THIS WEEK’S HARVEST
Galia Melons, Assorted Eggplant, Early Tomatoes, Metechi Hardneck Garlic, Dino Kale, Kohlrabi, Purple Daikon Radish, Loose Carrots, Summer Squash & Zucchini, Lemon Cucumbers, Green Magic Broccoli, Fresh Onions, Salad Mix (Chicory + Lettuce + Mustard Greens), Arugula, Cegolaine Little Gem and Rouxai Oak Leaf Lettuce
U-PICK
Check the u-pick board for updated weekly limits
🚩Wild Blackberries See below for tips
🚩Husk Cherries: Located just above the gnome homes in the garden / See below for tips
Amethyst Green Beans
Albion Strawberries
Pickling Cucumbers: 5 gallon per share season limit. See Week 8’s newsletter for picking instructions and a pickle recipe
Cherry Tomatoes: See below for tips
Frying Peppers: Shishito, Padrón / See Week 5’s Newsletter for harvest tips
Jalapeños: Located below the Padróns
Herbs: Rosemary, Thyme, Dill, Tulsi Basil, New Italian Basil, Thai Basil, Purple Basil, Oregano, Marjoram, Tarragon, Onion Chives, Garlic Chives, Vietnamese Coriander, Culinary Lavender, Culinary Sage, French Sorrel, Lemon Verbena, Lemon Balm, Perilla & Purple Shiso, Chamomile, Cilantro, Mints, Anise Hyssop
HARVEST NOTES
Husk Cherries: Also known as cape gooseberries, or ground cherries; these are a delightful, extremely sweet little nightshade fruits wrapped inside a cool little "wrapper". Kids love them. Just peel the papery wrapper off and pop them in your mouth! Husk Cherries are ripe when the wrapper is golden or white and the fruit is yellow. (Green = unripe). Look low down under the canopy of leaves for the ripe ones. In fact, the ones fallen to the ground are often the sweetest. Located just above the gnome homes.
Wild Blackberries: Offering wild blackberries to someone in Sonoma County at this time of year is like offering sand to someone at the beach. But if you live in an area without good access to wild blackberry brambles, we’ve got some good ones here on the farm! They are are starting to go off and you're welcome to pick them. The best patches are located in the Northeast back fence-line, behind the fields; if you’re standing at the head of the cherry tomato rows facing east, they are to your left devouring the far fence.
Galia Melons: Originally developed by growers in Israel, Galia melons were the first hybrid of intensely perfumed Middle Eastern melons. The Galia melon looks like a cantaloupe on the outside and a honeydew on the inside. Its light green, smooth-textured flesh, and honey sweet.
Green Magic Broccoli: We aim for our broccoli plantings to last two harvest weeks — but because of the heat last week, this patch of broccoli is coming on hard and fast. Unlimited in-bag broccoli this week!
Kohlrabi: These little aliens coming out of Field 5 are the best tasting Kohlrabi we’ve ever grown: Super sweet, buttery, crispy brassica goodness. Delicious raw eaten with dip or on salads; or sautéed with soy sauce, garlic and ginger. Kohlrabi is a relative of cabbage and broccoli.
New Italian Basil: There is a beautiful patch of new Italian Basil ready for picking on the West Side of the garden above the orange Cosmos.
Flower Garden: Try incorporating the white-purple, delicate cilantro flowers in your bouquet this week — they hold up great in a vase and are stunning. Make sure to visit the orange “Sulfur” Cosmos on the West side — they have just exploded in bloom. Also, the seed pods on the old agrostema (East side) and Nigella (West side) work great in a bouquet and dry beautifully.
FLOWER SHARE RAFFLE WINNER: VIVIAN HOWER!
Congratulations to Vivian Hower the winner of our Flower Share raffle drawing! Welcome to the flower garden, Vivian! If Vivian was a guest of yours at the farm, please have her get in touch with us to claim her prize — we do not have her contact info.
Thanks to everyone who participated in the raffle — we were able to raise $440 in support of Kiley’s farm capital fundraiser. If you missed the raffle but would like to support the creation of a Black led, regenerative farm, you can donate directly to Kiley’s GoFundMe campaign by clicking here.
2020 CHERRY TOMATOES
The first tomatoes in our u-pick cherry tomato path are just starting to ripen. This week’s slow trickle will become a deluge of sun sweetness in just a couple of weeks.
Here is a brief synopsis of the six varieties of cherry tomato we planted this year.
Note: Like the sugar snap peas, the first ripe ones will be found very low on the plants, near the ground, and they will ripen higher and higher up as the season progresses.
Supersweet 100: A classic red cherry tomato for a shock of red sweet tang in your salad. Ripest when deep scarlet red. The secret to Supersweet’s is to leave them out on the counter for a day or two after you pick them — they sweeten up off the vine.
Copper Beauty: We fell in love with this one last year. A gorgeous, oblong variety. Mellow, very low acid, sugar sweet. Ripe when auburn red, with copper gold streaks. These are slower to ripen, lots of green fruit now, just a few are ready.
Pink Princess: Developed by an oxen-driving, seed-saving wizard in Massachusetts, this gem is becoming a GVCFarm favorite. These seeds are very hard to find so we only have a few plants this year. Mellow, slightly grapfruited flavored, quirky sizes and egg shapes, in a firm, matte, soft pink skin. Ripe when pink.
Sungold: The sun... captured. An unbeatable classic. Ripe when deep orange. Candy sweet, super productive, it's not really summer until you've had a handful of Sungolds.
Pink Bumblebee: This beauty is one we’re trialing this year. They are ripe when pink with golden stripes. Let us know how you like them!
Green Zebra: We usually grow these in our field tomatoes that we harvest but they put out so many small ones we thought we’d put them in the cherry tomatoes this year. Skip the big ones, we’ll pick them for you. A perennial favorite, this beautiful, striped green tomato is ripe when it’s usual light green tinge shifts to yellow, stripes turn dark green, and is slightly soft to the touch. For people who like a tangy tomato this is a favorite.
ADD-ONS
Revolution Bread: Fresh bread is back this week!
Moonfruit Mushrooms: Limited quantities of shiitakes available this week. First come first serve out of the fridge next to the bread. Cash only.
Bramble Tail Homestead Creamery: Stocked with pastured eggs, Bramble Tail frozen yogurt, 100% grass-fed beef, Green Star chicken, Oz Family Farm heritage rabbit and more. Become a member of the weekly dairy herdshare by emailing Aubrie at brambletailhomestead@gmail.com.
The Marketplace: Stocked with Froyo, coffee, soaps, honey, coffee, Moonfruit Mushroom dressing and seasoning, beverages, and much much more. Across from the Bramble Tail Creamery.
VOLUNTEER WEDENSDAYS
Need some farm therapy? Come out for our standing volunteer morning. Come find us in the garden or fields from 9am - 11am on Wednesday mornings and we’ll find a nice, socially distant thing for you to do to beautify the farm and garden. All ages and abilities welcome!
FARMER’S LOG
“PESTS” ON THE FARM
Well, the crazy Turkeys are back at it. This week was supposed to be a week of Romaine lettuce and “Deer Tongue” Little Gems, but dang-it the Turkeys do seem to love green lettuce!
Fortunately, the fields and garden we tend here are home to many many friends. Unfortunately, some of them fancy the human food we grow as much as we do — but neglect to sign-up for a CSA share! Fortunately, due to the wildness of this place, these “pests” are kept relatively in check by myriad lifeforms that fancy to eat them. Unfortunately, the pests still cause semi-severe losses and your farmers must muster a resistance.
We thought we’d talk this week about pests and their management on the farm. For organization’s sake, we’ll start with the biggest and go down to the smallest.
* * * * *
Turkeys: Aye, the Turkeys. We love them. They are chunkiest pests at Green Valley Community Farm. Turkeys are a non-native species in California and they seem to be have a strong foothold in Sonoma County — at least in this valley! They are beautiful, intelligent creatures with intricate and seasonally changing social networks. They are omnivores, and cruise the landscape morning and evening, browsing for seeds, insects, the occasional frog, and juicy leaves. Most of the year we live in happy co-habitation with our fine feathered friends. They eat weed seeds, cucumber beetles and pill bugs for us just feet from our Spring lettuce and couldn’t care less about it. Once the “Dog Days” of summer come and the landscape dries out, however, they start to re-think the that juicy lettuce. We usually look the other way and don’t mind a lost lettuce or two or twenty. But sometimes it gets bad. Over the last couple weeks the Turkeys annihilated a months worth of lettuce. (Lucky we have been over-planting it.) As for keeping the turkeys in check, we have tried everything — from running and screaming like a crazy person to a plastic coyote that scared more people than turkeys to warning shots. Unfortunately it seems the only thing that keeps them away from the crops for an extended period is to shoot to kill. We usually have to kill one or two Turkey’s a year.
Gophers: The next (dimensionally) largest “pest” on the farm is the mighty gopher. There is an old NorCal adage that gophers are what chased the Russians away from Fort Ross. Lucky for us, Green Valley Community Farm lies mostly in a wet valley that sees long periods of standing water in the winter. Gophers, therefore, cannot make year-round runs in our main fields. They do tunnel there in the dry months and cause a fair bit of damage, but winter rains flood whatever inroads they make so they live in higher concentrations up in the hills. Also lucky for us, Green Valley Community Farm is a wild place and we have tons of gopher predators: Coyotes digging for them at night and bobcats pouncing; hawks, kestrels, and owls swopping from above; gopher snakes spelunking their burrows. In 2018, a Great White Egret named Ingrid took up residence on the farm from August through December and ate two or three gophers a day! We miss you, Ingrid!
Rats and Mice in the Greenhouse: We flew under the radar our first two years here, but starting last year, rats and mice eating seeds and seedlings from our greenhouse trays became a huge problem. We lost nearly two melon successions to them. Over the winter we brought in two feral cats from the Sonoma County organization “Forgotten Felines". Since then, we have had ZERO problems. Thanks, Meeko and Goose, we love you!
Slugs: On which day of creation were slugs created? Monday morning!? Just kidding, slugs are beautiful in their own special way (to other slugs?). Slugs get crazy for us in the Spring and late Fall, which is when their populations surge due to moisture. In the Spring we must put down “Sluggo”, an organic iron phosphate pellet in order to germinate carrots, otherwise they would all get gobbled up. Other than that, it’s live-and-let-live with the pretty little slugs and the ugly little holes they make on the bottom of our lettuce. Big props to all the frogs on the farm enjoying slug escargot.
Insects: Our insect pests offer a textbook example of the natural ecology of food sources. Our first year we had very few classic garden insect pests. The farm had been fallow for a couple years and their populations were scant. As soon as we started planting they started eating… and breeding…and now we have flea beetles and cucumber beetles in good supply — but less, I think, than other farms because of our relatively wild location. Flea beetles, for example, who feed on brassicas and make the little pin holes on the arugula and mustard greens, are relatively low here. This may be because we aren’t close to a large vineyard. A lot of local vineyards plant mustard as a cover crop in the winter for its anti-fungal properties. Large flea beetle populations over-winter on this cover crop. Come Spring, the vineyards mow the mustard, and the flea beetles jump on the nearest kale, broccoli, or cabbage they can find! Singing Frogs farm, next to a large Dutton vineyard, has a famously epic Spring flea beetle attack when Dutton mows. We’re lucky to have just a normal attack. As for the cucumber beetles (who look like green ladybugs), they would do a lot of damage were it not for the organic Kaolin clay (that white stuff) we spray on all our new cucurbit plantings until the plants grow strong enough to repel them on their own. And, again, the myriad birds, frogs, lizards, turkeys, and predatory insects who feed on the pest insects help us so much. One of the most beautiful things to watch on the farm is the swarms of swallows and dragonflies swooping over the fields and feeding on insects in the evenings.
Garden Symphylans: They who shall not be named. Of all the antagonists written about above, none are smaller and none are scarier than the garden symphylan. Garden symphylans are quarter-inch long, blind, super fast-crawling, soil dwelling arthropods that look like tiny white centipedes. They thrive in soils with high organic matter, good soil structure, and earth worms (for they cannot dig themselves). They feed on decaying organic matter and, tragically, the fine white root hairs of growing plants. In high enough concentrations they annihilate everything growing in their biosphere, even weeds. We have garden symphylans in high concentrations in fields 1 and 3. Like a photo-negative, they are where the crops are not. In our 200 foot bed of Purple Daikon this year, 100 feet grew happily, the other 100 feet was bare ground. Not even any weeds. Garden symphylans cause more crop loss, affect the harvest share, and determine the placement of our plantings more than any other creature on the farm. They responsible for why we haven’t had more Beets and Celery yet this year. Unfortunately, there are no known biological, organic, or even inorganic controls for garden symphylans. We are in decent company, both Santa Rosa Junior College’s Shone Farm and UCSC’s Farm have them. One known plant deterrent is potatoes (they do not eat potato roots). That is why we planted potatoes where we did this year — in an area hard hit by them last year. And so, we will continue to experiment with plant allies as deterrents in our dance with the little white ghosts of Green Valley Community Farm.
* * * * *
Hopefully wild pigs don’t cross the Russian River because that’s all folks — a pretty short list of other beings that we must vie with for Green Valley Community Farm fare!
In the end, we are eternally grateful for them. They keep us in check. They humble us and remind us of our place in the grand scheme of things; not above anyone; not below; but woven firmly within of the web of interrelation and inter-dependence that sustains us all.
See you in the fields,
David and Kayta