Radish seed in the hopper, ready to sow |
I've pretty much been running non-stop since my last post. Well, not running, perhaps, but walking, bending, digging, squatting, weeding, lifting, pulling, watering, driving, selling....
Basically, the rain stopped and it's been all farming, all the time, ever since.
An almost-ripe Pluot |
Our two newest farmily members, Chicha and Boda |
The season has brought with it daily lessons. We've grown some beautiful veggies, as well as entire beds that failed completely. We spent hours thinning fruit and pruning our apple trees when their branch tips started drying up and dying only to discover two weeks later that codling moth had bored its way into nearly all the fruit. Farming this season has been an entirely different experience from farming last year. While a half-acre of 200 foot-long beds is shaped by a tractor in a half hour over at the Ranch, Eric and I, with the help of our generous volunteers, spend half a day shaping three or four 90 foot-long beds with a tiller, shovels and rakes. Luckily, we have the help of some awesome, enthusiastic friends and volunteers. We couldn't do it without them.
A view of the garden back in May |
It's so easy to get wrapped up in how the plants are doing, and how much we're selling or not selling to restaurants and farmers' market customers. We have to keep reminding ourselves that this year, selling veggies is not the point. All the lessons--the bed of bolted radishes, the realization that selling kale might never really pay the bills, the harvest morning spent training and managing ten new volunteers--
that's the point. And with all those beautiful, delicious berries we didn't sell at the market the other day, it's a great excuse for strawberry shortcake.
Perfect berry |