Week 7, 2013

July Seventeenth Do you ever wonder how we get it all done? Do you wonder how many people it takes to get the labor done to fill your boxes full of these beautiful vegetables? I’m the orchestrator of this symphony, and I still wonder how we pull it off every week. I’m the lucky gal […]
Week 6, 2013

July Tenth Summer on the farm is busy. From the insects to the birds to the people, the farm is bustling. The farm is vibrating with a low hummmmmm. The lightening bugs, moths and crickets keep the night sky active and the bees and birds keep the day sky alive and moving along. The activity […]
Week 5, 2013

July Second Farming is really mothering. It is a short-term life cycle of germination, birth, and infancy. You nurture your little family along by watering them and feeding them and protecting them from the harsh realities of the big bad word until they are ready to be transplanted into a field wide open to the […]
Week 4, 2013

June Twenty-Sixth We farmers are dirty folks. The earthy kind. We do our best to keep our minds and carrots out of the gutter, but these days we’ve got the “F” word on the mind. Now that we’re parents of a little girl, we try not to use bad words anymore. Not the one you’re […]
Week 3, 2013

June Nineteenth Strong to the finich because you eat your spinach! For the first time in what feels like a very, very long time, it is starting to feel a bit like summer. The warm breeze blows against the sweat on our brow and makes us feel cool, the sound of the neighbors mowing their […]
Week 2, 2013

June Twelfth We find ourselves in another wet week on the farm with more rain in the forecast. We’re a little more hopeful this week because warmer temperatures will remain steady throughout the week providing our plants with the warm, humid and moist weather they will thrive in. We’re getting a little behind on our […]
Week 1, 2013

June Fifth Welcome to the Summer Share deliveries of 2013. We are excited about our 8th year running our little Small Family CSA Farm. We enter this growing season with fresh enthusiasm for life and all things that grow and live. Still, even after “all these years” it is exciting for me to watch all […]
2012-2013 Winter Crossing

CSA Family! Never before has the passing of one season been so markedly magnificent as the summer of 2012. Despite severe drought, record high temperatures and the added challenge of re-learning how to manage our time and energy so that we could share every last drop of it with our new daughter, we grew as a […]
Week 20, 2012

October SeventeenthIn back on tractor: Loras. In top row from left to right: Adrianne, Joe, Jillian, Adam and Steven. In front row, Julie, Olivia and baby Ayla. A completed season. It sounds so golden, so sweet, so much like a fresh-baked apple pie. Baseball has a season. Birds have a season. A well-seasoned cast iron […]
Week 19, 2012

October Tenth A blessed 3/10th of an inch of rain fell on our drought-laden farm on Tuesday. When I woke in the dark of the morning before sunrise and was stiring around the house, I saw rain on the window pane. It felt like salvation, like a reprieve from doing something hard for a very […]
Week 18, 2012

October ThirdHarvesting Broccoli I have fallen into a place of routine. I’m not sure if it’s my age, my stage in life, or my zodiac sign or enniagram, but I value the stability of a day and a home and a farm that runs smooth with the essence of constancy, sustainability and predictability. Well oil, […]
Week 17, 2012
September Twenty-Sixth A heavy frost settled over the farm on Saturday and Sunday night. The frost brings determined closure to some crops on the farm that can no longer survive with lows in the 30’s. We loose some of our warm weather favorites like basil and tomatoes, but our beloved fall spinach, kale, carrots and broccoli […]
Week 16, 2012

September 19th One of the major benefits of belonging to a CSA farm is that when the ‘gettin’ is good’, there is a lot to be gotten. The CSA boxes are heavy and colorful and full of scents and textures that will delight or entertain almost all of our senses. We begin to feel rich […]
Week 15, 2012

September Twelfth The winds of Fall blew onto the farm this week. It feels a little like taking a nap in the middle of the day and waking up slightly disoriented. The days have suddenly become shorter in a way that doesn’t feel fair. I sometimes think that someone is laundering time from me. Like […]
Week 14, 2012

September Fifth My neighborhood is wonderful. I love the people who live on the farm and farmettes around me. I love the rolling hillside, the cold water that comes from 350ft deep below ground level and spills out of my kitchen tap, and the gusty winds that blow in from the west on our tiny […]
Week 13, 2012

August Twenty-Nineth Harvest season is in full force on the farm. It feels like we are spending almost every day harvesting something which is leaving very little time left over for weeding or for harvesting and cleaning storage crops. We’re almost non stop picking cucumbers, zucchini, tomatoes and cherry tomatoes every-other-day. We’re harvesting green beans […]
Week 12, 2012

August Twenty-Second It seems to be the way of our times today to move very quickly, become very successful and lead productive lives. I understand this concept very clearly and almost to a fault some days. Even on a farm where we are literally surrounded with food, it can be difficult to find the time […]
Week 11, 2012

August Fifteenth In all of the years that we’ve been farming, none have been like this one. I’m not talking about the long drought or the intese heat this time, I’m referring to my frame of mind and our level of progress as farmers. This may be the first season ever, in my career as […]
Week 10, 2012

August Eighth It’s high tide at the Small Family Farm. All systems are in peak production. The ball that we’ve been pushing up hill all Spring and Early Summer has reached the top and is now beginning to roll back down the hill. It is gaining momentum and there is no stopping it now. The […]
Week 9, 2012

August First It takes a very special kind of person who succeeds in farming. The lifestyle is such that it demands more from you on a daily bases than what you have to give. Your job is to keep things alive, be it animals or plants. In an ideal world, a good farmer would have […]