Monday, July 14, 2014
A July 13th share.
This week's basket, clockwise from lower left: fennel bulb, wild plums, purple carrots, zucchini, and Grandpa George's Walking Onion.
Monday, July 7, 2014
A July 6th share.
This week's basket, clockwise from upper left: eggs, small red onions, turnips, snow peas, carrots, and snap beans.
Friday, July 4, 2014
CSA.
Photos of our 2014 CSA shares, weeks three and four....
Above: Sunday, June 22nd. White egg turnips, garlic spears, blueberries, snow peas, chives, and eggs.
Above: Sunday, June 29th. Snow peas, kale, carrots, turnips, zucchini, and blueberries.
Thursday, July 3, 2014
Monday, June 9, 2014
2014 CSA week one.
Clockwise from the lower left corner: over a quarter-pound of "Shuko" Pac Choy, two pounds of"Windsor Broadbean" Fava, two heads of "Osaka Shirona" Chinese Cabbage (half a pound), a bunch of "Easter Egg" radish (three quarters pound), and two pints of strawberries at center.
Strawberries!
We harvested eight pints of strawberries over two days, from about a hundred feet of strawberry plants spaced roughly a foot apart each. We thought we'd picked the plants clean on June 7th with a four-pint yield, but when we went back the next day we found another four pints ready to go. A few of our plants are several years old and well established, but most are just in their second year of fruit production. They're doing great this spring, with moderate watering (around two times per week) and warm weather.
Tuesday, April 22, 2014
Garden markers.
We were given these garden markers for carrots, lettuce, and zucchini by Heather and Derek Rubright. Here's what they look like now, adding character and beauty to our vegetable beds!
A brief tour of Habitat Farm, spring 2014.
Here's a view of the farm standing near the Northeast corner and looking toward the chicken coop. Note the tall stand of yellow flowers at about two o'clock: that's the cress that was covered in frost and snow a few months back. The small yellow flowers of broccoli-family crops like this one are a favorite of bees and other insects beneficial to the garden. Behind the cress, toward the center of the frame, is a tall stand of dark green: the crimson clover we sowed back on August 25th, that will be flowering in the next few weeks. Between the clover and the cress is a narrow strip of soil where our "cocozelle" zucchini seedlings, sown April 7th under cover, are coming up and showing their first set of true leaves. The bright green dots beside the cress flowers: "black-seeded simpson" lettuce, started indoors on February 2nd and planted out on March 24th. At three o'clock are three rows of "white egg" turnip, sown March 23rd, now ready for thinning. What looks like bare dirt at about eight o'clock is a bed of "atomic red" and "yaya" carrots, sown April 7th under cover. We just removed the cover a few days back, when the seedlings first began to show.
Here's a closeup of our "cocozelle" zucchini seedlings. We're planning another row of zucchini that we'll sow as a succession to this one, in about a month.
Here's one part of our chicken run. We've kept the chickens off the green grassy area in the background for a few months, so that it could grow thick and lush, better able to survive the chickens' routine grazing and scratching. We opened the space back up to them on April 20th, just for a couple of days. In the coming weeks we'll let them return for longer--a stretch of a few months-- while we give another section of their run some much-needed rest.
10-egg day!
With our eleven chickens, the average eggs laid per day is just over five. Ten eggs is the maximum possible harvest for a given day, and such a yield was mere conjecture until April 16th, 2014. Here's what it looked like that day, when every one of our hens chipped in.
Tuesday, April 1, 2014
Spring leeks and carrots.
We harvested these leeks and carrots last Saturday.
The leeks were sown March 10th of last year, transplanted a bit late (June 9th). They grew a bit in the fall, held in the ground through the hard, snowy winter this year, and make for very good eating these days.
The carrots were direct sown a bit late (July 19th) and held in the ground just fine through the winter with very limited top growth. One of the varieties shown is Purple Haze, which we've overwintered before and had great results.
We'll probably still overwinter Purple Haze this season (that would be winter 2014-15), but we're planning on trying a new variety as well, called Merida. It can presumably be sown in late September/early October, and harvested the following May through June. Has anyone out there grown Merida on that schedule? Please let us know how it turned out!
Tuesday, February 11, 2014
Winter Storm!
Check out this link where we've just added a handful of photos taken over the last 48 hours, and see our kale, onion, and garlic plants growing right up through the snow!
Monday, December 16, 2013
Baby food!
Our first batch of homegrown baby food made especially for our young friend on 12-14-13. Shown here: Autumn Harvest carrots in the 3oz. jars and Purple Haze carrots in the larger jar. Same-day harvested, steamed, pureed, and packaged.
Monday, December 9, 2013
Mystery Eggs.
Yesterday we had one of our youngest hens lay an egg; but who? Today, we found another mystery egg. The first one we attributed to one of our two Cuckoo Marans. Todays egg could have been laid by the same hen as the first, or by the second Maran. (If these two eggs come from the same hen, it would represent more variation from a single layer than we are used to seeing.) These Marans arrived at Habitat Farm as chicks, just several days old, back on June 10th (right alongside Buffy). We think they are the layers in question because Marans are known for a darker colored egg. Check these out:
Laid 12-8-13.
Laid 12-9-13.
Saturday, December 7, 2013
Cordial.
Remember all those plums we harvested back in August? Well, we ate a bunch, gave big handfuls away to the neighbors, made plenty more into plum butter... and used eight pounds of them for plum cordial! After three months, it's ready for sipping. It was worth the wait. We had some with Thanksgiving dinner, we'll give some away as gifts, and we're taking a bottle of it to game night tonight. (We created the labels by hand, using calligraphy pen and ink, marker, and gold pen.) But one of our 4-quart jars will sit on the shelf for a while longer. Maybe this time 2014 we'll open it up and see what kind of magic happened while we waited! In the meantime, here are some photos to savor.
Friday, December 6, 2013
In print!
Remember the short essay we posted here back in September? It is now in print! You'll find it in the Fall/Winter 2013 issue of Oregon Humanities Magazine.
Snow day!
It snowed today! But this was a rare snow for Portland: dry, very cold, and very windy. The chickens handled it admirably, huddling around their water trough and drinking gladly as we filled it again and again with steaming tea kettle-fulls of hot water. Some of the girls just refused to come outside at all, it was so cold and windy. As for us, we did go outside-- just long enough to get some photos to share.
Snow-covered cress.
Rememeber what it looked like the other day?
A strawberry plant in the snow.
Snow on the bench.
Frosts.
This week the temperatures dropped and the hard frosts arrived in earnest. Temperatures have remained at or below freezing during the day, and the ground underfoot feels like concrete. Most of the crops on the farm are protected from these conditions, thanks to our efforts. But those with leaves above ground don't so much mind it: strawberry plants, kale, cress, leeks. Here are some photos of frosty leaves snapped this week.
Upland cress.
Red Bor kale.
Giant Musselburg leeks.
Covered.
Earlier this week we finished covering all of the beds with straw before the major frosts hit. We do have crops growing in the garden right now; some for spring, and some for winter harvest: garlic, fava bean, spinach, carrots, turnips, peas, onions, and chard are all holding in the ground waiting to spring forth in warmer weather this spring. Meanwhile, arugula, spinach, carrots, kale, chard (under cover), tatsoi, and leeks are holding their own in this winter weather, still offering the occasional harvest during the dark months. We also have a couple of rows of beets that we started late; in the spring we will thin them down, allow them to flower, and harvest the seed. Here are a couple photos of the farm under cover.
Looking south.
Looking northwest.
Friday, November 8, 2013
Medlars.
We've updated the header on our website for fall, and the new image features a closeup of our medlar tree. Check out the full image:
Habitat Farm's 2013 Autumn Market Day: this Sunday!
Drop by this Sunday!
See the garden
Check out where the bees live
Say hello to our lucky 13 chickens
Sip some warm tea
Nibble on samples of our fresh veggies for sale
or on kale and chard right where they're growing!
And pick up some Habitat Farm produce,
for dinner that evening or for the week!
Harvested Saturday and Sunday, it may well be fresher than
what you'd find at the farmers market. And as always, it's
coaxed from the ground tenderly and grown entirely by hand!
Click this link for a list of what we'll have available--
while supplies last!
Some of the veggies that will be on offer:
See the garden
Check out where the bees live
Say hello to our lucky 13 chickens
Sip some warm tea
Nibble on samples of our fresh veggies for sale
or on kale and chard right where they're growing!
And pick up some Habitat Farm produce,
for dinner that evening or for the week!
Harvested Saturday and Sunday, it may well be fresher than
what you'd find at the farmers market. And as always, it's
coaxed from the ground tenderly and grown entirely by hand!
Click this link for a list of what we'll have available--
while supplies last!
Some of the veggies that will be on offer:
Red Round Turnips
Rainbow Carrots
Autumn Harvest Carrots
And be sure to give us a like at our Facebook page,
or comment on the 2013 Autumn Market Day event page!
or comment on the 2013 Autumn Market Day event page!
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