The Log Blog

March 1, 2010

March 5th Greens Delivery, and more

Filed under: CSF Members Reaping Rewards, Driftless Farm — Ameliaswan @ 11:12 pm
Melissa has joined our farm and forest for the season.  She will garden our earth, and type us poems.

Melissa has joined our farm and forest for the season. She will garden our earth, and type us poems. "Following her on the deer trail, past all the footprints from last week, side by side with the spring, she hopped, and I cautiously stepped to the other side, in and around the kissing spring, we snipped tiny tufts of watercress."

This week’s winter greens box will include…

*Watercress!

*A mix of tender salad greens: sorrel, claytonia, tatsoi, mizuna, mache and more.

*Blossoms and shoots from Raab and other mustard greens.

*Small bunches of kale/chard/or bok choy.

*Rosemary Sprig and remaining autumn garlic.

*Potatoes from Driftless Organics.

Sometime in the last couple weeks all the plants in the greenhouse got to talking.  They discussed the ratio of sunlight to darkness, mixed with soil temperature and daytime highs.  And from this conversation, they lept into BLOSSOM!  All the mustard greens and brassicas that have quietly persevered the winter have now decided to send forth shoots of soft seeds, full of sugars.  The greenhouse is now charged with fertility, and as tastey as can be.  Each blossom and shoot are like tiny broccollis, but so much more tender.

And in the forest, the watercress peeks above the spring water now; the mint has sent up its tips, the sap is about to run.

We started these seeds on January 9th, and transplanted them into the greenhouse yesterday.  They will be bright red mustard leaves, lettuce leaves, and endive by mid-late April.

We started these seeds on January 9th, and transplanted them into the greenhouse yesterday. They will be bright red mustard leaves, lettuce leaves, and endive by mid-late April.

This is a "hanging gutter" of arugala sprouting toward the February sunshine.

This is a "hanging gutter" of arugala sprouting toward the February sunshine.

Here is a stack of fire wood (white elm) ready to be delivered to a forest member for February and March.

Here is a stack of fire wood (white elm) ready to be delivered to a forest member for February and March.

January 13, 2010

PYRO FEST and more

Filed under: CSF Members Reaping Rewards, Driftless Farm, WORKSHOPS — Ameliaswan @ 9:58 pm

Footage from the LAST Driftless Forest party

Footage from the LAST Driftless Forest party

Come Join us to Celebrate Fire!!

The Community Supported Forest’s first event of 2010…

January 29th, from sunset into the night, as the full moon rises.

Bring a snack or drink, and a fire trick if you’ve got one.  We plan on starting fire with a bow, perhaps flint; we’ll have a bonfire; we hope to set a pudding ablaze; and some of us plan on blowing things up.

We’ll have the Bookend kitchen open and warm, for families, and cold feet of all sizes.  We’ll mull some wine, and hope to see all Forest members, Farm friends, and stragglers.

In OTHER news:

January 13th at the head of the Driftless Farm spring, watercress and crystals.

January 13th at the head of the Driftless Farm spring, watercress and crystals.

The Forest yields even now, with fresh watercress growing just below the surface of our Springs:

And the greenhouse has faired better this year than ever before, with almost no leaf damage from the sub-zero temps.   All this with no suplemental heat!

January 13th, watering in short sleeves.  All greens destined for our winter greens share holders.

January 13th, watering in short sleeves. All greens destined for our winter greens share holders.

We are choosing not to harvest this week from the greenhouse in order to give the plants a rest, and won’t deliver another greens share until late January– share members still have 5 more boxes due before mid-April.

Harvesting watercress for tonight's salad.

Harvesting watercress for tonight's salad.

December 18, 2009

A Trip to the Big City, Cool Glass Walls, Lush Glass Greenhouse

Filed under: Driftless Farm, Uncategorized — admin @ 3:56 pm
Dancing with the Grinch?  Twirling with Cookie Monster?  Whatever you think, my brother and his girlfriend make some fine cookies.

Dancing with the Grinch? Twirling with Cookie Monster? Whatever you think, my brother and his girlfriend make some fine cookies.

Amelia leaves the farm and goes to Boston.  In the big city, she visits a building, recently completed, that was designed by her brother’s firm, William Rawn Associates:

http://www.rawnarch.com/

The building, the new Cambridge Public Library, is entirely enveloped in a double paned window wall that allows the structure to appear as though it floats on its interior supports.  Glass, Concrete, Steel, not a Whole Tree in site, but so beautiful.  The visit allows Amelia to appreciate the modern paradigm we live within, and the beauty we are capable of creating.  Does she wish there were Whole Trees supporting the structure?  Probably not.  Perhaps.  (The children’s floor has faux wall paper that actually covers steel columns to make them look like trees!)

No trees in the buildings, but their reflections go oh so well with the glossy window wall!

No trees in the buildings, but their reflections go oh so well with the glossy window wall!

Oooh lala, the library's front faccade

Oooh lala, the library's front faccade

Returning back to her brother’s apartment, Amelia spends the evening decorating cookies, eating fine curry, and appreciating the nature of central heating (no logs to feed the fire, no dust).  She sleeps deeply, and dreams of mushrooms.

I’ve since returned from the glass/steel world where good prosciutto is available everywhere.  Re-entry into the snow and quiet takes a few days.  The smell of the damp, lush greenhouse invigorates.  We harvested our fourth Winter Greens box the day after my return:

Butternut Squash and Carrots from Driftless Organics

Bunches of Chard or Kale

Baby Bok Choys or Totsoi for stir fries

Salad mix

Fennel Fronds and Chervil

All this on December 17th, after a bout of sub zero temps here in Wisconsin.

The globe currently supports both realities, and many more.  Shall we enjoy all that we can while it lasts?  I believe so.

More of our favorites

More of our favorites

December 4, 2009

December 3rd Greens!

Filed under: CSF Members Reaping Rewards, Driftless Farm — Ameliaswan @ 2:26 pm
"If this salad were a beauty contestant, it'd win the Miss America Pagent."

"If this salad were a beauty contestant, it'd win the Miss America Pagent." -Casey Peterson

This is Driftless Farm and Forest’s first winter attempting a “Greens Share” for 10+ families.  We know the general performance standards of our passive-solar, whole tree greenhouse, but can’t predict the temperatures from week to week.  Currently we use low or no suplemental heat source, so our winter yields vary greatly depending on temps.  Thus far, we’ve had some vibrant success with the season extension, as shown here.

Stunning in the snow with no extra heat source.

Stunning in the snow with no extra heat source.

This week’s box included salad mix, arugala, rosemary sprigs, large bunches of mixed mustard greens, watercress, and a few lbs of beets sourced from a regional  farm, Driftless Organics(despite our names, we are unrelated).

Many of our forest members have chosen the Winter Greens Option as one of their forest benefits.  This doesn’t sirprise me.  As we continue to develop this Community Supported Forestry (CSF) model, we will continue to involve food production where it fits.  People love food!

Agriculture can weave amidst the needs of a sustainably managed forest.  A blend of permaculture and annual production; a nectar flow for bees that starts in early spring with the red maples, moves to the locust and honey suckle, boosts the squash and strawberry yields, and ends with late summer green manure crops like alfalfa; erosion control; windbreaks; leaf mulch; and whole tree timber for farm infrastructure.  I’ve been wondering what becomes of my status as “farmer” now that we are developing such a forest model.  It’s an identity shift that may bring me right back home again.

Casey at the Box

Volunteer, Casey Peterson, washes and packs watercress while occasionally making poetry about the process.

Wire hoops supporting a "blanket" of white row cover; a "blanket" of green arugala supporty our wirey hunger!

Wire hoops supporting a "blanket" of white row cover; a "blanket" of green arugula supporting our wirey hunger!

We packed the beautiful boxes as the temperature dropped.  Today, the 4rth, it is snowy and 20 degrees outside.  What will our next veggie box look like?  We’ll see what the low hoops do to preserve our arugala, and how quickly our new planting of mache and mustards germinate.

A Driftless Farm and Forest Winter Greens Box

A Driftless Farm and Forest Winter Greens Box

My most recent dream involves a winter-foods share that works within the CSF model.  Summer gardens would grow storage crops, and winter months would slowly yield all this color and life.

October 13, 2009

Snow Day!

Filed under: Driftless Farm — Tags: , — admin @ 10:50 am
if you look out the window on the right you can see the snow flakes falling - but inside the greenhouse next door the little plants are blooming away happily

if you look out the window on the right you can see the snow flakes falling - but inside the greenhouse next door the little plants are blooming away

This is a view into our passive solar greenhouse at Driftless Farm from “the Bookend” which is the second residence here at Driftless Farm. The Bookend incorporates a whole slew of nice sustainable design principals.  The downstairs is a community kitchen where we gather to eat or process things from the farm in summer.  It also holds our batteries and PV inverter.  The upstairs is a small apartment that can house our farm manager or workers.  Being built onto the end of the greenhouse, it shares warmth with it in the winter and venting in the summer.  The building is filled with re-used and found materials – shipping pallet walls, recycled carpet ceiling finish and, of course, whole tree structure.  Those trees were harvested sustainably out of the surrounding woods; the house sequesters 12 tons of carbon in wood and straw bales.

swiss chard all cozy in the greenhouse

swiss chard all cozy in the greenhouse

while outside its dropping big feather sized snowflakes

poor sage out in the cold

The plants for the winter greens share are blooming away in our greenhouse at driftless farm.  Since it turned cold this weekend they must be extra happy there.   It was clear  to see the difference yesterday when a surprise snow storm dropped puffy white flakes on us all day.  The fall plants left outside looked so forlorn but the greenhouse was cozy and bright … and safe from flurries.

September 15, 2009

“No Child Left Inside”

Filed under: CSF Members Reaping Rewards, Driftless Farm — Ameliaswan @ 9:50 pm

Roald’s word games have amused me for 5 years now.  This morning’s coinage won me over immediately.  We’d like the nation to take on a “No Child Left Inside” Policy.  Forget the standardized tests– what about the kids ignorant of nature?  There is a societal damage done to body, psyche and soul when we raise our kids afraid of nature.

Goggles and Mud

No Fear Here!

This new CSF “motto” also makes me think of our latest CSF member, Barb Huning.  She has joined our forest as founder of “Nature Centered Counseling and Education”.  She specializes in eco-psychology and shares with me her calling to heal the rift between our species and the rest of the natural world.  “We are so afraid of wilderness,” she notes, “and uncomfortable with the apparent chaos of Nature.”  And in our need to separate from nature, and control our environs, we create a chaotic psycho-spiritual interior that is destroying us.

As one who dances with depression myself, I have spent a lot of time  considering the effects of modernity on the psyche.  Living on Driftless Farm, I note the difference in frequency between the forest surrounding me, and the urban world of my past, and my peers.  I flutter away from the rhythm of the wisdom humming in these woods– and log onto this blog!  Or bounce my baby while answering the phone while making a web-banking transfer while listening to the radio.  Given that living amidst the forest still doesn’t slow me down enough to listen to its truth, I am inspired by Barb’s plans to integrate her eco-psychology training with our infrastructure and wilderness.  Check out her personal blog if this stuff interests you:

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