2021

To till or not to till, that is the question! 🚜 🌎

Dear Kimberton CSA community,

Last October we put out a newsletter titled Healthy Soil = Healthy Food = Healthy People. It discussed the then recent Rodale publication, Regenerative Agriculture and the Soil Carbon Solution and how it related to us sowing our winter cover crop (green manure). We ended the newsletter with the admission that our regenerative farming system here at KCSA is not perfect, but we do the best we can with what we got! Moreover, we highlighted that our aim every season is to improve our system, to not only produce healthy, nutrient-dense veggies, but to also build up our soil, its organic matter and ultimately sequester carbon.

Since Frank and I took over managing KCSA in 2017 (yes, it’s been over four years!), we have developed our system intentionally to reduce the amount of tillage we do out in the fields. This has included minimizing the intensity, depth and frequency of using our primary tillage implements (discing and harrowing) and essentially retiring our 3-point hitch rototiller from service. Although there is much debate in sustainable agricultural circles on the efficacy and practicality of introducing no-till systems, especially on medium to large scale farms, we are of the mind that any reduction in tillage is a good thing. There is no denying that dragging big chunks of metal through any soil will damage its structure, kill organisms, destroy aggregates, rip up fungi and accelerate oxidation, which, in turn, breaks down organic matter quicker and releases CO2 into the atmosphere.

Now, to make this newsletter even more confusing to members, part of the benefit of tilling is, in fact, accelerating that oxidization! By releasing the CO2, more bio-nutrients become available in the soil for our veggies to gobble up! Each of the four agricultural revolutions (cultivation, soil husbandry, mechanization and industrialization and, the most recent, green revolution) cite, in part, advantages and efficiencies in tillage. In fact, oxidization is a key component of biodynamics, as oxygen is “alive” and “warm” in aerated soil, rather than idling “dead” and “cold” in the air above the soil. Aerating the soil through tillage produces a more bacteria-rich soil, which is good for growing annual vegetables (and weeds!!!), as opposed to a fungal-rich soil, which is more apparent in perennial (and natural) systems.

Simply put, the goal of an organic tillage system is to essentially replace the organic matter you “burn” off, in addition to the bio-nutrients you extract from the soil, through the vegetables you grow. This is done via the addition of compost, fertilizers, mineral amendments and green manure. Diversifying what you grow and rotating these different crops throughout the farm so you don’t take too many of the same nutrients from the same area of the farm year after year is also important. Alternatively, in an organic no-tillage system, the goal is to minimize the “burn” off. So, instead of working and remediating the soil you have, no-till systems essentially build up the organic matter on top of your soil through the same application of compost, fertilizers, mineral amendments, and green manure, reducing the volume of these over time. In essence, by switching to a no-till system, a combination of mulches (both biodegradable and non-biodegradable) replaces the tillage.

Biodegradable mulches include living mulches that are essentially crimped cover crops or loose dead mulches (e.g., hay, straw, leaves, compost, wood chips) that are spread on the soil. Non-biodegradable mulches include reusable clear plastic tarps for solarization or opaque landscape fabric or tarps for occulation.

Solarization essentially creates a very intense greenhouse effect in the very top half inch or so of the soil. At the height of summer, you can cook plant residue, weeds and weed seed within a 24hr window, meaning you can harvest Tuesday morning and then transplant something else in the same bed the next day without disrupting the soil.

Occulation, on the other hand, blocks the sun, preventing photosynthesis and slowly returning any plant residue back to soil. Because occulation is a lot cooler than solarization, the process takes much longer. However, occulation is warm enough to increase all manner of soil life under the tarps including the germination of weed seeds, which then end up dying due to lack of sunlight.

As you can imagine, timing is key with all of these no-till methods. And time is exactly what I have run out of here today! We’ll pick this conversation up in a couple of weeks in the next newsletter! Spoiler alert…it’ll be called, To till or not to till, Part II!

Cheers,
Andrew

Snowing whilst we're sowing! ❄🌼

Dear KCSA community,

The conference season has come and gone! Spring is almost here. And despite the snow and subsequent ice, then snow and ice, things are slowly beginning to ramp up at the farm.

Since our last newsletter, we have had our first big snowing and our first big sowing of the year! Consulting the Stella Natura—the biodynamic planting calendar—last week on Tuesday was a fruit day, so we sowed our greenhouse seed peppers. Wednesday was a root day, so we sowed our bunching onions, an early New York variety (although not strictly the root, onions and garlic do do better on root days). Friday was a flower day, so we sowed even more flowers for u-pick (globe amaranth, strawflowers, and Chinese forget-me-nots). And Sunday was a leaf day so, we sowed some of our early spring greens—collards, kale, chard, and minutina!

If you are not familiar, the Stella Natura supports biodynamic farmers by deciphering the optimal times to sow annual crops in relation to the part of the plant that is ultimately harvested: root, leaf, flower and fruit. These four rudimentary parts of a plant relate to the four elements.

  • Root = Earth

  • Leaf = Water

  • Flower = Air

  • Fruit = Fire

Cultivating, harvesting (especially storage crops) and seed saving are also relevant to working with the cosmic rhythms set out in the biodynamic calendar.

The calendar works by tracking the movements of the moon and planets within the back drop of the stars of the zodiac (constellations). Essentially, the moon focuses the forces of the constellations on to the earth as it passes in-between them, bearing the qualities of each element. As Rudolf Steiner emphasized in his 1924 lectures on agriculture, the cosmic influences from the sun, moon, planets and stars are all important factors to work with when farming. Indeed! Sowing tomato seeds on a leaf day may create a full, bushy and vegetative plant, but as farmers, we strive for an abundance of flowers and fruit, as that is what we eat!

There are also times when we shouldn't sow at all! When the moon is passing from constellation to constellation, the waning of one element and the waxing of the next is not exact. The exact timing of when best to sow a root crop, which then switches to a flower crop, for example, is unknown. There is a similar buffer zone when the planets and moon intersect the path of the sun (nodes) and when the moon is closest to earth during its orbit. The moon's influence on our oceans is there for all to see, the effect it can have on the water content of a plant not so much!

As with most aspects of organic and biodynamic farming, knowledge is based on experience and experimentation. The author of the Stella Natura, Sherry Wildfeuer, leans heavily on the German-based biodynamic farmer Maria Thun's observations. From the 1950’s onwards, Thun has produced a huge wealth of knowledge. Sherry, a resident at Camphill Kimberton Hills, continues this indispensable work for us biodynamic farmers in the U.S.

I'll leave you with a quote from Sherry that explains the importance of maintaining the biodynamic calendar, "The astronomical information offered in the charts is, like the weather, part of the nexus of environmental factors which affect the plants in your care. If you wish to support their growth by creating optimal conditions, you will want to pay attention to this information – and to the weather!”

Cheers,
Andrew

Snow worries!

Dear KCSA community,

Conference season is upon us! We will be attending the PASA’s 2021 Virtual Sustainable Agriculture Conference all this week. And KCSA’s own Farmer Frank is helping kick things off with a workshop on Tools and Strategies for Online Sales and Direct Marketing.

Frank is a dab-hand at computer stuff. Due to COVID19, he set up an online store for our Lansdale Farmers’ Market customers to pre-order veggies at the start of the 2020 season. We then used the same platform to offer winter veggies sales as a little bonus to members that signed up early for the 2021 season. Online commitment forms, online stores, Facebook, Instagram, website maintenance…he is very much a 21st century farmer!

The first sowing of the season was last week - some u-pick flowers and herbs. But things will be kicking off soon (where did January go?!) with our spring sowings of Swiss chard, scallions, bunching onions, collards, parsley, kale, minutina, spinach and even some peppers all scheduled for 2/14! As usual, we will be consulting the biodynamic planting character, the Stella Natura to determine their exact sowing time.

In other farm news, a hawk tried to land on my head. Seriously! A hawk tried to land on my head! I was sitting in the pick-up shed, early in the morning last Saturday with my hat and hood up, and it swooped in through the window, and hit the top of my head. As soon as I flinched, it high tailed it out the door and perched way up in the Maple tree. So, either my head looked like a good perch, or it thought it was breakfast! Luckily, both I and the hawk were unscathed. It is definitely the closest call I’ve had with a bird of prey!

Happy snow/sleet/ice day!

Cheers,
Andrew

Turning over new leaves since 1987…and bunching them!

Dear KCSA community,

Happy New Year! With 2020 finally over, we hope you are looking forward to the 2021 growing season as much as we are! This is Kimberton CSA’s 35th season. Thank you for your support!

Shares for 2021 are available for purchase on our website. You can purchase our full, partial or half shares via debit or credit card (with an additional processing fee) or fill in our google commitment form (please scroll down) and mail either 1, 2, or 10 checks via our payment plan. Sales have been pretty steady since they opened at the end of last season, so don’t delay to guarantee your spot!

Aside from a lot of rain and snow melt, there is not too much to report since we were last in touch. We have had a pretty quiet holiday period with some much needed downtime. However, we have been steadily trimming back the vines and brambles between the fields and our fence line before it is completely over run with vegetation. Unfortunately, the best time to do this is when the ground is solid, which means the ideal time is early on those cold, cold mornings!

We have also been doing other maintenance jobs around the farm. Cleaning up the pick-up shed, clearing out the cooler to repair the walls and framing the fronts of two of our greenhouses. Once that is complete, the next job is (weather permitting) to hammer in the foot posts for our new greenhouse, which will be named: Fieldhouse 4.

We should have some more exciting news the next time we communicate in February. Our first u-pick flower sowing of the season commences on the 31st January!

Cheers,
Andrew