Join us Saturday to discuss Risky Decisions
January 25, 2020
Dear Friends and Customers of Many Hands Organic Farm,
Though we did spend some time this week buying more black bags, filling them with sand by banging the tractor bucket against the frozen pile to shake it free first, and battening down the hatches of the tarps that had so elegantly blown off of their respective fields, we hope that we now have that project in hand. But no promises! We are now focusing a lot of our attention on our old tried and true soil prep technique of putting down cardboard and then covering it leaves and hay. If all goes well, when we pull this mulch back, or even better, find we can plant through it, we expect to see masses of earthworms. We also cleaned out 3 hoop house beds to ready them for planting turnips, radishes, spinach and beets on Monday. And we will start some things inside too. Keep an eye out for a composite video on seed starting that Maya will be putting together soon – and positing it on our new YouTube Channel. Stu had a birthday, and Anthony is on his way to Colorado for a nice winter vacation. Maya and Ari have been working feverishly behind the scenes, and Clare and I are holding down the fort on our continued winter schedule. We welcomed Ram on Friday as a potential new working shareholder.
Stu on his birthday posing with Ram (left), more black bags to hold down tarps (right)
First On Farm Workshop for 2021 – January 30 – 10:30 am
The Five Risky Decisions that Defined our Lives
Jack has been carrying all the effort on putting this retrospective workshop together for us. We are excited that we already have 12 registrants (3 in person). This is the first of our free monthly series of wide ranging and educational workshops that we will be holding at our farm. This first workshop will help you get to know Jack and Julie and our journey over the past 40 years. We feel we have a rather unique lifestyle that has allowed us to live our lives and raise our 4 children relatively unfettered by socially accepted norms.
These workshops are free, and you can come in person (and stay for a pot luck lunch at noon) or join us via zoom.
Register here – bit.ly/MHSCWorkshop1
Download this poster and get it around to friends – https://mhof.net/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/Many-Hands-sustainability-Center-3.pdf
Sign up for the 2021 CSA options
We are now up to 25 shareholders for 2021. And this past Friday Clare and I started the fun process of laying out the crop plan for the year. This is by far our most fun project each year. So far we know where the corn, beans, peas, onions and leeks are going to be planted. We truly appreciate those of you who early sign on the dotted line.
https://mhof.net/community-supported-agriculture/
Reading Inspiration this week
Friend Christy gave me a copy of Mindset by Carol Dweck as a retirement gift. I just finished. This book really had a strong impact on me. Of course I have a growth mindset, I posited. Then I started to really investigate my many fixed mindset perspectives in certain aspects of my life. A great book to help one consider the roadblocks and blind spots that keep us from being as forward moving as we might like.
Ag Tip this week – wonderful cover crops
My friend Mike Lombard from Ideal Compost in Peterborough, NH turned me on to Green Cover Seeds – https://greencoverseed.com/ a few years back. They have an incredible selection of cover crops from all families. And over the years they have moved from a conventional farming system to a much more regenerative one (check out their bags). We purchased 4 50 lb. bags of cover crop mixes to use on our farm in 2021 (1 mix from the NOFA bulk order). We are excited to use these mixes in a thoroughly integrated way on our farm. Most of these mixes have up to 13 species, which wildly builds biodiversity above and below ground.
Cool Season Soil Builder Mix – Spring and Summer Intersow Cover Crops
Perennial Pollinator Mix – under fruit trees
Cool Season Pollinator Mix – vegetative pathways
NOFA Cover Crop Mix – Fall Intersow in Crops
Products available now
- Ground pork in 1 lb. packages – $10/lb.
- Pork chops in close to 1 lb. packages – $10/lb.
- Lard – $20/quart
- Pork stock – $7.50/quart
- Eggs – $8/dozen
- Comfrey salve – $8/2 oz.
- Hemp salve – $10/2 oz.
- Garlic powder – $10/2 oz.
- Lavender soap – $6/5 oz. bar
- Peppermint soap – $6/5 oz. bar
- Dandelion tincture – $6/2 oz. bottle
- Yellow dock tincture – $6/2 oz. bottle
- Frozen applesauce – $6/quart
- Canned (jarred) tomatoes) – $6/1 quart
Make arrangements to pick up at the farm or we can ship some things to you. Call at 978-355-3853 or email Julie@mhof.net
NOFA Tri-state Bulk order
The real last call. Don’t tarry. Here is a link to order. https://www.nofamass.org/bulk-order-program/
Keep that Cardboard Coming!
Although it is looking a bit like a warehouse in the garage right now, we have great plans to cover large areas of our fields with cardboard and hay over the next month. Thanks for the cardboard coming from all quarters. We are getting it out there.
Julie
Weekly Staff Spotlight:
Here is the first of our series of weekly farm staff and community member profiles. No better place to start than with co-owner Julie Rawson.
After growing up on a conventional farm in Illinois, Julie Rawson spent the first several years of her adulthood doing community organizing in Chicago and Boston where she met her husband Jack Kittredge. Once she and Jack started a family, they moved out to Barre to start Many Hands Organic Farm in 1982. It was important to both Julie and Jack to raise their family in the country and with homegrown food. Julie always says that her most formative moments as a kid were when she “was down at the crick with my sister Sue and brother Tom just playing in the mud.”
Over the past several decades, Julie has continued to be a pioneer in organic farming practices, especially in soil fertility and carbon sequestration. Julie remarked that “It’s not enough just to be organic, we have to really up our game to have organic and high quality food”. Besides raising high quality, organic produce and meat, Julie is committed to living up to the name, Many Hands, through her dedication to working with community members, young adults, and folks looking to connect with the land and food system. “It is very important to me, to be able to share what we have with as many people as possible, so that they can also gain from it,” says Julie. And of course there’s the added bonus of getting to play in the dirt all day long.
Check out the latest photos from the farm on our Instagram!