The Former Livestock of Better Farm

Gary Bensky faces off with Bill the Goat in 1973 at Better Farm (main house on left, old barn in background). Photo/CB Bassity.
Former Better Farm resident CB Bassity sent me an e-mail yesterday with some information on the livestock that graced the Farm back in the 70s. It appears the animals frequented the property across the street from the main house, behind where the barn now stands. I'll let him do the talking.

Editor's note: Those of you who have memories of the farm from the 70s will get most of the references; those who don't will simply learn a little more of the history of the space and people:


"Here are all the BF photos we have, all taken one day in the fall of 1973. A little on the cast of characters: The livestock were assembled piecemeal beginning in 1971. We got Goldberry in 1971 as a weaned heifer calf from the Neuroths ("Friendship Farm" on Route 37, Theresa—we nicknamed them the Friendlys):

"Charlotte as a weaned pig the same summer:

"None of us had experience with livestock, so it was all learn-as-you-go. I was struck by the companionship that developed between Charlotte and Goldberry. Each, lacking another of its species, took up with the other in close sisterhood. They roamed together and bedded together, sharing warmth in every kind of weather.

"Little Bill came in some sort of trade with Harold Cole, and was the herd sire for a number of years; he grew an impressive set of horns. That's Gary Bensky facing off with Bill (photo at top). Gary, who precipitated the 226 Prospect St. bust by inadvertently bringing a narc to the place, was a fugitive from the law and had borrowed I.D. from his brother, Ron—thus Ron #1.

There's a Toggenberg doe named Ralph, very much a Type A goat--she was hard-nosed, knew what she wanted from the world, and went for it. Bowse named her:


"We also had a gray, long-haired female cat that Bowse named Putkin, after Vladimir Putkin, a Russian general of some repute. Only Bowse could explain the male tags for female animals. (Are you aware, by the way, that when your folks were married at the Ridgewood Country Club, Bowse filled his pockets with the club's silverware and brought it to the Farm?)

Midnight, a Nubian, was very sensual. She chewed her cud with eyes half-shut and often a rhythmic soft moan; as best I could read it, she took such delight in her cud that she moaned her appreciation.



That's me offering grain from a peanut-butter bucket to Blaze:



Early in the game I took over care for the animals; once Bruce and Susan moved up the road I was the only one with interest. Hank Gibson, the old alcoholic horseman who lived in a tiny trailer on the Hunneyman place, talked me into buying Blaze from him so I could match him with Trouble and have a working team.



Anyone who knew anything about horses would have known better, but I was an easy mark. At some point I tried to sell the two horses (with an eye to buying one true draft horse with the proceeds), but the horse trader Hank brought around could clearly see that Blaze was skittish, and bought only Trouble, the better horse of the two. In early- and mid-20th-century, hogs were known as "mortgage-lifters," so productive and profitable were they.

"In a related sense, for a long time I referred to Charlotte as 'my business partner.' I raised and butchered and sold countless of her offspring; she routinely produced litters of 12 or thereabouts, about twice a year. Feed? Johnny Evans brought carcasses throughout the trapping season—muskrats and beaver mostly; we brought home enormous amounts of yoghurt, cottage cheese, etc. that the Crowleys milk plant trucked to the LaFargeville dump (for being mislabeled or whatever); and when Bruce worked at the egg factory on the Alex Bay road he brought me 5-gallon buckets of broken eggs, the rejected cracked eggs that were tossed. (Bruce and Susan's diet depended so heavily on eggs during that time that he got to the point he couldn't eat one. I think he's since recovered.)


I had to buy grain of course—the Redwood feed store was located behind Tibbles Lumber, the building that sits across from Knorr's—but a natural bounty stretched the bought feed quite well. We typically had way more pumpkins and squash from the garden than we needed. In later years Charlotte developed a taste for chicken. After I dumped her slop twice daily into her feed trough, chickens would jump for the odd bit that landed nearby during Charlotte's eager feeding. You could see the glint in Charlotte's eye when a chicken got close. She'd lunge for the bird and usually got it. I had to enclose the upper part of her pen with wire to keep from losing too many birds.








I hope you guys are doing well.

CB

Brainstorming: New outbuildings for Better Farm

We are growing! The overwhelming success of Better Farm's sustainability internship program and betterArts residencies has left us short on space during most of the year. Instead of packing more people into the main house, we're looking outward; at new, unusual dwelling units that will provide a private space for future interns and artists to call home during their stays at Better Farm. Here are a few ideas we love...

Teepee. No brainer.

Straw bale cottage (check it out at Tiny House Blog)

Houseboat!

A real-life gingerbread house!

Seattle treehouse (check it out at WebUrbanist.com)

Got a great outbuilding idea you'd like to share? E-mail us at info@betterfarm.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.

Grower's Guide: Growing and preserving leeks

It's amazing how underused the leek is, in spite of its similarity to the onion in cooking, its ease of growing, its flavor and smell and nutritional value.

We grew a huge crop of leeks over the summer, and have been enjoying their bounty well into November. I wanted to harvest what was left in the raised beds, and experiment with leaving the rest of the main garden's leek crop out under a hay cover so we can continue accessing the plants fresh into December and, possibly, even January.

Leeks from our raised beds. Photo/Nicole Caldwell

Below is some basic information on leeks, as well as preservation tips so you can enjoy these delicious plants year-round. Those of you who have never tried growing this vegetable before, don't be intimidated! We found leeks to be easier to grow that even string beans. And how many plants can you go outside to pluck even under a cover of snow?

Leeks are a biennial member of the allium family, which includes onions, garlic, shallots, and chives. There are several leek varieties, including American flag, King Richard and jolant. All leeks can be stored in a similar manner. The white shank has a mild, almost sweet, onion flavor; the green tops are stronger tasting.

Click here for great information on growing leeks in your garden; and read on for storing methods.

Leave them in the ground

Surround your leeks with straw, peat moss, grass clippings, and compost. Except for the most severe conditions, your leeks will survive all winter. If you're going to pick them in the winter (and not wait until spring), be sure you pull them from the ground on days when they don't have frost on them. If you leave them all winter, the leeks will come back to life in March.

Store them in peat

Pull the leek plants, trim the leaves, wash off the roots, and put the plants in a big tub of damp peat or potting soil. You will have to add water every so often to keep everything moist.

Bury them in the sand

You can put leeks in a bucket of wet sand and they will keep for two to three months.

Blanch them

Wash the leeks to remove all visible dirt. Place the leeks onto the cutting board and slice off the roots from the ends. Slice off the top part of the leaves also. Slice the leeks into ½-inch-long chunks. Fill a pot with water and set it on the burner. Set the burner to high and bring the water to a boil. Add the sliced leeks to the boiling water and leave them in the water for three minutes. Remove the leeks with a slotted spoon and place them directly into the ice water. Leave the leeks in the ice water for five minutes, then transfer them to the other bowl. Allow the leeks to cool to room temperature. Put the leeks into freezer bags, close the bags so only one inch is still open. Squeeze the bags to remove as much air as you can, finish closing the bags, and put your leeks in the freezer for up to one year.

Got a gardening question or tip? E-mail us at

info@betterfarm.org

to have your thoughts published on our blog!

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.

Planting Black Walnut Trees

Black walnut trees-to-be. Photo/Nicole Caldwell

A mature, leafy tree produces as much oxygen in a season

as 10 people inhale in a year

, and acts as a huge filter for the air around it. So when our friend Fred dropped off a huge bag of highly desirable

black walnut tree

seeds for us, it wasn't just the beauty of a tree-lined Cottage Hill Road that we had in mind (although let's not kid ourselves, who doesn't want a beautiful, tree-lined street to look at every day?).

May, Erin, and I planted a bunch of seeds yesterday afternoon in the unbelievably balmy, 70-degree weather. We stood about six feet off the road so the eventually enormous trees wouldn't interfere with the roadway, and planted each tree about 10 big paces apart from the next. We did both sides of the road between the main house and the sawmill down the road. Here are Kaiser and Han Solo seeing what all the fuss was about:

... and inside the bag:

Here's the size of an individual seed, surrounded by the meaty fruit of the plant (the actual seed is deep inside that pulpy exterior, and will sprout in the spring):

We dug down three or four inches in the dirt, dropped the seed in, and covered it back up with dirt and a little hay:

We're going to plant the rest throughout the property (about 200 trees in all), wait 30 or 40 years, and invite about 2,000 of you over to breathe in our new,

black walnut

-lined promenade leading to

Better Farm

.

Any local residents who would like free black walnut seeds can e-mail info@betterfarm.org to arrange a pick-up.

1 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.

Brave the Winter With Us!

Curious about what this place is all about? Looking for an inexpensive, fun way to spend your winter?

We have three private bedrooms available for rent at Better Farm through May 31 for $450/month.

Rent includes all utilities, wireless Internet, parking, heat and hot water, and incidentals such as toilet paper, paper towels, dish soap, etc. Bedrooms are also available furnished. Your rent covers your private bedroom, shared used of three bathrooms, two kitchens, and two common areas. Participation in Better Farm's communal food program and use of studio space in the Art Barn across the street available for an additional stipend.

Washing machine on-site, large-screen TV (no cable, but hooked up to DVD player), communal computer available for use by all residents.

Two dogs, three chickens, and a bunch of fish already live here, so please no pets! Please contact us at info@betterfarm.org with any questions or to schedule a visit.

Please note this rental program is for temporary winter lodging only, and not part of our sustainability internship or artist residency programs.
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.

Spotlight On: ShowMe


ShowMe video about ozone depletion.

The open source movement has without question changed the face of education; with open courseware, open source technology, and open-source lesson plans available for the masses.

Enter San Kim, a New Yorker who's taken things a step further by creating a global learning community where anyone can learn or teach anything.

ShowMe allows users to upload mini-lessons; from factorizing a quadratic with A not equaling 1 to phases of the moon. The lessons make learning as accessible as possible, while giving great teachers and experts a platform to reach even more students. This is also a super-cool resource for students who need a little edge on their studies (let's face it: Even teachers with the best intentions can't always make information palatable to every student), or really anyone with a hankering to know about any number of things. Kim's website transcends stuffy classrooms to offer interactive learning tools that are approachable and fun. And the best part? You can also upload your own lessons to demonstrate fun, new ways for people to digest information.

Click here to learn more and get started.
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.

Aquaponic Gardening: Phase II

Goldfish and minnows get acquainted with the Buddha. Photo/Nicole Caldwell
We told you last week about our plans to create an aquaponic grow station at Better Farm in order to grow salad greens, tomatoes, and peppers year-round.

Marching orders from our aquaponic/hydroponic setup consultant, Marco Centola of Brooklyn Farms, included getting our hands on at least a 40-gallon fish tank with two corner filters, gravel, and air circulator, letting water sit in the tank for two days, then adding a bunch of feeder fish to get the nitrogen cycle started.

I hit the pet store the next day to assess our options and make a note of prices, then scoured Craigslist to find great deals. We scored a 70-gallon tank and stand from Craigslist for $180—about $100 less than the cost of a new, 40-gallon tank and stand at the local big-box pet store in Watertown. Next up was picking out filters:
We also grabbed a pH test kit with "pH Up" and "pH Down" control additives, a bunch of fish food, gravel, awesome Indian sculptures, and even a few bulbs that will allegedly grow plants:


Here's an excerpt from an e-mail Marco sent to me outlining the process:
The first thing you should do is to setup the aquarium:
  • Rinse the tank well
  • Rinse the gravel well, food strainer makes the job easier
  • Place a flexible airstone at the bottom with the air line coming out and cover it with gravel (this is still on our to-do list!)
  • Fill the tank with water and begin aerating and filtering the water.
  • After 24 hours you can introduce the first feeder fish or you can put a couple of raw dead shrimp into the tank to begin the nitrogen cycle. 
After four days, you can take the dead fish out and replace with feeder fish.  From here you need to check ammonia, nitrite, and nitrate levels once a week. Feeder fish are cheap and WILL die but the purpose of them is to see when they can survive for more than four days. It should take from four to eight weeks to establish a strong enough nitrogen cycle to get some nice fish in there.  When testing, you will see ammonia spike high at first then nitrite, and finally nitrate. 

Though nitrate is safer, it is still toxic in large quantities and regular water changes are a must.  when you change water in a fish tank you must make sure there is no chlorine or you will kill all the beneficial bacteria that has already colonized.  I usually let water sit out 24 hours, which allows the chlorine to evaporate.  You should also only change 20 percent of the water at a time.  Fish are sensitive to temp, pH, and any drastic change, so this should soften the blow.

Is he the best, or what?! We added the fish yesterday (the woman at the pet store warned us the water would get pretty cloudy once the fish went in, which she said was normal as the nitrogen cycle begins and levels out. "Don't do anything when that happens!" she told me, "after a few days the water will clear.") Now, we wait a few days to see how the little fish fare. So far they've made it 24 hours with no fatalities (thank goodness for Better Farm's well water? Or is the good luck of our statuary?).



For more great information about aquaponics, visit Backyard Aquaponics.

More about our aquaponics experiment:
Aquaponic Gardening: Phase I

Name That Skull

The dogs found quite a treasure in the woods this morning. Who can name this skull?


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.

Mulching with Hay (and other Biodegradables)

Better Farm's garden rows get ready for winter. We piled about 1.5 feet of hay over each row this morning.
After reading Ruth Stout's How to Have a Green Thumb Without an Aching Back, I was convinced of the benefits of mulch gardening; a layering method that mimics a forest floor and combines soil improvement, weed removal, and long-term mulching in one fell swoop. Also called lasagna gardening or sheet mulching, this process can turn hard-to-love soil rich and healthy by improving nutrient and water retention in the dirt, encouraging favorable soil microbial activity and worms, suppressing weed growth, and improving the well-being of plants (all while reducing maintenance!).

This is the close of our second gardening season at Better Farm, and to say it's been a crash-course in everything organic is an understatement. We've been working uphill since Day One, when we "broke ground" (and several shovels) in the clay-rich, hard earth that had only homed hay for at least half a century.

Since that time, we've experimented with several planting, growing, weeding, fertilizing, and pest-control tactics. And what began as a small vermicompost bin in the kitchen has turned into a huge garden full of layered mulch rotting beautifully into dark, rich soil that feeds hundreds of plants every spring, summer, and fall.

We were fortunate enough this year to be visited by Guy Hunneyman, who dropped off several bales of hay for us to use as we ready the garden for winter. Mike and I hit the garden this morning and spread the hay out into nice, thick layers.



So, how do you get to this point? First, a weed barrier like cardboard is laid down to smother weeds. The cardboard decomposes after the weeds have all died and turned into compost. On top of the cardboard you can pile dead leaves, grass clippings, compost, several-years-old composted manure, and other biodegradables such as old hay. Mulch gardening can range from just a few inches thick to 2 feet or more, depending on how bad your soil is and how much raw material you have available (it will cook down and settle quite a bit). The cyclical process goes on year-round and works so well we don't have to put a single additive or chemical into the soil.


Want to learn more? Here's a snippet from an old interview with the Queen of Mulch herself, talking about how you too can have a green thumb without an aching back.

My no-work gardening method is simply to keep a thick mulch of any vegetable matter that rots on both my vegetable and flower garden all year round. As it decays and enriches the soil, I add more. The labor-saving part of my system is that I never plow, spade, sow a cover crop, harrow, hoe, cultivate, weed, water or spray. I use just one fertilizer (cottonseed or soybean meal), and I don't go through that tortuous business of building a compost pile.

I beg everyone to start with a mulch 8 inches deep; otherwise, weeds may come through, and it would be a pity to be discouraged at the very start. But when I am asked how many bales (or tons) of hay are necessary to cover any given area, I can't answer from my own experience, for I gardened in this way for years before I had any idea of writing about it, and therefore didn't keep track of such details.
However, I now have some information on this from Dick Clemence, my A-Number-One adviser. He says, "I should think of 25 50-pound bales as about the minimum for 50 feet by 50 feet, or about a half-ton of loose hay. That should give a fair starting cover, but an equal quantity in reserve would be desirable." That is a better answer than the one I have been giving, which is: You need at least twice as much as you would think.

What Should I Use for Mulch?
Spoiled or regular hay, straw, leaves, pine needles, sawdust, weeds, garbage — any vegetable matter that rots.

Don't Some Leaves Decay Too Slowly?
No, they just remain mulch longer, which cuts down on labor. Don't they mat down? If so, it doesn't matter because they are between the rows of growing things and not on top of them. Can one use leaves without hay? Yes, but a combination of the two is better, I think.
What is spoiled hay? It's hay that for some reason isn't good enough to feed livestock. It may have, for instance, become moldy — if it was moist when put in the haymow — but it is just as effective for mulching as good hay, and a great deal cheaper.

Shouldn't the hay be chopped?
Well, I don't have mine chopped and I don't have a terrible time — and I'm 76 and no stronger than the average person.

Can you use grass clippings?
Yes, but unless you have a huge lawn or neighbors who will collect them for you, they don't go very far.

How Do You Sow Seeds into the Mulch?
You plant exactly as you always have, in the Earth. You pull back the mulch and put the seeds in the ground and cover them just as you would if you had never heard of mulching.

How Do You Sow Seeds into the Mulch?
You plant exactly as you always have, in the Earth. You pull back the mulch and put the seeds in the ground and cover them just as you would if you had never heard of mulching.

 How Often Do You Put on Mulch?

Whenever you see a spot that needs it. If weeds begin to peep through anywhere, just toss an armful of hay on them. What time of year do you start to mulch? The answer is now, whatever the date may be, or at least begin to gather your material. At the very least give the matter constructive thought at one; make plans. If you are intending to use leaves, you will unfortunately have to wait until they fall, but you can be prepared to make use of them the moment they drop. Should you spread manure and plow it under before you mulch? Yes, if your soil isn't very rich; otherwise, mulch alone will answer the purpose.

How Far Apart Are the Rows?
Exactly the same distance as if you weren't mulching — that is, when you begin to use my method. However, after you have mulched for a few years, your soil will become so rich from rotting vegetable matter that you can plant much more closely than one dares to in the old-fashioned way of gardening.

How Long Does the Mulch Last?
That depends on the kind you use. Try always to have some in reserve, so that it can replenished as needed.

Now for the Million Dollar Question: Where Do You Get Mulch?
That's difficult to answer but I can say this: If enough people in any community demand it, I believe that someone will be eager to supply it. At least that's what happened within a distance of 100 miles or so of us in Connecticut, and within a year after my book came out, anyone in that radius could get all the spoiled hay they wanted at 65 cents a bale.
If you belong to a garden club, why can't you all get together and create a demand for spoiled hay? If you don't belong to a group, you probably at least know quite a few people who garden and who would be pleased to join the project.
Use all the leaves you can find. Clip your cornstalks into footlength pieces and use them. Utilize your garbage, tops of perennials, any and all vegetable matter that rots. In many localities, the utility companies grind up the branches they cut off when they clear the wires; and often they are glad to dump them near your garden, with no charge. But hurry up before they find out that there is a big demand for them and they decide to make a fast buck. These wood chips make a splendid mulch; I suggest you just ignore anyone who tells you they are too acidic.

Recently, a man reproached me for making spoiled hay so popular that he can no longer get it for nothing. The important fact, however, is that it has become available and is relatively cheap. The other day a neighbor said to me, "Doesn't it make you feel good to see the piles of hay in so many yards when you drive around?" It does make me feel fine.

Now and then I am asked (usually by an irritated expert) why I think I invented mulching. Well, naturally, I don't think so; God invented it simply by deciding to have the leaves fall off the trees once a year. I don't even think that I'm the first, or only person, who thought up my particular variety of year-round mulching, but apparently I'm the first to make a big noise about it — writing, talking, demonstrating.

And since in the process of spreading this great news, I have run across many thousands who never heard of the method, and a few hundred who think it is insane and can't possibly work, and only two people who had already tried it, is it surprising that I have carelessly fallen into the bad habit of sounding as though I thought I originated it?

But why should we care who invented it? Dick Clemence works hard trying to get people to call it the "Stout System," which is good because it should have some sort of a short name for people to use when they refer to it, instead of having to tell the whole story each time. I suppose it does more or less give me a feeling of importance when I come across an article mentioning the Stout System, yet I am cheated out of the full value of that sensation because I've never been able really to identify the whole thing with that little girl who was certainly going to be great and famous some day. What a disgusted look she would have given anyone who would have offered her the title of Renowned Mulcher!

And it borders on the unenthralling to have the conversation at social gatherings turn to slugs and cabbageworms the minute I show up. And if some professor of psychology, giving an association-of-ideas test to a bunch of gardeners, should say "moldy hay" or "garbage," I'm afraid that some of them would come out with "Ruth Stout." Would anyone like that?

If you want to learn more about the Stout System, you can locate copies of Ruth Stout's books through a used bookseller. You also can order the VHS or DVD video Ruth Stout's Garden from Gardenworks.

Occupy Wall Street Turns to Pedal Power



One of the most notable disconnects of the green movement is the continued reliance on fossil fuels and gas even as we protest the United States (and world's) reliance on fossil fuels and gas.

We heat our home with natural gas and protest fracking; drive cars everywhere while purporting to be against drilling for oil; and buy food from less-than-green companies in order to save a buck, even while decrying corporate agriculture and factory farming.

So it's a great relief to see some of the folks participating in Occupy Wall Street changing the rules.

For the first leg of these protests, gas-powered generators were indispensable: for lights, for charging up computers and cell phones, for providing heat. But last week, New York City confiscated many of the generators being used (Mayor Bloomberg cited a safety issue). Those generators won't be allowed back into the park, so environmental action group Time's Up! came up with a new solution: bicycle-powered generators.

The video above will do much by way of explanation; but basically the group needs 11 bikes in total to power the whole park. Any money raised for the bikes that goes beyond what they need will be used to build more energy bikes, which will be sent to other occupations. Awesome. 

Click here to donate.
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.

NOFA Winter Conference Set for Jan. 20-22

The Northeast Organic Farming Association of New York has released the full programming lineup for 2012's winter conference, "The Cooperative Economy". For the full brochure and to register (early bird prices before Dec. 7!), click here.

Ones to Watch: Sustainable Living Project

The Sustainable Living Project

(SLP) was created in 2009 to provide a community resource center and agricultural depot to serve North Country communities, rural enterprises, and other non-profits working toward sustainability initiatives.

Energies of this group culminate annually in the

Local Living Festival—A Celebration of Resourceful Living

,

held this year in September and secheduled again April 27 and 28, 2013, at the Learning Farm of the Cornell Cooperative Extension near Canton, N.Y.

The Sustainable Living Project's year-round programs are the core of the group's work in the community; and inform the SLP's creativity as a project through emphasis on "open learning"—the idea that we all have knowledge, skills and information to share with each other.  Expertise is sought and honored from both the "experts" and YOU at all SLP events.

To that end, below is a list of upcoming events this year and next. Be sure to visitSLP's website for more information, or

e-mail them

to be put on their mailing list to stay in the loop. And stay tuned to find out about

Better Farm

's future involvement with the group!

To

register for an event

:

  • RSVP to SustLivingProject@gmail.com with the event you are interested in, the names in your party and contact information(home and cell phone numbers, if applicable, as well as e-mail addresses). While e-mail is preferred, you may also RSVP by calling (315) 347-4223.

  • You will receive a confirmation reply within 24-48 hours generally, including any necessary information you may need.

NOVEMBER 2011

Green Home & Garden / Farm Tours

Saturday, November 19, location and time TBA

A series of monthly tours that will be one tour in one day, much more intensive and "whole-homestead" than previous (more renewable energy-related)

tours.  Energy, building systems, agriculture, cottage industries, land management, animals/livestock, and more will be covered as befits the host home that month.  Some tours will also feature an optional "work day" event where you can help out with a project that is useful to the household and

educational for you!

Suggested donation of $10 to $20, sliding scale, $5 student - scholarships available when you RSVP.

Bees and BeeKeeping

--

Discussion Group

Wednesday, November 23

-- and every 4th Wednesday

6:00 pm Advanced, 7:00

Novice 

Free will donation basis (pass the hat).  Call or e-mail for location in Canton, N.Y.

Click

HERE

to check out the "BeeHive" resource page for BeeKeepers!

DECEMBER 2011

Home-Made Preserves Swap

The foodstuffs need to be made by you, this year.  Swap out some of those 300 jars you made of dilly beans for another taste treat you'd enjoy, made by your neighbor.  Last year included items like homemade soap, for instance, so any  agricultural product is on the table here. 

Info:

Little Grasse CSA

, Canton. 

Date TBA.

MARCH 2012

D

ig

I

n

!

Food & Garden Conference

Monday, March 19, 7:30 AM register, 8 AM to 4 PM

SAVE THE DATE!  Details are subject to adjustment.

This second Dig In! conference

will expand on school and community garden topics to incorporate workplace and other “institutional” interests, from gardening to composting to nutrition education. We anticipate holding this event in

Spring 2012

(date above is tentative).  The

Healthy Schools NY project of the St. Lawrence Health Initiative

is collaborating with local organizations including Cornell Cooperative Extension, GardenShare, the Sustainable Living Project and UShare.  More info at

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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.

Winter Soup Recipes as Late-Fall Crops Take Center Stage

Brussels sprouts mature under a late-October sun. Photo/Nicole Caldwell
Our trip out to the garden today was significantly shorter than in recent weeks, with far fewer crops to choose from. Tomatoes (except for a few brave, hardy cherries), peppers, salad greens, and even squashes have run their course; leaving rows and rows of composted plant matter turning to dirt over old hay and cardboard.

Thanks to our rotating planting season and several great picks for autumnal veggies (gotta love those summer interns!), we've probably got another month's worth of leeks and celery, and the cauliflower and Brussels sprouts are still coming in strong. Our new intern May, Brian Hines (newly back from Afghanistan!) and I gathered enough to make plenty of delicious soups over the next few days:

Cauliflower
Pumpkin
May and Brian show off, from left to right, leeks, an earthworm, more leeks, and an enormous celery plant.
Here are a couple great  soup recipes you can whip up with the ingredients blossoming now in your garden:
Quick and Easy Potato-Leek Soup
2 Tbs. Olive Oil
2 Leeks
4 Potatoes (any kind will work!)
6 to 8 cups Vegetable Broth or Water (with spices of your choice and/or bouillon cubes)

Cut the leeks and potatoes up and throw them in a saucepan with the olive oil. Saute until leeks  soften, about 5 minutes. Add the broth (water should cover the top of the potatoes and leeks). Bring to a boil, then reduce to a simmer for about 20 minutes, or until potatoes are as soft as you like them. You can use a stick blender or food processor to combine everything, or just eat as-is.

Roasted Cauliflower and Leek Soup
(from Urban Organic Gardener)
1 1/2 small heads of cauliflower (or one large)
1 leek the bottom white and light green part
5-6 cloves of garlic
3-4 cups veggie broth
Tablespoon of olive oil
Dash of sea salt

Chop up cauliflower and put into bowl. Smash the garlic cloves. Slice up leeks and smashed garlic and put into bowl with cauliflower. Pour olive oil over the veggies with salt and toss to coat. Put on a baking sheet into the oven at about 425 degrees for 40-45 minutes until they start to brown. Heat the saucepan with some olive oil and put roasted veggies in. Cover with veggie broth. Allow to boil. Either use a hand blender and blend down in the pan or add to food processor to blend down until smooth. Transfer to bowl and top with leek and garlic pieces.

Pumpkin Soup
(From About.com)
Cook Time: 15 minutes
Total Time: 15 minutes

1 tablespoon margarine
1 onion, diced
16 oz. pumpkin puree
1 1/3 cups vegetable broth
3 cups soy milk
1/2 tsp nutmeg
1/2 tsp sugar
salt and pepper to taste

In a large saucepan, cook the onion in the margarine for 3-5 minutes, until onion turns clear. Add remaining ingredients, stirring to combine. Cook over medium heat for another 10-15 minutes. Enjoy!
Makes 4 servings of vegetarian pumpkin soup.

Got a great fall recipe to share? E-mail them to us at info@betterfarm.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.