
"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.
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.

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 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
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.
You guys are model citizens of this earth.
Would love to share ideas as we progress on our own project – THE CONCORD GREEN HOME.
I invite you to become a follower of our project. Simply visit http://www.concordgreen.blogspot.com and click on the right hand side bar FOLLOW link.
Keep up the great work!
Lisa
Comment by Lisa — December 7, 2009 @ 9:21 am