Posts Tagged ‘rain’

Day Shift/Night Shift

June 4th, 2010
Driftwood Farm | Blog

As we walked around looking like complete lunatics at dusk yesterday - watering cans in hand during a break in the rain - we were treated to the sight of a barn owl hunting over the field.  We were dispersing our second application of predatory nematodes to deal with the pesky “e-words” (earwigs), but I’m sure the neighbors thought we had lost it.

After finally diving down into a thick patch of unmowed vegetation, the owl stayed on the ground for a while and then departed to the patch of trees on the southeast boundary of our property, into the same thicket where the red-shouldered hawk (see photos) launches from.

We have been so happy to notice an increase in the number and diversity of wildlife since we settled here just under a year and a half ago.  Previously, all four acres had been continuously grazed by horses, so plant height/structure/diversity were minimal.  We’ve put in some native shrubs and trees (which still need to grow a bit to be useful for wildlife), we’re letting some pasture areas get a little long, there are frogs inhabiting last year’s strawberry patch, and birds are everywhere.  Diversity is good.  More animals to eat the abundant mice, slugs and e-words.  Red-shouldered hawks are very unlikely to predate chickens.  (Lucky it’s not a red-tailed hawk!)

Anyway.  I guess my thought is that while we are working “day and night” to improve this property, so are the wildlife.  Hawks, owls - eat as many rodents as you like.  Sparrows, swallows, bluebirds, etc. - the bug buffet is open.  Hmm, though, the robins sure do eat lots of earthworms…

Like everyone else, we’re drenched.  But was it as crazy sunny for you guys last weekend as it was here?  Suddenly, loads of lettuce and arugula were ready to take to market, which was great.  We nearly sold out, despite the fact that it - yep - rained.


News from the Late Spring Planting Rush

The later part of spring is always very full, and this year’s wetness has kept things interesting.  We’ve been getting our big, once a season plantings done… onions, potatoes, tomatoes, etc… with frequent interruptions from the weather.  We’re in the midst of a cold spring rain storm that just brought a scary bout of hail to the coast and some snow at just 3000 feet!  When the hail was falling I was picturing swiss-cheesed rowcovers, but the walk around the fields afterward thankfully showed little damage.  I’m still waiting to get the winter squash and melons sown ‘till it’s a bit warmer and drier.

Though the strawberries are not quite pumping yet, there’s enough good food on the farm now to start the CSA!  It’ll be fun to have all the farm members coming out on Tuesdays and Fridays again, and hopefully in the time between harvests we can catch up on weeding/thinning beets & carrots and hoeing lots of beds.  Talk to you again soon


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It’s raining.  It must be Tuesday.

April 29th, 2010
Coyote House Farm | Blog
The rain comes on Tuesdays as if I set the timer myself on one of the robots.  Then it warms up and dries out for the weekend.  It’s been like that for a month.  I can’t believe it. The last couple weeks we’ve been working on a number of things, both in infrastructure and planting.  Some of the work we’ve been doing over the winter has been making the off-grid operation able to sustain human life and even field a few off-farm job emails.  Most of the insulation is… Read the rest of this article »

Chickens At Four Frog

April 27th, 2010
Four Frog Farm | Blog
[slideshow id=174] Hey All, My apologies for being a flaky blogger farmer.  I’m trying to reform my ways.  I guess the long and the short of it this spring is the same as a lot of people - it’s pretty rainy and planting has been slow.  The rain is a blessing however.  It’s just hard to realize that when your greenhouse seedlings are outgrowing their containers and the field has standing water in it.  So far we’ve got successions of lettuce, squash, broccoli, kale, peas,… Read the rest of this article »
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Wet weather and earthday

April 26th, 2010
Ellwood Canyon Farms | Blog
For some reason winter weather just won’t go away here on the central coast.  It rained all last week and rain is in the forecast again this week, not making it easy for prepping soil and planting warm weather crops.  Luckily for me the land I am farming is sandy loam and drains fast enough so even with the rains I have been able do some tractor work and get most everything I planned on in the ground. The Earthday festival I participated in last week went great.  It was a huge… Read the rest of this article »
Tags: CSA, rain, earthday
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Rainy day

February 23rd, 2010
Driftwood Farm | Blog
Today’s rain is allowing us to take a break from the outside work, to hopefully catch up on our planning, and take a deep breath.  Matt has been working on converting a 10’ x 20’ car canopy into a greenhouse, as well as building a couple of top-bar bee hives from scratch.  In the meantime, I’ve been preparing beds, getting our first batch of seeds started in the small (8’ x 10’) greenhouse, and getting the rest of the perennial crops into the ground (the… Read the rest of this article »

Harvesting in the rain

November 22nd, 2009
Four Frog Farm | Blog
Friday: Logan and I arrive later to the farm than desired.  We get in a couple of hours of harvesting before the rain picks up.  Then, the mild downpour ensues for about 5 hours.  As soon as we’re done harvesting, the rain ends! Admittedly, I was pretty miserable. I’ve grown soft in these last 25 years of life.  I guess this is what farming year-round is like -it shows you where you’re soft.  Anyway, not harvesting wasn’t an option: we had big order from the co-op and… Read the rest of this article »

Not much Rain

November 12th, 2009
Four Frog Farm | Blog
Why are the storms so piddly? We had to set up major irrigation to the garlic today.   I think we’ll start doing some major sprinkler action on the field that have cover crop seed but aren’t yet germinated.  This is a lot more work for us, but it keeps me from getting in trouble.  I wish it would rain a lot, but hey, it’s also nice working in the sun - I’ll look on the bright side.  Well, let’s still all pray for rain because this State needs it.   Andrew Read the rest of this article »
Tags: rain
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The Storm

October 16th, 2009
Four Frog Farm | Blog
It got wet on Tuesday, and Wednesday, and even thursday (a little bonus surprise!). We were expecting it.  Actually, we were expecting a lot more, although 2+ inches at a time is enough.   The unexpected thing, and this points to my nascent experience as a farmer, is that the strawberries all pretty much rotted (the fruits, not the plants).  Bummer, but not really a surprise. Logan and I are going through a crop by crop audit and making sure it’s worth it to grow all these things.  It looks… Read the rest of this article »
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Still Catching Up

October 15th, 2009
Four Frog Farm | Blog
The rain is here…the fields are wet…20 weeks of CSA boxes filled…I still want to catch you up on early October. The beginning of the month brought a vacation for Logan.  That was much-needed for him. We just continued the regular - harvesting, weeding, and also taking up irrigation in fields in preparation for disking and planting cover crop.   We knew the rains were coming sometime this week, so our efforts were spent preparing space for garlic (to be planted after these rains),… Read the rest of this article »
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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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