Posts Tagged ‘labor’

Natural Weed Eaters

February 29th, 2012
Daily Grace Farms | Blog

chickens

As you can see the portable pen built to help combat winter weeds was a huge success! The beds have never been in this good of shape so early in the season.  I am loving this new system, low labor and low maintenance.


Patience and test fields

June 14th, 2009
Coyote House Farm | Blog

Test fields are not fun.  Here is why:

1. They are little.  If they go well, you wish you planted more.  If they do poorly you end up telling yourself, “I could kill a hydrogen atom!  What am I doing with my life?”

2. They are little.  Your peers say, “We just made our first shipment of 24 varieties to Africa!  The famine is over!  President Obama is here to thank us, so I have to go.  We are so excited!”  You say, “We have radishes!  Oh, wait. No.  The rabbits got them.”

3. They are little.  I picked a couple zucchini this weekend.

Test fields are a good idea.  Here is why:

1. They are little.  Our cost outlay could be handled in a single ATM withdrawal.

2. They are little.  Yellow Star Poopyhead Thistle can only grow around so much border.

3. They are little.  Less to turn, water, plant, and generally spend labor on.

And we have learned so much.  Here are a few things:

1. 400 square feet takes 86 gallons per week in our summer to water.  This is a mathematical input to our infrastructure planning process.

2. The cheap fishing line deer fence seems to work.  At least for now.  We didn’t have to invest in 7’ fencing.

3. We have rabbits.  They like radishes.  They do not like basil, potatoes, or squash (much).

4. Vegetables are far more expensive to produce in our climate than fruit.  This will be an input on our production plan and revenue plan.

5. Vegetables take up more labor.  See above.

6. You may as well plant on the moon if you don’t amend the soil here.  We compared potatoes here in Palermo to those we grew in Pacifica.  Even with a later start in cool, wet Pacifica, they outperformed the Palermo crop significantly.  The Pacifica plot had a cover crop the season previous and compost.  With proper amending, we should be able to grow that thing from “Little Shop of Horrors” by the row.

7. Raised rows will be the way to go after we amend.  We need to figure out some other things before we do the intensive beds.

8. Double digging gets out the rocks, but will be a waste until we amend down the clay.  Compaction comes back quickly.

9.    Get big farm logo stickers to cover up the tooth marks on the veggies.  No, not really.

This is a start, and there are other things yet to know.  The “learnings” we have gathered (I really don’t like that word) suggest we should continue adding trees in the coming season and build soil through cover cropping, gypsum, and perhaps some compost.  Our field may not be much bigger until we get indications that our soil has arrived at a profitable point.

I started getting worried about being a tree farmer out here.  Everyone grows tree fruit.  Where is the differentiation?  Then I remember that our market is going to be in the Bay Area where the tree fruit market is not saturated.  We won’t give up on the vegetables, but with our water and labor constraints that offering will be limited until we change our resource basis.

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Labor

May 24th, 2009
Honey in the Heart Farm | Blog
I’ve been feeling tired lately, and sore.  Farming is very physical and there’s always more to be done than can be possibly be done.  We’ve been calling everyone who’s expressed interest in volounteering and trying to get as much help as possible during this crunch time of getting stuff in the ground.  It’s a very messed up issue, the whole practice of farm labor in this country.  Farmers just can’t get enough for their product to support paying employees a… Read the rest of this article »

My Apologies

September 2nd, 2008
Four Frog Farm | Blog
So it has been a long time since my last blog. I am sorry for all those avid fans of mine, who have been waiting endlessly for my now, monthly updates. Life has seemed to take a big turn since our help has arrived. Farming hasn’t been that secluded life of living on the land fantasy. It has been much more social and vaired than I could have ever thought. Our days and nights are very full of activity. It seems like everyone in town wants to make friends with their local farmers. It has been… Read the rest of this article »

Sunday Morning On The Farm

September 2nd, 2008
Four Frog Farm | Blog
Sunday Morning at the farm.  I’m sure it’s pretty glorious.  I live a little bit away from the farm (20-25 minutes), so I am rarely there on Sunday morn.  It’s my morning off.  I am going there later to water the onion flats and switch some watering in the main field. Next year it looks like I’ll be farming on a 10 acre piece of land right down the road from where I live.  I will continue to farm at Wildgrace (Glenn and Muffy’s) next year as well.  I want to put… Read the rest of this article »

Grass is not always greener

June 13th, 2008
Four Frog Farm | Blog
I’m not sure if all farmers have this problem or if it is just part of the first year of doing farm work. I wake up most mornings and it feels like I was in a car crash the night before. It takes my body a good 10 minutes before it gets it used to movement again. I might be weird, but I love this feeling. It makes me feel like I am using every muscle and joint that my body was designed for. Although, I have not been enjoying the sharp pain in my lower left back and right knee, which are all… Read the rest of this article »

Three farms are starting from scratch.

They are turning the dirt and hoping to be successful enough to turn a profit, and to become a valuable part of their communities as suppliers of organically grown food.

Peaceful Valley is giving them a head start by offering them special pricing as part of this Freshman Farmer program.

The Farm Blogs

Freshman:
New Farms Coming Soon!
Sophomores:
Daily Grace Farms
Crescent City, CA
Freestone Family Farm
Vernal, UT
Wise Moon Farm
Redding, CA
Graduates:
Coyote House Farm
Palermo, CA
DeepSeeded Community Farm
Arcata, CA
Driftwood Farm
Fort Bragg, CA
EarthDance Farm
St. Louis, MO
Ellwood Canyon Farms
Goleta, CA
Four Frog Farm
Penn Valley, CA
Hand Sown Homegrown Heritage Farm
Poulsbo, WA
Home Plate Organic Farm
Orleans, CA
Honey in the Heart Farm
Nevada City, CA
Willow Springs Farm
Penn Valley, CA

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About the Farms

Coyote House Farm
Palermo, CA
Daily Grace Farms
Crescent City, CA
DeepSeeded Community Farm
Arcata, CA
Driftwood Farm
Fort Bragg, CA
EarthDance Farm
St. Louis, MO
Ellwood Canyon Farms
Goleta, CA
Four Frog Farm
Penn Valley, CA
Freestone Family Farm
Vernal, UT
Hand Sown Homegrown Heritage Farm
Poulsbo, WA
Home Plate Organic Farm
Orleans, CA
Honey in the Heart Farm
Nevada City, CA
Willow Springs Farm
Penn Valley, CA
Wise Moon Farm
Redding, CA

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The best room and board for your backyard chickens May 10, 2012
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