ARTfarm Popup NYEE! Tuesday PM 12/30/2025, 4:30 – 5:30pm

That’s a full load on the farm cart! Early morning salad mix harvest at ARTfarm!

Tuesday’s December 30th (New Years Eve’s EVE) ARTfarm PopUp features fresh salad greens and a few cherry tomatoes starting! Festive French breakfast radishes and lovely limes. Our season is getting underway.

We’ll see you Tuesday 12/30/25 from 4:30pm – 5:30pm. No reservations; first come, first served.

Plenty

  • Sweet salad mix
  • Zucchini
  • Lettuce heads
  • Italian basil
  • French breakfast radishes with green tops
  • Key limes
  • Kafir limes and leaves
  • Green jalapeños and chilis

Early Birds

  • Cherry tomatoes
  • Cucumbers
  • Bunched cooking greens
  • Green sweet frying peppers
  • Cilantro
  • Dill
  • Lemongrass
  • Thai basil
  • Pineapple slips
  • Marigold cut stem flowers
Sweet salad greens in early morning at ARTfarm
Tomato energy is building. Cherry tomatoes for early birds this week!

See you Tuesday afternoon! 4:30 – 5:30pm. Happy Holidays!

ARTfarm Holiday Gratitude

A post-Thanksgiving leftovers ARTfarm update for our supporters, direct from Farmer Luca!

It’s been a long summer of learning, researching and planning and we wanted to share some of those things with you as season approaches.

Here’s the update:

The weather has brought our water storage levels nice and high!

Cover crops have been mowed and turned back into the the soil – along with the lobster compost we’ve made with big thanks to Duggan’s Restaurant.

Sorghum (an old world grain) has been interplanted with sun hemp (sorry, not CBD hemp), sword bean and cow peas — they are almost ready to be harvested for our chickens.

Lots of tomato seedlings are in the ground and are already over a foot tall! They’re starting to flower and are looking a lot stronger than the tomato seedlings did at this time last year.

Our lettuces, radishes, Italian & Thai basils are all growing nicely. We’ve planted lots of flowers that attract beneficial insects and hopefully we’ll have many bunches of carrots of different varieties and shapes this year too!

Our papaya patch is looking wonderful and putting on fruit now, and our pomegranates have started and are putting on more fruit regularly.

Our limes have nice dark leaves and are loaded both the crucian Keylime and the kafir lime.

Our longan trees are loaded with blossoms right now and they are setting their little sweet fruits.

Pineapples are looking very strong – even the ones that got burned in the fire.

Soon our cucumbers, watermelon and zucchini will get transplanted.

Our family and volunteers have been enjoying the Shangri-La mulberries which are out of this world and are still going.

We’ve been busy for the last few months researching regenerative agriculture practices and various products/ techniques to improve the farm further.  We’ve always practiced many regenerative ways, but there’s so much more to learn as new discoveries are made and as our climate changes.

Sheep! We’ve upped our sheep numbers to help with all the extra grass that is on the farm now. The Department of Agriculture came through and helped out in a huge way with mowing, bringing some ease to our pasture management and making it easier with fencing repairs post fire. Hopefully it helps with grasshopper management too.

There’s been a lot of research and purchasing of replacement materials that were lost in the fire. The beautiful thing about disasters is that they offer a chance to rebuild better and stronger. I’ve been taking the time to improve things where I can. We are all very appreciative of all the donations that people have made to help in that regard. VI Good Food Coalition, American Farmland Trust, Christina and Alyssa have all been very helpful in raising funds.

Thank you to all our volunteers since the fire – you’ve been incredible. The family and I still look back and we all feel very moved thinking of everyone that took time to help during and after the fire.

Moving forward, the farm can still use your help. If folks are interested in volunteering, please get in touch. At this stage in the season it is very important that any volunteer is a non-tobacco user and doesn’t live in a house with tobacco use. The tobacco mosaic virus can keep us up at night and can wreak havoc on the current and future fate of the tomatoes we’ve grown to love so much. Some of the current volunteer tasks are weeding, raking, pruning, setting out drip tape, topping off water bowls for mongoose so they don’t chew on our drip tape (old large metal pots or metal dog bowls are welcome for donation) We’re a farm so there’s countless other tasks as well but these are great beginner tasks.

You say you want to do more on the farm than volunteer? We have part time employment opportunities for volunteers.

Wrapping up, the farm is a beautiful example of hope right now and we are incredibly grateful for these blessings:

  • Christina and Marina
  • my parents
  • all our friends
  • our volunteers
  • our farmstand customers
  • our restaurant/chef partner a
  • a farmer’s gift of wood chips
  • our incredibly kind Post Office staff
  • Maddy at the USDA
  • our accountant
  • Louis Hewlett and Fernandez Plumbers
  • Mechanics Thomas Ledezma and Chiba
  • Mike Bruno with Hybrid Power System
  • John Stoll – compost volunteer and construction mentor
  • the DoAg for their support
  • Stewart and everyone at Quality Foods
  • A Better Copy
  • Dr. Amy Dreves and Dr. Larken Root at UVI
  • Roneal Honeyman
  • S&D feed
  • Phil at smilinggardener.com
  • Giovanni of Mil Agro
  • American Farmland Trust
  • VI Good Food farm advocates
  • new Vieques and Puerto Rico farm friends
  • Arte-suelo-ser soil advocates
  • and lastly Slinky the Cat, Ginger & Spice the collies …and all the other cool creatures and plants both domesticated and not that are with me every day here at the farm that I’m slowly understanding and growing together with.

Hope everyone had a great holiday weekend. We will update you soon when we have food or other farm news to share!

ARTfarm Saturday AM: Stuff to Eat… 3/15/2025, 11am – 12 noon

Moonbathing chicken

Tons of beautiful tomatoes and more, Saturday mid-morning farmstand 11am – 12 noon! It will be first come first served.

recent tomato haul!

Plenty for All

  • Sweet salad mix (tender, and sweet from the rain)
  • Teen spicy salad mix
  • Sweet and spicy salad mix
  • Teen arugula
  • Watermelon! Red AND yellow…

Early Birds

  • Cherry tomatoes
  • Slicer tomatoes
  • Heirloom tomatoes
  • Kale
  • Bunched Chinese cabbage leaves
  • Bunched mature arugula
  • Butternut squash
  • French breakfast radishes with green tops
  • Baby ginger
  • Carrots
  • Green and red hot peppers
  • Basil
  • Cilantro
  • Dill
  • Parsley
  • Lemongrass
  • Kaffir limes and leaves
  • a few pomegranates

First come first served! Grateful for your support! See you Saturday 11am – 12 noon!

ARTfarm Wednesday PM: Shades of Green… 3/12/2025, 5 – 6 PM

Teen spicy mix harvested fresh at dawn, in your fridge next day! Keep the air out of the bag and these will last a long time, to eat straight, mix with other salad greens, use as a garnish or bed for an entrée, wilt in a dish for a slight pepper flavor…

Things are drying up a little bit. But for this mid-week stand, we’ll once again have an abundance of salad greens and more tomatoes and watermelon. Come see us tomorrow afternoon, and enjoy all the peak season deliciousness.

It will be first come first served Wednesday. As usual, if the crowd looks thick, Farmer Luca may ration some items so no one goes home empty handed.

4pm Sundays is getting established as a meetup time slot for volunteers. If you’d like to join our little group, give us a call or send a text or reach out through social media or email. If you are interested in learning more about sustainable, regenerative gardening practices — we would love some help in the gardens and with a few other tasks as well. Volunteers have always been crucial elements of our system.

If you have reached out to us about volunteering and we haven’t gotten back to you yet please be persistent. This is our busiest time of year. We could still use your help. Just reach out again!

No reservations; first come, first served. We recommend coming about halfway or later through the hour if you would like a shorter line. We really appreciate your support.

Watermelon is one of Luca’s favorite crops.

Plenty for All

  • Sweet salad mix
  • Teen arugula
  • Teen spicy salad mix
  • Sweet and spicy salad mix
  • Watermelon – red AND yellow!

Early Birds

  • Slicer tomatoes
  • Heirloom tomatoes
  • Cherry tomatoes
  • Cucumbers (mixed varieties)
  • Chinese cabbage leaves – bunched
  • Butternut squashes
  • Fresh breakfast radishes with green tops
  • Carrots with green tops (for juicing if you like)
  • Green and red hot peppers
  • Baby Ginger
  • Basil
  • Cilantro
  • Dill
  • Parsley
  • Scallions
  • Lemongrass
  • Kaffir lime leaves and limes (fruit)

We appreciate you all! See ya Wednesday 5 – 6pm!

Our teen spicy salad mix at ARTfarm is a combination of peppery greens. They’re bigger than baby greens but still tender and not totally mature.