The Trustees of Reservations
Moose Hill Farm
CSA Blog
A property of The Trustees of Reservations
Moose Hill Farm CSA
CSA Info | CSA Sign Up | Farm Stand | Volunteer | Apprentice | Connect with Us | Visit Moose Hill Farm


Monday, August 26, 2013

This week in  your share you will enjoy a choice of herbs, garlic (courtesy of The Neighborhood Farm), a choice of beet greens or Asian greens, mizuna, peppers, eggplant, tomatoes, and potatoes.  There are plenty of cherry tomatoes and ground cherries for you to pick in the field and flower share members have sunflowers to add to their bouquets this week. 

Farmer Molly and the crew

Monday, August 19, 2013

Your CSA cup is half full!

We are half way there...  I don't know whether to feel relieved that we have made it this far or sad that it is flying by so quickly!


This week I wanted to give you an update on the value of your share since we only have 10 weeks left.  We are trying to reach $600 and we are right on target (and your $20 food donation is right on target as well).  The second half of the season tends to contain more abundant and valuable crops so $289 is a great value to be at this point of the season (see chart down below - I love seeing such a wide variety of veggies too!).  Thanks for a great first half and here is to a fabulous finish to the season!

This week you can enjoy picking up mizuna, lettuce mix, scallions or kale, summer squash, cucumbers, tomatoes, eggplant, peppers, hot peppers, leeks, and onions.  More cherry tomatoes are waiting in the field for you...there are several different varieties throughout the planting so be sure to check out all 3 beds (there are orange, red and purple varieties).  There are also ground cherries ready (they are a funky fruit/vegetable from the tomatillo family...we'll have some samples at the pick up for you to try!)  Flower share members will enjoy another colorful bouquet this week. 

Farmer Molly and the crew

Here is a break down of what you have received so far:



CROP AMOUNT (bunches or lbs) PRICE VALUE
lettuce 14 $2 $28
spinach 0.5 $6 $3
bok choi 4 $1.50 $6
kale 6.5 $2 $13
scallions 4 $1.50 $6
herbs 14 $2 $28
broccoli 2 $2.75 $6
arugula 1 $8 $8
radish 3 $1.50 $5
turnip 1 $1.50 $2
chard 5 $2 $10
cabbage 6.5 $2 $13
kohlrabi 2 $1.50 $3
peas 8 $3 $24
radicchio 2 $2 $4
beets 4.5 $2.50 $11
caulifower 1 $2.75 $3
squash 10.5 $1.50 $16
carrots 4 $2.50 $10
scapes 2 $1.50 $3
onions 5 $1.50 $8
potatoes 7.25 $1.50 $11
cukes 8.5 $1.50 $13
beans 4 $3.00 $12
eggplant 3.75 $2.50 $9
lettuce mix 1.5 $5 $8
tomatoes 6.5 $2.50 $16
padrons 0.25 $2.50 $1
leeks 1 $2 $2
hot peppers 4 $0.25 $1
asian greens 0.75 $6 $5
cherry tomatoes 1 $4.00 $4
TOTAL     $289

Monday, August 12, 2013

And now for the weather report...

"How's this crazy weather treating the crops?"


Hands down, that is the most asked question of me this season...and rightly so.  So far this season, we had a very late winter set in.  There was still snow on the fields the first week of April, delaying our planting in the fields by almost a month.  I remember the first day that the apprentices started back in April.  We were working in the greenhouse in our t-shirts while snow flurries blew around outside.  The fava beans were planted much later than they should have been because of the snow and we lost that crop...the farm's first casualty.  Things started to get better though and we had a wonderful mix of spring crops, despite my constant worrying that everything was planted too late.  A farming mentor told me a while back; "plants want to grow" and they did. 

Then the treacherous rain storms of June came and I thought that was it for the farm. We saw several beds of seeded crops just wash away, including parsnips, carrots, beans, herbs and greens.  The cherry tomatoes drowned and died...luckily we had seeded extra tomatoes way back in April.  Concerned that they were no nutrients left in the fields after the horrible rains, the crew and I re-fertilized the entire farm by hand since no equipment could get into the fields.  We pulled out all the dead cherry tomato plants and re-planted into soil that one could describe as "chocolate pudding."  I had my doubts that new batch would make it either, but they did and you have cherry tomatoes to pick this week.  

Those rains made planting in our soil impossible until after the 4th of July...the latest I have ever planted heirloom tomatoes, peppers, eggplants, winter squash, or sweet potatoes.  But I am happy to report that they have been growing, slowly, but they are growing.  Night time temperatures dipping into the upper 40's here on the hill do not make tomatoes and peppers want to ripen.  I certainly don't want those heat waves we had in July to come back but for the sake of the nightshade crops, I would take another one.  You have had just a taste of tomatoes and eggplant so far, but if all goes well by the end of the month you will have copious amounts of tomatoes, peppers and eggplant.  That is later in the season than normal, but that's farming, especially in a time of climate change. 

Some of you have been asking about when you will get to sign up for the winter share.  We are going to have to keep you posted about that.  Due to the heavy rains that we had in June in combination with the wet soils that we have here at the farm, we are very limited on the amount of land that we have to plant on this first season.  In order to guarantee the success of the summer share, I had to make some very hard decisions on which crops to eliminate and a lot of the winter share crops were sacrificed.  I should know by early September if we will be able to offer this option or not.  If not, I am sure we will be able hold some Fall Harvest market days that you can come and purchase extra cold weather and storage vegetables at.  I have been working with the NRCS (a government agency that helps farmers prevent erosion on their farms, among many other tasks) to make our soils better here at the farm.  I feel confident in the long-term plan that we are developing for next season. 

This week marks the 10th week of the CSA - we are almost half way through this crazy first season!  It definitely has had its challenges but there have been many triumphs as well.  I want to thank you for taking this first step with us on this journey to create a vibrant community farm that will continue to feed, educate and inspire for many generations to come.

Chicken coop at sunset



This week at the farm you will enjoy a choice of parsley or basil, kale or chard, Asian greens mix, lettuce mix, scallions, choice of potatoes or beets, onions, hot peppers, cucumbers, summer squash. and tomatoes.  Take a walk out to the fields for the first of those sweet cherry tomatoes and flower share members can expect an even bigger bouquet this week!

Farmer Molly and the crew



Monday, August 5, 2013

August!

The busiest month of the farming season is here!

We are at the height of the farming season now...August is a culmination of all the tasks that happen on a farm.  We are planting the very last seeds in the greenhouse and the last transplants in the field.  The weeds are at their worst.  We have the day-to-day harvesting plus large storage harvests such as onions.  We need to start prepping fields for next year by plowing and cover cropping.  Needless to say, it's going to be a short blog this week!

At pick-up this week you will have a choice of herbs, tatsoi, carrots, choice of kale or chard, a mix of potatoes, cucumbers and squash, tomatoes, hot peppers, eggplant, leeks and onions.  The cooler temperatures are keeping those cherry tomatoes from ripening fast enough but maybe by next week. 

Flower share members!! The flowers have finally started to bloom!  Your first bouquet is waiting to be picked!