6/28/17 - Week 3 - Wild Farm

THIS WEEK'S HARVEST: Fennel, Heirloom and New Girl Tomatoes, Cipollini Onions, Rover Red Radishes, Hakurei Turnips, Arugula, Mustard Salad Greens, Bok Choi, Spinach, Olympic Red Kale, Dino Kale, Mixed Summer Squash (Italian Zucchini, Crookneck and Patty Pan) Chioggia/Red Ace/and Golden Beets, Cabbage, Farao Cabbage

U-PICK in the GARDEN: Sugar Snap Peas (might be the last week), Basil, Cilantro, Savory, Chives, Parsley, Sage, Oregano, Thyme, Mints, Sorrel, Chamomile, and assorted flowers (Cosmos, Nasturtium, Bachelor's Buttons, Zinnias, Calendula and Snapdragons, Red Spike Amaranth, Sunflowers)

U-PICK from the FARM: Cherry tomatoes (Sungolds on the right facing east are ripe when deep gold, SuperSweet 100's on the left are ripe when scarlet red)

FARMER’S LOG:

One of the most special things about living and farming at Green Valley is that it still a very wild place. It is home to so many creatures.

It's no wonder: If you zoom out on a satellite map of the address here (13024 Green Valley Rd.), you'll see that this little valley is nestled at the base of forest that extends Northward, essentially unbroken, up through Alaska.

We come in contact with this wildness everyday on the farm. And it is perhaps most noticeable in the bird and mammal kingdoms at this time of year, during the spring / early summer surge of activity, new growth, courtship, competition, homemaking and baby-raising that corresponds with the return of the sun and the surge of plant life. At this time of year especially, our furred and feathered neighbors weave themselves into our lives, greeting us in the morning, and keeping us company throughout the day and on our ways home at night as they go about building their lives next to ours. And it is striking how similar theirs are to ours...

The bird world is especially rich out right now. Kayta's parents, avid birders, spotted 34 species during their two week visit from Missouri at the beginning of June. (And that's just the tip of the iceberg.) All the feathered ones seem to be making a go of it while the gettins good and doing all the things that go with that: Courting (those Turkey gobbles of April and May, echoing down the valley) and singing (wow, hear that Swainson's thrush), fighting (the "bird wars" begin in late May as the sky fills with inner/interspecies arial battles and battle cries as they all squat, steal and harass each others nests and territories), eating (where did all our lettuce seeds go?), building homes (check out the Violet-Green Swallow mud nest above our wash-station) and starting families...

In the owl box perched along the 13024 driveway, a barn owl family has taken up residence. Who knows when mom and dad moved in but about a month and a half ago tiny little raspy screeches could be heard coming from the box. Now, our way home at twilight every evening, we watch four barn owl teenagers exercise their flying permits. Compared to their silent, sleek, be-masked parents they are awkward flying monkeys. At first they would just pop their fuzzy heads out of the house, then pop back in. Lately, they have been taking flight, with a tellingly rapid RPM crash landing into the nearest tree, screeching at each other for awhile, and then flying back to the safety of the house. They screech all night.

Also like clockwork, at twilight, comes a Dark Sentinel. Our main fields are on her route. She has three spots -- that we know of: On a fence post overlooking the center meadow, on a large tree overlooking the main fields, and on the tall power pole overlooking the entire vineyard and farm. A shadow. The Great Horned Owl. Like the Lady of the Forest, she gives us shivers, reminding us of our mortality. But she reminds gophers of their mortality too, which is very necessary around here.

Yes, twilight is a special time. Quivers of quail come out from their thicket homes, paranoid and domestic, to forage. Mama and baby skunk visit the compost pile to see what's been left, and a gophers flit through the grass. 

The gopher (at its population low near the end of winter, being food for so many predators during that time) explodes in population at this time of year. Their subterranean networks of paths seem to multiply underfoot, their little portal holes pock the ground, and their boldness grows. One crashed against my leg as I was harvesting mustard mix on Tuesday. They may not visit the barn, but you can be sure that the gophers have been picking up their shares.

And then there is Mama Deer. You may have noticed the fortress of junk in between our greenhouses and the hog panels around Aubrie and Scott's garden. These are protection from Mama Deer. Mama Deer took up residence in a thicket near the greenhouses about a month ago and, pregnant and now presumably nursing, uses a genius and boldness I have never seen in a deer to infiltrate our fortresses and feast on the fare. Who can blame her, she's making a go of it just like the rest of us.

This list could go on: The juvenile Salmonids and the baby turtle in the culvert, Aubrie and Scott's carefully timed new calves, the broccoli-obsessed ninja Hare or the demon Racoon that visits our neighbors... no matter how much they demand from us or pillage our provisions, we can only but be grateful for their antics, their lessons, their company, and that they are here. This place is alive and wild. Let's make sure to keep it that way.

See you in the fields,
David

6/19/17 - Week 2 - Winter then Summer

THIS WEEK'S HARVEST: Heirloom and New Girl Tomatoes, Chippollini Onions, Easter-egg and Rover Radishes, Hakurei Turnips, Arugula, Mustard Salad Greens, Bok Choi, Spinach, Dino Kale, Siberian Kale, Collards, Chard, Cauliflower, Lettuces (Butter heads, Little Gems, Oakleaf, and Heart of Romaine)


IN THE GARDEN: Sugar Snap Peas, Basil, Cilantro, Chamomile flowers, Savory, Chives, Parsley, Sage, Oregano, Thyme, Peppermint, Sorrel and assorted flowers (Cosmos, Nasturtium, Bachelor's Buttons, Zinnias, Calendula and Snapdragons)

FARMER'S LOG:

This heat spell really has marked the beginning of summer loud and clear hasn't it? The plant life on the farm heard it loud and clear. It's really interesting watching how different crops, and different plant families have responded. Those that relished the rain and fog the week before last seem to hunker down and show their grumpy side in this heat. The brassicas, who glow oh-so serenely on a foggy day, seem subdued and toughened on days like today, turning a beautiful purple hue in their stress. The broccoli and cauliflower seem to bolt to the finish line, unfurling their flowering heads quickly, to life's end Meanwhile, the summer crew is partying. Between Saturday and today the basil in the u-pick garden and our newly germinated Painted Mountain corn in the main-field have doubled in size, as have the youngest successions of field tomatoes, cucumbers and summer squash who've seem to have grown into teenagers over-night. They are verdant and wild and stretching their vining arms with a unruly vigor. It's kind of scary. And we are really behind on trellising.

2017 will surely be remembered for being a quick spring, bookended by a soggy winter that didn't know when to leave and a hot-headed summer that arrived too early. The good thing about a highly diverse farm, is that we can take what comes and savor the ever-changing "terroir" of weather captured in the food. Make sure to enjoy a hefty helping of those sugar snap peas next time you're out. They've bottled the recent sun into some sweet oblong candies, and we're not sure how long they'll last. Onward into summer, my friends.

See you on the farm.

David

6/15/17 - Week 1 - Tomatoes

THE HARVEST: Easter-egg Radishes, Hakurei Turnips, Bok Choi, Spinach, Dino Kale, Siberian Kale, Collards, Chard, Broccoli, Lettuces (Butter heads, Little Gems, Oakleaf, Romaine), Arugula, Mustard Salad Greens, Early Girl Tomatoes (Limited)

IN THE GARDEN: Savory, Chives, Parsley, Sage, Oregano, Thyme, Peppermint, Sorrel, Cosmos, Nasturtium, Bachelor's Buttons, Zinnias, Calendula and Snapdragons

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FARMER’S LOG:

We’re so excited to meet each of you and have you all on the farm for the first time! We’ve been in high-gear trying to whip this old mill site into shape and keep the plants happy. The produce is starting to kick in out here. We need help eating it! Kayta and I have started to eat the turnip/radish/tomato/cheese bread lunch snack… a Hallmark of summer for us. It’s going to be an abundant season.

While we savor these first early tomato slices (which you all will enjoy this week) it triggers memories the sweet abundance of summer here in Sonoma County. But it also makes us think of limits. The share this week be limited to 1 or 2 tomatoes per share this week — as our first succession of tomatoes, laden with green orbs, begin to ripen, it can be painfully slow watching them turn from green to red. “When will I be able to eat you, tomato!” But then those first few tomatoes are so much sweeter.

This simple tomato experience made me think of the CSA model of agriculture. It occurs to me that each of us could go to Safeway or Whole Foods 9am to 9pm to buy a sack of tomatoes from the Central Valley or Mexico at most times of year. Limitations and restraint are not a concept our culture celebrates.

The tomato plants you will be eating the fruit of this week were seeded just after New Years. I remember because Kayta and I did a considerable amount of head-scratching about whether or not the vulnerable seedlings would be okay without our watchful eye during the coldest part of the winter while we went away for 4 days for an annual farming conference. We went for it and they did splendidly. These guys were fighters. Under cover in Kayta’s greenhouse at Russian River Vineyards those little guys powered through cloudy day after cloudy day, and storm after storm. When we finally got them in the ground here at Green Valley in a refurbished greenhouse surrounded by the old Mill road base, they were faced with one of the wettest Marches in memory and an April dowsing on top of it. I was sure they were going to kick the bucket as I gazed helplessly at their roots saturated with water for days on end. But they persisted.

And then the sun started to shine. And you know what happens when tomatoes get some good sun. The rest was been history. 

Thanks to the strengths of these plants, we have some of the earliest heirlooms in the county. We hope this story of the tomatoes prevailing over a wet, wet winter adds a touch of sweetness to your first tomato from the farm. We can’t wait to share many more stories and sweet bites with you in the months ahead. 

Thanks for joining us on the journey.


See you on the farm.

David