Greenhouse Visit

jeff and mary sueLast Wednesday (pre-junket) I went to visit a greenhouse in Buffalo, Minnesota. The greenhouse is part of the alternative/technical high school in Buffalo, but was not being used this year. Two farmers rented the space to grow greens and plant starts.

rows of greensJeff Aldrich and his wife Mary Sue Stevens began planting greens in December and have been selling them at the Local Roots Food Co-op and local venues. This co-op is an unusual model, taking online orders for pick-up on distribution day. It is working somewhat like a food hub/farmer’s market hybrid. It is a great thing for the farmers, as they can post what they have available and bring exactly what they’ve sold. Jeff and Mary Sue have a model somewhat like mine– gardens scattered on the property and access to the greenhouse.

broccoli plantsDan has a 7-acre farm in Hutchinson and has used his greenhouse space to grow greens for clients in the Twin Cities and Hutchinson and to start plants for his CSA. On March 11, he was taking 72 large broccoli seedlings to transplant into his hoop house under another cover. He said they would be safe there unless it goes below 10 degrees outside. And though we do expect more snow before spring arrives for good, it will probably not go that low.

planting board

planting board row maker

At this point I have basic questions about greenhouses like how much does heat cost (way too much for us to consider heating our greenhouse through the winter) and how do you water (by hose) and how and what are you planting. Jeff, Mary Sue, and Dan are planting different types of lettuce in trays, without even using cells. They fill the trays with potting mix, stamp in rows with a piece of plywood with ridges on it, put some vermiculite on top of the seed, and there you go. They say you don’t need to thin if you plant in rows.

Dan was also taking some trays to harvest, wash, and package in 6-ounce bags of mixed greens.

My visit had been postponed because there was an infestation of aphids at the greenhouse. Aphids are the scourge of greenhouses, and of basically any warm, moist climate, I’m thinking. I had not seen aphids before, but they supposedly come in three types: yellow, green, and red. These were yellow. They are tiny and remind me of the little bugs that kill houseplants. (I have never had success growing houseplants.)

It is disheartening. Beneficial insects have been purchased and green-lacewing1-123x123released: lacewings and ladybugs. The ladybugs seem to be mostly walking around checking out the space, or checking out each other and getting busy (wink wink), but not eating aphids. Maybe aphids are an aphrodisiac for ladybugs.

After visiting, I’d have to say it was hard to see an end game with the aphids. At that point Jeff and Mary Sue were harvesting whatever they could and trying to figure out what they were likely to lose and how to thoroughly clean the place, let the beneficials work, and then get started on the tomato and pepper planting. This may be another argument for shutting down a greenhouse for December 15 – February 15. Let every bad bug freeze to death.

sunflower sprouts

I learned a lot in my short visit. My favorite thing by far was to see the trays of sunflower sprouts. Sunflower sprouts! They grow big, thick shoots in 10days that you can harvest and throw on salads or in a stir fry (think of the sunflower/tahini dressing possibilities) or just eat by the fistful. They definitely beat the wimpy sprouts I’ve been making in jars on my kitchen counter.

 

Posted in garden, the Farm | Tagged , , , , , | Comments Off on Greenhouse Visit

Coolest Small Town in America

photo-42I am here in the coolest small town in America, Grand Marais, Minnesota. So says Budget Travel magazine. They have a point. Here at the very northern point of Minnesota along the Lake Superior shoreline, there is a town with some mighty fine restaurants, including the Angry Trout and the Crooked Spoon. I don’t know about you, but there will always be a place in my heart for towns where you can dream of having a little house on a very large body of water. Here’s the house:

photo-38As always in towns like this, I’m tempted to apply for a summer job at a place like “Best Donuts” or one of the fudge shops. I wouldn’t presume to think I could get hired at the Ben Franklin, which is clearly for year-round residents.

photo-37I’m on a bit of a “junket” with The Saint John’s Bible. I’m doing a talk tonight and a workshop tomorrow morning, before heading off to Kentucky for a visit with an old friend who lives in Louisville and a talk at Berea College. I’m being very well hosted by Bob and Ginny Padzieski. That photo at the top? That’s the view from where I’m staying. It’s only in the 30s here (going to be in the 60s at home today) but it’s a lovely day for knocking around a town as cool as this one.

It’s filled with people who walk with purpose (they’re wearing boots), many of them artists. Lots of the year-round folks chose to retire here, moving north from wherever they lived before. That is a particular type of person. Last night at a “grazing” fundraiser for the high school I met some of them. They all talked about how much is going on in Grand Marais, and how busy they are.

 

photo-40On the way home we passed this church, which has been converted into the home and art studio of Betsy Bowen, one of my favorite Minnesota artists. Right now I’m taking advantage of the free wifi in the very cool and well-appointed public library. But I’m itching to get back out there, for a little walk in the hills before lunch.

photo-43Oh, and there’s a food co-op. Where you can get stuff like the local jam I had for breakfast. Take a gander at these ingredients. That’s some zing.

photo-41

 

Posted in Minnesota history | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on Coolest Small Town in America

spring forward (and drink kombucha!)

photo-40Tonight the clocks, if modern enough, will spring forward all on their own. The sun is already setting near 7 p.m., so starting tomorrow it will set at 8.

We spring forward into more sunlight and, although it will snow more before winter is over, the snow won’t last long from here on out. Today it was in the 40s and we got a real sense of spring. I opened up the cold frame and felt inside. The soil was hot and dry. It’s so tempting to throw some seeds in there, but I’ll try to contain myself. It’s way too early. If the temperature goes below 20 degrees at night, young plants will freeze. I’ll stick to the indoor lights in the new plant room for a few more weeks.

Every year the goal is to start eating fresh produce earlier and end later. Today I had the great experience of eating the very last of the 2014 potatoes and also the very first small salad from greens growing on the windowsill under a fluorescent light. Earliest spring met late summer.

kombucha 3 days

Because it is still winter, I’ve been playing around with new projects. “The year of ferment” is over, but a good fermentation project is always welcome. A few weeks ago My sister-in-law gave me a piece of her kombucha mother. I plopped it in some sugary green tea and in five days I filtered some into a pint jar. It was delicious, like really good, flavorful iced tea. Not much fizz, but tasty.

Steve said it looked like something from the bottom of the pond (to be fair, he was also looking at a jar with chia seeds in it). He’s not far off when the green tea has left grassy dust along the bottom of the jar and the mother is trailing strands of yeast. The mother looks like a milky jellyfish. The compact disc Annie gave to me has expanded in my larger container.

photo-35Kombucha is made by fermenting tea with caffeine and a large quantity of sugar (3/4 cup for 2 quarts of tea). The mother eats sugar and grows on it. The tea loses its sugar and gains probiotics and vitamin C. The health benefits of kombucha are not proven and are probably overstated, but it tastes good and supposedly improves digestion. It has occurred to me, however, that I might not be letting it ferment long enough, and just enjoying an excuse to drink sweet tea!

If you want to make your own kombucha, find someone who can give you a piece of their mother, or you can buy one online. This is the best site about kombucha I’ve found: http://www.kombuchabrooklyn.com.

Posted in garden, recipe | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on spring forward (and drink kombucha!)

The Coop

A friend on Facebook recently woke up on her birthday and went out of her house to find her husband bought her a shiny new car and there it was with a big bow on it. We all know this moment– from television commercials, mostly. My female creative writing students regularly featured this moment in their short stories (said husbands were usually firemen and the cars ranged from Lexus to Mercedes).

garden with coopMy choice in husbands (and lifestyle) is such that I am quite sure I will never have such a moment. However, when I looked out the bedroom window yesterday at my garden I got an equally wonderful surprise– a chicken coop made by my husband had been delivered! I was so excited. I just love the way the garden looks– more like a little village with the cold frame and coop.

I’ve been wanting a chicken coop for a few years. It needed to be varmint-proof and big enough for four chickens, easy to clean and sturdy. I showed Steve a bunch of designs from a website, including one that had incorporated four toilet seats for reaching in and getting the eggs behind the chicken’s backs.

chicken coop sideMy chicken coop is decidedly a Steve Heymans design. It echoes the shape of our house, with one long sloping side and plenty of windows. His new favorite material is polycarbonate, so that was put to good use. The bar across the door will keep the varmints from breaking in. There’s a shelf for roosting (easily removed for cleaning). What is not there yet is the covered run, which will extend from one side and allow the chickens easy access in and out without being in danger from predators in the air.

thermometerIt is still very cold outside. But I’m driving over to the Cold Spring Country Store today to order the chicks. They’ll arrive at the end of the month. The idea is to get them started inside so we’ll start getting eggs earlier. We’ll move them to the coop when it’s warm. Then in winter we will move the whole coop, either to the furniture shop or the barn or even the greenhouse.

And so, I (will soon) have my very own animals in their own little house on the farm!

 

chicken coop front

Posted in garden, the Farm | Tagged , , , | 3 Comments

Squash and Pepper Soup

photo(1)At certain points in the gardening season, when things are coming in fast and furious, many gardeners give up careful canning and preservation strategies and just start chopping up stuff and throwing it in the freezer.

I made quite a few loaves of zucchini bread this summer, but near the end I just sliced a bunch, blanched it, and threw it in freezer bags. A little later I got tired of making red pepper sauce but still had paprika peppers, so I diced them and threw them in the freezer.

I figured I’d throw the peppers in soups and stews, but wasn’t sure what I’d do with the sure-to-be-mushy zucchini. Until someone on FB mentioned zucchini soup!

photoLast night I wanted to make a soup with the last of the butternut squashes (a small one) and decided to raid the freezer for other ingredients– as much garden as I could muster on March 1.

The result was just the most flavorful, excellent soup ever. I’m sticking to my big epiphany of the winter being how much flavor red peppers add to stews/soups. Here’s the recipe.

 

Squash and Pepper Soup

1 medium onion, finely diced
1 medium stalk celery, diced
1 medium carrot, diced
olive oil
3-5 cloves garlic, smashed or finely diced
3 cups butternut squash, diced/cubed (mine as fresh, but could be frozen or pureed)
2-3 cups zucchini (one medium, again fresh or frozen)
2-3 cups diced sweet red pepper
2 Tbs chipotle peppers in adobo sauce or other hot red peppers
14 oz can of tomatoes (or a few tomatoes, fresh or frozen, or the half jar I had in the fridge)
4-6 cups of chicken broth (or vegetable)
2 Tbs sour cream, cream, or yogurt (if you want it creamier, which I do)

Begin with the mirepoix: onion/celery/carrot in olive oil simmered on low for 10 minutes (no browning). Add garlic and saute 1 minute until fragrant.

While the vegetables are sauteing, cook the butternut squash in boiling water for 5-8 minutes. Drain (keep some liquid if you are using vegetable broth).

Add the two types of squash and peppers and saute a couple minutes. Add the tomatoes and broth and simmer 10-15 minutes. You want all the ingredients to be very soft. Blend it in a blender or with an immersion blender until smooth. (The zucchini skin gives great green flecks and the red pepper lovely red flecks in the golden orange soup.) Stir in the sour cream if desired and serve hot with bread and butter.

Serves 6

Posted in garden, recipe | Tagged , , , , , | 2 Comments

Fine Dining Begins at Home

photo-35I’m officially announcing the end of an age. The age of fine dining. It went out with a bang, namely a trip to Restaurant Alma. I’ve been wanting to eat at this restaurant ever since I saw the film Dirty Work: The Story of Elsie’s Farm by Deb Wallwork. (This is the same filmmaker who made Grow, a short film mentioned a few posts back.  Dirty Work tells the story of a small CSA farm run by a couple, Don Roberts and Joni Cash, that struggles and eventually downsizes. Don’s son is Alex Roberts, the chef at Restaurant Alma, which is consistently on “best of” lists of restaurants in the Twin Cities.

For my 50th birthday last year, we ate at a wonderful farm-to-table restaurant in Chicago, The Bristol. It was a fun time of small plates and sharing and at the end they treated us to every dessert on the menu! (I was a very special guest.) For my birthday, my parents gave me a gift certificate to Restaurant Alma, which is what put it in reach for us.

Of course, the height of the fine dining era was going with my brother to Next, Grant Achatz’s restaurant, when he had invitations to a preview. Not only that, my review of that preview is still my most popular post on this blog. That was an experience I’ll never forget and my brother was the absolute best companion.

However, I realize my thoughts about food and going out to eat have really changed. I have always enjoyed cooking, but I have also always really enjoyed going out to eat. And I’m not saying we will stop going out to eat. Oh no. But no more bills over $150 for two people. I’ll save the fine dining for home.

Before the meal, we went to “Feast: Radical Hospitality in Contemporary Art” at the Weisman Museum. The image at the top of this post is by Laura Letinsky (“Untitled #6 from the series Rome 2009) and from the exhibit. It was a fine show, but most of the art was performance art, which means most of the exhibits were records of performances, so there was a lot of reading. I have some thoughts on politics and art and the politics of art and food, but that’s for another post (and in large part the exhibit, supposedly about radical politics, reeked of privilege, as did the dinner of course).

My favorite piece in the exhibit was a display related to food from Iraq by Michael Rakowicz. It included datesRobbinsIceCreamSocial-166x250 mislabeled as to country of origin in order to circumvent the embargo as well as replicas and images of plates from one of Saddam Hussein’s palaces that the artist bought on eBay and used to serve “performance art” meals until Iraq insisted on their return– as well as pictures of the “Enemy Kitchen,” a food truck flying an Iraqi flag and serving Iraqi food served by veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. My second favorite piece was a collection of items from a series of parties where the color scheme was entirely the pinks and browns of Baskin Robbins. (One summer I worked at a Baskin Robbins and felt like a kids’  party clown getting out of my car in my uniform to pump gas.) Or maybe the video of working class men breaking the Ramadan feast that had strong echoes of Leonardo DaVinci’s Last Supper

And afterwards, Restaurant Alma. The food was delicious. And one of my favorite things about the night was how good I felt when I got home. It was healthy food, flavorful, and the portions were right (though, sure, one more scallop would have been nice as Steve almost cried handing over half a scallop to me from his perfectly cooked pair).

I didn’t take any photos of the food. My favorite dish was the farro with white beans and squid, and Steve likewise enjoyed his first course the best, endive and smoked potatoes. But it was all good, perfectly cooked and perfectly paced and gorgeously plated.

photo-37And I want to keep eating that way… on occasion. I just want to see if I can come close at home. So this morning, when it was time for brunch and Steve was still talking about the smoky potatoes, I gave it a whirl. We’d had a nice dinner with friends on Friday that consisted of salmon with red pepper sauce, asparagus, and some of the last of the garden potatoes. We still had some of everything, so I made a breakfast version. Starting, of course, with “presentation” in the form of badly drizzled red pepper mayonnaise (mayo, garden red pepper sauce and fresh lemon juice)

I boiled the potatoes a few minutes before roasting them. Not smoky, but well-seasoned and roasted. Could have used more time for char, but hey, it’s just brunch. Along with roasted asparagus and some onions, garlic, and rosemary.

A fried egg topped with salmon and fresh sprouts. More red pepper sauce served alongside (actually, the red pepper mayo did add a bit of smoky flavor).

I mean, really, why go out?

photo-36

 

 

 

Posted in garden, recipe, reviews | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Prom

If you click on the link, you’ll see what is inside this box.

You’re going to want to see what is in this box, and what happens next.

http://cowbird.com/story/109654/Prom/

 

10835116_10152719566486947_76991729407084872_o

Thanks to Sarah, Tom, and Hannibal Scott and Emily Steere for letting me share this story with others.

 

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on Prom

New Plant Room

potting bench and storage lightedThe plant room, formerly known as the basement, is up and running! I love it from the ice cold floor and new storage boxes along the western wall to the super-bright shop lights hanging over the planting bench.

A word about those lights. It is seriously as if we have a spaceship in the basement. You could safely land a plane in the backyard thanks to the light it casts out the window over the snow. We close the blinds at night to reduce the light pollution for the neighbors, but there is still a bright white glow coming from our house until I shut it down about 10 p.m.

seed bench in februaryThe first little blades of grass that will be leeks in six months are just emerging, and I went ahead and started a few basil plants, kale, broccoli, cauliflower and a window box of spinach, lettuces and scallions.

The cold storage boxes are particularly fantastic. This is an experiment to see if we can get a better space for storing squash, potatoes, carrots, beets– the root crops. Anything will be better than what we have now, which is just putting the squash and potatoes in laundry baskets covered with burlap and pushing them under the planting benccold storage thermometer 1h.

I put a thermometer on the tile floor in the bottom of the box and so far so good– 42-45 degrees. There’s a little ventilation carved into the front of the boxes, and they’re not exactly airtight along the hinges. I’ll be interested to see what happens next fall in terms of humidity and temp when it is not -5 outside. September/October when the squash and potatoes first come inside will be the real test. The beets and carrots will be in damp sand inside the boxes, providing some of the needed humidity.

kale seedlings feb 15Right now I’m still in the wipe-up-every-droplet-of-water stage and trying to keep the bamboo veneer clean. Doing the actual planting in the garage so no soil gets on the new carpet. It will also be interesting to see how this shiny new workspace ages…

For now, it’s happy planting!

Posted in garden | Tagged , , , , | 3 Comments

Farming

sfa-logoYesterday I attended the Minnesota Sustainable Farming Association’s (SFA) annual conference at the College of Saint Benedict. It is only a mile from me and brings together small farmers from all over the state. Last year it was at this conference’s seed swap I picked up a few seeds for Cool Old Squash, a big winner in last year’s garden.

I’m happy to report there were a lot, maybe even a preponderance, of people under 40 attending this conference. Lots of young farmers with dreams of running CSAs and selling wholesale and living off the land. I met one young man who has 15 acres out near Alexandra where he, his wife, and one of their high school friends, are farming. His friend is into horses and does some plowing and cultivating with teams of horses.

Last year's conference

Last year’s conference

Everyone had on farm-related t-shirts and Carhart knit caps. There were babies and small children. But these weren’t hippies. Oh no. Closer to hipsters, but not even really that. Well, yes, there was a couple with a large green thermos passing a cup of hot Mate back and forth in its gourd-like cup with a bombilla (straw). (Don’t worry if you don’t recognize this– it’s an Argentinian thing. Without a friend from Argentina, I would have been clueless.)

10689912_893840830633765_1222017589933732777_nOver the lunch hour we watched a short film, “Grow,” that followed young people who came to the Fergus Falls community college for a short-lived program in sustainable agriculture (2010-2013). The goal of the program was to teach skills to young people who wanted to move back to rural areas and work in sustainable farming to some degree. They ended up in various professions: CSA farms, a mobile chicken processing operation, food preparation and production. The program succeeded very well, but also didn’t fit into a proper academic setting– being mostly hands-on and project-oriented. The SFA has taken over some of the workshops.

foodhubsfinal3I learned about food hubs. I’ve heard a lot of buzz about these but didn’t really understand them before. Basically, they’re part of a movement being encouraged by the USDA to get small and medium-sized vegetable producers to come together in order to distribute to bigger markets. Think schools, hospitals and nursing homes getting organic, local food on a regular basis.  Think local warehouses with tons of professional equipment for processing 100-200 lbs of lettuce and greens an hour, packaging and storing large quantities of food and delivering it fresh to large grocery stores and other clients. A food hub in Mankato has received $100,000 in grants and you should see the facility they’ve designed! (In addition to farmers, the other major participants were young people in all sorts of cool nonprofits related to alternative energy, sustainable food production, etc. These folks were in general better dressed and more urban looking.)

One thing I had been concerned about in moving (maybe– baby steps!!) toward growing enough produce to sell was market saturation. I don’t want to step on other farmer’s toes. Well, I learned yesterday there is absolutely no need to worry about that. Not even a fraction of the market is being reached.

But partly this is because of all the hard work it takes. That same farmer with the friend who plows with horses? Well, he seemed kind of discouraged. They are not loving doing a CSA. After attending the “post-harvest food handling and packaging” workshop, I can totally see why. You have to grow a huge variety of produce, all of which needs to be cleaned and stored differently, packaged differently, some cooled some left outside the cooler but not too long, etc. All of it degrades (respirates) at different rates. You need to get it into a beautiful box that will make your customer gasp with delight every week– and do that for 30, 50, 80, 200 people a week!

How much better would it be for the farmers of 3-15 acres to grow one thing at a time, maybe 5 crops a season (greens, broccoli, tomatoes, peppers, potatoes) and deliver a lot of it as it is harvested to a food hub, where other farmers are bringing something different (say beets, green beans, basil, zucchini, winter squash) and the CSA is there with giant coolers and bagging operations for packing the boxes. Or better yet, people can order what they want and come in and pick up their order each week.

Because, as with any farming, the investment seems intense to me. Food washing stations, packing stations, packing materials of many types, hand washing stations in the field and near the packing area, different things for hauling in the produce, cold storage and that equipment, etc. I came home and immediately shopped online for a 5-gallon salad spinner. They generally run from $125–$300! No wonder so many small farmers just wrap their greens in mesh bags and spin it around by hand.

When I came home, I couldn’t really think. But today I felt sort of inspired. It is unclear whether anyone can make even a meager living doing this. Maybe the best you can do is a kind of homesteading where you provide for your own food with minimal investment each year.

But things are happening. I see two major areas of development: community-building and market development.

On the one hand, you have to rebuild farmer communities that support small- and medium-scale farming:

  • teach the skills to a generation who left rural areas (or whose parents did)
  • provide land, equipment, and expertise to help them succeed
  • encourage cooperation over competition to make it work

And on the other hand, you have to educate and develop consumer communities (markets) to support the farmers:

  • continue to educate consumers about local and organic
  • encourage grocers to display and offer local and organic
  • encourage communities to develop food hubs for distribution to larger clients

For example, there are no regulations on selling fresh produce (not processed) to institutions. There are a lot of regulations on selling meat, dairy, and processed foods. But nursing homes and hospitals and schools are free to buy fresh produce directly from farmers, and farmers just need to use best practices around harvesting, cleaning and storage to ensure food safety. Did you know that? I didn’t.

These two areas were reflected most clearly in the final session I attended, an attempt to begin a network of people who want to build and operate deep passive solar winter greenhouses. We broke into two discussion groups: “finances”– can this be viable? with one group of mostly farmers; and “markets” with another large group, a combination of farmers and nonprofit types who wanted to talk about getting the produce into the communities.

collage from last year's sfa festival of farms

collage from last year’s sfa festival of farms

 

Posted in garden, the Farm | Tagged , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Farming

Potting Room

basement beforeI know. I’ve been gone. Not actually, but from the blog. This is, I believe, the longest I’ve gone without posting since I started in 2008. It feels like a really long time. And I have no excuse except, well, it’s winter. Not a very cold or very warm winter. Just winter. And over the past five years I’ve pretty much shared with you everything I cook and do in winter. I tried writing a few essays for you, but I was sick of my own opinions.

But I do have something to show you, Dear Readers! It might not look like much yet, but it will look so much better tomorrow! As you know, winter is also renovation season. steve ceiling2

Here is a photo of poor Steve the first year we were married, when he renovated the living room and scraped the “popcorn” off the vaulted ceiling. Every time he has to do another popcorn ceiling, I tell him that if anyone said I had to do that I would cry and it would be the end of the project. Fortunately, the only room left with popcorn is the master bedroom. And that’s not going to be renovated any time soon.

 

stairs going in

stairs going in

 

 

This year Steve decided to tackle a smallish project, (i.e., not one of the two bathrooms), the basement. It started when he pulled up the carpet before Christmas and put in gorgeous red oak stairs. They are incredibly beautiful. And that carpet just had to go.

 

 

 

my own pantry in September, now much depleted after holiday gift giving.

my pantry in September

As for the basement itself, it has become in time my space. It is my workout room, and it is where I store my canned goods (on built-in shelves with sliding doors that are not part of the renovation). It is also where I pot my plants, and the wide windowsill and some makeshift counters and tables along the southern wall have been prime surfaces for starting plants.

The one thing we do not have at all in this house is cold storage. I’ve imagined large-scale projects involving cinderblocks and insulation in the basement of the barn, but they are beyond me (see popcorn ceiling above). And who wants to walk out to the barn to get some potatoes for dinner in the middle of winter?

In the house, there are no hidden internal closets or rooms. The basement also includes a studio apartment, and that is where a proper cold room would go. There is a closet under the stairway, but it is in the apartment and prime storage space for the tenant. I don’t think she’d appreciate me filling it with squash, carrots, onions and potatoes. I’ve made do by keeping things in buckets and burlap-covered laundry baskets under the makeshift counter.

But my dream potting room would have cold storage. And grow lights. And a nice long counter for the seed starting. And I’m getting it all!

We replaced the 28-year-old carpet down there with carpet squares. It cost a bit more and will be “colder” than the former plush carpet with a pad. Maybe not as good for the workouts. But I’m going for a cooler space in general.

Steve has made a gorgeous long bench with hinged seats that will be installed on the tile floor along the eastern wall, which borders a carport. A thermometer in that corner has read 50 degrees for the past few weeks. Right now the benches are raw wood on the inside, but we will add styrofoam insulation if they aren’t cool enough in the fall and spring. I’m not sure what I’ll do about humidity– probably just store root veggies in damp sand in trays inside the boxes.

The countertop is made of pine and sheets of plywood with bamboo veneer tops. They are so fresh and cute!

leek seedsI was gifted two 4-foot fluorescent lights last summer. This afternoon we adapted them from hard-wired to using plugs and they’ll be hung over the planting bench on chains to raise and lower them. How professional is that?!

It is officially the year of “taking it up a notch.” To celebrate, I planted my first seeds, the leeks, 48 of them, and put them on their heat mat to germinate. As soon as the operation is up and running, I’ll post an “after” photo.

Posted in garden, the Farm | Tagged , , | 1 Comment