9/6/19 - Week 12 - "We remember don't we?"

THIS WEEK'S HARVEST

New Desiree Red Potatoes, Heirloom & Slicing Tomatoes (See Week 9’s newsletter for variety descriptions), Jimmy Nardello Italian Frying Peppers & Sweet Bell Peppers, Red Ace Beets, Baby Celery, Walla Walla Sweet Onions, Italian Late Softneck Garlic, Curly Green Kale, Rainbow Chard, Easter Egg Radishes, Striped Armenian Cucumbers, Olympian Cucumbers, Summer Squash and Zucchini, Rainbow Carrots, Sarah’s Choice Cantaloupe Melons, Salad Mix (with mustards, arugula, and salanova lettuce), Blonde Sweet Romaine Lettuce

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U-PICK

  • Dragon Tongue Green Beans: 8 pint (1 gallon) limit this week! See below for a green bean “dilly bean” pickle recipe

  • Strawberries

  • Husk Cherries See week 8’s newsletter for harvest tips

  • Cherry Tomatoes: No limit this week! See week 7’s newsletter for varieties

  • Frying Peppers: Shishito, Black Hungarian, Padrón / See Week 2's newsletter for harvest tips

  • Jalapeños: Located below the frying peppers

  • Herbs: Italian Basil, Tulsi Basil, Thai Basil, Purple Basil, Italian Parsley, Rosemary, Lemon balm, Lemon Verbena, Perennial Cilantro, Annual Cilantro, French Sorrel, Onion Chives, Garlic Chives, Shiso, Tarragon, Oregano, Thyme, Chamomile, Mints, Dill, Anise Hyssop (*New Italian, Thai, and Purple basil plantings on the west side of the garden.)

  • Flowers!

HARVEST NOTES

  • New Desiree Potatoes: We dug up our first potatoes this morning! “New” potatoes are potatoes that harvested fresh while the plant is still green and the skins haven’t hardened. They are crisp, turgid, fresh vegetables and something of a delicacy. They’ll be limited to 1.5 lbs per share this week. Try making home-fries to show off their flavor.

  • Sweet Romaine Lettuce: The Romaine Lettuce coming out of the field this week is exceptional. We’ve been enjoying it drenched in a classic Caesar salad dressing with a hard-boiled egg over quinoa.

  • Beets: Beets are back! That is all…

DILLY BEANS

One of our favorite ways to preserve the harvest is pickling green beans, aka "Dilly Beans". They are a garlicy, tangy treat to throw on the plate next to pretty much any meal. Our new patch of Green Beans (Dragon Tongue variety) out in the main field is loaded and the picking limit will be 8 pints (1 gallon). It’s a great time to make a batch of dilly beans. Here is a solid dilly bean recipe.

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TOMATOES FOR PRESERVING

Pick-up your tomatoes for canning or preserving this week before they are gone! Each share may take a 15 lb (season limit) big batch of tomatoes from the back table. You can take your 15 lb allotment all at once, or in smaller increments (7lbs this week, 8 lbs next week, for example). But get them now, because the late summer avalanche is almost over!

We’ll have a scale out for weighing. Please bring your own bag or box to take them home.

Preserving tomatoes… the easy way: A really yummy way of preserving tomatoes (sauce tomatoes, or heirlooms) that is slightly less involved than canning is… Halve the tomatoes and spread them on a baking sheet. Pour a little olive oil over them, and throw in some garlic and onions. Roast this concoction on on a low temperature until the water is reduced and the flavor concentrated. Take out of the oven and let cool. Put the saucy mixture into pint jars or bags and store them in the freezer for future use!

Kayta checks on the beets on our Thursday harvest share planning walk

Kayta checks on the beets on our Thursday harvest share planning walk

GARLIC TRIMMERS WANTED

We are looking for lovely volunteers for a meditative farm task — trimming garlic. Wherein… we will set you up with a seat and some nice scissors and you can trim garlic ‘til the cows come home. Literally! Let us know if you are interested!

VOLUNTEER WEDNESDAYS, 8:00-10:00 AM

Interested in some farm therapy? Come out on Wednesday mornings to help us tend the garden and farm together! Find us in the garden or out in the main fields on Wednesdays from 8:00am 'til 10:00 am. People of all abilities welcome, we’ll find something comfortable for you to do!

FARMER’S LOG

We had a big, physical week out here on the farm this week... as most weeks in the August-September period seem to be.

We continued our big fall planting push (with beets, cabbage, scallions, escarole, sugar loaf chicories and Bok Choi transplantings); we renovated beds in the east half of the garden (out with the old cosmos and clarkia, and in with some new sunflowers, nasturtium, parsley and cilantro); and we made a big push to mow, compost, and prep about 2,000' of beds for the last round of seedings of plantings in the coming weeks that will feed us until the winter solstice. When we look on the calendar now, we can see the last major field plantings set for September 25th.

After the Autumnal Equinox, as the sun slips further south, the time it takes for crops to mature smears out to become longer and longer. In July, it'll only take 30 days for a transplanted lettuce to reach maturity, whereas a lettuce planted in late September will grow slowly, and then slower, and slower, until it is ready for harvest in early to mid-December. Though it is a bit of a guessing game knowing exactly when these late summer planted crops will eventually mature… given the relativity of how the lower light, shorter days, and affects their growth. But mature they will, and we've got a great Fall shaping up out there.

With that, we’ll leave you with some poetry from our veritable poet in residence…


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Untitled — Summer Day
by Rebecca Harris

Today
Was the first day of blackberry picking.
I wore shorts instead of pants
Hoping to be scratched.
I lingered near a bee folded in a white blackberry flower
Hoping to be stung.
But today
Was the gentlest of all other days.
I wonder why.
What happens if I lay over there?
With my head in the sunlight and tall grass?
I can hear now already,
The stirring of small animals,
In places where I cannot see and am not allowed.
I saw a carcass of the smallest fawn I’ve ever seen,
Yesterday,
Strewn on the path like a warning.
Where was the animal?
I think of my dreams last night.
How close I was to the mountain lion-
And her doings.
I find that I wanted to move closer,
As close as I moved to the honey bee,
My body aching for venom.
And for sight.
My bowl is only half full of blackberries.
Whey do I feel like am chasing the seasons?
They seem to be moving so fast.
Yet I know
That I am the one 
Who will not hear the birds,
Who will not muse about their patterns 
Their language
As one might try and comprehend
The bright pink of a striped petal,
Translate it into music
Or words
Or thoughts as
Smooth as a violin bow.
I know there are 
Manzanita trees that have 
Dropped their fruit.
Will I not make cider like
Last year?
I am too fast,
I have to go home because my 
I-phone died,
And I have work in the morning,
And I have not even washed my face.
When was the last time that 
I harvested the ground cherries?
Last week I think.
I imagine the wilting lavender 
In front of my house,
Children I planted
As a gardener.
The deer sits alive in my mind on its haunches
Like a dog.
Little fawn,
With all the wisdom of its killer.
Like food and liquor in its eyes. 

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Young Farmers
by Rebecca Harris

Young farmers
Here they are,
With their wands of beautifully
Brown fingers,
Small sorcerers in the waves
Of earth, sky, and sea and the
Fire that helps us end and begin
Again in an orange rage and quiet
Sunset.
Yet they are not waving their hands
With flowers appearing.
They sink their hands into the earth
And start the children of
Cucumbers.
Of squash and red and yellow
Tomatoes with all the colors of fire
Alive in them.
Like fine teeth the farmers’ bodies
Comb the field as roots grow.
And with all of that work I’m sure
There are setbacks,
A smile turns into a mountain they
Cannot climb,
They argue with small
Vegetable children.
Or the dirt
Which has not been elegant.
But if you look at them closely,
You can see that they live within a
World as ancient as we feel inside…
All of the real things
Inside of joy.
Made by earth, sky, sea, fire.


And here we are combing the fields,
Walking as gently and curious
As combing our children’s hair.
Picking flowers and snap peas and
Strawberries
With the red of tomatoes
In their memories.
We remember don’t we?
Even though we may not have fields
Of our own,
I can feel the garden of my life
When I walk through their farm.


Our good friend and neighbor and CSA member Rebecca Harris has lived on this land for many years and walks through or by the farm just about every day. As you can see, she is also an incredible poet…

After a just a little begging, she was kind enough to let us share a couple of her poems in the newsletter this week. Thank you, Rebecca!

If you ever have something to share in the Farmer’s Log (writing, recipes, pictures, etc.) we’d love to share them in this Community Supported Newsletter!

See you in the fields,
David & Kayta



Illustrations by Kayta from the Heart of Tracking by Richard Vacha from Mount Vision Press

8/30/2019 - Week 11 - "The Peace of Wild Things"

THIS WEEK'S HARVEST

Heirloom & Slicing Tomatoes (See Week 9’s newsletter for variety descriptions), Jimmy Nardello & Bell Type Sweet Peppers, Eggplant, Walla Walla Sweet Onions, Italian Late Softneck Garlic, Cabbage, Siberian Kale, Rainbow Chard, Easter Egg Radishes, Striped Armenian Cucumbers, Olympian Cucumbers, Summer Squash and Zucchini, Rainbow Carrots, Sarah’s Choice Cantaloupe Melons, Spicy Mustard Mix, Little Gems and Mixed Head Lettuce

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U-PICK

  • 🌟Dragon Tongue Green Beans: See below for tips

  • Strawberries

  • Husk Cherries See week 8’s newsletter for harvest tips

  • Cherry Tomatoes: No limit this week! See week 7’s newsletter for varieties

  • Frying Peppers: Shishito, Black Hungarian, Padrón / See Week 2's newsletter for harvest tips

  • Jalapeños: Located below the frying peppers

  • Herbs: Italian Basil, Tulsi Basil, Thai Basil, Purple Basil, Italian Parsley, Rosemary, Lemon balm, Lemon Verbena, Perennial Cilantro, Annual Cilantro, French Sorrel, Onion Chives, Garlic Chives, Shiso, Tarragon, Oregano, Thyme, Chamomile, Mints, Dill, Anise Hyssop (*New Italian, Thai, and Purple basil plantings on the west side of the garden.)

  • Flowers!

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NEW CROP NOTES

  • Walla Walla Sweet Onions: A delicate, sweet, fresh-eating onion developed in Walla Walla Washington. These are a delicacy. Try them in a way that you can show them off: Lightly grilled in a good burger or raw in a salad with a delicate dressing. They are so mild, some people even eat them raw like an apple! (We haven’t tried it, let us know how it goes!) Read more about Walla Wallas here.

  • Dragon Tongue Green Beans: These are juicy, cream colored heirloom green beans with purple stripes. Eat them raw or cooked. They are located on the farm in the field to your left if you’re standing at the head of the cherry tomato beds. Please be extra careful (especially with kiddos) not to step on the beds next to them where we have growing leeks and fresh planted chicories.

  • Jimmy Nardello Peppers: We’ve had these out a couple times, these are the long, thin peppers that look like hot cayennes. They’re not, they’re exceptionally sweet beauties. Our favorite pepper for eating raw or cooking.

PRESERVE TOMATOES

Pick-up your tomatoes for canning or preserving this week before they are gone! Each share may take a 15 lb (season limit) batch of tomatoes from the back table. You can take your 15 lb allotment all at once, or in smaller increments (7lbs this week, 8 lbs next week, for example). But get them now, because the late summer avalanche is almost over!

We’ll have a scale out for weighing. Please bring your own bag or box to take them home.

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Preserving tomatoes… the easy way: A really yummy way of preserving tomatoes (sauce tomatoes, or heirlooms) that is slightly less involved than canning is… Halve the tomatoes and spread them on a baking sheet. Pour a little olive oil over them, and throw in some garlic and onions. Roast this concoction on on a low temperature until the water is reduced and the flavor concentrated. Take out of the oven and let cool. Put the saucy mixture into pint jars or bags and store them in the freezer for future use!

PESTO BASIL

Each share may take home two whole basil plants from the old planting. Just snip the plant at the base. (Make sure you’re in the old planting which has a white stake in it with a red flag.

BRAMBLE TAIL MILK HERDSHARE

As many of you know, this land is home to Bramble Tale Homestead, a grass fed raw milk herdshare and a true Sonoma County local food gem.

Raw milk — from healthy cows raised on grass — is a nutrient-dense and alive food, containing active nutrients, healthy fat & protein, immune factors, vitamins, minerals, enzymes & healthy bacteria. The Jersey cows are rotationally grazed through the grasslands of this diversified and collectively owned land, playing a vital role in the regeneration of the landscape by sequestering carbon & creating habitat for wildlife while feeding our community.

Their herdshare program works similarly to our CSA where member-owners of the herd receive a portion of the milk produced by the herd each week. They also offer a value-add share (think yogurt, feta, and fresh cheese!)

It’s an incredible experience, trust us, we’ve been members for 5 years!

For more information email Aubrie and Scott: brambletailhomestead@gmail.com

VOLUNTEER WEDNESDAYS, 8:00-10:00 AM

Interested in some farm therapy? Come out on Wednesday mornings to help us tend the garden and farm together! Find us in the garden or out in the main fields on Wednesdays from 8:00am 'til 10:00 am. People of all abilities welcome, we’ll find something comfortable for you to do!

FARMER’S LOG

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The Peace of Wild Things
by Wendell Berry

When despair for the world grows in me
and I wake in the night at the least sound
in fear of what my life and my children’s lives may be,
I go and lie down where the wood drake
rests in his beauty on the water, and the great heron feeds.
I come into the peace of wild things
who do not tax their lives with forethought
of grief. I come into the presence of still water.
And I feel above me the day-blind stars
waiting with their light. For a time
I rest in the grace of the world, and am free.

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See you in the fields,

David & Kayta

Illustrations by Kayta from the Heart of Tracking by Richard Vacha from Mount Vision Press

8/23/2019 - Week 10 - Bodies, Faces, and Food

THIS WEEK'S HARVEST

Heirloom & Slicing Tomatoes, Sweet Peppers, Celery, Zoey Yellow Onions, Italian Late Softneck Garlic, Broccolini, Red Russian Kale, Amara Ethiopian Kale, Lemon Cucumbers, Striped Armenian Cucumbers, Olympian Cucumbers, Summer Squash and Zucchini, Rainbow Carrots, Sarah’s Choice Cantaloupe Melons (Kayta’s favorite), Esmee Arugula, Little Gems and Red Butter Lettuce

Summer harvests, Fall plantings… must be late August!

Summer harvests, Fall plantings… must be late August!

U-PICK

  • Strawberries

  • Husk Cherries See week 8’s newsletter for harvest tips

  • Cherry Tomatoes: See week 7’s newsletter for harvest tips

  • Frying Peppers: Shishito, Black Hungarian, Padrón / See Week 2's newsletter for harvest tips

  • Jalapeños: Located below the frying peppers

  • Pickling Cucumbers: LAST WEEK * 2 gallon season limit * See below for instructions

  • Wild Blackberries See week 8’s newsletter for locations

  • Herbs: Italian Basil, Tulsi Basil, Thai Basil, Purple Basil, Italian Parsley, Rosemary, Lemon balm, Lemon Verbena, Perennial Cilantro, Annual Cilantro, French Sorrel, Onion Chives, Garlic Chives, Shiso, Tarragon, Oregano, Thyme, Chamomile, Mints, Dill, Anise Hyssop

  • Flowers! We have a new planting of cosmos and zinnias planted to the left of the cherry tomatoes.

TOMATO AVALANCHE!

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On Tuesday we started distruting canning and 2nds tomatoes in bulk on the back table. We are running preserve tomatoes at a 15 lb season limit this year, meaning starting now, members may take 15 lbs from the back table total this season. You can take your 15 lb allotment all at once, or in smaller increments (7lbs this week, 8 lbs next week, for example).

Don’t wait too long though, the tomato avalanche will only last a few weeks! We’ll have a scale out for weighing, and a clipboard to check off if you’ve taken your share. Please bring your own bag or box to take them home.

PESTO BASIL

We are retiring our first planting of Italian basil which means it’s PESTO TIME! We each share to take home two whole basil plants from the old planting. Just snip the plant at the base. (Make sure you’re in the old planting. The new planting is located on the left side of the garden when facing the mountain.)

ThE LAST WEEK OF PICKLING CUCUMBERS

Last week’s heat wave precipitated the end of our pickling cucumber planting. If you have not picked yet there are still a few good quality cukes to be found out there.

Picking instructions: Bring something you can estimate 2 gallons with, or one of the white buckets below the sign-in table to pick into. Find the pickling cucumber bed out on the farm marked with yellow flags. They’re in the far left field near the corn. Comb through the plants gently, doing your best not to step on the vines or the adjacent bed. The ideal sized pickling cucumber is around 4 inches long and 1 inch thick. Bigger is great. Please don't pick them much smaller than this so they can size up for the next pickers. If you use the farm bucket, please transfer your cukes to another container and put the bucket back below the sign-in table.

Check out Kate Seely’s tried and true pickling cucumber recipe for pickling instructions.

BRAMBLE TAIL MILK HERDSHARE

As many of you know, this land is home to Bramble Tale Homestead, a grass fed raw milk herdshare and a true Sonoma County local food gem.

Raw milk — from healthy cows raised on grass — is a nutrient-dense and alive food, containing active nutrients, healthy fat & protein, immune factors, vitamins, minerals, enzymes & healthy bacteria. The Jersey cows are rotationally grazed through the grasslands of this diversified and collectively owned land, playing a vital role in the regeneration of the landscape by sequestering carbon & creating habitat for wildlife while feeding our community.

Their herdshare program works similarly to our CSA where member-owners of the herd receive a portion of the milk produced by the herd each week. They also offer a value-add share (think yogurt, feta, and fresh cheese!)

It’s an incredible experience, trust us, we’ve been members for 5 years!

For more information email Aubrie and Scott: brambletailhomestead@gmail.com

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LEANNE’S LAVENDER

CSA member Leanne Sarasy will be selling her beautiful lavender products in the barn from lavender she grows just down the road!

She’ll have dried Grosso lavender bunches ($5), hydrosols ($5), bath soaks ($10), & dried sachets ($5) available. Please bring cash.

HEARTH FOLK SCHOOL

We’re rich in amazing neighbors here at Green Valley Farm + Mill. Our newest, the Hearth Folk School, offer workshops and series classes on skills such as willow basketry, hide tanning, fiber arts, woodworking, blacksmithing, timber framing, and more. Check out their website to learn more.

Upcoming classes include:

  • Fiber Basketry: August 30th

  • Beaded Earrings: September 1st

  • Hide Tanning: September 4th - 8th

  • Fiber Basketry: September 9th

NOTES & REMINDERS

  • Dead heading: Whenever you are picking flowers, it is helpful to the plant and the garden to snip off any dead/wilting or spent flowers that you see. This allows the plant to focus on new blooms for next week!

  • More Eggs in the Creamery: Aubrie set up a relationship with Green Star Farm, a wonderful West County pastured egg and meat producer, in order to meet more demand for eggs in the creamery. Let us know if you don’t know where to locate the eggs. Thanks, Aubrie!

  • Pint Baskets: Please remember to return / re-use your farm pint baskets.

VOLUNTEER WEDNESDAYS, 8:00-10:00 AM

Interested in some farm therapy? Come out on Wednesday mornings to help us tend the garden and farm together! Find us in the garden or out in the main fields on Wednesdays from 8:00am 'til 10:00 am. People of all abilities welcome, we’ll find something comfortable for you to do!

FARMER’S LOG

Bodies, Faces, and Food

We have a great harvest for you this week with some scrumptious newcomers: Everyone's favorite melon (Sarah's Choice), everyone's favorite cucumber (Striped Armenians), celery, an exotic brassica bursting with flavor (Amara Ethiopian Kale), and a beautiful new variety of arugula.

It was a slightly weird week out here. On Tuesday, Anna tweaked her back. It was freaky at the time, but luckily, it seems it was of the less-serious variety. Anna's feeling strong again and was back in action today. 

Missing Anna for just a few days highlighted a couple things we already knew: 1.) Anna is completely integral to the functioning of this farm. And 2.) Small farms like ours are completely reliant on bodies. Healthy, happy, human bodies.

One of the things we love about the model of CSA we practice here is that it puts a face on those bodies. It allows the faces that eat the food get to know the faces that grow the food and vice versa.

But what's the deal with this crazy model with its upfront payment and free-choice and 2nd tomatoes and u-picking? Where did it come from?

Hear tell…

After World War II, agriculture changed drastically. The mechanization and industrialization of the war turned inward into industry and food production. Farms got bigger and more mechanized; family farms were put out of business; food importing, exporting, and shipping exploded; supermarkets became dominant; even rural communities began losing the neighborly connection to the sources of their food they had once taken for granted.

In reaction to this, people in Japan and Europe began forming groups around a single farms to sidestep the facelessness of food. (Legend has it that one of the first formal such arrangements was a group of Japanese women organizing with a local dairy farmer to get fresh milk... hey, Bramble Tail!). 

In Europe, these arrangements interwove with and were influenced by the work of Rudolph Steiner (an Austrian philosopher who inspired Waldorf Education and Biodynamic Agriculture). Steiner believed that good farming and good land stewardship were so important to our survival and well-being that maybe... just maybe... we should not subject our farms, farmers, and soils to the cut-throat forces of global capitalism, but steward them as communities and see to their good care so that they might provide for us in perpetuity. 

Lots of people agreed.

When it came to food and farms, Steiner thought we should be asking, "What do you need from me to grow me this apple while taking care of the soil, the tree, and yourself," rather than, "How cheaply can I buy this apple from you?"

From the former, Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) was born. With the financial support of neighbors when they need it (Spring!) and in times of need, farmers can rest assured, care for their land and workers, and shower their communities with abundance.

CSA’s thrived in Europe and jumped the Atlantic in the 1980's. Nowadays, the term "CSA" has come to encompass a wide range of practices and relationships. In California, the term often refers to box-subscription retail service without much shared risk.

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We love this more old school way. There is something magical about food and land and all the bodies and faces involved in the cycle coming together in the same place each week.

See you in the fields, 

David (for Kayta & Anna)