Memorial Day Trees

It just so happens that this wet time of year is a time when we get a lot of young trees into the ground. When you plant a tree, you’re taking a long range view of things.

In thinking about Memorial Day, I reflect on the youth, drive, and promise of so many who serve our country in the US military. People like everyone else with families who love and depend upon them, but whom we also as a country depend upon, whose function or lives are always at risk of being cut short because of their service.

Like a mature tree in your yard, you start to take its lifetime of service for granted. The shade it provides, the buffer from road noise, the habitat for birds… You might not look at the tree every day but pass right by it, a mere obstacle. Part of the landscape.

After a severe storm or hurricane, when all of the trees have lost all of their leaves and we are faced with a blistering sun, we realize how important that large, strong, silent partner was in our comfort and health.

We have to take care of our trees, pay attention to and care for them more than once a year, be sure to plant new trees and appreciate them as well.

Our active military and veterans deserve no less for the service they silently, unerringly, dutifully provide us.

Next time you plant a tree, consider it a gesture of thanks to our silent and strong military and first responders. When you pass an old tree by in the yard or on the street, honor the spirit and strength of all those who serve. Consider it a reminder to give back, through your own active participation in a community where you enjoy many hard-won freedoms, including the freedom to discuss and organize to change large and small injustices.

Happy Memorial Day.

Saturday Morning ARTfarmstand, Waterlogged Edition

Saturday Morning ARTfarmstand: Sweet mix, baby arugula, microgreens, baby spicy, cucumbers, tomatoes, garlic chives, Italian basil, lemon basil, Thai basil, holy basil, recao, dill, cilantro, lemongrass, sage, rosemary, thyme, parsley, beans, broccoli greens, dandelion greens, King Kong (the Asian water spinach, not the giant gorilla), honey, ice cream, bread, zinnia flowers, pineapples.

Due to heavy rains, we were not able to do any pre-harvesting on Friday morning. Some of this prodigious Friday night list of available produce for Saturday’s stand is dependent on the weather. Heavy rains and flooding are predicted for tonight and tomorrow (as of right now, WAPA is out on the South Shore and it is coming down). If the rains are too hard on the salad greens overnight, we may be slightly short on those items. Feel free to call us for availability if an excessive amount of salad mix is what you’re looking for. Everything else should be in good supply. We’ll be open rain or shine at 10 AM! See you then! One one thousand, two one thousand, three one thousand, four one thousand…BOOM

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Wednesday Pineapplogy! Open 3-6pm Today!!

Sorry for any customers who showed up on Monday. Hope we didn’t frighten you with the bee suit. We have now stopped our Monday farmstands until next season. However, in keeping with our Crucian culture, we have not yet taken down the signs that say that we are open on Mondays. We will try and get to that this weekend!

For today’s Wednesday 3-6pm stand we have baby spicy greens, baby arugula, sweet mix and spicy mix, broccoli leaves, mustard greens, dandelion greens, tomatoes, cucumbers, long beans, garlic chives, Italian basil, Thai basil, lemon basil, holy (tulsi) basil, sage, lemon grass, recao, ice cream, honey, fresh baked bread. AND — woohoo — fresh figs and pineapples!!

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ARTfarm Saturday Harvest! Open 10am – 12!

Saturday ARTfarm stand: Sweet mix, spicy mix, microgreens, bunched arugula, broccoli greens, kale, dandelion greens, Asian water spinach (Kan Kong), Italian basil, lemon basil, Thai basil, holy basil, lemongrass, garlic chives, cilantro, parsley, recao, sage, rosemary, onions, scallions, Bodhi beans, cucumbers, tomatoes, bread and bagels by Tess, ice cream, figs, zinnia flowers.

Big ups to the dozens of little teeny garden fairies who get up every Wednesday and Saturday at 5:30 AM and harvest this long list of stuff! We keep trying to get a picture of them for you but the wily, resourceful little beings wear these ridiculous hats made of assorted foliage that blend in with their surroundings. And, they’re only three inches tall. We’ll keep trying.

(Here’s Farmer Luca unloading another cart full of produce the fairies left him this morning!) 20130518-070857.jpg