April 11, 2008

Volunteers welcome!

We've planted our spring crops in the fields, and our greenhouse is full.  If any of you wish to come lend a hand, we would be happy for the help.  We're working all weekdays 9am-5pm, and some Saturdays.  Call us at 301-537-3038 to let us know when you plan to come.  In May we will begin working every Saturday and our hours will be slightly different.  You can check out more details on this link, www.cbf.org/csa, Volunteer.   

For those of you who wish to work for vegetables, you may work now and "bank" your hours so that you can redeem those vegetables in May or later, once we begin harvesting. 

November 07, 2007

Quick schedule update

Here we are, in the midst of our final week of shares!  Honestly, when we were in the middle of this year's drought, I never thought we could make it all the way to the end of the season with reasonably-sized shares.  It feels like a miracle. 

Our last share pick up will be this Saturday, November 10.
Next week (probably Tuesday) we will be harvesting strictly for donation, mostly to Salvation Army and Reston Interfaith.  If you would like to join us, we would love your help.  We're not sure yet which days we will be harvesting, so if you'd like to make sure you are coming to help harvest rather than mulch garlic, give us a call first at 301-537-3038.  Next week we will also be emailing you a survey to find out what you liked and didn't about your shares this past year. 

Next weekend, beginning November 16, you are welcome to the farm to glean whatever remains in the fields. There will at least be lots of greens and herbs, and I have been told more than once by members in years past that they were eating salads from our farm's greens all the way through December.  Do you really want to get caught buying salad greens from the supermarket for Thanksgiving?  That would be silly.  We will post what's available on this weblog on November 15th, so feel free to check here if you would like to know in advance what you plan to pick before you come.  We'll post maps and signs around the farm to help you find what you're looking for.

Then the farm staff will take a much-needed break.  We'll resume making plans for next year, putting everything away for the winter, fixing up the new greenhouse, and lots of other chores after Thanksgiving.  Then Rob and I are expecting a baby in mid-January.  We're anticipating that this might delay when we send all of our returning members an invitation to sign up for 2008 shares.  So look for that in February.  New members will be invited to join by April.   Then 2008 shares will begin in mid-May! 

So that's the plan, at least.  We'll see you soon, I hope!

Your farmer,
Carrie

October 08, 2007

Job seekers welcome

As of 4/8/08 we are no longer seeking applicants to work here in the 2008 season.

Tragically, we are losing two of our wonderful co-workers this winter.  Kenji is moving to California and Dave is moving to Rwanda.  So we'll be hiring several new staff next year, and if you're interested, or know someone who is, this is a great time to introduce yourselves to us. 

We are much more likely to hire individuals who have worked with us in the past--as volunteers, worksharers or otherwise--than people we have never worked with before.  In addition to helping us get a sense of the applicant's work style, it also helps the applicants when they have a clear idea of what the commute to the farm is like, and of course, what it really means to labor in the fields. 

We plan to hire both part-time and full-time staff, and our starting wage is currently $9/hour.  We'll begin interviewing in February and make our hiring decisions by around mid-March.  Positions will begin around April and end around the end of September, though this may vary considerably, depending our needs and the availability of the applicants. 

So just to be clear, we're not taking resumes now, but if you think you might want to work here next year, let us know you're interested, and give us a chance to get to know you now while we can work with you in the field.   

-Carrie

August 25, 2007

Enter the chili contest at the Anacostia Farmers Market

This is a fun opportunity for anyone who has been considering a visit to the Anacostia Farmers' Market.  Every year they have a chili contest and they're still looking for constestants.

If you'd like to enter your chili, download the entry form, and make sure you submit it by the September 5th deadline.

Download guidelines_and_entry_form_for_fourth_annual_chili_bowl_bonanza.doc , or call the market manager, Nadja Strucker, at 202-526-5344.

If you'd simply like to attend the Bonanza and try other peoples' chili, here's the details:

4th Annual Chili Bowl Bonanza

September 12, 2007

4:00-4:45 Competitors drop off chili to be warmed (no crock pots--no electricity!)

5:00- 6:15 Chili Tasting (community judges People's Choice, "celebrity" judges for other 4 categories)

6:30 Awards announced

This year we have 5 categories: All-Around Chili Champ, Four Alarm Fire House Hot Award, Best Vegetarian Chili Award, People's Choice, and Best New Classic with a Twist.

DC Mayor Adrian Fenty is scheduled to come so we all hope that he will be able to make it!

So just a quick reminder, here are some of our coming events:

  • September 1, Clagett Farm benefit day at the Whole Foods in Annapolis
  • September 12, Chili Bowl Bonanza at the Anacostia Farmers Market
  • October 20, Fall Festival at Clagett Farm

See you there!

-Carrie

July 28, 2006

A summer Thursday

Yesterday morning a volunteer named Ryan spent a few hours weeding the watermelon field with Kenji. Pigweed, Jimson weed, morning glory and foxtail were the most common plants that were pulled out. It was hot and very humid, so soon both, Ryan and Kenji, were drenched in sweat. Good practice for Ryan, who in September will start his agriculture-related Peace Corps stint in a Francophone African country (he does not yet know which one). While Ryan and Kenji were weeding, Michael Heller and Keith Hudson, a young volunteer who loves farms, were stacking hundreds and hundreds of bales of hay. Hard work.

During lunch we were sitting at the wash station when Kenji saw a large bird. "An eagle!" Kenji exclaimed. Sure enough. A bald eagle! By the time I took a picture the eagle was high up in the air, so please excuse its fuzziness.

Pict0032_1
Rob quipped that as national symbols are concerned Clagett Farm has it covered. We have wild turkeys, which Benjamin Franklin wanted to designate as the national symbol, and now the bald eagle, the actual winner of this honor, shows up at the farm.

After lunch Janie, a dedicated volunteer, helped Kenji to mix soil for our second seeding of fall brassicas.

Pict0076

The dogs, Tuzeek and Cassie, pretty much took it easy and stayed out of the sun. They know what to do when it's hot.

Pict0059

July 21, 2006

Twining tomatoes

Our tomato crop promises to be a good one. Shareholders already got some, but most of it is still to come. The plants are laden with green fruit, so August, once again, will be a great tomato month. To keep up with the growing plants, though, we have to twine them between the stakes. Twining facilitates and increases the tomato harvest. It's quite a chore, though--especially when it's hot and humid.

Below we see Kenji and Patti Wawzyniecki working as a team of twiners. Patti is a leader of a Young Neighbors in Action group that volunteered at Clagett Farm during this week of challenging weather.
Pict0016

And here is Stefan Wawzyniecki, the other leader of this hard working group, young members of St. Bartholomew's Parish in Vermont, Connecticut. They came to the DC area for a week of service work. Not exactly a relaxing vacation for them, but we were certainly impressed and grateful for all their good help.

Pict0028

Joe and Gail after several hours in the tomato field.

Pict0025_1

After much sweating, pulling and straining Kenji and Patti stop work to get a well deserved lunch break.

Pict0029_2

July 20, 2006

Code Red Harvesting

The radio and the papers urged folks to stay indoors on Tuesday, a Code Red day. But Tuesdays are our busiest harvest days and there is no choice for us. We were very impressed, though, by those who did have a choice and still came to the farm to pitch in. Connecticut volunteers from Young Neighbors in Action harvested close to 500 lbs of tomatoes. Other volunteers and worksharers helped us harvest over 700 lbs of summer squash and cucumbers. And that's not all they did, but I'll stop here to show some photos.

Pict0008_3

Harvesting summer squash. Susan Minor, shareholder and volunteer, is in the foreground.

Pict0004_1
Worksharer Laurie Martin between the summer squash and the sunflowers.

Pict0010

Tricia McCauley, a veteran worksharer, carrying a bin of cucumbers she just harvested.

July 14, 2006

U-bar!

Thank you to all for the wonderful potluck party last Saturday at the wash station. I was blown away by a huge surprise gift: a u-bar!
Pict0007_2
Here I am trying to explain what this weird looking thing is. The u-bar is an excellent hand tool for tilling soil, and it's much easier to use than it looks because it works on gravity: a person steps on it and the long tines go in. It's similar to a broadfork, but heavier and with longer tines. It is often used in biointensive farms and gardens. Where can you buy it? You can't. It has to be made by a good welder. That's what makes this gift so special.  Without me knowing anything about it, volunteer Sean O'Harra was approached by Clagett Farm colleagues and asked whether he can weld such a thing. He said, sure. And Sean not only made one, but two! One I'll take to Vermont, the other stays here at Clagett Farm.
Pict0008_2
The man behind Tricia McCauley is Sean. Roshani is on the right. Wonderful volunteers and good friends of the farm.

June 27, 2006

Cabbages under the rain

Pict0086
Yesterday a hard working group of volunteers from Massachusetts harvested over 1,400 lbs of cabbages. Despite the rain and the mud the Young Neighbors in Action volunteers worked hard weeding, harvesting and twining tomatoes. And today they were back at the farm for more of the same!

May 31, 2006

Last week of May

Among other things during the last week of May, we transplanted sweet potatoes, u-pickers hit our two strawberry fields hard, and we started to harvest garlic scapes. The appearance of garlic scapes usually indicates that garlic bulbs themselves will be harvested about a month later. As Carrie noticed, the garlic plants are drying somewhat earlier than usual. We are not exactly sure what this means. The drier than usual spring is certainly a factor. Perhaps we will start harvesting garlic sooner than expected and perhaps our bulbs will be smaller than in previous years.

May turned out to be a fairly dry month. The farm probably got less than half the usual precipitation. All in all this has been a dry spring: in terms of rain, April was a good month, but it was sandwiched between a March with virtually no precipitation and a fairly dry May.

Last Saturday we were surprised by the number of worksharers that came to the farm--almost forty individuals. In August we can keep such a crowd busy harvesting, but there is simply less to harvest in May. Nonetheless, once the harvest was done we kept everyone fairly busy with weeding some of our beds as well as raking recently mowed rye grass and hairy vetch (cover crop) and then piling it all up on a compost heap.

We appreciate our volunteers and worksharers, and we understand that most of them are unable to come to the farm during the regular work week. But let me lobby for Tuesday as the day of the week to come. If you want to work for a share or simply volunteer at the farm, you will be especially welcomed on Tuesday, which is our most intense harvest day.

And now a few photos.

Above we see Dave clearing a heap of just-mowed cover crop that was in his way. Dave was using the tractor to prepare a couple of beds with a mechanical spader. (Photo by Sarah Tooley.)

Worksharers and Gail (foreground) weeding one of our beds.
Pict0012_1
Kenji engaging in close combat with new green stuff on his compost pile.

April 30, 2006

Transplanting Tomatoes

We transplanted tomatoes this past Friday, April 28. It was a glorious spring day, just perfect to work outside. Farm workers and volunteers enjoyed a day with few glitches. Here are a few photos to show you what we did. First, we see Rob Vaughn disking the cover crop.
Pict00271
Next, Megan Caine, a dear Clagett Farm veteran who now often volunteers, is pulling out tomato seedlings from their trays to place them in the transplanter container. Tuz Boy is the dog checking out the operation.

Pict002611

And in the last picture, Kenji Warren is driving the tractor and volunteers Sean O'Harra and Terry Victor are sitting on the transplanter working as tomato seedlings setters.

Pict00331

Our transplanter is very old and was originally used for tobacco. It's a very ingenious device. For a quick explanation of how it works, click here to read one of our posts from last year. 

January 09, 2006

Becoming a 2006 member or worksharer

Thanks to everyone who has expressed interest in joining our farm for the 2006 season as a member, volunteer or worksharer.

We will probably begin signing up members in March. We will post a message here as soon as we do, so if you would like to be one of the first to hear that we've begun taking orders, then click on the <RSSFWD:> link at the upper left of this page. Then submit your email address, and you will be notified any time we post news on this site. At any time if you wish to stop getting this notification, it is easy to be removed from the list. Our deliveries and other details about the share for 2006 should be the same as 2005, although we might raise the price by $20. You can read about those details at www.clagettfarm.org. We will include any new information and a new order form on this page as soon as we begin taking orders.

Volunteer opportunities include office work (starting now, although we prefer a commitment of more than one day), greenhouse work (starting in February), and field work (starting in March).  Before May, our schedule is irregular, so it is best to call us to let us know you're coming (301-627-4662).

After May, we are happy to offer a share of vegetables to any adult who works 4 hours or more. This "workshare" begins in May as soon as we start distributing vegetables (we are aiming for May 9).  There is no commitment, and you do not need to sign up in advance.  Simply show up to work any weekday between 8am and 4pm, or Saturday between 8:30am and 1pm.  There are more details on our website (clagettfarm.org) and of course, we will post any changes on this weblog, should they arise.

November 12, 2005

Last CSA harvest of 2005

This past Tuesday, November 8, we had our last harvest day of the 2005 season. A bittersweet day. Everyone was cheerful and our team's customary wry and irreverent humor was in good form. And yet there was a tinge of sadness, too. After all, we will not be doing this again in a while and when we resume some of us will not be around. But that's what happens every year. There is continuity even in this end of season dispersion.

Pict0578_1 

Here we are harvesting mixed baby lettuce for our CSA shareholders. In the foreground, on the left we see Carrie being productive as always and to the right a smiling Andrea Humm is being her usual gracious self, but Dave Vernon, in the middle, is showing obvious signs of work-induced derangement (the size of the image may not show that clearly, so readers will have to trust me on that).

Pict0580

A view from the other side: Gail Taylor and Megan Caine with the baby lettuce. It took a comically long time to harvest this tiny lettuce. Why? Because when we seeded them we didn't expect that we would be cutting them that small--otherwise we would have them closer together for a quicker and more efficient harvest. Incidentally, cutting baby lettuce is not the only exciting experience lived by Gail and Megan. Gail recently returned from a visit to Europe. Right before Europe she had some interesting adventures in Guatemala. Megan, after studying Spanish in Ecuador, hitchhiked through several South American countries. Every once in a while during her travels the farm would receive Megan's fascinating emails. Her traveling companion was Farah Fosse, another friend of the farm who frequently volunteers here. Before we knew her, Megan also traveled to China and South East Asia.

Pict0584

Back to the baby lettuce. Here is a batch of it being rinsed to get it ready for the shareholders.

Pict0585

Dave, Andrea and Megan working on the lettuce at the wash station. Dave is new to the DC area. Shortly after his arrival this summer he found out about Clagett Farm and has been a consistent volunteer ever since. He has worked on farms in his native Wales, and lived in South Africa and Canada. As to Andrea, all season she was a Tuesday volunteer whose dedication went above and beyond the call of duty. Neither cold rain nor oppressive heat ever managed to dent her gracious and gentle humor.

During Tuesday's lunch break Kathleen Davis came by to say hello and goodbye to us--her former farm teammates. We were happy to see her! Next week she is flying to her home in Hawaii. We wish Kathleen the very best, but for selfish reasons hope to see her back. Many of you know Kathleen, especially if you were a Saturday shareholder or worksharer in 04 and 05. Few people know, however, how much the CSA benefited from Kathleen's friendly and unassuming but very capable presence.

So here we are in mid-November. There are still plenty of things to do at the farm. But the dynamics of the work are quite different and fewer hands are needed.

November 03, 2005

Planting garlic for 2006

We are planting garlic this week. We'll probably be done today. Then we will mulch the field with a fairly thick layer of straw and wait until spring. We are using cloves of several hardneck varieties: Bogatyr, German Porcelain, Music, Marino, Nova Scotia, Red Rocambole, Killarney, and Temptress.

For the curious, a bogatyr in Russian is an heroic knight-errant. Unconfirmed rumors have it that if you eat plenty of Bogatyr garlic you will become infused with the virtues of a legendary hero. We are not sure whether Music is so named because of the special melodic qualities of this tasty variety, but we do know that it originated in Ontario, Canada.

In our minds we associate garlic planting with cool weather and sweaters. Who would have guessed that on the first day of November we would be working with short-sleeved t-shirts?Garlic_planting_dave_and_carrie

Morning action: above we see Dave Vernon dropping cloves into dibbled holes set about five inches apart, while Carrie is walking to refill her empty container with garlic cloves to plant. In addition to the volunteer work of Dave, a new DC resident who hails from the UK, we also benefitted from the great help of volunteers Andrea Humm and Pat Burke.

Garlic_plantingmegan_joe_carrie

Late afternoon: Joe getting ready to dibble more holes (two sets of rows per hill). Megan is dropping cloves and Carrie is covering holes.

Garlic_planting_carrie_and_megan

Later still: Carrie and Megan planting with brio as the sun is setting lower and lower. The long days of summer are long gone.

Clagett_farm_november_evening_1 

One of the benefits of working outside. This is how it looked when we were ready to go home.

October 24, 2005

Farm Fall Festival

Thank you for a wonderful fall festival. The day was cool, overcast and at times drizzly, but that did not dampen anyone's spirit. Many of the activities took place inside our main barn, which felt cozy, cheerful and warm from the buzz of all the people, the food, the warm cider and the live music from the steel drum band.
Steel_band_10222005_14749_pm
And yet the weather did not deter people from going outside and take hay rides led in turns by Michael Heller and Craig Highfield. From all appearances, people had a great time.
Load_of_hayriders_10222005_25428_pm
Some of the many hay riders (picture snapped by Kenji.)

Shareholders may seldom hear about Julie Adkisson and Susan Topping, both of the Capital Area Food Bank, but much of the work done for the CSA, the Anacostia Farmers Market, and the farm volunteer groups is done by them. And in keeping with this, the fact that the fall festival was such an enjoyable experience to so many people owes a lot to the dedication of Julie and Susan.

Incidentally, shareholder and friend of the farm Fred Delventhal kindly sent us a link for a series of photos he took during the festival. To see his pictures, click here.

And let me finish this post with one of Fred's fall festival photos.
Fred_pic_fall_festival_cow_boy

October 03, 2005

Lola: farm volunteer and world class bike courier

Lola_2_1

Lola Rodden is one of our volunteers. We love the way she jumps into a task even if she has never done it before: transplanting brassicas, harvesting summer squash, or double digging a clayey bed with hand tools (spade and fork). We knew that Lola is a DC bike messenger who also spends part of her summers as a service group guide in Costa Rica. Lola never told us, however, that she's also a great competitor. We found out that in July she was a participant in the 2005 Cycle Messenger World Championship (CMWC) held in New York. Top bike couriers from all over the world took part in the championship. Along with hundreds of others, Lola raced in the main event and after a grueling 2 hours and 17 minutes she won second place in the women's final. Jojo Reeder from Sweden came in first and Christine Pacheco from Seattle was third. Thus Lola is the top American among female bike couriers.

The 2006 CMWC will be held in Sidney, Australia. Lola intends to be there.

September 15, 2005

A little help wanted

<p>&nbsp; &nbsp;Lately we've noticed that our leftovers from the Saturday pick-up aren't getting donated as quickly as we would like because the agencies we serve don't have access to transportation and volunteers on <strong>Saturday evenings or Sunday mornings</strong>.&nbsp; If anyone is willing to ferry some boxes of vegetables to a soup kitchen or homeless shelter on weekends, we might be able to get more of it into needy hands before it goes bad in our washing station (particularly tomatoes).&nbsp; You can choose an agency near you or we'll link you with one we already work with.&nbsp; We would be happy to count any hours of your help toward a work share.&nbsp; <br />&nbsp; &nbsp;Also, a Food Bank staff member and friend, Andrea Merritt, just moved to Austin Texas.&nbsp; That's left us short-staffed at the Anacostia Farmers Market (3-7pm, Southeast DC).&nbsp; If anyone would like to spend a few hours each <strong>Wednesday</strong> helping out at one of the farm stands re-selling some jams and sauces, or perhaps helping us with various errands during the market or closing down at the end, we would love the help.&nbsp; And of course, that time could count toward a work share, as well.&nbsp; The market is a 10-15 minute walk from the Anacostia metro.</p>

September 12, 2005

Picnic

<p> Yesterday we had a wonderful picnic at the beach in appreciation of our volunteers and worksharers. It was a beautiful day, there was plenty of food (the grill stayed busy), swimming, bacce ball playing, badminton, and good conversation. It was fun to get together with volunteers and worksharers in a relaxing setting, since usually we get to see them under very different circumstances.</p> <p>Kudos to Lance Baldwin and Kathleen Davis for instigating and organizing this event.</p>

August 28, 2005

Harvesting potatoes

<p>We harvested a sizeable portion of our potatoes last week, and we want to thank the American University students who came to our farm and played a major role in the harvest. The AU students were enthusiastic and inquisitive, a fun group of volunteers.&nbsp; </p> <p>Some of the potatoes were dug out the old-fashioned way, with digging forks and muscle power (the way we harvested our new potatoes earlier in the season), but the bulk of them was dug out using our small (and old) tractor-powered potato digger. Muscle power was still essential, though. As you can see below, we had a group of students clearing most of the mulch in front of the tractor as it made its way up the row, and other students were behind the tractor filling up the bins with the just dug out potatoes.</p> <p><a href="http://kolya.typepad.com/photos/uncategorized/25_aug_harvesting_potatoes_cfn.jpg"></a><a href="http://kolya.typepad.com/photos/uncategorized/25_aug_harvesting_potatoes_cfn_1.jpg"><img title="25_aug_harvesting_potatoes_cfn_1" height="313" alt="25_aug_harvesting_potatoes_cfn_1" src="http://weblog.clagettfarm.org/images/25_aug_harvesting_potatoes_cfn_1.jpg" width="350" border="0" /></a>&nbsp; <a href="http://kolya.typepad.com/photos/uncategorized/25_aug_harvesting_potatoes_1.jpg"></a>&nbsp; </p> <p>While working on the potato field, the AU students rescued a young corn snake that was uncovered while clearing the mulch. After admiring it for a couple of minutes, the snake was released to where it belongs. </p> <p><a href="http://kolya.typepad.com/photos/uncategorized/aug_25_au_snake_rescuer_cfn.jpg"></a><a href="http://kolya.typepad.com/photos/uncategorized/aug_25_au_snake_rescuer.jpg"><img title="Aug_25_au_snake_rescuer" height="398" alt="Aug_25_au_snake_rescuer" src="http://weblog.clagettfarm.org/images/aug_25_au_snake_rescuer.jpg" width="220" border="0" /></a> </p>

August 04, 2005

Heat

<p>It's turning out to be a hot summer and the heat makes a hard job even harder. In the previous two summers we were fortunate not to have any days with temperatures over 100 degrees. Not so this summer. Our Wash Station thermometer already registered at least three (probably four, I didn't check today) days with maximums over 100 degrees in the shade.</p> <p>Yesterday I came back to the farm from the Anacostia Farmers Market sometime after eight o'clock in the evening. I checked the thermometer and saw that the high just reached over 100 degrees. As I was unloading the van I felt tired. Then I saw Michael Heller and Rob Vaughn pulling out in tractors with wagons full of bailed hay. They looked dirty, sweaty and tired. There was no comparison. I had it really easy.</p> <p>And despite all this, we still get volunteers and worksharers who brave the heat and come to the farm to help us with the harvest. Understandably, not as many as when the weather was cooler, but they still come. Thanks!</p>

July 08, 2005

Wanted: bicycle repair, office paper, and food

<p>First, let me shout-out to the anonymous member who gave us big boxes of band-aids and Tylenol.&nbsp; My most recent blister especially thanks you for the band-aids.<br />&nbsp; &nbsp; Speaking of kind gestures, one of our young members, Brigham Geurts, brought his family, his boy scout troop, and many of his church members to build a terrific bike rack for the farm.&nbsp; As sturdy and elegant as it is, it currently rests empty, because all of our bikes are in terrible disrepair and hidden in a barn.&nbsp; If anyone would like to offer their services in <strong>bike repair </strong>(replacing tubes, aligning wheels, tightening brakes, repairing gear shifts...) we will happily offer a share of vegetables for 4 hours work, and we'll cover the cost of parts. <br />&nbsp; &nbsp;Another way to earn a work share is by <strong>cooking</strong>!&nbsp; We love the great recipes you give us, but nothing beats a prepared meal.&nbsp; Fix enough for the members at your pick-up site to sample, and we'll replace the vegetables you used, and give you an extra share as thanks. Call in advance to make sure we're giving out the vegetables you're cooking that week.<br />&nbsp; &nbsp;And finally, we hate wasting trees, yet we keep using up our <strong>office paper</strong>.&nbsp; I know lots of you folks work in offices that use one side of your paper--bring it to us and we'll use the other side.&nbsp; No trees wasted and everyone's happy.&nbsp; And thanks to Deborah Sterobin-Armstrong and Sumana Chatterjee for donating so many office supplies!</p>

April 08, 2005

On Volunteering at Clagett Farm

<p><span face="Times New Roman">&nbsp;</span><span face="Times New Roman"><em>This post was written by Pat Burke, a shareholder, worksharer, volunteer and dear friend of the farm.</em><br /><br />A friend wanted to know why I volunteer at an organic farm. After all, I’m a nurse, and nursing jobs are plentiful. Why would I leave paying health care work for “stoop labor” in the fields?</span> </p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt;"><span face="Times New Roman">I tried to explain. My life had changed radically. I had just returned to graduate school, and was taking on considerable debt as well as a double course load. Instead of being outdoors, I was spending my hours sitting in lectures and libraries and hunched over the keyboard. My food was increasingly coming out of vending machines instead of from the organic market. I was stressed out, not exercising, not relaxing, and eating scary things out of cellophane.</span></p> <div style="border-style: none none solid; border-color: -moz-use-text-color -moz-use-text-color windowtext; border-width: medium medium 0.75pt; padding: 0in 0in 1pt;"><p class="MsoNormal" style="border: medium none ; margin: 0in 0in 0pt; padding: 0in;"><span face="Times New Roman"><br />When I found out that there was a CSA nearby, and that I could exchange 4 hours of farm work a week for a share of fresh organic produce, I thought it was too good to be true. I could be outside, get exercise, get a break from studying, and afford organic &quot;veg&quot; again! I expected that the work would be tedious, but thought I would give it a try.</span></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="border: medium none ; margin: 0in 0in 0pt; padding: 0in;"><span face="Times New Roman"><br />To my surprise, the work gave me far more than delicious produce. I met wonderful people, heard great stories, and gained a new appreciation for the work of farmers. The staff and volunteers at Clagett are hardworking folks. They are cheerful when things are going well, and creatively resolute when challenges appear. Time together in the fields yields friends and fond memories. </span></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="border: medium none ; margin: 0in 0in 0pt; padding: 0in;"><span face="Times New Roman"><br />The farm itself is an oasis of quiet in an increasingly unquiet world. At the farm, the sounds are of birdsong, the drowsy hum of honeybees, the welcoming bark of farm dogs, the murmur and laughter of volunteers sharing stories as they plant, transplant, mulch, weed, stake, hoe, clip and pick.&nbsp; If you want to be with people, there is plenty of opportunity. If your day requires silence, then you can have that, too.</span></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="border: medium none ; margin: 0in 0in 0pt; padding: 0in;"><span face="Times New Roman"><br />The work is varied. For those who want a physical challenge, there are plenty. There are many full wooden crates of produce to hoist upon a scale. Or fields of pumpkins or watermelons to pick and load into a van. But there are also flats to be seeded, carrots to be thinned, strawberries to mulch and potatoes to wash and sort. One day the “work” was to pick flowers and bunch them for the Dupont Circle shares.</span></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="border: medium none ; margin: 0in 0in 0pt; padding: 0in;"><span face="Times New Roman"><br />Farm lessons are for free. Volunteers told me how to preserve abundant harvests for winter. Experience taught the sweet contentment that comes with working with a properly sharpened hoe. I’ve learned that the taste of heirloom tomatoes is indescribably good. That not all weeds are bad. I’ve learned that okra flowers look like hibiscus, and that kohlrabi looks like alien spaceships. And that raw sweet corn eaten in the field is a treat best enjoyed in moderation. </span></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="border: medium none ; margin: 0in 0in 0pt; padding: 0in;"><span face="Times New Roman"><br />Most of all, I learned that a few hours of volunteering brings so much more than fresh organic produce. Three years have passed since my friend asked me that original question. I’m still volunteering at Clagett, and my life is richer for it. Come join us!</span></p></div>

April 06, 2005

Busy Spring and Volunteers

<p>Spring is here and we at Clagett Farm are in full swing with early spring activities: preparing beds, seeding trays, transplanting our first crop veggies, and on and on. By the end of March we were done with planting the potatoes but we have not yet finished mulching them. We were also busy building two greenhouses, one to be used for Clagett Farm's native trees nursery operation for the Chesapeake Bay Foundation and the other for some CSA crops. We are not&nbsp; yet done with the CSA&nbsp; greenhouse. There are so many things to do that we have to engage in a sort of triage. What we do in any given day depends on many variables, the weather always being one of the major ones.<br /> </p> <p>With so much work, we are fortunate to have eager and hard working volunteers--we are immensely grateful for them. Their good humored help has been crucial. To illustrate this, here are a few photos taken on Saturday, March 25, a cold and gray day that did not deter them.</p> <p> <br /><a href="http://kolya.typepad.com/photos/uncategorized/don_and_nina.jpg"><img width="350" height="268" border="0" src="http://kolya.typepad.com/clagettfarm/images/don_and_nina.jpg" title="Don_and_nina" alt="Don_and_nina" /></a> </p> <p>The photo above shows volunteers Don Edwards and Nina Yu carrying rafters that were assembled a few dozen yards away from the greenhouse site. </p> <p><a href="http://kolya.typepad.com/photos/uncategorized/rob_nina_josh_and.jpg"><img width="350" height="231" border="0" src="http://kolya.typepad.com/clagettfarm/images/rob_nina_josh_and.jpg" title="Rob_nina_josh_and" alt="Rob_nina_josh_and" /></a> </p> <p> Clagett Farm's Rob Vaughn and volunteers Nina Yu, Dione Elmendorf and Josh Riesler Cohn pounding the ground posts into place and making sure that they are lined up just right. <em>(Photo by Barbara L. Salisbury/The Gazette)</em></p> <p><em><a href="http://kolya.typepad.com/photos/uncategorized/curtis_rob_and.jpg"><img width="350" height="233" border="0" alt="Curtis_rob_and" title="Curtis_rob_and" src="http://kolya.typepad.com/clagettfarm/images/curtis_rob_and.jpg" /></a> </em></p> <p>Curtis Elmendorf, Rob Vaughn and Dione Elmendorf placing the rafters onto the posts. <em>(Photo by Barbara L. Salisbury/The Gazette). </em>About two hours before this picture was taken Dione was still high up in the air, flying from warm and sunny Florida to cold and damp Washington, DC. She was flying for a weekend visit. Her brother Curtis picked her up at the airport and headed straight to the farm to help us out for a few hours. This was news to Dione, but she jumped into the work with gusto.</p> <p><em><a href="http://kolya.typepad.com/photos/uncategorized/nina_and_curtis.jpg"><img width="350" height="228" border="0" alt="Nina_and_curtis" title="Nina_and_curtis" src="http://kolya.typepad.com/clagettfarm/images/nina_and_curtis.jpg" /></a> </em></p> <p>Nina and Curtis atop step ladders attaching purlins to the greenhouse rafters. <em>(Photo by Barbara L. Salisbury/The Gazette)</em></p> <p>For a couple additional pictures, check out the just started <a href="http://kolya.typepad.com/photos/clagett_farm_photos_2005/">Clagett Farm Photos: 2005</a> album.&nbsp; As in the previous two years, more photos will be added to the album as the season progresses.</p>

March 01, 2005

2005 Update and Order Form

<p>Greetings again, dear members!</p> <p>At last, we have the brand new 2005 order form. Please note, space for former members is guaranteed until April 1, 2005.</p> <p>Click here:<a href="http://kolya.typepad.com/clagettfarm/files/2005_csa_order_form.doc">Download 2005 CSA Order Form</a> </p> <p>Here are some updates...</p> <p><strong>Same prices, sites, new flexibility</strong> </p> <p>Again this year we are offering shares at $385 at the farm and Anacostia, and $425 at Dupont Circle. As ever, the premium for shares at Dupont covers the extra cost of delivering those shares. We will also be keeping the number of full-paying shares at 215. One change this year, is that you can pick up your share at any site without prior notice. For example, you can pick up your share on the farm on Saturday instead of at Dupont that previous Tuesday without telling us in advance. Just make sure that you sign up for the day and location where you will pick up your vegetables at least 80% of the time. And if you can tell us in advance that you won’t be at your regular pick-up, that is still helpful and appreciated.</p> <p> <strong>Good news about our financial stability</strong></p> <p> Did you know that 2004 was the first year that the income from full-priced shares, which was 60% of our harvest, covered more than 60% of our expenses? That means that if this were a private farm selling all shares at full price, we could pay our farmers a decent wage, invest a little into new equipment, be good stewards of our land, and still make a profit. Not only that, but the work environment has been so rewarding, that for the first year, everyone in our paid farm crew will be people who are returning from years past. There’s plenty of room for improvement of course, but we’re glad to be moving in the right direction. Congratulations to our members, volunteers and work sharers for supporting such a great endeavor. Hooray for successful, local, sustainable farms!</p> <p><strong>More vegetables to low-income families</strong></p> <p> Last year, in effort to reduce (but not eliminate) our reliance on the Capital Area Food Bank and Chesapeake Bay Foundation for extra income, we lowered the percentage of reduced-price and donated vegetables from 50% of our total harvest to 40%. Fortunately, since our total pounds of production was so much higher, the actual pounds we distributed to low-income families was still greater than in years past. This year, if we can increase production again, we are hoping to return that percentage closer to the 50%. So who gets these veggies? Some of our recipients are in summer camps for at-risk kids who visit the farm and go home with a bag-full of vegetables. Some will be elderly folks who come to the Anacostia Farmers’ Market with their senior center. Some have been patients at an HIV/AIDS clinic that offers alternative therapy and nutritional classes in addition to free produce from our farm. Some are families on disability who come to us directly for help, or individuals with weakened immune systems who work for their vegetables when they can. One agency that regularly picks up vegetables from the farm serves homeless men who are too sick to survive on the street. Any time you donate money to us above the cost of a share, or lend an extra hand to harvest or twine tomatoes, it helps us increase this outreach. And if you ever forget to pick up your share, we can donate a few extra pounds in your honor. Thank you!</p> <p> <strong>Volunteers welcome</strong></p> <p> Speaking of lending a hand, help now and help often! We’ll be updating this weblog when we have particular needs, and we’re keeping an email list of people who would like to work for free or for food, so we can send those people special requests if we’re particularly desperate, or invite them to events in honor of our workers. We can use weekly help in the office (Tuesdays 1-5pm is ideal during the summer), endless help in the field Monday through Saturday until early evening, groups of volunteers can make arrangements any day or time, and we love it when people give us copies of good recipes to give our members. If anyone is willing and able to help us improve our website, this is a great time!</p> <p> <strong>Chesapeake Bay Foundation and the Capital Area Food Bank</strong></p> <p>Last, we would like to remind you of the special help that we get from the Capital Area Food Bank and the Chesapeake Bay Foundation. In 2004 the Chesapeake Bay Foundation took 37,000 students on educational field trips, lobbied legislators to reach significant targets to reduce pollution in the Bay, planted thousands of trees as stream buffers and started oyster and underwater grass nurseries to improve the stability of the Bay’s ecosystem. Last year the Capital Area Food Bank distributed 20 million pounds of food to agencies serving the hungry in our area and picked up the slack when D.C.’s children lost their free school lunch for the summer. With all these tremendous efforts, both organizations still spend the extra time and money to support this little project that combines both missions—they remember that we must be stewards of our environment AND our community, all at once. They pay From the Ground Up’s expenses that are not covered by income from shares and donations. There are small ways you can help them, as well—by volunteering to sort food in the <a href="http://www.capitalareafoodbank.org">Capital Area Food Bank</a><a href="http://www.capitalareafoodbank.org">’s</a> warehouse, or by joining the <a href="http://www.cbf.org">Chesapeake Bay Foundation’s</a> e-mail action network. And if the spirit moves you, perhaps you could send them a note telling them how important the farm is in your life—lest they forget about the farm amidst their other various needs. Thanks for making our jobs a meaningful, rewarding, joyful experience! </p>

December 03, 2004

Clagett Farm 2005 calendar

<div>Roshani Kothari, a friend of the farm, volunteer and worksharer, created a 2005 calendar with images from Clagett Farm. It's a one page pdf document that you can view and save by going <a href="http://www.globalmosaics.com/2005farm.PDF">here</a>. Thanks, Roshani!</div>

November 09, 2004

Musings of a worksharer

<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt;"><em>By Tina Shane</em></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt;"><strong><br />The City energizes me with its frenetic activity:</strong></p> <p></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt;"></p> <p></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt;">- Careening sirens &quot;rushing&quot; through rush hour traffic</p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt;">- Trumpeting car horns singing duets with caroling car alarms</p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt;">- Hands shouting in animated gesticulations</p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt;">- Schools of people entering and exiting the earth, striding sidewalks and streets</p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt;">- Buses and subway cars stuffed with sardines</p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt;">- Conveyer belts of jets rumbling through the sky with bellies full of people</p> <p></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt;"></p> <p></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt;"><strong>But it is Clagget Farm that nourishes, restores, and soothes my soul:</strong></p> <p></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt;"></p> <p></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt;">- Friendly greetings of &quot;Hey! H'ya doin'?&quot; smiles</p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt;">- Soft murmur and gentle rhythm of volunteers harvesting the bounty</p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt;">- Canada Geese honking in V-formation overhead</p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt;">- Birds chattering in top-secret meetings in the trees</p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt;">- Praying mantis, lady bugs, spiders:&nbsp;all safely hidden in the dark embrace of foliage</p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt;">- Rain-sound of leaves letting go their docking stations and tumbling through the trees</p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt;">- Soft breeze cooling the brow</p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt;">- Pitter patter of rain on raincoats</p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt;">- Fall sun coaxing brilliant colors from the foliage</p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt;">- Bowl of sky outlined with soft undulations</p> <p></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt;"></p> <p></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt;"></p> <p></p> <p></p> <p></p> <p></p> <p></p> <p></p>