  • Brussels

  • Sungolds

  • Broccoli

  • Rutabaga

  • Hot Peppers

  • Bok Choi

  • Cippolinis

  • Potatoes

Ingredients

  • 1 red bell pepper diced

  • 1 small eggplant diced

  • 1 small zucchini diced

  • 1 tablespoon olive oil

  • Salt and black pepper to taste

  • 21 jumbo pasta shells we use DeLallo and I always cook a few extra in case they break

  • 15 oz ricotta cheese

  • 1 large egg

  • 1 1/2 cups shredded mozzarella cheese divided

  • 1/4 cup grated Parmesan cheese

  • 1/2 cup frozen chopped spinach thawed and drained

  • 1/4 teaspoon dried basil

  • 1/4 teaspoon dried oregano

  • Pinch of nutmeg

  • Salt and black pepper to taste

  • 2 1/2 cups marinara sauce

  • Chopped fresh basil for garnish, if desired

Got a fun idea for a vegetable loaded easy meal from someone at the market last week:

Roasted Vegetable Stuffed Shells

Instructions

  • Preheat oven to 400 degrees F. Place the diced red pepper, eggplant, and zucchini on a large baking dish. Drizzle with olive oil and toss. Season with salt and pepper. Roast for 20 minutes, or until veggies are tender, stirring once. Remove from oven and set aside. Turn the oven down to 350 degrees F.

  • Cook the pasta al dente, according to package directions. Drain and place the shells on large plate or cutting board so they are not touching. This will prevent them from sticking together.

  • Meanwhile, in a large bowl, stir together ricotta, egg, 1/2 cup of the mozzarella cheese, Parmesan cheese, spinach, roasted veggies, basil, and oregano. Season with salt and black pepper, to taste.

  • Pour 1 cup of the marinara sauce into the bottom of 9 x 13 baking dish. Stuff each pasta shell with a generous amount of the roasted veggie ricotta mixture, and place in the baking dish.

  • Cover shells with the remaining sauce and sprinkle remaining mozzarella cheese over the top. Bake covered with aluminum foil for 25 minutes. Remove the foil and continue baking until the top begins to brown and the sauce begins the bubble, another 10-15 minutes. Garnish with fresh basil, if desired, and serve warm.

  • Note-For easier filling, fill a gallon ziplock bag with the roasted veggie ricotta filling and cut a hole off the corner of the bag. Pipe the filling into the shells. The stuffed shells freeze well. I like to bake the pan, let them cool, and then put them in a freezer container. Reheat when ready to eat!

C.S.A. Week 11

The sound of the rain was amplified in the greenhouse, where we spent the day today. Two beds of tomatoes got released from their string trellises, pulled from the ground, and dragged to the compost pile. Next the landscape fabric was taken up and folded for next year. Kyle added compost and fertilizer to each bed and then raked them smooth, laid drip tape and turned the water on. I dug three shallow trenches in one bed with a hoe and sprinkled arugula seed in each one, then covered them back up with a light layer of soil. The other bed became a long row of baby spinach seedlings, gently removed from their starter trays and then set into the ground. The three remaining beds of tomatoes will remain for a few weeks longer, until the rest of the winter green seedlings have sized up and are ready. It’s always a mix of excitement and disappointment to pull the tomatoes. They put on such impressive growth over the course of just a few months, a shame to pull them before a frost, but we are pressured by our upcoming winter shares to transition to greens by mid-September and in that way, it is exciting thinking of food to come.


In the share:

  • Red Onions

  • Leeks

  • Sweet Peppers

  • Eggplant

  • Red Russian Kale

  • Sungold Tomatoes

  • Carrots


PAN ROASTED EGGPLANT

  • 1 eggplant, cut crosswise into 1/2-inch slices

  • 2 tablespoons olive oil

  • 1 teaspoon garlic powder

  • ½ teaspoon smoked paprika

  • ½ teaspoon Italian seasoning

  • 1 teaspoon salt

Step 1

Preheat the oven to 425 degrees F (220 degrees C). Line a baking sheet with parchment paper.

  • Step 2

    Place eggplant slices in a single layer on the baking sheet. Drizzle with olive oil and sprinkle with garlic powder, smoked paprika, and Italian seasoning.

  • Step 3

    Roast in the preheated oven until golden and crispy, about 25 minutes. Sprinkle with salt.