Monday, January 21, 2013

End of this CSA Season

Our plants look like this most mornings.
This Wednesday, January 23rd, will be the last CSA delivery of the season. We've had frost just about every morning for the past month. The frost, combined with the short day length and wet soil, means that we haven't been able to grow replacement crops for those we are harvesting. It's okay; that's winter, and it's to be expected. We plan to restart our CSA in April, and we'll be notifying everyone by email and Facebook when we're ready to sign-up members again. If you're not already on our contacts list, and you'd like to be, please fill out the membership form http://www.1-acre-farm.blogspot.com/p/sign-up-to-get-veggies-delivered.html

Lots of people have remarked on how nice it will be to have a vacation over the next couple months. Yeah, right. While we do hope to take a vacation (keep fingers crossed), there's still much work to be done in order to keep things running and get ready for spring. The bigger jobs include tilling the soil for spring and summer plantings, growing thousands of seedlings in the greenhouse, pruning fruit trees, and doing winter plantings of asparagus and strawberries. See you in spring!

Thursday, January 3, 2013

Cauliflower, a Long Time Coming

(L-R) Broccoli, Romanesco, and Cauliflower

This week we had a beautiful harvest of cauliflower, broccoli and romanesco! Although most people think of cauliflower as a fairly common veggie, as opposed to something like fancy heirloom tomatoes, cauliflower actually is quite difficult to grow. Once tomatoes are established, they give many pounds of fruit continually for about 3 months. Cauliflower takes just as long to grow (We seeded today’s cauliflower back in July!), and each plant makes only one head. Although the leaves are also edible, most people don’t eat them, so it’s a 1-harvest crop. Cauliflower is a cool-weather crop, and we only grow it in the fall now because we’ve found that spring cauliflower tends get aphids and cabbage loopers, and it bolts (goes to flower) as soon as we get a hot day. The cauliflower we're harvesting now was covered with shade cloth back when the weather was hot and later with another type of row cover to keep it warm and keep the bugs off. Now that we’re getting cold nights, we’ve also lost some of the heads to frost damage. These are a few of the reasons why our fall CSA tends to feature much more leafy greens, like kale, which grows in only 2 months and can be harvested continuously for many months. 
A mature plant is about 3 ft. tall with huge leaves.

I just want folks to have some idea of what it takes to grow a vegetable that most Americans think of as relatively inexpensive and common. How does organic cauliflower arrive at the grocery store year-round for about $3/head? I really don’t know. Surely, it's due in part to economy of scale, i.e. larger farms can grow big fields of cauliflower and mechanize the process. I also think it has a lot to do with importing from other regions and countries when it's out of season here, underpaid farm labor, and maybe climate-controlled greenhouses.

If you have tips for growing cauliflower efficiently, let us know. We're still learning!