New Hues
/| The farm's deck gets a spring makeover. |
... and the finished product!
| The farm's deck gets a spring makeover. |
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Better Farm is an education center and artists' retreat founded in
1970 on the principles of the Better Theory—a belief that every
experience brings with it an opportunity for exponential personal
growth. Through educational workshops, artist residencies, work-shares,
and an ongoing commitment to sustainable living and community outreach,
we strive to apply the Better Theory to all our endeavors while offering
the curious an opportunity to expand, grow, and flourish.
Copyright (C) 2013 Better Farm All rights reserved.
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| This photo from the New York Times is of a ceiling created out of discarded picture frames by Dan Phillips of Phoenix Commotion. |
| Bunk-house inspiration in Gettysburg, Penn. |
| Outdoor eating in a secret garden. |
| Claw tub planter growing fresh herbs and flowers. |
| Flowers growing out of the trunks of trees. (Miami, FL) |
| Koi pond. |
| Gravel footpaths through foresty landscaping. |
| Chandelier by Dale Chihuly |
| Stepping stones through a fish and turtle pond. |
| Outdoor aviary. |
| Outdoor shower/patio area. |
| Construction of a basic rainwater catchment system at Better Farm. |
| Instructor Paul Jennings walks folks through a second fermentation of blueberry wine. |
The season has started at Better Farm
with lots of fresh produce available for sale to the community. Please contact us at (315) 482-2536 or info@betterfarm.org to place an order!
Here's what we've got available so far:
Organic Asparagus
$3/bunch
Our
is grown in raised beds on the property. Instead of chemical fertilizers or pesticides, we employ lasagna gardening methods (also called sheet or
). Because we utilize hay, cardboard, fresh compost, organic manure from our chickens, and other
methods, our asparagus is free of all chemicals, totally organic, and completely delicious.
Organic Looseleaf Lettuce
$1.50/bunch or $6/6 oz.
This crop of organic, looseleaf lettuce was grown indoors in Better Farm's
setup. Utilizing fish waste to fertilize and nourish our plants, this lettuce is raised in a gravel bed and gets its sun-like rays from a grow light hovering overhead. Because it grows inside, the leaves are never exposed to harsh elements or winds; making for the tenderest lettuce you're likely to ever taste.
Organic Chives
$2/handful
This is the fourth season for our chives, which make a great addition to any recipe. Add fresh to salads, stocks, stir-fries, bakes, or marinades; or dry it out for months of use in your favorite dishes. Our chives are grown alongside the asparagus in raised mulch-garden beds.
Free-Range Eggs From Happy Hens
$3/dozen
Okay, not a "green", but we have lots of karmically balanced eggs available from Better Farm's hens!
Scarlet, Bernadette, Delores, Destiny's Child, the
, and all the
enjoy fresh grass, organic leftovers, and yummy feed (not to mention endless pounds of all the centipedes, spiders, ticks, mosquitoes, bees, and worms they can find!) all day long as they have free range of Better Farm's entire property. These hens are spoiled to the Nth degree; and it shows in their amazing eggs. Variety of colors (brown, pale blue/green, and white) available.
Stay tuned as more and more crops come to bloom!
| From left are Jeremy DiCaprio, Holly Boname, Laurie Petersen, Rick Lopez, Adam McBath, Jackson Pittman, and Aaron Youngs. |
| Children paint trees at the betterArts booth during Mustard Seed's annual Earth day event. |
| Nicole Caldwell helping one child press cherry blossoms with a plastic bottle. Photo/Holly Boname |
| Better Farm's table at the event. Photo/Nicole Caldwell |
| Photo/Holly Boname |
Since moving up here almost four years ago, I've resisted the urge to discuss feminism insofar as it relates to farming and gardening. I realize that farming has traditionally been a man's undertaking (and gardening a woman's); I get the social context, the history of farming and how it turned us from roving scavengers to land-owners.
But it's the 21st Century, right?
So guys and gals alike are free to garden, till, hoe, weed, crop, plant, and harvest until the proverbial cows come home, all things being equal. And while I don't have a huge, commercial farm or anything, I do indeed consider myself more and more of a "farm girl" with each passing day.
Now, any practical farmer-gardener will tell you that to get your hands (and feet, and knees, and everything else) dirty, you need to have the appropriate gear. That can mean, a hat to keep your head protected from the sun, Carhartt bibs for durability, the right tools for the job, a functional pair of rubber boots, practical things. Good things.
None of these things is particularly gender-specific, and one of the things I like about gardening in general is that you check your ego, your gender, and everything else at the door in order to focus totally on the job at hand: growing.
I didn't move up here to make some point about the power of women, or to show that women can be independent, or any other such thing. So when people tell me this is proof that I'm a strong woman, I say thanks but people are people—this isn't about me being a woman. I mean, would it really be that different if a man ditched his Manhattan cubicle and settled in Redwood?
So I live like a person first and foremost; not however it is a woman is "supposed to". I sort of ignore gender roles and just do what feels right—and if that makes me feminine, great. If it makes me masculine, so be it. Go ahead and label it however you want.
Anyway, living like a human being is super until you're sitting in the doctor's office waiting for your appointment and you pick up a
Martha Stewart Living
magazine and open it up to this:
Yup, you read it right: "Garden Getups". Which is to say, "Hey ladies, never miss an opportunity to look your best!" I mean after all, you never know when Prince Charming might stroll through on his white horse. God forbid he should catch you in a stained tank top and ripped shorts, barefoot.
Let's read the fine print:
Maybe I'm overly sensitive, maybe I don't understand the entire feminine mystique thing, and maybe Martha Stewart is the antichrist, I really can't say. But here's a purportedly independent, self-made woman advising lady gardeners the world over to throw on a $315 silk scarf, $199 boots, and an $88 hat to go dig in cow manure, clean out chicken coops, and pull weeds. Since when did the garden become a runway show? Is there
anywhere
a woman can be without having to primp; without having it jammed in her head that people will judge her on how she appears?
Even in this most basic act—digging in the dirt—we have Martha Stewart tapping our shoulders, reminding us to cross our legs and say please and thank you.
"While gardening clothes should be comfortable and washable and, ideally, protect you from sun and insects, they shouldn't prevent you from inviting a friend to lunch to admire the fruits of your labor."
Which I guess they wouldn't do if you looked like a slob; all covered in, say, dirt.
Stay tuned for our photographic response to the Martha Stewart Living article!
| Baby white spruce trees. |
| 3-in-1 citrus tree, three kiwis, and a banana tree gain some ground in pots. |
| Lining the bottom of planter pots with cardboard, twigs, and compost. |
| Cold-hearty kiwi vine |
| A chainsaw, log, drill, and lag bolts are all you need to make your own rustic, outdoor bench. |
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