From the Field: The multitudes that surround us

From the Field: The multitudes that surround us

This season is shaping up to be a season of revision and revelation both on the farm, and in the wider world that surrounds us. There have been no markets here this year, no events, no classes, and barely a visitor on the farm to speak of. And in the silence and stillness, an opportunity for deeper listening has risen into focus. In the absence of rote imposition, the natural world rings out loud with its secrets - not really secrets at all, just intelligence that can go unheard in the heavy to-do of the day to day…

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From the field: Plants enjoy good company

From the field: Plants enjoy good company

Plants, like most people, enjoy good company. Everywhere in the wild they can be caught gathering and mingling about together, and on our farm it’s no different. This wild approach to farming is based in biomicry, and is wholly dependent upon strategic collaboration with the plant world…

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Beyond the Field: Edible Weeds on Farms / Northeast Farmer’s Guide to Self Growing Vegetables by Tusha Yakovleva

Beyond the Field: Edible Weeds on Farms / Northeast Farmer’s Guide to Self Growing Vegetables by Tusha Yakovleva

Tusha Yakoleva has authored a wonderful resource guide exploring the crop value of wild plants within the cultivated landscape. The project was funded by a Northeast Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education Farmer Grant, and has been made available to all for free download

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Bearing witness to what is

Bearing witness to what is

There is a permaculture principle called Observe & Interact, that like most permaculture principles, seems at first, simple, obvious, and perhaps perfunctory. But to truly observe with honesty, is a radical act that requires one to suspend preconceptions, rote prescriptions, and built in prejudices to stand as a witness to what is. It is precisely at this intersection that interaction with our environment can begin from a place of collaboration and respect, rather than dictation and control….

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Permaculture Principles: Produce No Waste

Permaculture Principles: Produce No Waste

We keep a lean operational budget on the farm. It’s one way we’ve found to make it work over the years on this experimental farm in the absence of topsoil, existing infrastructure, or reliable market channels. We might say this attention to the bottom line is the primary motivation for saving seed, not heating the propagation house, or conducting every class for seven years around a single picnic table, but that would only be part of the story…

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When the center of gravity shifts

When the center of gravity shifts

We’ve been out of touch for a while. It’s been a challenging time to put to words as the world around us rapidly reorients, and moves like the blustery winds in this otherwise mild spring.

At the start of the year, our center of gravity was already shifting. We ended our three month stay at the farm on Barbertown Idell Road nearly a decade later than expected. Johann’s mom finally moved into the cottage, and we moved to the “new farm,” five years later than anticipated. The intervening years between expectation and realization were some of the most challenging of our lives so far…

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What does it mean to be part of community?

What does it mean to be part of community?

What does it mean to be part of a community? Once a young boy was visiting the farm from the city, and sitting in the twilight of a still summer sunset, he looked around and announced, “I could never live here, it’s so lonely!” His parents giggled nervously. I smiled and lowered myself to his height to divulge a secret, “But... we’re not alone right now. Listen, do you hear the frogs croaking to one another? The deer crackling over fallen branches in the woods? The wild ducks taking off in flight from the pond? Do you smell the fragrant plants in the fields? See the fireflies twinkling in the distance?”…

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READING THE LANDSCAPE SERIES: Microclimates

READING THE LANDSCAPE SERIES: Microclimates

Watching this ice storm melt is like lifting the veil on the energetics of elemental forces in the landscape. Where does the water gather and freeze, or trickle and melt? Where is the whipping wind persistent enough to keep a bent branch permanently encased in ice, even as it twinkles in the sun? It is as revelatory as it is enchanting…

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Shaping the World Through a Conscious Process of Encouragement & Discouragement

Shaping the World Through a Conscious Process of Encouragement & Discouragement

As the plants retreat into the underworld and we wrap up another season, our focus naturally shifts from the complex web of relationships that comprise the green world, to the curious continuum of human relationships that shape our culture and connect us to one another.

Over the years, through our work on the farm and within the fields of permaculture and ecological restoration, we’ve developed and refined an approach to landscape management that revolves around a deliberate process of encouragement and discouragement.

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Water For Any Farm

Water For Any Farm

Great time traveling to the midwest last week! First stop was the Savannah Institute Perennial Farm Gathering and then onto the ACRES Eco-Ag Trade Show in Minneapolis, Minnesota to meet up with our sister organization, Restoration Agriculture Development. Many exciting initiatives are afoot in the regenerative ag community! One of which being Mark Shepard’s forthcoming book, Water For Any Farm - officially available now!…

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Beyond the Field: Ironbound Hard Cider Project

Beyond the Field: Ironbound Hard Cider Project

A couple of seasons ago, we were approached by Ironbound Hard Cider to help develop their new cider orchards within a regenerative design context. This summer we broke ground on installing a swale system on their sloped field to help mitigate erosion and run-off, while retaining water in the landscape and increasing soil hydration for tree roots. Their new orchard layout will follow the contours of the landscape creating a continuity between agricultural production, and the underlying geographic formations of natural landforms.

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Permaculture Principles: Appropriate tools & technology

Permaculture Principles: Appropriate tools & technology

Appropriate tools & technology: The plant nursery on our ten acre forest garden farm is active, robust, and as low tech as they come. Early in the season I’ll start propagating in a small unheated hoop house, but for the bulk of the year all the action happens in sprawling, shady area under an old maple tree with a few wooden pallets and raised bed boxes.

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WILD FARMING SERIES: "Up there, that's for the birds..."

WILD FARMING SERIES: "Up there, that's for the birds..."

Friday flashback to a few weeks ago when fruit harvesting at the farm was in full swing! Each season, in what feels like a matter of moments (though it could be a couple weeks), elderberry, beach plum, seaberry, blackberry, and aronia all come into ripeness at once. At that point a flurry of activity commences as us and the birds race to liberate the ripe from fruit from its branches!

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Regrowth

Regrowth

How subtle can you get?

Each reaping initiates a new process of growth in a plant, and that growth takes shape in the present context of environment. The soft texture and delicate fragrance of an herb in early May reflects the cool mist of the new spring it was born into.

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Shifting Seasons

Shifting Seasons

There is a shift in the air today, and I can feel the sun is beginning to set on another summer... Soon the landscape will change color and shape again.

Dynamics systems require dynamic response. Participating in a long term relationship with the natural world, means one must evolve in tandem.

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WILD FARMING SERIES: Perennial Polycultures / Complexity & Abundance

WILD FARMING SERIES: Perennial Polycultures / Complexity & Abundance

Growing in perennial polycultures mimics the complexity and abundance naturally displayed by wild ecosystems. Cultivation happens within a horizontal and vertical spacial context, maximizing the productive yield of any given area, but also within the context of perpetually unfolding succession.

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Flower Medicine (We're not that different from the bees after all)

Flower Medicine (We're not that different from the bees after all)

We’re not that different from the bees after all. Helplessly romanced by the allure of a blossom unfurling into a flower...

Flowers reliably command our gaze, silently beckoning us with their sweet, soft scent traveling effortlessly through the ether. An invisible cord compels us toward them until we find ourselves transfixed, bent forward or on a knee, nose deep in delicate petals.

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