August Vegetable Planting

Thursday, August 13th, 2009

In an effort not to have to send out seventeen million emails to the friends and family asking me what vegetables to plant right now – here’s a post. Go get dirrty!

Leafy Greens -

Lettuce
Chard
Kale
Cabbage
Arugula
Spinach

These can all be planted now and in successions until November. You may not get your last crop due to the weather, but if you do you’ll be happy you planted it. Sow seeds or plant plugs every two – three weeks.
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Driving Tractor

Saturday, July 11th, 2009

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Garlic Time

Wednesday, July 8th, 2009

Hands down the best place to buy garlic (other than from me of course!)

Now is the time to get orders in for quality garlic. The tiny bulbs you can buy at the nurseries are crap…. Buy now, plant in September, harvest next July!

Not my beets!

Tuesday, June 9th, 2009

I’m not quite sure about the percentages… because I’ve heard mixed numbers from different sources – but just read about beets.

Farm wildflowers from yesterday

Friday, May 1st, 2009



All Photo’s owned by Jennifer Segale

The last of the sunflowers

Saturday, January 10th, 2009


The last of the sunflowers were pulled out of the garden last week. They looked good for a while thanks to the cold weather, but recent frosty nights were their final demise.
Once the secondary heads start looking tired or you don’t see them enlarging from one week to the next, you know they are finished. It was a shame since they harbored a perfect growing condition for a few types of mushrooms. Portabellas were particularly happy, multiplying in the compost that surrounded the sunflowers for the past six months.
After Octavio pulled up the sunflowers, he placed them in the compost pile, not knowing how slow they can decompose. The next day I raked they down from the pile, and stacked them neatly to be cut up. As I snipped them into six inch sections, I was thinking it a shame that the sturdy stems could not be dried and used for stakes for seedlings or something. But they tend to get very brittle once fully dried out, so I went back to snipping. Some of the stems were completely covered in beetles and other bugs, I let them be and chopped up the rest, then tossed them back onto the warm compost pile.
The flower strip in the garden will finish the cold season with calendula, a couple small nasturtiums, and a couple stringy marigolds. Vetch cover crop fills in the gaps and amends the soil as it grows.

First Frost of the Season

Monday, December 8th, 2008


Last Monday morning I showed up to the farm in my normal shoe attire: Uggs. After walking through field C for 10 minutes my toes were completely soaked and I was getting cold and cranky. Luckily I had my duffel bag of extra Winter gear in my truck; I threw on another jacket, gloves and my wellies and went off in the garden.
Days before we laid a think layer of horse manure and stall shavings over an unruly patch of weeds in field C. I knew the weeds would eventually grow through it, but any thick application of a mulch helps. When I walked through the field on Monday, I was surprised to see and feel frost on the ground. I felt worried for the tiny pea seeds I had planted a few days before, but the crunching of frost under my wellies was a nice welcome to Winter.