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You are here: Home » Sustainable Agriculture » Full Circle Farm - Dig It Blog
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Full Circle Farm - Dig It Blog

Taste what’s growing on our farm now…tomorrow..at noon in Seattle

August 7, 2008
Chiogga Beets

Chiogga Beets

DEAR HUNGRY Seattle-based ‘lunch-break-goers’ and ‘early-weekend-starters’….,

If you’re passing through the South Lake Union neighborhood tomorrow go by the Westlake Whole Foods Market ‘Mini-Market’ event! We’ll be there and we’ll be passing out ‘SAMPLES’ or actually whole HELPINGS OF herbs and veggies so that you may take them home with you, get hooked, and immediately contact us …seeking more of the goods we got. hehe…

But really…in a nut shell..check out our MARKET STAND, tomorrow- Friday August 8th - between noon and 3pm. *( Your palate will be pleased you did…)

Don’t forget to say hi to Jay, our market manager and Laura, the uber-friendly & hip market rep…who reps the FCF at Ballard too on Sundays! YOU MAY EVEN CATCH ME THERE TOO….before I head back into the valley to ramp up for our super fun volunteer work party on Saturday!! (–see yesterday’s blog).


Calling all organic farm fanatics & philanthropes…

August 6, 2008

Help us cut a trail to our berries this saturday from 10-2!

Take the opportunity to help fill the local food banks and experience what work is like here on our organic farm!

Help us build a trail to our Berry Patch

Help us build a trail to our Berry Patch

We need to clear a path to our berry field so in exchange for every hour of your time and hard work helping us cut a trail, we’ll donate 500 servings of organic produce to Hopelink Food Banks.

We’ll provide the tools, farm-fresh snacks and beverages–heck we’ll even teach you a smidge or two about the seasonal organic crops, harvest, local supply chain! DRESS for warm weather, clearing brush, laying bark, & pickin’ berries!

For more information or to sign up for this month’s ‘berry trail building’ Experience Farming Project or to volunteer… visit our website EVENTS page. http://www.fullcirclefarm.com/events.html


Good enough to eat.

July 29, 2008

Produce processing is a relatively simple process on our farm- nonetheless, it’s an activity that we couldn’t be in business without- and why would we wanna do without it anyways?…our processing process leaves our harvested crops in top quality, cooled for maximum freshness, and rid of the chunks of soil and other ‘buggers’ that might otherwise need to be sorted through by our customer. So, once the field crew brings in the harvest, such as the Napa Cabbage atop the flatbed in this photo,

Bringing in Napa Cabbage harvest July 08

Bringing in Napa Cabbage harvest July 08

our processing crew takes charge of the ‘just-picked’ produce by hydro-cooling in ice baths, washing, sorting, and packing in portioned boxes of ice- among several other intricacies along the path of Full Circle Farm’s processing. Processing the harvest

Processing the harvest
(Though ‘they’ say you should wash any produce you buy before you eat it…our processed product is vibrantly clean, beautiful, and I lay claim that it’s ‘good enough to eat.’ …But that’s me…and I often eat it straight from the field. :) )

Experience Farming Project Event at Full Circle

July 18, 2008
Our gracious EFP Habitat Restoration volunteers! THANK YOU!

Our gracious EFP Habitat Restoration volunteers! THANK YOU!

We’re BAAAACCKKK!
As the primary contributor to this blog..it is to my regret that I have been absent from filling your eyes with the sights and news of our Farm.  After spending a long weekend on the beautiful San Juan Island with my family over the fourth and then another long weekend in the Black Hills of South Dakota visiting over 100 of my midwestern relatives—I’m back and I’ve got some exciting news to share from this past weekend!
In response to an overwhelming request from our CSA members and local community, we have opened up our barn doors to volunteers to come out to Carnation and experience what work is like on our organic farm! We have created the Experience Farming Project as means for community members to make a hands-on contribution to the development of a more sustainable food system.
Our first project, on Saturday, July 12th, was a great success!  Local non-profit, Stewardship Partners led a team of 20 volunteers on an on-farm habitat restoration project followed by an educational seminar on
July 12 Experience Farming Project Volunteer pulling blackberry invasives

agriculture, salmon safe and ecology.  Full Circle Farm is making an in-kind donation for every volunteer that works.  Saturdays event guaranteed a donation of over 8000 servings of organic produce will be distibuted to Hopelink Food Bank.  The donation will be given in the EFP volunteers’ names.  LUNCH served on the forest understory and everyone received a Volunteer Work Certificate that one kid used for school credit!  RIGHT ON!

If you’d like to come out to experience what work is like on our farm, have a delicious complimentary farm picnic, and learn more about sustainable ag, choose from one of our 4 existing parties!
Calendar of work parties:
August 9, Full Circle Farm, farming practices and harvesting
September 13, Full Circle Farm, farming practices and harvesting
October 11, Ames Creek Farm, farming practices and harvesting
October 18, Ames Creek Farm, habitat restoration

To sign up, Please call or email Tim Bernthal at 206.783.3088 or tbernthal@gowebway.com


Choice

June 27, 2008

I sit in the dirt as I draft this blog. The sky appears blue as a breeze wafts through, the sun is warm blanketing me with vitamins, and the farm is busy. I ponder our human ability to make choices, and as I enjoy the narrow spectrum of light filtering through I furthermore consider the wide spectrum of choices that are made moment to moment amongst the people of Full Circle Farm.

The people of the farm include those that work here, as well as those that support us. From the simple decision to get out of bed to the more complex decision to sustain a positive mind, each of us faces an indefinite number of choices everyday. As a farm we have a choice to not use chemicals and to care for the natural wildlife and environment; as a business we have a choice to support other farms and cultivate a positive work environment for those around us; as a consumer we have a choice to buy organic and encourage healthy living; as a community we have a choice to get connected and put forth effort; as people we have a choice to stay present and create awareness…

This morning Andrew Stout, Full Circle Farm Owner, chose to put on a wetsuit, slide into Griffin Creek, and incorporate a fish screen device with an irrigation system. Full Circle Farm is located between Griffin Creek and the Snoqualmie River, and is Certified Salmon Safe. Read more about our choice to protect the local wildlife habitat and participate in the Salmon Safe Certification at http://www.fullcirclefarm.com/benefits.html

-Jenny

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Adding a little color….

June 25, 2008

If you venture out to any of the 25 Farmers Markets that Full Circle Farm participates in this week (week of June 23-29) - Expect to see some Local Color!  Thanks to the cease of rain, warmer weather, and sunshine,Purple Radish just plucked. this will be the first week this summer we’ll be offering Rainbow Carrots and Purple Radishes alongside heads of Brocolli, mixed pints of Edible Flowers, and striped Chiogga Beets.  This morning I did a walkabout around the fields shooting photos of various produce plants….and I think I got some pretty useful shots!A species of Marigold Flower -La Calendula Edible I pasted a couple into this blog entry and the rest I added to the photo album…check’ em out.Nasturtium Edible Flowers

Also, thanks to the cease of rain and sunshine— we have begun irrigating in order to keep our crop colors coming in!  We irrigate our main crops with moveable pipes that can be pieced together at  various locations around the farm.  The pipes are steel and can withstand many years of use.  Our farmhands have to move the piping many times throughout the week during the summer and often long distances- hauling them onto and off of tractors and then stacking them in heavy piles when they are not in use- the wearability of these ‘watering tools’ must be sturdy enough to last for years…but it also makes them really heavy.  Here is a photo of Carlos preparing to move some of the piping…piling an arm of a tractor full.   Preparing to move Irrigation piping

Lastly, a haiku…

Rye nurses the Vetch.

Vetch makes for a healthy soil.

Healthy Soil brings life.


Full Circle Farm’s Greenhouse Manager

June 20, 2008

So what does Rose the farmer and gardener like to do in her off time? Well, cook and enjoy her harvest of course! “I’m a sucker for a good hearty fall soup like butternut squash or potato leek,” said Rose, “and in the summer a nice gazpacho!” Rose enjoys kale whenever she can get it, and recommends the From Asparagus to Zucchini cookbook for cooking vegetables. Her favorite cookbook, however, is Sunday Suppers at Lucques by Suzanne Goin . “It’s beautiful, split into seasons, gorgeous pictures, great recipes,” said Rose, “I just love looking at it, it makes me happy.”

Such a simple pleasure from someone who works hard to make so many others happy, providing them with healthy delicious food to eat, a positive work environment, and a warm smile. She talks as she moves down the row and situates the lettuce in the soil, and it is apparent she really has found her place in the world. When asked if she had any last remarks Rose said, “I really hope you enjoy the produce.”

If you have any interest in working with Rose for a day, learn more about these and other volunteer opportunities through Full Circle Farm’s Experience Farming Program.

-Jenny


The Future of Farming

June 9, 2008

Below is a letter written by Full Circle Farm founder and farmer Andrew Stout. He urges people to take a pro-active role in creating a healthier food system by simply taking a minute to fill out a brief survey…

June 9, 2008

Friends,

In 2007, the Washington State Legislature directed our state’s Department of Agriculture to draft a strategic plan mapping out the opportunities and challenges facing farming in our state, providing a historic opportunity to help shape the policies and regulations that will, in many ways, determine who grows our food, how our food is grown, and how and where it gets to
market.

A Steering Committee has been put together representing various segments of our state’s agricultural sector including wheat farmers, wine grape growers, dairy producers, organic growers and small and direct marketing farms. But there are many additional voices that are critical to a sound, well-informed food and farm policy and a brief electronic survey has been created to bring those ideas and opinions into the process.

Farmers, ranchers, food producers, farm-related businesses, nonprofit and civic organizations, even consumers all have a stake in ensuring that agriculture continues to be a thriving, growing, sector of our state’s economy as well as a visible part of our landscape in Washington.

The Future of Farming process will examine and make recommendations about how our state government should respond to key challenges for agriculture like escalating land values and subsequent loss of farmland, labor, transportation, water, and the regulatory landscape. But there are also many opportunities like development of new markets that can create and take advantage of rising demand for Washington-grown and produced foods.

Please take a few minutes today to fill out the survey. This is a process that will inform the Washington State Legislature as they develop food and farm policies for our state. Your voice is important in this process.

Take the survey today. Go to http://agr.wa.gov/fof/survey.htm

Please forward this to your friends and colleagues so they can be a part of this important process as well.
Thank you!

Sincerely,

Andrew Stout, owner of FCFAndrew Stout, Full Circle Farm

Future of Farming Steering Committee member for Small Farms/Direct Marketing



Seattle Greendrinks Tomorrow Night!

June 9, 2008

Seattle Greendrinks is turning five years old on 10 June 2008! To celebrate, we are throwing ourselves a party that you won’t want to miss. With breakout space for socializing, exhibitors, music by DJ’s miss b. wonder jones and KEXP’s Riz, spaces for exhibitors, as well as amazing food and drinks from local producers, this will be the green gathering for Seattle in 2008. The location is 3200/3220 1st Ave S, in Seattle’s SoDo area.

http://www.seattlegreendrinks.org/

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