2008
We used the greenhouse for winter production of lettuce
and spinach for the first time this winter and were very happy with the
results. We had
timed our harvest for the Feb.2 Ground Hog Day Winter
Farmers’ Market in
Greenfield. That event was wildly successful; we sold
out of all our
produce in a couple of hours. Next year we would like to
grow for the
Winter Farmers’ Market again and we want to supply our
CSA customers
with greens throughout the winter on an “as needed
basis”.
A new crop we’re planning this year is celeriac, an ugly
root that
tastes like celery and stores all winter. Its’ great in
soups and
stir-fries and with roast chicken. Of course we’ve added
a few new
melons to try for a total of 21 varieties.
We put up a solar shed this winter in a corner of our
flower garden. It
has 20 solar voltaic panels on the roof and will produce
75% of our
electricity even in the summer when we’re running the
greenhouse fan and
the air conditioner in our cold room. As an added bonus,
the solar shed
serves as garage for our tractor. We have pictures of
the solar shed and
more in the 2006 gallery.
2009
Our CSA has been wildly successful this year. We’ve had
to turn away potential customers because we limit our
membership to 20. This year Saturdays and Wednesdays
are pickup days. The spring has been mostly good to
us. The cool rainy has made for great sweet lettuce,
peas, and broccoli. A new crop we’re trying this spring
is fava beans. They like it cool too. But we’ll need
some heat and sun soon to get our tomato, corn, melons
and sweet potatoes off and running. We are testing our
some new heirloom sweet potato varieties to see what
tastes good and grows well in our conditions; white, red
and purple varieties. Again, I went crazy with new
melons, over 25 varieties. We are also trying some new
heirloom tomatoes with great names like Boxcar Willie.
The peaches, pears and plums are looking great but the
apples are thin this year due to poor pollination
weather during their bloom.
Healthy and Happy eating.
Ervin and Gloria
Coyote Hill Farm
June 22, 2009
2010
This year is
our 7th year in farming and we have learned a lot. It seems every
season has a lesson to teach us. Last year we watered our greenhouse tomatoes
too much when we planted them in their beds with the result that the soil
compacted and we had a 50% yield reduction. This year the tomatoes look
absolutely wonderful. We’re trying for more greenhouse cucumbers too. We’re
starting our sweet potatoes in the greenhouse this year but have yet to devise a
satisfactory system for producing slips.
It was a very
early spring this year and the orchard bloomed two weeks early. Hopefully frost
on April 28th didn’t set back the blooms on the peaches, pears,
apples and plums. The early strawberry blossoms were blasted by the cold but
there should still be enough future blossoms to produce a crop. We’re trialing
an ever bearing variety called Seascape this year for berries in September.
Hopefully we
won’t get a repeat of the late blight disaster on our tomatoes and potatoes that
hit us last year in July. We salvaged the potatoes but there was little
harvesting of any heirloom tomatoes. This year again we’re trialing 30
different heirloom varieties of tomatoes and hopefully this year more of our 25
varieties of melons will reach maturity. It is always a gamble with New England
summers and melons.
Have a good summer
and happy eating
Ervin and Gloria