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Farm-at-a-glance

Mariquita
Farm
Location:
Land in Watsonville and Hollister
Years farming: Andy has farmed
for the last 20 years in various capacities from
farmworker to owner, from large farm to small.
Total acres farmed: 25
Key people: Andy, farmer and
rave king; Julia, farm wife, CEO, mom, email elf,
etc.; España, foreman, tractor driver,
all around repairman; Jose España, head
harvester; Lourdes Duarte, head vegetable packer
Range of crops: greens, root
crops, tubers and herbs, berries, peppers, tomatoes,
garlic, melons, artichokes, and more besides that.
Marketing methods: CSA and 1
farmers market, with a small number of carefully
selected restaurants that pick up at the farmers
market
Soil type: silty loam
Regenerative practices: cover
cropping, crop rotation, fallowing
Length of season: all year |
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February
22, 2005: I’m not always happy to see spring
flowers; carrot blossoms, for example, make me feel especially
depressed.
Carrots do have a lovely bloom. Queen Anne’s Lace
is popular with florists everywhere for their unusual, white,
umbrella shaped flowers and Queen Anne’s Lace is just
Daucus carota, or common carrot. But when an edible carrot
goes to flower its crunchy, sweet root gets long and woody.
Any sugar reserves the carrot has are burned up as the plant
sends a fibrous flower stalk six or seven feet into the air.
If you grow carrots for the vegetable market, like me, a flowering
crop is a lost crop. I haven’t seen any carrots flowering
yet, but I’m checking the field every day. It’s
important that we have nice carrots at the beginning of the
third week in March when we start our 2005 CSA deliveries.
Put yourself in my muddy rain boots; CSA stands for community
supported agriculture. Hundreds of families have advanced
me money to support my farm. I’ve spent the money wisely,
on rent, seeds, tools, fuel, and payrolls, but I’ve
spent it. Soon I’ll have to repay my farm’s supporters
for their trust and cash with weekly vegetable deliveries.
The first harvest share boxes of this year’s delivery
season will be filled with the crops that were planted last
fall for overwintering. We had rain storms coming one after
another so we’ve been able to do very little spring
planting. If all my overwintered carrots go to flower before
I can harvest them, I’m going to sound like a fool.
“Here you go, folks, a nice, attractive bunch of carrot
blossoms you can smell when you come home from buying your
week’s carrots at the super market.”
The first month and a half of every season’s delivery
program is always nerve wracking as we struggle to patch together
a balanced mix of fruits and vegetables by combining harvests
of overwintered crops with what we’re able to successfully
sow in the middle of winter. Other farm’s CSA programs
in our area don’t start until May, when good harvests
are assured. A May kick-off for weekly harvest deliveries
is safe and reasonable but I’ve got my reasons for starting
in March.
People are hungry for fresh vegetables in early March when
we’re signing up our subscribers. November and December
are all about parties and getting together with friends. Like
bears plumping up for hibernation folks treat themselves to
sweet indulgences. But by March people are jaded and uneasy
with excess. Experience tells me people make ambitious resolutions
in the early spring to cook more at home, eat more vegetables,
and lose weight ; I want my farm to be there for them before
their interest flags and they're distracted from their healthy
ambitions by summer activities. If we can get folks to sign
up early for our program we can keep their interest through
the whole season, but we need to make our pitch to them when
they’re hungry.
March is a hard time for the farm to put out a quality pack
but it’s definitely the best time to show off what we
can do. By March almost all the produce in the supermarkets
has traveled a great distance, from the deserts of Southern
California and Arizona, or from Florida, or from even farther.
Supermarket shoppers typically encounter the oldest, and most
expensive produce of the year in March. A farm like ours that
makes a big point of selling very fresh, locally produced
food for a reasonable price has the market conditions in its
favor for a brief period in early spring.
We offer people signing up for the first time with our CSA
a special four week trial share. A month’s worth of
deliveries is enough time for people to learn whether a weekly
vegetable box is going to work for them or not. If they like
what we do then we ask them to sign up for ten weeks of deliveries
at a time. Once people make the leap of faith and try our
service out, we can use the weekly newsletter that we send
with each box to explain the harvests. We’ve discovered
that our newsletter is our best tool for educating our supporters
about what we do and why we do it. Lots of people who signed
up for our delivery program for the vegetables stay on because
they find they really appreciate knowing more about how their
food was grown for them and they love being surprised by new
vegetables they never heard of before.
When I write the newsletter columns I try to be as honest,
informative and funny as I can because honesty and humor are
in chronic short supply. Consumers can get all the soft focus,
vaseline-smeared-on-the-lens, warm fuzzy hoo-hah they need
from watching bacon, ham and orange juice ads on TV. But,
I cannot tell a lie, sometimes don't tell my customers the
whole truth. I want CSA customers to have faith in my farm’s
productive capacity so I never tell them how nervous I am
at this time of year. And my farm’s supporters want
to think that they’re supporting someone who has endearing
human qualities so I never tell them spring flowers bring
me down.
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