I don’t want to jinx it, but we’ve had a pretty solid start to the soon-to-be madness that is March. Whether this is our false Spring, or a slow buildup to the real thing, we’re making moves. Mark spent most of his day on somewhere between the columns of his spreadsheets and the field rows, which is how you know stuff’s getting real. We’re pretty sure this is the earliest that he’s ever been able to get out there and do honest-to-goodness tractor work and soil prep. Now, we just have do our best to keep the momentum up and the crows at bay. Lupa’s got some chasing to do!
Read moreWild Hare Weekly, Winter #7/10: Purple Sprouting Broccoli, Round TWO
Purple Sprouting Broccoli is a weird, unreliable crop. We grow it, because it is delicious and unique, but it is a royal purple pain. PSB is the kind of vegetable that is accessible to eaters as it is a delicacy, rescuing us from the depths of Winter with a shock of purple when we need it most. It is one of those vegetables that endears folks to their local farmers, because they won’t find something that looks or tastes quite like it from a grocer. It is labor intensive, requiring multiple rounds of weeding and cultivation before it has a chance to overwinter. It is irregular. One plant might boom with multiple pounds of leafy little violet florets while the one beside it barely puts forth any shoots at all, so we have to plant a whole lot of it and harvesting takes a lot of time and discernment on the part of the harvester. Did you know that our Purple Sprouting Broccoli crop takes up a larger footprint than all of our rows of Tomatoes combined? It was news to me too until a few weeks ago when Mark was grumbling and calculating during our annual “why do we keep growing this?!" rant in the Winter Brassica field. Pessimistically, or perhaps realistically, we figured 2025 was going to be only one-and-done harvest year (in January, no less) thanks to the one-two punch of early bloom and extended frost. So, I was SHOCKED and ECSTATIC when I learned that we had a nice second flourish, ready for harvest today. The CSA is going to get a sizeable portion this week, but we will have extra for sale in the farm stand too. I’m not going to jinx things by even wondering about a third harvest for this year, but I am stoked that we’ll be able to make folks so happy by way of this very fussy but fabulous vegetable. PSB is a BFD. Kudos to Mark, Claire and Kelly for a very full and luscious rainy day harvest.
Read moreWild Hare Weekly, Winter #6/10: Sizzling Away the Drizzle with Fresh Stir Fry Greens
I cannot tell you what a relief it was to kick off our week both on time and above freezing. We haven’t had a normal Monday in over a month. I was starting to think that the farm had been spellbound at some point in mid-January, leaving us shivering, stir-crazy, scrawling more and more items onto our to-do lists than we could physically do anything about. Even though it looks like the fields are about to be drenched and quenched this week, Mark and I are relieved that we can finally start making moves that feel Spring adjacent. After all, rainy days like these are perfect for plant propagation and greenhouse time. We’re very thankful for our high-tunnel greenhouses this week–thanks to them, we’ve got some sweet little Bok Choy, Tokyo Bekana and mixed Mustards for fresh harvest. They’ll be great, as always, with winter Carrots and our Purple Daikon from the root cellar. Along with a sweet round of Frozen Blueberries from Shelby Summer at Sunrise Farm, things are looking pretty bright, delicious and nutritious for a gray week February.
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