banner
CSA Week 22 - Autumnal Praise
News
Expected Harvest
Fall Feast
by Farmer Derek
Autumn farmscape.
Harvest #22 (Week B) should include bok choy, celery, potatoes, cauliflower, salad radishes, hakurei turnips, beets, kohlrabi, winter squash, onions, lettuce, romaine, garlic, arugula, swiss chard, red mustard, kale, and italian dandelion. Some items will be a choice. U-pick should include herbs and flowers.
Notes From The Field
Out of the Fields
by Farmer Derek
We missed the opportunity to take pictures while harvesting sweet potatoes but here is proof that they're no longer in the soil. Following harvest, we sowed the final round of cover crop seeds (winter rye) and incorporated them with the disc harrow. The sweet potatoes need to 'cure' in heated storage for a couple of weeks where they'll slowly convert starches to sugars.
I know I think and say this way too often, but I do love this time of year. It's the combination of perfect weather for working in, the colors of the farmscape, the worklist getting shorter, the fields looking nice and tidy, and the shrinking of the farm footprint that we need to be conscious of right now. It's also the comfort that comes with stowing a good harvest of roots, tubers, and storage crops to carry us through many weeks of CSA distribution. Yields of almost all crops this fall have been ideally satisfying. I can't think of one crop I'm disappointed with. On the other hand, I don't think anything is what I would call a 'bumper', more just a perfect amount below that threshold. Our goal over the next five weeks of Main Season and the following five weeks of Late Fall will be to distribute shares that are an ideal balance between fresh greens and lettuces, roots and tubers, necessary alliums, and specialty crops like fennel, celery, cabbage, and napa, all while trying to give you as much choice as possible in the pick up room.
Our list of storage crops to pull out of the ground continues to shrink. With the aforementioned sweet potatoes successfully retrieved, what's left includes rutabaga (everybody's favorite!); the final round of beets; more storage radishes (if needed); napa, red, and savoy cabbages; and hopefully carrots (sown late after an unexpected initial germination failure).
While in storage crops still need to be maintained. Moisture and temperature requirements vary. We are fortunate to have three separate crop storage facilities. Sweet potatoes are currently curing at 75 degrees in their own room with the remnants of the winter squash harvest. Potatoes and onions share a cold and dry storage room set at 45 degrees. All other storage crops go in our moist and cold cooler, set at 38 degrees. In there we still monitor the crops and occasionally hose them down with water. Space constraints are still an issue. Each unit is the size of an old horse stall, because that's what they were. Rumor has it that when there is a full moon on Halloween on a Friday a horse named Anchor runs out of the barn with a cabbage, a squash, and a potato on its back.
Workshifts for Week of 10/17/22
by Farmer Derek
Farmers Craig, Gabby, and Sarah preparing soil in the greenhouse for the very final round of 2022 transplants.
There will be weekly work opportunities through the first week of November. Over the next few weeks we'll be harvesting roots and tubers, pulling weeds, splitting garlic bulbs into cloves, and transplanting and mulching those cloves.
Dividing garlic bulbs into cloves will be easy-on-the-body work in the barn and will take place over a few shifts during the latter half of October and/or early November.
If you signed up for a CSA share with work discount but are unable to work please consider remitting payment in lieu of work sooner rather that later.

This week's workshift schedule:
  • Tuesday 10/18 10am-12pm
  • Wednesday 10/19 10am-12pm
  • Friday 10/21 10am-12pm
  • Sunday 10/23 8-10am (garlic bulb splitting in/near barn)
Bring gloves, water, a hat, sturdy shoes, and a pad for kneeling (if necessary for you)!
We meet under the large red maple at the end of the barn by the pick up room.
Reminder: Registration Open for 2022 Late Fall, 2023 Main Season
by Farmer Derek
Autumn color scheme.
Sign up for your continued share of the harvest!
The 5-week Late Fall CSA commences the week of November 21 and wraps up the week of December 19. Follow this link to join.
2023 Main Season CSA will run 28 weeks from Mid-May through Thanksgiving. Sign up and pay in full by 12/31/22 to receive the current 5% discount on share prices. Follow this link to join.
Herb of the Week: Echinacea
by Gia Yaccarino

Greenhouse receiving its new skin.
Echinacea (Purple coneflower) (Echinacea spp)
Benefits
  • Supports the immune system
  • May reduce anxiety
  • Helps regulate blood sugar
  • High in antioxidants
Uses
  • You can make a tea with the petals and leaves, use one to two teaspoons of the dry material per one cup of water. Steep in boiling water for fifteen to twenty minutes.
Caution
  • Echinacea might worsen autoimmune mediated disease such as RA, MS and Lupus
  • Those allergic to daisies, chrysanthemums, marigolds, ragweed might experience an allergic reaction to Echinacea
Safe for Cats: Yes
Safe for Dogs: Yes