Farm Happenings at Oxen Hill Farm CSA
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Oxen Hill Farm Summer 2020 CSA Season Week 4! (week of July 13)

Posted on July 11th, 2020 by Lisa Griffin

We are excited to offer Art @ the Farm activities as take home projects for CSA kids this summer starting this week! We will have more info and a video on our Facebook page shortly, and we welcome you to share your kids' projects with us online! 

art @ the farm activities

As for the veggies, the green lettuce is fading away, though the red leaf varieties tend to hold out a bit longer.  The much needed rains have been watering the weeds as well as the plants so we are working round the clock on getting weeds cleared from some of the later season harvested plants such as winter squash and sweet potatoes.  The tomatoes are coming along nicely with the heat and we may even have some green ones available soon.  Melon vines are running, and the Irish potatoes are putting on flowers.  More cabbages are balling up and should be ready in another week or two.     

The rain has been good for the open field corn plantings that struggled with the cold in May and the drought in June, but some plants are tasseling out at a short height and we aren't sure what that will mean in terms of production yet.   We keep planting more seeds in the greenhouse and have put celery, beets and more successive plantings of squash and cucumbers in the ground along with winter squashes and carrot seeds.  Green beans are coming slowly and a few purple beans should show up soon too.  

watermelon vines

squash harvesting

One of the things you may have noticed if you come to the farm for pick-ups is the black plastic rows into which the plants are planted. This is called plastic mulch and we use it on some crops and fields for several reasons.  Most notably, the mulch reduces the need for costly manual, or fossil-fuel intensive mechanical weeding.  In the beginning of the season, the raised beds that are held together underneath the plastic are warmed faster by the spring sunshine, thus raising soil temperatures to speed up germination and growth of early plantings.   A video showing some of the process can be found here.

rows of mulch June 2020 We have also taken a tip from an onion farmer, and learned that if we can put the mulch down and wait for a week or two before planting into it, any weed seeds that were under the plastic will have already germinated and died. So when we poke holes to plant small things like onions, we will spend less time and expense weeding the small spaces around the plantings.  There is a line of “drip-tape” that is buried within the bed which allows us to irrigate only the roots of the crops when needed, thus reducing water usage and minimizing the waste of watering the weeds in between the rows.  Keeping the leaves and fruits of the plants off of the muddy soil also helps to reduce disease and pest pressure on the plants, while producing a cleaner crop. 

 planting beets on mulch      lettuce stays cleaner on plastic mulch

At the end of each season, the beds and tape are lifted up and removed from the fields. We use plant-based plastics whenever available and continue to use the other strategies mentioned in last week's newsletter to reduce the amount of waste as much as possible.  

Some of the produce you receive today has been rinsed from the field, but like all fresh produce, should be thoroughly washed and often, refrigerated by you at home.

The weekly Pinterest page for the farm has plenty of recipes too.