Category Archives: farm

Our Garden, Farmer’s Market, CSA and Everything Else

It has been a busy couple of weeks of work, life, kids, family, gardening, reading and everything else. To sum it up:

Our seedling our finally planted in the ground in our vegetable garden in the back. We finished this yesterday. My husband finished digging up a foot deep of dirt. Then he rented a tiller and tilled up the earth with all of our compost, some composting leaves from two doors down, and Organic Soil from Miracle Grow. Then we built up little hills and transplanted the seeds. I will need to take pictures and post them on here.

This is what we have in the ground: pumpkin, watermelon, cantelope, cucumber and one garlic. We made hills for the watermelon, cantelope and the pumpkin. I suggested a 4 sided t-p trellis like the one in the Organic Gardening book for the cucumbers. My husband grabbed a few long branches my neighbor cut from the crape Myrtle when it fell in our back yard during Hurricane Ike. He cut several branches in order to help me raise the Crape Myrtle back up. It looks ugly now, but its thriving strong with leaves and even flourished with flowers a few months back. When my husband came home he cut the cut branch’s into smaller straighter branches. He grabbed four of these yesterday. Collected them at the top with wire and spread the bottom. Once the trellis was made he placed in the garden. He can make trellis so easily. You should see the simple but affective one he made for the jasmine in the front yard.

The okra seedlings are still in a pot waiting for a bigger pot. We are having trouble finding free large containers for our container garden vegetables. There just has to be a place were we can just go pick up free large containers someone else doesn’t want. I will have to try freecycle again. We would also like to find large containers to make our own rain barrels. These would be very helpful because where we live sometimes we can go weeks without rain. Using our fresh water gets expensive.

Our Topsy Turvey has 3 small green tomatoes quickly growing on the vine. I can’t wait to taste them. My neighbor’s Topsy Turvey has six. He tease us constantly about our little tomatoes.

Our herbs…..not doing so well. They look weak and small in their beautiful homemade wooden container. We think it either a drainage issue or a too much sun issue. We are planning this week to visit the botanical gardens near by to ask in hopes for the correct answer. A friend of mine from work also suggested Randy Lemmon. He’s a radio gardener.

Our CSA meat came on May the 30. This is what we got:

Beef Liver (I still have the last one)
Whole Chicken
Beef Sirloin Steak (2)
Hot-Piggity- Dogs
Top Round Roast Beef
Pork Shoulder Roast
Smoked Jowls
Ground Brisket Beef (2)
Ground Beef (2)
Ground Pork
Beef Cutlets

As always the meat is delicious and I am so happy to be eating meats that are healthier for my family, kinder to the animals (compared to other places), healthier for the environment, and helps support a local farm. I absolutely love the customer service from here and I always look forward to Honi’s newsletters. She is so cheerful and gives great cooking tips and recipes. The only downfall is the price and the amount. I’m trying to use the amount of meat we eat for our health for our pocketbook and for the animals, but one day I made a meal that obviously didn’t have enough meat for my husband or even my kids. He loved the taste of the meal but was upset that there wasn’t more meat. We ate less meat at this meal than recommended per meal per person. Usually this isn’t a problem because I have nuts or mushrooms or a starch, but on that day we were running low on everything, but vegetables and the other CSA meat varieties. I really do wish I was a better cook.

Our CSA veggie pickups have had a lot of squash. A lot! So, we’ve eaten a lot of squash lately. We are pretty much all squashed out, but I made a squash dish everyone liked yesterday. I cut the squash into small pieces. Sauteed them in butter and garlic. Added salt, black pepper, and a bit of lemon pepper.

This past Saturday we shopped at a farmer’s market as well as visited a farm and bought some of their fresh picked veggies at the little shop they had on their farm. The farm was huge. I’m still shy about asking farmers how they grow their food in fear they’ll become defensive like one woman farmer did months ago, but I did ask if they gave tours. I am interested in showing my girls what a farm is and does. The women apologized and said only in groups, like a school group. Oh well, maybe next year I can convince my daughter’s school to take a field trip to the farm.

The rest of this week will be busy too. School is out, but work isn’t.

CSA Vegetables


The CSA for Vegetables starts next month. There is a meeting tomorrow, late in the evening for members to learn more about the program. I like that, but unfortunately I will probably not be able to show up. The time, place and date are inconvenient. I know so far that my pick up dates are weekly every Tuesday 3:30 to 5:30pm and the place I need to pick up is about 20 minutes a day. The fact that the pick up date is in the middle of a school/work week and that I have 3 kids to take with me on the trip there also makes it very inconvenient. I wish I had known the pick up day earlier and I would have thought about it a little more. For some reason, I thought the pick up date were Saturday mornings. This would have made it so much easier. So far my impression of this farm and their CSA program is that they are not very family friendly or that they assume that all CSA members, have no children or that we can just leave their kids with someone else while we pick up our produce, get out of work early and so forth. Still I’ve already signed the contract. I’m going to do my best to show up every Tuesday. Which mean I’ll have to pick my daughter up from school and as soon as she gets out, then drive 25-30 minutes there, pick up our share (how ever long that will take) then drive 25-30 minutes back home. I really wish my city had more convenient options. No wonder so many people hesitate to join CSAs. It isn’t that we don’t want to. We either can’t afford the cost, the pick up locations and dates are too inconvenient or both. In my case it is both. My only hope is that my opinion of this changes. As for the CSA of Meat… I had to ask to skip this month’s shipment. Its just not in my budget this month and I am so grateful their system is set up so that you can skip a month or two if you need to. It is more of a pay as you go CSA. I’m sure this is hard on the farmers though since they don’t have certainty of the income they will get every month. Then again its hard on CSA members too since we don’t know how much produce we will get every month and the economy isn’t exactly stable. There has to be a common ground. I’m hoping through my experiences I will be able to find one and share it with everyone.

First Meat CSA Delivery

My first meat CSA delivery arrived last week-last Saturday. I’d love to say I wasn’t disappointed, but in a way I was. I was excited to have fresh healthier meat in my kitchen, along with a cookbook and a newsletter, but disappointed in the amount available. As I understood it the amount of meat I received is suppose to feed 2 people 3 times a week for a month. What I received instead was enough meat to feed 1 person 3 times a week for a month. At least that’s what it looks like. Maybe we just eat a lot of meat here in my house….I thought we didn’t. Let me give a perfect example of what I’m talking about… among the variety of meats I received in the icebox there was one pork chop. I looked through the rest of the meat for another, but only found one. Say I wanted to cook pork chops one night how would this one pork chop be divided between two people and still be filling? Would I have to add larger side dishes? What if the second person is a 6 foot 1 inch tall man? Would he really be satisfied with half a pork chop? Would I, in order to satisfy him, have to go buy another pork chop at the regular grocery store?Would this defeat the purpose of joining the CSA? Who would get the CSA pork chop and who would get the other? I’m not sure why, but this one pork chop really bothered me… still does. It also bothered me when I saw the 4 tiny ribs. I’m new to the CSA thing, but I was hoping that if they give an estimate of how many people their meats can feed they would at least make an effort to make sure it feeds two people as closely as possible. Two people—give me two pork chops. It makes sense doesn’t it? I emailed the very nice lady in charge of the CSA that evening, but have yet to receive a response. This is not a bad thing. They are very busy, but I am curious what her response will be. As for the other meats they all seemed satisfactory. I’m happy that the animals are grass fed, are free range and aren’t injected with hormones. I’m not sure how long I can afford the price for the amount of meat I receive though. Maybe this month was slow. Maybe next month will be different. I took a few pictures of what I received. I’ll download them later and post them. I also wrote down a list of the types of meats I received, but seem to have misplaced it. It is here somewhere. When I find it I will post it too.

Update Jan 22. 2009
I have pasted the pictures I promised to post throughout this entry.
This is the list of meats I received on this delivery.
1. Ground Pork (1)
2. Pork Sausage (1)
3. Smoked Jowls (1)
4. Beef Liver (1)
5. Spareribs (1)
6. Polish Sausage (1)
7. Beef Ribeye (1)
8. Boneless Porkchop (1)
9. Real Pork (links) (1)
10. Ground Beef (2)
11. Whole Chicken (1)
12. Pork Shoulder Roast (1)
13. Pork Cutlet (1)
Plus a free cookbook, the monthly newsletter and the bumper sticker.

I joined the CSA

I did it. I joined the CSA. Actually I joined 2. One will deliver meat to my door once a month and the other I will have to pick up veggies once a week starting in March. I’m a little nervous. I hope it goes well.

CSA and Local Organic

I visited LocalHarvest.org again this past week. I made an online purchase of grass fed meat sticks for my brother-in-law for his birthday and then I searched once more for a local farmer’s market near me. The closest one doesn’t sell to individuals, but instead downtown at the Farmers Market about 25 miles away from me. They also don’t do CSA though they use to. They say the business is too hard any other way. The lady tells me it’s only her and her husband and its all done by hand organically. She tells me looking at my huge belly that its all about priority as if my priorities are not set straight or something, because I was concerned about driving so far downtown and the parking availability (not to mention the parking costs) and the early mornings availability. I wanted to say something rude in return to her priority comment, but instead I felt sorry for her because she was a struggling small time farmer. I can’t imagine having to survive as a farmer in this economy or any other time. Its hard work. I wanted to convince her to let me drive to her home and pick up every week instead, but she seemed to jaded from her past business experience that instead I told her thank you for her time and I’d see what I could do about making it downtown. Truth is I knew I wouldn’t. Maybe once every two months or something, but the gas and the kids and my huge belly and the awkward Saturday times for the Farmer’s market was just too huge of an inconvenience for my family’s life style.

So this week I looked again I wondered perhaps if there was something closer to me in the other direction. It turns out there is. I sent out 3 emails to the 3 closest farms. All 3 have CSA and one of them has a seasonal farmer’s market closer to me. They also farm organically. So far only one has responded. I’ll have to calculate the price to see if its worth it for me and them.