Artisan Organics Weblog

CSA Newsletter, July 12, Good Samaritan Pick up site

July 11, 2008 · Leave a Comment

This Weeks Veggies

Bunching Onions – This is the last time you will receive onions from this planting. Some of you preferred using them as chives when they were very small. Others of you have preferred them at this larger stage. All in all, it has been an interesting experience to include them in your share at the various stages of growth and receive your feed back.

Lettuce, Lettuce, and more Lettuce – At least three heads of lettuce. There are three different types of lettuces this week. Please take your pick. There is plenty to go around so if you’d like more than three heads, help yourself.

I sowed these slow bolting varieties more than three months ago. Then I had to hold the seedlings in the greenhouse because it was too wet and cold to transplant. The result was that the successions caught up with each other. Instead of maturing over the course of several weeks as planned, they are all ready for harvest at the same time. Which means we get to enjoy an abundance of lettuce!

Simpson Black Seeded is an Heirloom loose leaf lettuce first introduced in 1850. It has large, sweet, bright green, crumpled leaves. As the name implies Bronze Mignonette is a lovely reddish bronze butterhead lettuce. Buttercrunch is a classic green butterhead.

Farm Life

My thanks to farm volunteers Rosalea and Jeff. Both have gotten new jobs that do now allow them the flexibility to continue working on the farm. I greatly appreciate their contributions and wish them well on their new endeavors.

Our volunteer, Nathan Miller, is continuing to add has considerable energy and talents (See Nathan’s Bees in the side bar.) I am grateful to him for the many, many hours he has spent weeding thistles.

As mentioned in your Independence Weekend supplemental newsletter, this weeks share includes fewer vegetables than I hoped to provide. I have lost many hours of sleep trying to figure out how to increase the variety of vegetables available to you. But no matter how much I worry, I still can’t control the weather.

I have contemplated purchasing vegetables on the wholesale market to distribute with your share. I decided against this for two reasons. First, it is too expensive. The price I am charging for the shares doesn’t cover my existing expenses. I don’t have the financial resources to absorb more costs.

The second reason is that it would feel dishonest. The primary reason for joining a CSA is to have a relationship with your food… to know the farm… and the farmer. If I supplement your boxes with produce from the wholesale market, that relationship is forfeit. I become just another middleman in the food distribution chain.

As the Artisan Organics web site says, “… together we share the joys and challenges of farming”. For the next week or two, we will share the challenges. But don’t despair, we will soon share the joys in the form of a bounty of summer squash, green beans, and fresh ripe tomatoes.

Categories: Friday Pick Up - Good Samaritan Hospital

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