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Barrett's Mill Farm | CSA & Farm Store

449 Barretts Mill Rd
Concord, MA, 01742
978-254-5609

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Barrett's Mill Farm | CSA & Farm Store

  • About
    • What We Grow
    • Growing Practices
    • The Farmers
    • Jobs
    • In the News
    • Contact
  • CSA
    • CSA Options
    • Photo Tour of the CSA
    • Member Guide
    • FAQs
  • Barrett's Bucks
  • PYO Flowers
  • Farm Stand
  • Blog
  • Sign up

March Madness on the farm!

March 29, 2019 Lise Holdorf
Scallions shoots popping up in the greenhouse.

Scallions shoots popping up in the greenhouse.

With the help of our annual crew of volunteers (moms and friends!) we have been keeping up with our greenhouse seeding schedule. So far we have seeded onions, leeks, cabbage, kohlrabi, fennel, shallots, kale, and the first lettuce and Salanova. In preparation for the field work to come later this month we have also been receiving deliveries (fertilizer and potatoes have arrived!) as well as placing more orders for additional supplies such as row cover, drip tape, and plastic mulch. We have also been working to hire our remaining positions as well as writing up policies and procedures for our incoming crew. Our friend Charlie recently came down for his annual spring tractor maintenance visits to help get our equipment in top shape for the season. He and Lise got the Ford tractor started (electrical issues are the trickiest for us!), put the belt back on our deck mower, and checked the bucket hydraulics. Implements and tractors were greased, oil levels checked, and engines run. It must be spring!

Next week we are welcoming our two new assistant growers, Brian and Sarah, as well as our returning field crew member Rebecca for her fourth season on the farm! They all come with years of farming experience and we are excited to have them here. Projects will include farm orientation, invasive removal from our blueberry patch, and of course lots of cleaning and organizing. Together we will be seeding flowers, high tunnel tomatoes, bok chop, and basil, lettuce, Salanova, eggplant and peppers in the greenhouse. In the fields next week we will begin plowing for many spring crops and seed the first carrots of the season! To prepare beds for carrots we will chisel plow, disk, lay fertilizer, and rototill. Once we have our flat beds for seeding we drive over them with our cultivating tractor that marks where to seed and use our walk behind seeder on three (hopefully) straight rows. After seeding we will cover the beds with row cover to speed their growth and protect them from the cold. We hope to get all this done before a nice light rainfall and then we will wait patiently to see them coming up in just a few weeks. Wish them luck!

Lise and Charlie do some mower maintenance.

Lise and Charlie do some mower maintenance.

Sign up by March 15th for Early Bird discounts!

February 26, 2019 Lise Holdorf
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In spite of this week’s wintry weather, planting in the Barrett’s Mill Farm greenhouse begins in earnest next Monday. The farm crew will be starting up in April, asparagus shoots will pop up in May, and strawberries will be here before you know it! With the farm season fast approaching, now is the time to secure your membership for 2019! Early Bird pricing is available to anyone who makes a deposit by March 15th, and sign-ups can be done either online or by mail. See the sign-up page on our website for more information about payment options or to pay by credit card. If you are unsure whether or not you are already signed up for the 2019 season, please email Melissa (melissa@barrettsmillfarm.com) to check.

CSA sign-ups made by March 15th save $30 off the full price, and early Barrett’s Bucks sign-ups receive the maximum bonus credit!

Early Bird (by March 15th) pricing is as follows*:

  • Main Season CSA (June 11th-October 26th): $695 New / $685 Renewal

  • Extended Season CSA (June 11th-November 23rd): $830 New / $820 Renewal

  • Flex CSA (20 out of 24 weeks, June 11th-November 23rd): $735 New / $725 Renewal

  • Barrett’s Bucks (early May-October 26th): 10% bonus credit added to starting balance (with a minimum purchase of $250)

*CSA prices assume returning members still have their CSA bag. Additional bags are available for $10.

Happy almost-spring!

Your farmers, Lise and Melissa

February on the Farm

February 13, 2019 Lise Holdorf
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February is a great time to whittle down the farm to-do list as low as we can get it before planting begins again March 1st! This month we have been busy checking off necessary administrative tasks such as completing organic certification paperwork, calculating fertilizer needs for each crop, finalizing our greenhouse and field schedule, finishing the 2018 bookkeeping, and updating our budget for the coming season. We are also continuing the hiring process for our few remaining positions, as well as setting up payroll and other record keeping systems for the year. While there is plenty to keep us busy in the office over the winter, we are also able to make time to get out and be a part of our community! We attend meetings and workshops on both vegetable growing as well as the related topics of open space, regulations, and food safety. Each winter we also give a few talks ourselves - this year Lise spoke to a gardening class at MCI Concord and Melissa is scheduled for a “Conversations with a Farmer” event at the Concord Seed Lending Library March 23rd.

Some of the meetings we attend over the winter are planning sessions with our fellow farmers in the area. Earlier this month we participated in the annual planning meeting for the Eastern Massachusetts CRAFT (Collaborative Regional Alliance for Farmer Training). The group schedules biweekly farm tours and workshops for beginning farmers and apprentices, and we’ll be hosting a session on greenhouse management this spring. We have also continued to attend the town Agriculture Committee meetings. We enjoy this gathering of Concord farmers and community members working together on projects such as a Farm Passport program, summer farm tours, and the 2019 Ag Day market. Details on these events to follow in the coming months! The first event of of the 2019 season will be the Ag Committe’s Spring Forum Thursday March 21st, 7pm at Harvey Wheeler. Chefs from local restaurants will be there to talk about how they incorporate produce from local farms in their cooking year-round. Join us for for a discussion of the rewards and challenges of cooking seasonally and take home some new ideas! The farms of Concord have also collectively started a farmsofconcord instagram account to showcase all the exciting (and beautiful!) things happening on the farms around Concord. We also now have a barrettsmillfarm instagram account. Feel free to tag either account or send Melissa your photos this season so we can include them!

While in many ways this has been a typical February on the farm it also included a major milestone: the end of our first 5-year lease on the property! We moved in on March 20th, 2014 with no employees, equipment, or supplies and we now have 5 tractors, 2 greenhouses, a high tunnel, an irrigation well, numerous farm implements and 10 seasonal employees! Earlier this month we signed another 5-year lease on the property, our last before the town will require another Request For Proposal application process for a new lease. As we sign on for the next five years we are encouraged and supported by the sign-ups and membership payments arriving each day. We are still accepting sign-ups for the 2019 season - forms are available on our website, where you can also now sign up with a credit card. If you’re a returning member from this past season and have lost your renewal form, just email Melissa (melissa@barrettsmillfarm.com)! The deadline for early sign-up discounts is March 15th.

The 2019 season will be here before we know it - we can’t wait!

Fifth season summary and dreaming of spring

January 11, 2019 Lise Holdorf
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Winter is often a time of dreaming and planning for farmers. Our outdoor tasks diminish, and on cold days, we hunker down in our office with our space heater, maps, seed catalogs, spreadsheets, budgets, hot tea and ideas. This year we feel like we have a lot to reflect on and be proud of.

In terms of numbers, the 2018 season was our biggest season yet: we grew crops on more land than ever (13 acres), we had more members than ever (225 CSA and 73 Barrett’s Bucks), and we had a bigger staff than ever (12 fantastic field and store workers). We are really grateful to Katherine, Janel, Zach, Rebecca, Dave, Molly, Jacob, Ari, Alexis, Emma, Alice and Sophie for working with us this year and making this growth possible!

It was also a big season for us due to some notable successes. We had more veggies available for longer in the year – we added more variety to our early spring offerings, doubled the size of our late fall CSA to 100 members, and hosted a very well-attended pop-up farm stand in December. With the help of a grant from NRCS (Natural Resources Conservation Service) we had a 30’ x 96’ high tunnel constructed in the field for in-ground growing. This high tunnel (also known as a hoophouse) will allow us to improve tomato-growing efficiency, extend our greens growing a little into the shoulder seasons, and try out some completely new crops like ginger. In addition, this fall we broke new ground at the South Corey Meadow just down the road from us. Our plan is to continue to cover crop one acre for the 2019 season and then start growing potatoes there in 2020.

In terms of crop yields, we improved our popcorn variety selection, had another great tomato harvest, discovered a new favorite winter squash (Black Futsu), honed our greens-growing strategy to produce more greens with fewer holes, had an excellent onion harvest (so excellent that we ran out of protected space to cure them, and ended up losing a large chunk of them to rabbits!), and grew some of the largest sweet potatoes we’ve ever seen. Also, after years of battling Colorado potato beetles, we were finally able to rotate our potatoes across the street, which was far enough away that we reduced the pest pressure and had our biggest potato harvest ever. In many ways, this last one feels like our biggest victory of all!

Of course there were some growing challenges as well. Although we ended up with a really nice fall carrot harvest, we struggled with seed germination in the heat waves of June and July, leading to a longer gap between spring and summer plantings than usual. The extreme heat also caused a lot of blossom drop on our eggplant, which led to delayed fruiting and overall smaller yields. We also struggled with diseases in our melons again, which we think may have been due to some contaminated older seed coupled with some really wet field conditions. With the unusually rainy fall, we saw a lot of diseases in our broccoli and beets, leading to an almost total crop failure for broccoli, as well as some unattractive beet greens! And while the winter squash harvest was excellent, we do think that the wet field conditions at the end of squash growing season combined with sub-optimal storage conditions contributed to a lot of premature rotting of butternut and Honeynut squash.

While there is not much we can do to alter the increasingly wild and unpredictable weather we are seeing, we are always thinking about what things are within our control. Foremost on our minds is increasing the amount of protected growing space we use (high tunnels, for instance) and improving crop storage and curing areas. High tunnels are expensive, but fortunately there are grant opportunities to help with this. Crop storage space is a different sort of challenge because our overall indoor storage space is quite limited. Nonetheless, we are determined to get creative and are busy brainstorming elevated rodent-proof onion and sweet potato curing systems, as well as semi-protected structures to move some equipment out of our barn and make way for more indoor squash storage and refrigerated space.

Our practices of crop diversity coupled with a variety of membership programs are the two other main strategies that we’ve been using since the beginning to deal with climate uncertainty. It would of course be more efficient to focus in on a few types of crops and sell them in bulk. However, with fewer crops, you are oftentimes at the mercy of factors you can’t control (like the weather and disease), and a single crop failure or even moderate yield reduction can have a devastating impact on income for a farmer. For this reason, we grow a large number of crops, including over 50 types of vegetables, fruit and flowers, and across those crop categories we grow hundreds of varieties. Our community of CSA and Bucks members also helps to ensure that we don’t lose a dramatic amount of business for the whole year if we have one weather-related crop failure. This is because members have made a commitment to the farm, and while it may be a bad year for one or two crops, it’s always a good year for many other crops!

Farms are built on optimism, so while we’ve identified some challenges, we also are always excited to tackle those challenges and plan for an even better season the next year! We are currently in the process of applying for more NRCS funding to build 2 more high tunnels. These would be used to rotate our tomatoes each year, try out protected growing of peppers, cucumbers and flowers, and create more space for season-extending greens. We’ve also been thinking about ways to have more variety and a steadier revenue stream during asparagus season, so we’ve planned to grow more micro greens and we already planted a bed of tulips for cut flowers in May. For some later season variety, we’ve ordered ginger seed to plant in a smaller high tunnel that we plan to complete this spring. As mentioned before, we’re coming up with some designs for curing and storing increased quantities of fall storage crops. We’re also thinking about small fixes in our farm store set-up and signage that will make our shopkeepers’ lives easier, and hopefully improve customer experience too!

One of the most exciting things for us about this coming season is the number of people who are returning from previous seasons. In terms of farm crew, Rebecca and Dave are returning for their fourth seasons this year as part-time farmers (complementing their Irish Dance and English teaching lives respectively), Molly will be graduating college and joining us for her third season in the farm store and field, and Katherine is coming back for her second season as an Assistant Grower! In addition, Wyatt from the 2016 crew is making a welcome return from New Zealand for the summer and will be working with us part-time! We also already have a strong contingent of CSA and Barrett’s Bucks members returning for the 2019 season, some of whom have been with us since our very first season in 2014! These returning crew and customers bring dedication, energy and efficiency to the farm- it wouldn’t be the same without them!

The bustling December pop-up farm stand.

The bustling December pop-up farm stand.

Farm stand pop-up this Saturday, December 8th!

December 3, 2018 Lise Holdorf
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We’re having one last veggie sale for the season:

Saturday, December 8th

9am - noon

Come by to stock up on carrots, potatoes, leeks and more. We’ll have limited quantities of several items (like spinach and microgreens), so come early! For a more complete list of what’s available, see below. We’ll be set up in the greenhouse that is attached to the farm stand, and as usual either cash or check will be accepted.

This Saturday at the pop-up farm stand:

  • Carrots - 2lb and 10lb bags

  • Potatoes (white Elba) - 5lb bags

  • Cabbage

  • Brussels sprouts

  • Leeks

  • Onions

  • Garlic

  • Spinach

  • Microgreens

  • Black Futsu squash

  • Butternut squash

  • Rutabaga

  • Turnip

  • Honey

  • Barrett’s Mill Farm bags

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Barrett's Mill Farm  |  449 Barrett's Mill Road  |  Concord, MA 01742


 

2025 Farm Store Schedule

Open May - October 25th

Tuesday - Friday 11am - 6pm
Saturday 9am - 3pm

2025 CSA Schedule

Starts June 11th

Wednesday 11am - 6:30pm
Saturday 9am - 3pm

 

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