A NEW SEASON HAS BEGUN

The winter is over and the first crops have been seeded outside. Over the winter I grew in the new high tunnel and have recently completed a second high tunnel. But my off farm job as a carpenter is finally over and Im back to farming full time. I have been trying not to fall behind on farm tasks, and we have already started over 10,000 seedlings.
For the most part, my interaction with the alpacas over the winter has been to feed them in the morning and occasionally throw them some green stuff from the high tunnel. They still arent used to me being around all day. Every time I walk towards the pen, this is the scene that greets me. They are sure Im bringing them food and pace quickly back and forth, anticipating a treat. I feel like Im disappointing them, but when I walk back the next time, they are doing the exact same thing, so I guess Im not doing any long term damage.






This weekend we will be attending our last farmers markets for the year, it is the end of our second growing season. Farming, for us as a new farm, is an all consuming endeavor. The days are long, our ‘to do’ list only seems to get longer, and we make more mistakes than we want to admit to. Last week, when I mentioned to a customer that we were a new farm and had a lot to learn, she said “you would never know that, your produce always looks so beautiful.” I thanked her and said “That’s probably because we dont bring all our screw ups to the farmers markets.”
In the past, when I heard people thanking their customers and saying it was their customers that keep them going, I always wrote it off to hyperbole. But as a farmer, Ive finally realized what they meant, and it isnt just something people say to keep their customers happy.






My future in laws had let us use their large garden to grow in last year and we were planning to also use it this year. They had earlier suggested that we stay at their place and expand the garden. I love working there and the soil is good, but all their property was wooded. They made it very clear that they were ok with us clearing the land and since we were getting desperate, we decided to go for it. Originally, I felt bad about clear cutting the area in front of the garden, but it all happened so quickly that I had no chance to dwell on it. Two weeks after we started cutting the first tree, the stumps were out, the ground was graded, fencing was up and the first bed was put in and planted. We have been making steady progress and hopefully will be caught up with our planting by the end of the week (when we will have to start putting in the warm weather crops).














