Saturday, December 14, 2013

join our tiny letter

Sometimes a blog post is too much. Sometimes an instagram post is not enough. Sometimes rambling is fun. If you want to keep in touch with the farm in another way, try out our tiny letter.


We hope you will enjoy the musings that occur there and that you will subscribe.
You can also read the letter archive on the subscribe page.
So far we have one letter.
It's the first one.


Saturday, November 2, 2013

A survey: Improving Furlong Forest Farm

If you are a CSA member of Furlong Forest Farm we will be sending you a special survey of 10 questions relating your experience with the 2013 CSA season.

If you are not currently a member, but might be a member in the future, or will never be a member, or you are a member of a different CSA, are a follower of us on Instagram, or have happened upon this blog by chance, or you are a family member, a friend, a neighbor, or someone from the other side of the world, we would like to invite you to take a separate 10 question survey that might help us to gather some information on people's preferences, likes/dislikes, or general chatter on CSAs and vegetables, fruits, herbs, and flowers.

Please feel free to fill out the following survey we created through survey monkey. We thank you for taking the time to consider our questions.

Click here for survey - Improving Furlong Forest Farm

Sunday, October 27, 2013

Harvest Days

Here's a collection of photos from some of our big harvest days.

Onion Harvest
July 13th we had a good stand of different onion varieties growing. We didn't grow as many onions as we had hope this year, mostly due to our inability to get the beds prepared in time. We had some early onion seedlings of australian brown and red and yellow cipollini that never got planted because we started them early and had beds ready too late and most of the seedlings didn't make it. We ended up having to buy 6packs of onion seedlings from Occidental Arts and Ecology Center. They worked out fine, but we didn't have as many onions as what we had planned for.  The varieties we grew this year were red weathersfield, red creole, newburg, walla walla, yellow cipollini,  deep purple scallion, and welsh onion.





 

We took out the bulk of the onion varieties by July 31st because they were starting to get some kind of mold on the leaves. We finished the curing process by building a makeshift shade structure for them to hang out on until ready for boxes.


By September 1st, we took out the last variety of onion, the walla walla sweet onions. We tried to leave them in the ground as long as possible to get a little bit bigger since they didn't have as big of a moldy leaf issue.



Potato Harvest

We've had various potato harvest days as we wanted to dig them up the day of or the day before they would go into a box. We grew a few different varieties of potatoes: canela russet, mountain rose, purple majesty, and la ratte. We tried to pick types that were early, mid and late season varieties to see which we would have the best success with. So far, we think that the fingerling potatoes, la ratte, have done the best for us. We only have some photos from one harvest day when we took out our first potatoes of mountain rose and purple majesty. 





Just a small harvest for the first round of mountain rose and purple majesty. We have 8 potato boxes and each seemed to have various success rates. We are still trying to figure out the perfect potato growing conditions on our very gopher-centric farm. We won't be able to grow potatoes in these boxes for a handful of years as we need to rotate our crops to prevent disease. I think for next year, we might grow some herbs in some, some sunchokes in some and we'll see what else we can come up with.


the end of that one potato harvest day and the sun was going down and the clouds lit up in the sky.

Bean Harvesting

In early August, our bean beds were a lush stand of bush beans and semi-pole bean climbers. We harvested a little bit for green beans, but mostly our goal was to do the long wait for dry beans.


By late August, we had made one harvest of the earliest dry bush beans of calypso. We had to stash the curing pods in various places around our property and the farm.


And by early September, we were able to start harvesting some of the other dry beans. We put the small batches into pillow cases and hung them on our shady tree to continue to cure. 


By the end of September, the rest of the dry beans were ready to harvest. The weather was cooling and there were many mornings with dampness that would bring about molds that would settle onto the pods. We needed to get the rest of them out of the field so we could start the process of cleaning them. 






We got a a good amount of dry beans from all the varieties we grew, but we think our best was swedish brown, a Yeti favorite. Our other varieties we grew were red hopi and yellow hopi, calypso, and painted pony.

During one work party day, we did a blind taste test and we got some great feedback from our friends and their tested palates. First they got to look at all the bean varieties with two kinds thrown in that we weren't growing to confuse them, and then everyone was blindfolded and given a spoonful of each bean. The blindfolds were then removed and they had a chance to write down their thoughts on which variety it was and any notes on flavor and texture.


Yellow hopi was too thick skinned, as was painted pony. Red hopi had a nice soft texture and a good beany taste, while calypso was well liked for the most part, but swedish brown came out on top in flavor and texture. All around our best bean for both growing ease and in the taste test!

We've also had harvest days for sunflowers



Harvest days of our special peppers



These two photos below of the comapenos shows some oddly huge chiles!!



We've also been harvesting our hungarian paprikas for drying so we can have some spice in the winter months.


And on our final day with the cucumbers on October 21st, we started a fermentation of some lemon cucumber pickles



 It was also our final day for our cherry tomatoes so we plucked off as many green tomato clusters as possible to continue ripening in our pantry at home.... until next season cherry tomatoes!


Saturday, September 28, 2013

Tomatoes - who's who?


Time for figuring out which tomatoes are which in those CSA boxes. We are trying out a variety of cherry tomatoes this year as we are looking into figuring out which varieties to continue with for next year and if we grow them next year, we will start to save seed from the best plants. We ended up having to purchase our cherry tomato plants because the seedlings we were hoping to grow did not happen for us. For some reason the seed we used just never germinated. By mid May we had to do something if we wanted cherry tomatoes at all. So, we did the only thing we could do which was buy some plants...

We set up our cherry tomato beds so that they went from Red to red to small red to brown to orange to Yellow to yellow. A nice rainbow effect!

Listed below are some varying opinions of flavor:

Alan Chadwick cherry
size: big!
flavor: sweet and meaty or savory salty
grow again: yes!



Peacevine

size: small to very small
flavor: sweet and juicy or juicier than Alan Chadwick
grow again: maybe
Brown cherry

size: medium
flavor: tart
grow again: maybe

Sungold

size: small
flavor: very sweet or bright and sweet
grow again: yes!
Chello
size: medium big
flavor: tart
grow again: maybe
yellow Reisentraub
size: very small
flavor: sweet
grow again: yes!

Now here's some pictures of the other tomatoes we are growing. We have our slicers and our pastes.

Slicer tomatoes:
Nyagous

size: medium
flavor: juicy and sweet
grow again: no
Nyagous
Moonglow
size: medium to large
flavor: firm flesh for slicing
grow again: maybe

Paste tomatoes:

San Marzano

size: medium
flavor: very firm flesh not super sweet
grow again: yes

Principe Borghese

size: small
flavor: mealy but sweet
grow again: yes!


The paste tomatoes have already gone through two trials of sauce making. So far we thing they make great sauce both on their own and mixed together. We threw them into the pot whole without cutting at all, just removed the stems. While they do have thick skins, we were able to sieve them out with a bit of work and by using the only colander type kitchen gadget we had. We got about 6-7 quart sized jars each time from about  more or less 28lbs of tomatoes.




Still got plenty of paste tomatoes hanging. More saucing is in our future for sure!

Monday, September 2, 2013

Summer at the Farm

Ahhh... summer. Summer took a long time to make its presence known this year. We were patiently waiting for all of our summer veggies to spring into action for the CSA. We can officially say that summer is here by September. Not ideal when you want to provide your CSA members with lots of summer fruits and veggies during June, July, and August, but that's just how it is in our area and in our little microclimate of a valley.

The months of July and August had us busy with weeding, and weeding, compost pile making, preparing to sow and plant some beds, and watching patiently as our fruits and veggies ripened. Each day feels like a hundred years, as you stare at the same tomato day after day waiting for it to be big and red and juicy (or small and yellow and sweet). But, by late August it's all worth it when you've got more tomatoes and cucumbers and melons and squash and peppers than you know what to do with!

In July:



We began to plant into our keyhole block.  We had made the decision that this area would be a perennial herb area, so we have lots of holy basil (aka tulsi), and then a few plants of sage, roselle, thyme, lemongrass, lovage, dill, summer savory, and sculpit. And some things are popping up that we had planted last year like a couple of shiso plants. Over time we'll fill in the square area surrounding the keyhole with flowers and herbs.


 We planted a bed of different types of Italian varieties of chicory. There's puntarelle, grumolo, and frastagliata. No idea what the names really mean, but we are looking forward to trying some new things. We love the taste of bitter chicory greens, so hopefully these are delicious.


From the northerly view, the garden is lush with growth and many things are in full bloom and their fruits are beginning to develop.


By July 18th, we had our first cherry tomato of the season. The weather had been so cool that we didn't really get our first crop of tomatoes until August 2nd, and even then it was only enough for 4 tomatoes for each member box! Our tomatoes didn't really take off until August 17th.


But, finally by July we were able to provide strawberries from the farm itself. In the beginning, we were buying them from another local farmer to put in the boxes. And now we've had plenty of strawberries each week. And some are huge!


In August:

It always surprises me how much growth can occur in one month. I take pictures nearly every time I am out at the garden as it becomes somewhat of a photo documentation of how things were on a particular day, how long it took for something to germinate, how long before they flower, how long before they fruit, how long it takes for a fruit to get to a certain size, how long it took us from the planting date to the harvest date. 


By August 3rd the chicories looked like this


And then by August 23rd they looked like this.

We had some friends come and visit and give us a hand in the garden removing all of our broccoli, cabbage, and kale plants that had seen better days or were done with their veggie providing stage. We had to chop down all the plants, then build a huge compost pile layered with the green materials and then with brown materials we had stockpiled around the garden. The pile ended up being up to my neck.







By late August the pile cooked down to this size. Compost it will surely be by the time we get to using it for the beds.

It's been wonderful to watch the growth of each of our different winter squash varieties. We should have a lot of each, plenty for our members and plenty to last us through the winter.

tromboncino
spaghetti
jarrahdale
tromboncino
butternut
jack o' lantern
spaghetti
jarrahdale
butternut
tromboncino
jack o' lantern
jack o' lantern

And the peppers are ripening.

jimmy nardello
huatusco
huatusco
And we've got tomatoes too!

anaheim peppers and nyagous with a grasshopper and cherry tomatoes

alan chadwick, peacevine, brown cherry, sungold, chello, yellow reisentraub and nyagous

We'll leave you with a September 2nd sunflower shot. Remember those sunflowers sown in June? We just got our first sunflower heads blooming! Happy Summer!


Soon a post on some of our other big harvest events: onions, potatoes, and beans! Oh my!