Delivery #18, Week of September 28th, 2025

The News from Windflower Farm

What’s in the vegetable share?

  • Spinach 
  • Mustard Greens
  • Radicchio
  • Parsley
  • Leeks
  • Broccoli
  • Beans
  • Sweet Peppers
  • Pie Pumpkins OR Delicata Squash
  • Tomatoes

Your fruit share will be fresh Empire Apples from Yonder Farm.

News from the farm

It rained on Wednesday and Thursday of last week, giving us a total of more than 3 inches. Hallelujah! It was so much rain all at once that our electronic rain gauge couldn’t produce a reliable figure. Already, it seems, the grass is greener. And we’ve been able to move on to other activities. We live just 35 miles south of the Adirondack Park “blueline.” To celebrate the arrival of rain, we went paddling for the day in Lower Saranac Lake, where we enjoyed the company of loons and peak fall colors.

Our soils are rolling and rocky, making them less than ideal for the kind of work we do. Still, they are highly productive soils and have yielded record corn crops and some very good vegetables. The rolling aspect of our farm is not a great problem, and not one that can be easily remedied anyway. To be sure, it can make the tractor ride more exciting. We’ve learned that brakes should be fully operational. Having adapted to being hill farmers, we’ve also learned to farm on the contour to prevent erosion. 

Rocks, on the other hand, can be a problem. Hand picking, something we’ve done for 25 years, has helped, but it hasn’t been enough and it is back breaking. Last December, we made the decision to spend some of our equipment budget on a Rock-O-Matic, a big pull-behind rock picking machine.  We found one in Ontario and had it shipped here just ahead of the Trump tariffs. Because potato harvesting brings a huge number of rocks to the surface, we decided to start our rock picking there. The quantity of rockscoming out of the field has been staggering. Our farm won’t be stone-free overnight, but the improvement makes me think that we might grow straight carrots here one day!

Have a great week, Ted

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Author: Central Brooklyn CSA

The Central Brooklyn CSA (CBCSA) is dedicated to working with our partners the New York City Coalition Against Hunger, Windflower Farm, and the Hebron French Speaking SDA Church to continue the work of building a Community Supported Agriculture model that increases access to fresh, local produce for all members of our communities, regardless of income level. Join us as we continue to bring fresh, organic, affordable and nutritious vegetables and fruit to the Bed-Stuy, Crown Heights, and surrounding communities.

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