Tag Archives: weather

New website changes and 2010 CSA info

Hello subscribers, land-lenders, helpers and friends of the farm!

I hope you’ve all been staying warm during the very cold weather. The 2009 CSA season for Calliope’s Table ended just before Thanksgiving, and the very wintery weather seems to have provided a closure to the season with beds being covered and tucked away for winter. It’s also given me an opportunity to get to work on plans for 2010, and you can now see those changes on the website.

Here are some of the changes for you:

The 2010 CSA season is now underway and you can find subscription info and all the details on the CSA page. The CSA distribution will be moving to the RiverHouse farm in Sellwood where I’m now in residence, and there will also be some new options for picking up your produce. Among them are a delivery option that will get your CSA share to your doorstep and also a Sunday pickup at the Hawthorne Urban Farmers Market.

There is also a new 2010 CSA Info Sheet that has all the details of the 2010 season including an updated crop list. Among the new things that will be in your CSA share this year are herb and vegetable starts and cut flowers.

I’m keeping the CSA the small, intimate size it was in 2009 which is going to give me time to do some other food and farming things I want to do like more cooking and canning the harvest, feeding some folks that need a good meal, helping to get some new folks started growing some of their own food, and raising a few chickens. I talk more about this on a new Foodshed page. There’s a new video there that talks about Neighborhood Foodsheds too.

I’m going to be doing more farming this coming season with my friends Marie of Sellwood Garden Club and Nikki from RiverHouse CSA which will help all of us accomplish more and give us more time for the other things we want to do. We’re quite a combination of experience, philosphies, and temperaments, and we love working together.  Among the projects we’re already working on together is doing a remediation and creating a garden space at Radius Studio in Portland’s industrial eastside. We’ll keep you updated on our progress. We’re also working on building some raised bed gardens for folks while we have a bit of spare time this winter, offering 100% sliding scale to accommodate those that really need some help getting some food growing. You can read more about how we’re planning to do that on a new Garden Box page.

I’ve also learned a lot this past season about growing food in other folks’ yards, and so I’ve added a new Yardsharing  page to talk about those things and find a few more folks that want to have us grow some food in their yards.

We’re planning a gathering here at the RiverHouse sometime in late January when everyone gets back from the holidays so we can hang out and eat some food in this wonderful space. I would love for you all to visit and see what amazing things have been done here and are planned for the future. I’ll keep you posted on that.

I thank each of you for the part you played in one of the best years I’ve had in this life. I feel it’s just the beginning of a fabulous life as a farmer. I also wish you the best of the holiday season. See you soon!

Peace and peas,
Calliope

Calliope’s Table CSA Distribution #8-July 22, 2009

GO_bedsHello Subscribers,

The warm weather the plants have been needing is here, and then some. Keeping all the gardens watered becomes a good deal of the activity every day in weather like this. I’ve seen signs of a tomato or two starting to ripen, and the squash are really starting to come on, so I’m very happy to bike to the gardens and spend time with the plants while watering.

This week I’ll have broccoli, chard, summer squash & zucchini, a few more peas, basil, and more greens.

The weather this week dictates cold foods like salads. You might try a salad with broccoli, a few peas, basil, and even some thinly sliced summer squash. Use a combination of salad greens and/or some of the summer greens I had last week like orach and chicory. Toss with your favorite salad dressing, and serve very cold with some crusty bread. Perfect for our dinner time weather this week.

For desert you might try something I haven’t even tried yet, sliced summer squash with honey. Sounds great to me. Thanks to Ethan for that one. Is anyone else coming up with interesting things to do with your CSA bounty? I’d love to hear what you’re cooking up, and if you’d like I would love to post your recipes here too.

I’ve also been reminded to remind you that our produce distribution is on Wednesdays at the Ginger-Olive garden on SE Woodward. The time is set for 4-7pm, however if you come right at 4 you might still find me doing some harvesting. If you can’t make it by 7 or at all, give me a call and we’ll arrange something that works for you.

Have a fabulous week, and stay cool!

Peace and blessings,

Calliope

April showers bring…more showers?


The rain just keeps coming, but one of the things I can do in a rainy period like we’re having is to take a few minutes to catch up with the blog.

The ground is still wet with the recent round of rains we’ve been having. The last two dry cycles offered some drying out for new plots waiting to be prepared, even if just for a day or two before the rain is back again. It’s all about being ready to work the windows of good weather when they arrive. This new garden was within hours of being ready to plant when the day ran out before the two farmers present could finish it all. By later that evening the rain was back and it will be another week before this one can be worked on again.


It’s often just this kind of close timing that makes the difference in farming. Had we been able to start earlier that day, had we had just one other helper, well, you get the idea. The difference might have allowed us to get this one planted out with the salad greens we plan there. And that’s a huge difference. Everything that is planted at this point is doing fantastic! While it seems unusually rainy to me, a check with the National Weather Service confirms that so far it’s a fairly normal year precipitation wise here in Cascadia, and by August we’ll actually be a bit short on rain. If you like geeky weather stuff their Climate Prediction website shows you just such things.

By the way, these pictures are from a stylish new cell phone given to me by a farm supporter when he learned about the “farmers without phones” dilemma posted about recently by Farmer K. Thank you! I have been waiting to take some pics of what’s going on in the gardens and now I can.

Rainy weather usually means more work in the greenhouse, and last Sunday the moon cycle, the right day, the materials, and my quest to have my favorite hot peppers to cook with for years to come, finally came together. I spent that beautiful spring day starting seeds for several of my faves, and also got to eat lunch with the bees there. I enjoyed starting Peacework Sweet Peppers beside two heirloom tomatoes, Burbank slicing and San Marzano paste, with seeds from Seeds of Change. That would be pre-Mars, Inc.-Seeds of Change as these seeds were bought last year but never got planted. These are two of my favorite heirloom tomatoes, and when I bought the seeds last year expressly for growing out and saving the seed from them I didn’t realize it would be that much more important as another “organic” company sells out to agribusiness interests.

Last year Seeds of Change was quietly sold to Mars Inc. of candy bar fame. This is the same Mars candy company who will now be using GMO sugar beets for the sugar needed in their products. Mars is claiming innocence about their part in non-GMO sugar beets becoming essentially unavailable, but I will no longer patronize them, nor will I trust them to preserve the heirloom varieties that are important to me.

This mission statement can be found on the Seeds of Change homepage: “In 1989, Seeds of Change began with a simple mission: to preserve biodiversity and promote sustainable, organic agriculture. By cultivating and disseminating an extensive range of organically grown vegetable, flower, herb and cover crop seeds, we have honored that mission for 20 years.” Maybe so, but I have strong doubts about that intention going forward. So these two tomato seed packets will be my last seeds from Seeds of Change, now that Seeds of Change has changed. Another company that started out trying to do the right thing suddenly becomes part of what they fought against. If this were a rare thing you could just say it’s an anomaly. But do you know how many small organic producers end up being owned by an agribusiness company? Lots. Check out this chart on Organic Industry Structure.

How does this happen? I don’t think they all sell out for the money. But when companies like Dagoba Chocolate and MaraNatha Peanut Butter end up being owned by Hershey and Heinz it makes you wonder how this happens. Perhaps it’s an issue of scale. Do these companies just get too big for the comfort of the big food companies? Does the popularity of the products grow the companies too large to hang on to their ideals? Maybe it’s when a regional company goes national that is the dividing line. In the case of Ben & Jerry’s, now owned by Unilever, it apparently started when Ben & Jerry’s collective ownership of the company fell to less than a majority share and they could no longer insist that their vision be embraced. I think it will be important in the future that we hang on to our regional producers lest we lose the ability to make that product on a local basis in enough quantity to matter.

In other news I’m happy to tell you a newly built bike trailer for me is just days away from being completed. I borrowed a similar trailer from the trailer builder last week and did the first compost pick-ups from the coffee shops last week on the bike. It was so great to just zip up and park next to the front door on the bike and change out the buckets. Sweet!

I’ve been picking up coffee grounds from 3-4 coffee shops on Mondays and Thursdays for a couple of months now and have been using the grounds to amend beds and start new compost piles. It does take time away from other farming activities but it’s something I’m committed to. Coffee grounds are concentrated tropical nutrients, high in nitrogen, available for free. If you’ve got a garden, go talk to your nearest coffee shop and ask for their grounds. The key is coming back regularly to pick them up. Most coffee places have experience with people picking up the grounds for a while and then fizzling out. If you’re someone who would enjoy an hour or so zipping around to a few places on a bike twice a week to pick up compost, let me know. I can hook you up with a trailer and there’s often a free cup ‘o Joe in it for you.

I’ve also started picking up the veggie scraps from the awesome people at Soup Cycle. I ran into one of their soup delivery people delivering soup to the residents of one of the gardens, and we got to talking. It seems we’re all kindred spirits in cooking great food, using good organic ingredients, and bike delivery! Hopefully some of the compost from them will help grow veggies that will make their way back into a future batch of soup. I’ll keep you posted!

If you want to contact me about helping out, my new phone number is: (203) 962-2741. Just give a call on a day you want to come out to one of the gardens and find out what we’re doing that day. There is much to do and plant in the next 6-8 weeks, including a huge new plot in Ladd’s Addition that was once a community garden! It’s in a fantastic, very visible spot across from one of the rose gardens, and I would like to infuse some community growing there again. Besides planting corn which has been a tradition there in the past, I think it would be awesome to grow some things like Giant Kohlrabi which people don’t see growing very often in a city. Much thanks to J & J who made the land-lender aware of Calliope’s Table and what’s going on with urban farming!

Come out and join us as we turn these spaces into food production sites. With so much to be done, we can accommodate all ages and skill levels and help you find something to do that lets you find your happy space while in a garden. See you soon!

Peace and peas,
Calliope