September 12, 2011
Distribution Week #14
braising greens

Waltham Fields Community Farm

CSA Newsletter

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What's in the share this week...

This list is prepared before we harvest your share. Some guesswork is involved! We do our best to predict which crops will be ready to harvest, but sometimes crops are on the list that are not in the share, and sometimes crops will be in the share even though they're not on the list.   

 

Mix-and-Match this week from a list that may include:  

Pick-Your-Own Crops   

You are welcome to harvest the PYO portion of the share during any daylight hours, 7 days a week. Please check the board at the little red kiosk for information on amounts, locations and picking instructions. Remember, you can pick one time per week but it doesn't necessarily have to be at the same time you are picking up your share      

  • Raspberries
  • Chiles
  • Cherry tomatoes
  • Plum tomatoes
  • Green beans
  • Cilantro
  • Basils:  Italian, Thai, purple, lemon and lime 
  • Dill
  • Parsley
  • Perennial herbs & flowers

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Quick Links

Upcoming events at the Farm

Save the Date: 

Waltham Farm Day
Saturday, Sept. 24th, 2-5pm
FREE event, open to all
Join us in celebrating MA Harvest for Students Week and farming in Waltham!  More details to come soon.

 

 

Turtle Creek Winery CSA Day

 

Sunday, Sept. 25, Anytime between 12 and 4pm

At the winery - 28 Beaver Pond Rd.  Lincoln, MA

 

What better way to round out your weekend after coming to our Waltham Farm Day event on Saturday than to wake up Sunday and head on over to winemaker Kip Kulmer's home in Lincoln, MA to tour the grounds and sample his wines.  For the past two years, Kip has brought his Turtle Creek Winery products to our farm, but this year he is inviting our CSA shareholders to his place.  For anyone interested in purchasing 12 or more bottles of wine when they are there, a 15% discount is being offered.  The following wines will be available for sampling and purchase on CSA Day:

 

2010 Chardonnay

2009 Syrah

2009 Zinfandel

2009 Cabernet Sauvignon

2009 Pinot Noir Reserve (at a special price)

2009 Cabernet Franc Reserve (at a special price)

2008 Late Harvest Zinfandel

 

Hot Sauce/Salsa

 

Shareholder Elise writes in ... I made a delicious salsa/hot sauce using many farm ingredients.  I never measure or follow a recipe, so here is my guesstimate as to what I used:

 

1/2-1 tomato

1 close garlic

1/2 small onion

2 jalapeno and 2 serrano peppers (adjust according to how spicy you like it, this was hot)

5-6 tomatillos (boiled 1-2 mins to remove skin)

juice of one lime

1-2 teaspoons agave to mellow heat (optional)

salt to taste

 

I threw everything into a little puree-er and pulsed until is was a good consistency, no chopping.

  

Enjoy!


Do you have a favorite recipe you make with farm produce that you'd like to share!?

Send it on in!

 

Children's Learning Garden After-School Programs

Cucumbers

 

Come enjoy the excitement of fall on the farm!

 

Check out the Waltham Recreation Department Website for more details!

For grades K-2: Tuesdays, September 20th-October 25th, 3:30-5pm. For grades 3-5: Thursdays, September 22nd-October 27th, 3:30-5pm. 

 

Register Today!

 

Notes from the Field:  Cover Crops

 

radishesAs much as we love the edible fruits of our labors, some of the most satisfying crops we grow are ones that we don't harvest. A key part of organic farming, at least in our non-governmentally-approved definition, is the building of soil. In our minds, this means creating a resilient and healthy ecosystem filled with micro-organisms from insects and worms to bacteria and fungi, with a physical structure and chemical balance that supports crops as they take root quickly, grow vigorously, and become a robust plant that tastes delicious and yields well. In the rest of our bodies - well, you can just tell when the soil is good. Digging sweet potatoes last week, we were overjoyed by the dark, crumbly, rich texture, easy to sink a fork into and filled with earthworms. In the broccoli field near the CSA shed, the dark blue color of the plants is an indicator of their vitality. In the very dry days of midsummer, though, the soil seems to lose structure, and plants don't take off the same way; we have significant disease issues in several of our crop families; and there are 'trouble spots' in some of the fields where plants act different, remaining small and spindly despite getting the same treatment as their companions in other rows. We have a ways to go before our soil is exactly the way we want it.

 

One of the ways that we work to leave our soil better than we found it - a tall order, since it is inherently prime agricultural land -- is by planting cover crops, sometimes also called 'green manures'.  These are crops that grow in the fields when we don't have cash crops there, and while all are key soil builders, keeping the soil in place and adding organic matter when they are turned back in, some have specific jobs to do.  In the early spring for the past few years, we have planted field peas on land that doesn't need to get planted into vegetables until late May or June.  Peas are great nitrogen fixers, capturing nitrogen from the atmosphere and converting it to a form that is useable for crop plants that follow them; this means we can reduce the amount of fertilizer we apply to those crops when they do go into the ground.  Peas also disappear quickly when we turn them into warm late-spring soil, so they are great early season green manures.   

 

This year, on the recommendation of the wise farmers at Roxbury Farm, we tried an early season mix of peas, oats, and bell beans -- a kind of small fava bean -- before some of our fall broccoli and cauliflower.  The beans and peas re both nitrogen fixers, and the oats, which come up quickly, are a 'nurse crop' grain, adding organic matter and bringing up minerals from the soil.  We seeded this cover crop in April, turned it in with the tractor in mid-June, and planted the brassica crops in July.  The result, with a little help from some alfalfa meal and kelp meal, is the beautiful blue-green field beyond the CSA shed -- the plants there are big and strong and healthy, despite being planted in the midst of the dry weather back in the middle of the summer.  They are maturing quickly, each variety in its own time, the way we like them to, and are not succumbing to any of the many diseases or pests that can sometimes plague their family at this time of year.  It's interesting to compare that field with the one behind the plum tomatoes, which also has broccoli and cauliflower in it, but following a cash crop of snap and snow peas rather than the cover crop mix.  These were also planted about two weeks later, so they are smaller for a reason; we'll see what the final harvest and disease picture looks like, but the initial results of our highly unscientific experiment in cover crop management are positive.   

 

beets and chardAt this time of year, we start seeding cover crop combinations on all the land where the vegetable crops are finishing up for the season.  We generally try to plant pairs of crops, including a legume to fix nitrogen (which is otherwise a very mobile nutrient that is easily lost fo the atmosphere or groundwater) and a grain to hold the soil in place over the winter, collect minerals, and add organic matter when they are incorporated.  From the beginning of August through the beginning of September,  if we have any space that we're not immediately re-planting with fall greens, we like to seed oats and field peas.  These two crops grow through the fall and then 'winter kill' in our climate, forming a beautiful golden mat that is very easy to turn in in the spring, perfect for early crops like beets and carrots.  After about the second week of September, oats and peas probably don't have enough time to put on good growth in the fall, so we seed a second cover crop pair, rye and hairy vetch.  In this pair, vetch is the legume and rye the grain.  Vetch, rumored to be a more efficient nitrogen fixer than peas, is also a good weed suppressor and soil conditioner -- but it is slow to establish and needs the 'nursing' of the rye to help bring it along.  Both of these crops will survive the winter in Massachusetts and resume growing in  the spring -- sometimes too vigorously, if we don't keep an eye on them!  We sometimes mow them right when the vetch begins to flower (usually in May) and then turn them in with a moldboard plow or disk harrow before making beds for our crops.   


If you walk around the farm at this time of year, you'll see it all:  crops right at the peak of their growth, like the broccoli; crops that are finished, like the tomatoes; crops that have already been turned in, like the crops in our around-the-corner field just beyond the treeline.  If you look carefully, you can see the delicate spears of the oats and the curly tops of the peas just coming up in the furrows where the disk harrow scratches them in.  They are especially beautiful in the early morning when they carry a heavy blanket of dew.  To me, the sight of these crops feels deeply right -- it means that we were able to get our crop out, get the weeds turned under (weeds, by the way, should not be underestimated as cover crops in their own right, although sometimes they can host pests or diseases that can have a negative effect on the following crop), and get the cover crop planted -- a 'thank-you' to the soil, and a way to help prepare the fields for the season to come.     

 

 Enjoy the harvest!

 

-Amanda, Andy, Erinn, Dan, Larisa and Lauren

Waltham Fields Community Farm Staff  

Claire Kozower, Executive Director

Jericho Bicknell, Education & Volunteer Coordinator

Amanda Cather, Farm Manager

Andy Scherer, Field Manager

Dan Roberts, Field Manager

Erinn Roberts, Greenhouse & Field Manager

Marla Rhodes, Development Coordinator

Deb Guttormsen, Bookkeeper & Tech Coordinator

 

 

Assistant Growers/Farmers in Training:

Larisa Jacobson, Lauren Weinberg

 

Farm Crew:

Rachel Dutton, Andy Friedberg, Courtney Giancaterino, Rachel Kaplan, Sam Powers, Shira Tiffany, Laura Van Tassel

 

Learning Garden Educators:

Marie Benkley, Rebekah Carter, Kristin Cleveland, Dede Dussault, Paula Jordan

 

Summer Fellow (from Stanford's Center for Public Service):

Joanna Rosene-Mirvis

 

www.communityfarms.org          781-899-2403  

Waltham Fields Community Farm | 240 Beaver Street | Waltham | MA | 02452