Volume 22, Week 8
Full share &🌛yellow🌜half shares
218 Gates Avenue between Classon and Franklin
(IMPACCT Brooklyn at the Gibbs Mansion)
5:00 to 7:30 pm
Sign up for a granola share by 7/24!
New share alert!! Fort Greene Granola is offering full and half shares beginning July 27th! They’ll be on site this week and next to give samples and answer any questions. The deadline to sign up is July 24th. For more information and to sign up, click here!
Order extra local goodies from Pleasant Valley Farm!!
As many of you know, Lewis Waite Farms went out of business this past winter. The good news is that their neighbor, Pleasant Valley Farm, has purchased much of their inventory and will be selling high-quality poultry, beef, pantry goods, and many other products. If there's enough interest, they'll be delivering every other week starting next Thursday, July 25. You can find more information and place an order here.
This week’s share
Tendersweet cabbage
Fennel
Red onions
Swiss chard
Beets
Dill
Zucchini or summer squash
Tomatoes
Fruit: Yonder Farm’s peaches
Extras: eggs, bread, mushrooms
News from Windflower Farm
Distribution #8, Week of July 17
Water, water everywhere. We’ve had 15” of rain since the beginning of June, more than half of it since the beginning of July. Last year, we had about 4” in the same period. Ponds, creeks, and rivers everywhere are swollen and brown with runoff. Lake Champlain has risen an incredible 26” in the last two weeks. Our barnyard is all puddles. Our fields are all mud, with standing water in low places.
We need several days of drying out or we’ll begin to experience losses. So far, we have lost our garlic crop and we will till under plantings of spinach and arugula because we have not been able to cultivate them. I worry about our winter squashes, and our cucumbers are on the way out because the storms have brought spores of the fungus causing downy mildew northward from its overwintering grounds in the Mid-Atlantic. Succession plantings have been delayed. Our greenhouse has a backlog of lettuce, broccoli, squash, and cabbage.
Vegetable growers’ listservs have lit up with questions about disease management in a very wet season. One wonders, for example, if there is a fungicide approved under USDA’s organic farming rules that is actually effective against downy mildew of cucumber or basil? Or against early blight or Septoria of tomato? Answers: No and no. Organic disease management is all about variety selection and pre-planting cultural considerations.
Small farms are fragile. The limited financial reserves most small-scale farmers have leave them especially vulnerable. I am reminded of how grateful I am for the CSA model and your willingness to share in our risk every time I think of our own exposure. I’ve been hearing that several of the Vermont farms that were hit by last week’s intense rainfall are on the brink of insolvency. Just as they were about to market their crops and begin to repay their operating loans, their crops were lost to flooding.
Farming is a risky business, and weeds, diseases, and insect infestations are just a beginning. Having little control over the environment in which we work is especially challenging during seasons with extreme weather. Most of us struggle in the high heat and humidity, naturally dislike extended periods of work in the rain, and cannot work in the mud. Prolonged rainfall prevents us from making timely plantings and makes effective weed control nearly impossible.
So, we’re struggling. But I don’t want to close on an entirely gloomy note. We have a fair amount of high ground, and potatoes, summer squashes, peppers, eggplants, sweet corn, tomatoes, sweet potatoes, onions, leeks, beets, and a variety of leafy greens look good. Good things will continue to come along. But the Dutch may have it right: we may have to work toward a future where we grow everything under cover.
Have a good week, Ted
Recipes
Pasta with raw tomato sauce, a beet salad with feta and dill!, and my personal favorite - shaved fennel salad
Did you know? Our website has recipes, food storage tips, and information about the vegetables you might come across in your share!