Found: Images of Better Farm's first float

Long before this generation of Better Farmers got involved in Redwood Firemen's Field Days in 2009 and 2010, some old, found pictures reveal the former generation shared our penchant for parades.

These shot appear to be from the late 1960s or early 1970s, and could have been taken in Ridgewood, N.J. on the 4th of July. Better Farm's founder Steve Caldwell is seated in the below photo at center in glasses.

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Nicole Caldwell

Nicole Caldwell is a self-taught environmentalist, green-living savant and sustainability educator with more than a decade of professional writing experience. She is also the co-founder of Better Farm and president of betterArts. Nicole’s work has been featured in Mother Earth News, Reader’s Digest, Time Out New York, and many other publications. Her first book, Better: The Everyday Art of Sustainable Living, is due out this July through New Society Publishers.

Redwood Field Days 2010

The 2010 Redwood Firemen's Field Days were a flurry this year of junk auctions, live entertainment, beer and food tents, oodles of rides and games, raffles, prizes, and all the fried dough you'd ever care to eat.

Festivities were kicked off Thursday, Aug. 26, with a junk auction held behind the Redwood Fire Department's station on Stine Road. From there, the excitement built to culminate Saturday night in a parade down Route 37 in downtown Redwood, past hundreds of onlookers.


Better Farm's "float" in the parade—comprised of a banner draped across the front of Butch's pickup truck, CCR blasting on the stereo, Chris and Joel handing out cucumbers and fliers, and Corinne and I throwing bags of string beans into the confused crowd while Kobayashi Maru and Han Solo napped in the truck bed in their Hawaiian leis—took third place for floats. It was a major step up from Better Farm's "float" last year; which was really just Stacie Mae and I wandering down Main Street while throwing wildflowers at the crowd.

We plan to come out in full force next year and sweep the parade for first.

It was a great weekend of communing with locals, winning a few prizes, listening to some great music, and enjoying the last bit of summer.
Only another 362 days or so until the next field days rolls into town. Until then, better be.

Artist-in-Residence Mike Sperone Performs Compositions for Glockenspiel

Two weeks ago Better Farm welcomed composer and artist Mike Sperone to the betterArt residency program. Referring to sound as his medium, Mike's music runs the spectrum from short and simple to long-form, complex compositions.

"I am influenced by the physics of nature and mathematical formulae used to describe them," Mike told us. "But in such a strict and logical discipline, I also see the inexplicable, seemingly random, and beautiful occurrences which push my art in a likewise direction."



During his time at Better Farm, Mike helped out with finishing touches on our greenhouse, setting up the farm stand each morning, collecting crops from the garden daily, and taking care of our chickens Henrietta, Sissy, and Scarlet. He also proved extremely valuable as a Better Farm ally during Bill Johnston's Pirate Days in Alexandria Bay.

Mike's musical project during his residency was a series of compositions for orchestra bells (glockenspiel) and computer.  "I have used this combination of instruments to create pop music," he said, "but had not yet composed 'serious' or 'classical' music with it. With such a simple instrument as a set of tuned metal plates, and the limitless possibilities that lay inside the computer, I knew there was a lot I can say with this."

Say it he did! Last Friday Mike followed a sunset dinner on Butterfield Lake with an outdoor concert at Better Farm featuring his compositions. It was the perfect conclusion to a great couple of weeks having Mike on board at the Farm. Best of luck to him and his musical career!
To learn more about Better Farm's betterArt residency program, click here.

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Nicole Caldwell

Nicole Caldwell is a self-taught environmentalist, green-living savant and sustainability educator with more than a decade of professional writing experience. She is also the co-founder of Better Farm and president of betterArts. Nicole’s work has been featured in Mother Earth News, Reader’s Digest, Time Out New York, and many other publications. Her first book, Better: The Everyday Art of Sustainable Living, is due out this July through New Society Publishers.

DIY Greenhouse

Inspired by a Mother Earth News article from last year, we decided in the spring to construct a greenhouse utilizing rough-cut local lumber, and recycled windows donated by people around town.

We further decided to go with a basic 10 x 10 size, A-frame roof, and a ceiling made of greenhouse plastic (donated to us by Krings 1000 Island Produce and Nurseries). All the wood we bought for the project came from Redwood lumber, and supplemented by the supply of an Amish family down the road in Pamelia, N.Y.


Next step was getting the crew together; a feat made far less impossible by the fact that people in the North Country are among the most helpful you'll meet. On the day of construction, no fewer than 12 people showed up on-site to lend a hand.

We laid 4 x 4's along the ground to form a square, leaving the center floor open so the greenhouse would have a grass carpet. We put the walls together with rough-cut 2 x 4's, leaving appropriate space for the windows (many thanks to Craig for being the mathematical wizard behind all of that). Next step was framing the walls out, and standing back as Craig and Jody figured out the roof.
Then, we found some old house stain in the basement of Better Farm. Presumably bought for the main house, it doesn't match and was most likely stowed away for use on something else. The day had arrived! We applied the stain to the exterior of the greenhouse, let it dry, and stood back to admire our work. A few days later, a team of us stretched the greenhouse plastic over the roof and tacked 1 x 2's down over it to keep it in place.
We used power drills to pop the windows into the structure; leaving four hinged so they could open for ventilation. Adhering those with 1 x 1's to the building, we then painted the trim to match the main house and screened in the hinged windows and roof.

From there, it was just a matter of constructing the ladder to reach our sleeper loft, putting in hooks and shelves for our tools and seedlings, and putting the door on the main entrance.

Click here to see the full photo album!
Please contact us if you're interested in purchasing the plans to build this greenhouse.

'Of the Earth' Art Show Features Pottery by betterArts Resident Jacquelin Dattisman

Jackie Dattisman arrived at Better Farm in the begin of July to focus her energy on clay. Helping to round out a summer of betterArts residencies which included a sketch artist, painter, dancer and choreographer, and composer, the 29-year-old school teacher spent her days at the Farm working with her pottery out in the barn.


Jackie also forged a relationship with our neighbors over at Dragonfly Pottery, Ann and John Donovan, who were endlessly helpful with their advice and gracious offer for Jackie to use their kilns.

In addition to the creation of many stunning pieces of work, Jackie became integral to the daily operations at Better Farm during her stay. She lent a major hand in the garden, ran Better Farm's table at a Redwood Farmers' Market, took charge of all composting and recycling at the Farm, and acted as a huge player in getting big, family style dinners together on a nightly basis.

She will be missed!

Her Aug. 14 art show, titled "Of the Earth", featured the work Jackie's completed in the month and a half she was at Better Farm. Photos after the jump!



For more information on Better Farm's betterArt residency program or to apply, click here.
Comment

Nicole Caldwell

Nicole Caldwell is a self-taught environmentalist, green-living savant and sustainability educator with more than a decade of professional writing experience. She is also the co-founder of Better Farm and president of betterArts. Nicole’s work has been featured in Mother Earth News, Reader’s Digest, Time Out New York, and many other publications. Her first book, Better: The Everyday Art of Sustainable Living, is due out this July through New Society Publishers.

Bill Johnston's Pirate Days

Thousand Islands' most dreaded pirate was the notorious smuggler and War of 1812 privateer Bill Johnston. Dubbed the man the British most wanted to hang, fortunes were blown on the pursuit of Johnston as he was hunted by United States and Canadian authorities.

His most notorious project was the May 30, 1838, attack on the passenger steamer Sir Robert Peel (which was docked at Wellesley Island on the St. Lawrence River). Johnston ordered his men to loot the ship and burn it, which they did while chanting "Remember the Caroline." Johnston eventually surrendered to United States authorities.

So of course it stands to reason that almost 200 years later, we'd create a holiday in honor of this guy.

Hey, it worked for Christopher Columbus.

Bill Johnston's Pirate Days is a 10-day holiday held in Alexandria Bay which features two pirate invasions, two block parties, sword fights, puppet shows, public drunkenness and mayhem, magic shows, parades, and more.

The folks at Better Farm rose to the occasion, donning swords and hooks and pillaging Alexandria Bay. Our own Brian Purwin performed at Top of the Bay, Cavallario's Steak House, and The Dancing Dog; while others stopped in at the invasion, worked behind-the-scenes at local businesses (Corinne at Singer Castle, Chris at Riley's, Joel on Wellesley Island), and danced and boogied while the bay burned.

Quite an epic week! Don't throw that pirate gear away just yet—Bill Johnston's Pirate Days will be back next year around the same time. Keep up on scheduling at VisitAlexBay.org.
Comment

Nicole Caldwell

Nicole Caldwell is a self-taught environmentalist, green-living savant and sustainability educator with more than a decade of professional writing experience. She is also the co-founder of Better Farm and president of betterArts. Nicole’s work has been featured in Mother Earth News, Reader’s Digest, Time Out New York, and many other publications. Her first book, Better: The Everyday Art of Sustainable Living, is due out this July through New Society Publishers.

Artist-in-Residence Reporting: Better Farm, betterArts

By Mike Sperone

Hello! I am writing from the beautiful location of Better Farm in Redwood, NY!

I am in my second week as artist-in-residence at the BetterArts program here. It is great! I have written about 10 minutes of music and plan to write at least another 10 minutes, for glockenspiel and computer.

Yes, I have done quite a bit with that set up, but before this residency I hadn't written any serious, fully composed pieces for this particular instrumentation. This Friday will be the premier of all the music I have/will compose(d) during these two weeks, I hope to get a recording so I can share with you. If not, then I will do a "studio" recording after I get home.

I'll post pictures as I get them "developed."
Comment

Nicole Caldwell

Nicole Caldwell is a self-taught environmentalist, green-living savant and sustainability educator with more than a decade of professional writing experience. She is also the co-founder of Better Farm and president of betterArts. Nicole’s work has been featured in Mother Earth News, Reader’s Digest, Time Out New York, and many other publications. Her first book, Better: The Everyday Art of Sustainable Living, is due out this July through New Society Publishers.

Building a Better Birdhouse

One of the many birdhouses on Better Farm's property has been roofless for years. Long-since deserted by its many feathered guests, the structure has sat birdless far too long.

We decided the other day to do something about it, and began brainstorming what materials would work best for a replacement roof. Thatched hay? Sticks and mud? Glass? Tin? We liked the idea of reappropriating some of our aluminum recyclables, but figured we'd need a base to affix said cans to. Off to the wood shed we went, where we found scraps from the tongue-and-groove pine used for loft flooring back in May.

After scrounging up a few more materials found around the house, we were ready to get started. Directions on how to build your own birdhouse roof, along with photos, after the jump!



Materials:
  • Tape measure
  • Hand saw
  • Staple gun and staples
  • Hammer and nails
  • Wood (we used leftover scraps from tongue-and-groove flooring in our lofts)
  • Emptied and cleaned aluminum cans
  • Scissors
Directions:
  1. Cut the wood to fit. Hammer into place.
  2. Cut apart the aluminum cans, then cut them into a scalloped shape.
  3. Starting at the bottom of the roof, staple the cans to the wood in a row. Work your way up, staggering the cans so the scallops overlap nicely from row to row.
  4. After you've stapled the top row, take a few cans and cut them into rectangles. Staple the rectangles along the top crease of the roof so moisture doesn't leak in.
Comment

Nicole Caldwell

Nicole Caldwell is a self-taught environmentalist, green-living savant and sustainability educator with more than a decade of professional writing experience. She is also the co-founder of Better Farm and president of betterArts. Nicole’s work has been featured in Mother Earth News, Reader’s Digest, Time Out New York, and many other publications. Her first book, Better: The Everyday Art of Sustainable Living, is due out this July through New Society Publishers.

Better Farm has a Farm Stand!

It was only a matter of time before our garden outgrew the appetites of the 12 people who called Better Farm home in the last month. Even hauling cucumbers down to Knorr's to sell wasn't satiating the garden, which has been producing zucchinis, string beans, summer squash, radishes, kale, and lettuce (oh, the lettuce!) like crazy.

So our powerhouse-of-an-intern Tiyi took it upon herself to organize, plan, stock, paint signs for, and execute a farm stand on the edge of Better Farm's property. She researched reasonable prices for organic produce, spent days painting sign after sign so there was no chance of anyone missing the spot, and got up each morning to pick produce and set it out. At the end of each day, Tiyi helped transform whatever we didn't sell into dinner.

We've divvied up Tiyi's work since she left on Saturday (never do you realize how much someone does until you try to take on their workload yourself), and have been enjoying all the people who stop to tell us their Better Farm stories, pick up some fresh local produce for their families, and ask us questions.
Comment

Nicole Caldwell

Nicole Caldwell is a self-taught environmentalist, green-living savant and sustainability educator with more than a decade of professional writing experience. She is also the co-founder of Better Farm and president of betterArts. Nicole’s work has been featured in Mother Earth News, Reader’s Digest, Time Out New York, and many other publications. Her first book, Better: The Everyday Art of Sustainable Living, is due out this July through New Society Publishers.

Artist-in-Residence: Mark Dilks

Mark Dilks, a painter and collage artist from Philadelphia, Pa., recently completed a week-long artist residency at Better Farm.

A graduate of Hampshire College in Amherst, Mass., Mark has worked for a number of years at numerous Philadelphia-based art institutions; including a stint as arts coordinator at Please Touch Museum, Philadelphia's children's museum. While there, Mark planned, organized, and executed activities for the museum's visitors. He painted all the while, working mostly in oil-on-canvas. Before coming to Better Farm, Mark held several residencies elsewhere, including Vermont Studio Center; and shared a studio with the founders of A United Front, an organization connecting creative communities. Mark will begin coursework at MICA in Baltimore this month. His band Deep Possum plays regularly in the Philadelphia area.


To see more of Mark's work, please visit the following links:
To commission a piece or ask any questions, contact Mark.

Checking in with Better Farm's Chickens

Ever since we brought Sissy (left in photo above) and Scarlet (right) in to keep Henrietta (center, obviously) company, the chicken scene in Better Farm's garden has changed dramatically.

Three chickens' level of food and water, not to mention their effect on the ground inside their run (and the hay inside their little den) is significantly different from the days of just one South American hen with a busted-up leg. We were careful to invite only the nicest young chickens we could find (thanks Jody!) into Henrietta's home, so they wouldn't cause any trauma to the previously battered princess.

We let the chickens run freely whenever we're outside gardening, as the 100-by-80-foot garden enclosure works very well to keep the birds from wandering onto Cottage Hill Road or into an open field for an alert hawk to grab. Here's Henrietta doing her thing this morning, being polite enough to not pull the small plants out of the ground and focusing instead on worms and weeds:
What a gal.

While Henrietta, Sissy, and Scarlet romped around our vegetable garden, I took on the dirty job of cleaning out the coop (the dirtied hay was put directly into our compost pit and scattered sparingly—too much will kill plants—along our rows of veggies) and moving the whole tractor mechanism a few feet over; as Sissy and Scarlet managed to rip out every blade of grass in their run. Here's the track they left behind, next to a shot of the grass I moved the chicken tractor over.
This area, as well as all the space we'll be composting on throughout the fall and winter, will make for extremely fertile planting ground next spring. And with a fresh track of tall grass to play in, our lovely lovely hens are back to scratching and pecking away, eating up hundreds of worms, crickets, and horse flies (thanks ladies!) daily.
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Nicole Caldwell

Nicole Caldwell is a self-taught environmentalist, green-living savant and sustainability educator with more than a decade of professional writing experience. She is also the co-founder of Better Farm and president of betterArts. Nicole’s work has been featured in Mother Earth News, Reader’s Digest, Time Out New York, and many other publications. Her first book, Better: The Everyday Art of Sustainable Living, is due out this July through New Society Publishers.

Happy Trails to Tiyi

With July at an end, we had to wish a fond farewell to our interns Joe Pintaudi and Tiyi Brewster. Joe posted regularly on the Better Farm blog, but Tiyi (pronounced "Thai") preferred to work behind the scenes.

We did manage to pin her down for an exit interview of sorts, to get her thoughts on her time at the Farm...

Better Farm: What made you want to apply for the Better Farm internship program?
Tiyi: I saw the internship posted on Clarkson University's site; and when I checked out Better Farm's page, I was impressed by the design and blog... The slogan, the history, pretty much the whole Web site! On the blog, everyone seemed so open and loving life. It all sounded great!

How did you like all the work (and we do mean WORK) that was given to you?
I was excited by all the responsibility given to me. I wanted to learn more about farming and farm management, and I definitely did that. I really feel like the whole thing was an opportunity for growth. I've grown up socially for sure. There was no choice but to interact with so many different people and that was really good for me. At some point I had a shift in perspective, and now I feel like an official adult. It's amazing what a month can do!

You're about to enter your sophomore year at Clarkson University with a future degree in environmental science and policy. How will you take what you've learned at Better Farm and apply it to your schooling?
I belong to ECO (Clarkson's Environmental Conservation Organization), and we've already been planning a composting project using an aerobic digestor... I'm hoping that we can also start an experimental garden at the school. I would love to be a part of that. Now that I've really worked at an actual farm, I feel that I'll better understand how the processes work. I plan on applying this knowledge to the reading I have for class as well.

After graduation, what are your plans?
I'm not entirely sure where my path will lead, but I am interested in becoming a forest or park ranger. I do know that I'll be getting my driver's license in the near future so I can come back and visit Better Farm, or even live here!

Well, Tiyi, the amazing work you put in here, and not to mention your constantly sunny personality, means you will always have a place at Better Farm!