Tuesday, August 24, 2010
Week 13 A
Beans--all 3 varities are coming in so: purple, yellow wax or green may be options
Carrots--Danvers variety, previous carrots were the Yaya variety
Sweet Potato greens--a fun addition last year
tomatoes-in some form or another
garlic
bunched herbs--we're trying to push summer savory and basil on you....
summer squash
sweet peppers
hot peppers
eggplant
Eat 'em up, YUM!
Friday, August 20, 2010
Scouts Build Bird Houses
By Liam Fox
Recently I and many of my friends worked to improve the availability of real estate for Red Wiggler, bird real estate that is. My name is Liam Fox, I have been volunteering at Red Wiggler for several years. I am also a Boy Scout and wanted to do something for the farm for my Eagle Scout project.
Working with Liz and Woody, we came up with the idea of building more eastern blue bird homes and installing them. They also wanted me to install a purple martin house. Both of these species bring a lot of benefits to the farm. They eat a tremendous amount of insects, providing a natural means of protecting the crops. The birds are also beautiful neighbors, enhancing the variety of fauna on the farm and in the community.
Many people made donations to help me purchase the materials, including my family, neighbors, and the Knights of Columbus at St.Elizabeth's Parish in
On Sunday the 15th, 15 friends and fellow Scouts gathered at my house to build 10 eastern blue bird houses. Without mortal injury we completed the houses and ate a lot of cookies.
On Thursday the 19th, 10 friends and Scouts including Woody met at Red Wiggler and installed the houses we built as well as an eight gourd purple martin house.
I got educational material form
Blue Bird
http://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Eastern_Bluebird/id
http://www.nabluebirdsociety.org/
Purple Martin
http://birding.about.com/od/birdprofiles/a/purplemartinfacts.htm
Monday, August 16, 2010
Split Tomato Overload
CSA Harvest for This Week (12B)
Heirloom
Tomatoes
Cherry Tomatoes
Beans
Summer Squash
Sweet Peppers
Hot Peppers
Baby Carrots
Eggplant
In the PYO:
Zinnias
Basil
Marjoram
Oregano
Thyme
Sage
Lovage
Mint
Chives
Calendula
Feverfew
Bachelor Buttons
Snapdragons
Statice
Strawflowers
Anise Hyssop
Tuesday, August 03, 2010
Harvest 10-B
This week:
Baby Carrots
Heirloom Tomatoes
Cherry Tomatoes
Sweet Bell Peppers
Hot Peppers
Summer Squash/Zucchini
Potatoes
Beans
Sunday, August 01, 2010
Remembering Hallie Wells Birthday Today
Red Wiggler Community Farm remembers Hallie Ausmus Wells birthday today August 1, 1893- she would be 117. Below is a re-posting of an archived blog entry describing how she came to donate her 290 acre farm to the Park system in 1981- we are very grateful for this special woman and her contribution to our community.
Originally posted: Friday, August 15, 2008 by Susan Skeith, valued Red Wiggler Volunteer 2008
They had no children, and this fact led, in 1956, to Ovid Hazen Wells and Hallie Ausmus Wells making a momentous decision which affects us all today.They clearly loved the State of Maryland, the open landscapes of Montgomery County and the charm of farming life. They both seemed to be visionaries of their time desiring to protect the land that they valued so dearly. In 1956 they made their decision to deed the 290 acres of farmland which they owned to the Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission so that it might remain as open space and be used for recreation. In l981, when Hallie officially made the donation, their vision had become reality.
Ovid Hazen Wells was born in Claiborne County, Tennessee in 1894, as was Hallie, in1893. They moved to the District of Columbia in 1918 when they were in their twenties. Ovid worked on the White House Police Force (now known as the Secret Service) and Hallie worked first for War Risk Insurance (a Federal department for WW1 veterans) and later for the IRS.
In 1940, Ovid retired and the Wellses bought 94 acres on Skylark Road in Clarksburg and later they acquired more adjoining land, including a dairy farm, bringing their total acreage to 290. They continued to live in DC but Ovid worked on the farm with the help of farmhands. Hallie described her husband as a ‘handshaker’, one who was prone to bringing people over on Saturdays and Sundays to show off his farm. She once told the Gazette in a l989 interview that “my husband informed me, one day back in 1952, that he planned to move to Cedar Grove and if I didn’t want to come, he would leave me a bed!” She promptly retired and they moved to the farm permanently.
It was on a Spring morning, four years later, when they had their discussion about who should benefit from their good fortune when they were gone. Between them they had more than 20 brothers and sisters and, as Hallie so eloquently put it, “bequeathing it to all those heirs would have meant a nickel piece of it each time lawyers and everybody got their part”. Besides, the Wellses were more than a little concerned that development was intruding ever closer and they wanted to make sure that their piece of open space was left for the community to learn about their agricultural heritage and to have a recreational park for generations to come; not merely development into houses on one-acre lots.
They also wanted it to benefit children.
Later that same year, Ovid sadly died at the age of 62, having been denied his senior years working the land as he had hoped. One wonders if he knew his life was coming to an end and he needed to have a plan for Hallie.
Hallie made the donation of their farm in 1981, despite the fact that the land had appreciated in value to over 1 million dollars. She continued to live there until her death, at the ripe-old age of 98 and she is buried with her husband in the Salem United Methodist Cemetery on Ridge Road.
Because of the generosity and astounding vision that this couple exuded we are still able to work the farm, as Red Wiggler; providing job opportunities for adults with developmental disabilities; growing and selling high quality produce and continuing to expand the Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) program which, by its nature, creates and nurtures a healthy and inclusive community.
What a superb legacy Ovid and Hallie have left for this community and, like them, we must continue to protect and preserve the land around us as our responsibility for this generation and generations to come.
by Susan Skeith, Red Wiggler Volunteer 2008