Sunday, May 29, 2011

Don't let the sun go down on me

Getup grad Sophie sent this report of Saturday’s workday to accompany the photos below:

This week at the Free Farm there was a huge harvest. There was the last of the chard, tree collards, collards, strawberries and a new addition, potatoes.

Along with the harvesting there were a lot of other activities going on. There was a huge pile of manure dropped off by Dave that will work wonders for the soil at the Free Farm. Also, Les stopped by to talk about a potential flower project at the Free Farm.

We also held the Farm Stand on Saturday. In addition to handing out the days harvest to customers, we also handed out tomato plants. I look forward to hearing the neighborhood residents stories about growing their own plants. Hopefully they are inspired to begin growing their own food, in concert with our activities at the Free Farm.

See everyone next week! - Sophie

Ready to harvest potato tower
Julia & Sara check-in with workday leader Pancho
Adding compost to potato beds
Sara harvests tree collards
Rainbow chard
Varsha waters quinoa beds
Sifting soil
Rev. Valerie McEntee of http://sfnightministry.org/ offers in-person counseling & referral to anyone in crisis, 10 pm to 4 am, every night of the year.
Tree holds kale
Kris & Byron at labyrinth, Julia & Sara harvest chard
Stanley harvests strawberries
Colorful plants
Squash planted 2 months ago
Admiring lamb's quarters
Pia brought home-made chocolate chip cookies
Joyce & Pia share a laugh
Tree holds up curvy cucumber
Tree thanks Dave for trucking in horse manure
Builder Byron & Painter Page. Dig Page's Jackson Pollock-inspired drip paint on khaki pants!
Shoveling horse manure from Dave's pick-up truck
Unloading manure to heap below
Dumping every bit of manure
Sophie sorts harvest
Page compliments Pancho's shirt which he receives in gratitude
Pancho put on new shirt before lunch
Lunch spread by Getup grads




Gratitude circle inside greenhouse
Rice bowl
Sophie & Stanley chat with stand visitors
Hibiscus is state flower of Hawai'i
Brody asks: "Excuse me, can I eat stem?" Answer: De-stem for compost & then eat whole strawberry including greens for nature-balanced bitter + sweet flavors
Marty & Brody walk labyrinth
Strawberry fields forever
Sara holds up leaf against sky
Tree holds up flowers wrapped in collards
Public Service Announcements:

Wed., June 1, 2011 at 1:30-3:30 pm SF Food Security Task Force MeetingCity Hall - 1 Dr. Carlton B. Goodlett Place, Rm. 278, San Francisco, CA 94102
http://www.sfdph.org/dph/files/mtgsGrps/FoodSecTaskFrc/agendas/FoodSecTaskFrcA06012011.pdf
SF Sustainable Food Directive Report at http://www.sfgov3.org/Modules/ShowDocument.aspx?documentid=503

Through Thurs., June 30, 2011 Give Feedback: SF Graywater Design ManualThe SFPUC has developed a technical resource for homeowners and professionals who want to install graywater systems for outdoor irrigation in San Francisco. The manual provides a detailed step-by-step process for designing and installing laundry-to-landscape systems, as well as the basic steps for designing and installing branched drain and pumped systems. The manual provides an overview of the benefits of graywater systems, when and where to install different systems, permitting requirements, what products to use, and operation and maintenance requirements. The SFPUC would like to make the San Francisco Graywater Design Manual as useful as possible. If you would like to provide us with suggestions on how we might improve it, we will consider comments in making future refinements to the manual. Please use the form comment sheet at http://sfwater.org/detail.cfm/MC_ID/13/MSC_ID/168/MTO_ID/758/C_ID/5421
and email your feedback to landscape@sfwater.org by June 30, 2011.

GOMBS pasta

Earlier this year, I learned about Dr. Joel (Eat to Live) Fuhrman’s GOMBS, or acronym for the top 5 foods (Greens + Onions + Mushrooms + Berries + Seeds) for cancer prevention. I thought it would be fun to play Iron Chef and create a dish using GOMBS ingredients and bring it to our workday potluck.

1. Cook 8 oz. pasta al dente & set aside.
2. In pot, sauté 1 small chopped Onion + 4 cloves minced garlic in 2 Tbsp. olive oil.
3. Add 1 lb. sliced shiitake Mushrooms, & sauté until soft.
4. Add ½ cup stock (water + hijiki) + ¼ cup mirin + 3 Tbsp soy sauce.
5. In small bowl, mix 2 Tbsp tapioca starch + 4 Tbsp water; stir into pot & cook for 1 minute.
6. Toss pasta & pot contents.
7. Sprinkle with 2 chopped Green onions +3 Tbsp. sesame Seeds + handful of goji Berries.

Enjoy!

Saturday, May 21, 2011

Beautiful

No matter what we do
(no matter what we do)
No matter what they say
(no matter what they say)
When the sun is shining through
Then the clouds won't stay

And everywhere we go
(everywhere we go)
The sun won't always shine
(sun won't always shine)
But tomorrow will find a way
All the other times

'cause we are beautiful no matter what they say
Yes, words won't bring us down, oh no
We are beautiful in every single way
Yes, words can't bring us down
Don't you bring me down today
“Beautiful” lyrics by Linda Perry
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eAfyFTzZDMM&feature


You can grow food almost anywhere in almost anything
Kale crane red
Beds to harvest
Daisies
Digging for carrots
Pancho found feathers to help him fly
Beautiful carrot

Small is beautiful
Our beautiful Free Farm Stand/The Free Farm were selected as one of five finalists from almost 100 applications for Bay Citizen’s inaugural Citizen of Tomorrow contest, which recognizes organizations working to solve a local community challenge in the San Francisco Bay Area. From May 2 to May 16, over 5,000 votes were cast at www.baycitizen.org/citizenoftomorrow/, which featured a video of Tree’s talking head and the following description:

“The Free Farm Stand and the Free Farm make locally grown, fresh and nutritious organic produce accessible to all, especially those in need. We grow our own food and gather surplus food from neighborhood gardens, farmer’s markets, community gardens, and fruit trees, then distribute it for free every week in the Mission and Western Addition. The Free Farm Stand and Free Farm also act as community garden centers where plant starts and gardening advice are given freely.”

Free Farm Stand/The Free Farm received the 2nd highest number of online votes, and we thank you for your support!

While I was away from The Free Farm during the voting period, I sent email blasts to family and friends, asking them to vote—daily, if possible, to help further our work in building local food security, health, community, etc. At the same time, I’m a “small is beautiful” proponent – as in small-scale, local, artisanal, mum & pop enterprises – and wondered what impact all this attention would have on our beautiful farm. We’ve had local media and independent documentarians visit during our workdays -- would Michael Moore, Morgan Spurlock or even Hollywood come next?! I was torn over plans to get a potentially energy-guzzling cooler at The Free Farm, though I also don’t want to see produce go to waste due to spoilage.
Kellen & Byron with compost
Tree's impromptu avocado tree grafting workshop
Tree labels "Lamb Hass 5-21-2011"
Alena offers raspberries
After harvest
Garlic chive, carrot, potato & oca
Washing harvest
Stanley carries strawberries


Beautiful changes

As much as I prefer to be off-the-grid, I was logging online daily to cast my vote for Free Farm Stand/The Free Farm. My email blast surprised some family and friends outside of the Bay Area, who hadn’t received an email from me for sometime: Where in the world is Wandering Veggie? They weren’t surprised about my farming because my childhood hangout was my family’s own kitchen garden and I’d participated in sustainable agriculture programs in Africa and Central America, but they did wonder: Are there farms in San Francisco?

I shared with them a couple of quirky ways The Free Farm changed my life – sort of like “makes me want to be a better person” (to paraphrase the Jack Nicholson character in the film, "As Good As It Gets"):

1. Reduced my carbon footprint. I’d been addicted to travel (“Hey! Bye, San Francisco!”), but The Free Farm has really grounded me—literally, helped me put down roots. And I realized the wisdom of Thomas Jefferson, who said travel makes one “wiser, but less happy.”

2. Reduced noise pollution. Part of my love of traveling was the anonymity that allowed me to sing out loud, which was my preferred form of deep breathing exercise :-). Seriously, I don’t mind singing badly if no one around knows me, but I actually feel the need to be considerate around people who know me. Now I prefer deep breathing from the sheer physicality in farming outdoors, and even inside the greenhouse during rains.

Fortunately, since I rarely ask for favors, some family and friends obliged and voted as I’d requested. Thanks, you’re all so beautiful!




Enjoying lunch
Raspberries & strawberries
Joyce greets Ken, who is Coordinator of Healthier Living Program, developed by Stanford University School of Medicine and hosted by SF Department of Aging and Adult Services. Free 6-week Healthier Living workshops help people with chronic conditions and their caregivers improve the quality of their life; details at http://healthier-living-sf.eventbrite.com/

Stanley & Kris carry harvest to stand

Siblings Cassie & Byron represent brain drain from Hawaii
Tree holds up framed flowers from The Free Farm

Uncommon is beautiful

In American Wasteland: How America Throws Away Nearly Half of Its Food (http://www.wastedfood.com/), Jonathan Bloom writes that food waste begins at farms when produce that look less than perfect are left in the field. For example, one cucumber grower doesn’t harvest at least half of the cucumbers on his farms because they’re too curved, making them hard to pack, or they don’t meet “food beauty” standards.

“Ideal” beauty standards for produce are like how cosmetics and surgery make humans appear the same, much like GMO produces uniformly freakish food. Organic produce don’t look “perfect”-- they look natural, uncommon, exceptional – much like how wrinkles and graying hair reveal wisdom and character . . . and help one gain a seat on the MUNI bus!
Planting map
Workday leader Hannah & Tree at end of workday
Trellis for planting beans
Labyrinth
Kris readies to aim waterhose

Amy Chua, author of Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother who was named one of Time magazine’s 100 most influential, shared the following advice that she received from her influential father: “Be original, not just follow what everyone else says, not to care what anyone else thinks.”
http://www.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,2066367_2066369_2066449,00.html
Visit us soon to check out our uncommonly beautiful plants!