Want a chance to spend $25 at the market that doesn’t come out of your own pocket? Yearning to buy something different, or a gift for a special occasion? Or just lots of extra fruits and vegetables?
Starting June 2nd, sign up for our drawing, at no cost, just share your e-mail address with us. Once a month we will pick one lucky winner for a $25 gift certificate to spend at the Northwood Farmers Market. You don’t have to be present to win, but the e-mail address does need to be a working one, so we can let you know you were picked.
And do keep an eye here or on our Facebook page for upcoming events. We have a lot planned for this summer!
Monday, May 30, 2011
Wednesday, May 25, 2011
Master Gardener to Visit Farmers Market
Would you like a chance to talk with a trained volunteer who loves to garden and to share her knowledge with her community? Come to the Northwood Farmers Market at the corner of Rts. 4 and 202/9 on Thursday, May 26th, from 3-6:30 pm, and Linda Smith, NH Master Gardener, will be available to answer questions and point us in the right direction as we get our gardens geared up for the summer season. Fruit, flowers or vegetables, she knows where to find the best information.
Monday, May 23, 2011
"Growing Into a Farmer"
Sarah of New Leaf Farm had this wonderful piece published in the Concord Monitor and gave us permission to reproduce it here.
Growing into a farmer
By Sarah M. Earle / For the Monitor
Created 05/22/2011 - 00:00
It took some time for me to realize I was happy with dirt under my nails
My earliest memories of gardening do not feature little pink trowels and feelings of warmth as I knelt beside my mother in the sun, tending to a dewy plant just beginning to yield its first harvest. I recall no particular interest in the backyard plot that turned out various plants deemed edible by adults but that mostly served to challenge my gag reflex.
What I do remember about that garden is that it often stole my mother away for what seemed like hours but was probably no more than 15 minutes, leaving my little sister and me to our own devices. One such evening, when I was maybe 4 or 5, I spotted a pair of scissors and decided, as almost every child does at one point or another, to try my hand at cutting hair. After clipping off a few of my own locks, I busied myself sneaking up behind my toddling sister and chopping indiscriminately at hers.
Much more vividly than any memories of our garden, I remember the reckless thrill of trying to catch those glossy strands between the blades, the exhilaration of doing something I'd never done before, knew nothing about and by all rights should not have been doing.
Funny thing is, that's the same feeling I get now when I look out my kitchen window at my (gulp) farm.
I'm not exactly sure what qualifies a piece of property as a farm. I'm sure there are real farmers - the sort who get up at 4:30 a.m. seven days a week to milk cows, who spend their summers tossing around bales of hay instead of tossing their kids around in the pool - who would find my use of the term laughable. I actually come from a line of such farmers: My grandparents ran a dairy farm that had been in the family for several generations. I spent many hours at that old farmhouse as a kid, absorbing the sights and sounds and smells, if not exactly participating in the farming operations. Still, I never considered that farming was in my blood.
Never until this past year anyway.
My family moved out of the house with the garden not long after the haircutting fiasco. Life got busy, and we didn't grow our own vegetables again while I was growing up. I was reintroduced to gardening when I started dating my husband, whose family had a huge garden and who, for some reason, had developed an obsession with canning. Many of our "dates" involved packing pounds and pounds of cucumbers into canning jars in my parents' summer cabin, baptizing them in vinegar and turmeric, then hanging out underneath the sweating water pipes waiting for the pressure canner to turn them into pickles.
We stocked the cabinets of our first apartment with those pickles and quickly tilled a plot where we could grow more. It feels strange to admit this now, in this era of "locavores" and "agri-preneurs," but I really didn't see the point.
"Why spend half a day picking, snapping and canning beans when we can buy a can at the grocery store for a buck?" I groused more than once when my husband came in with yet another basketful of legumes.
Thankfully, he didn't listen. Over the course of 12 years, three homes, two kids and a couple of job changes, the backyard garden kept growing. While my husband was its proud parent, I was its moody sister, embracing it one minute, resenting it the net, awed by its beauty, disgusted by its excesses.
Perfect fit
More and more though, it insinuated itself into my life, curling its tendrils around my soul, (forgive me the melodrama, but this is what a garden will do to a person), until one day I woke up and realized it was a perfect fit.
The truth is, my brain has always been a bit lazy, but my body adores a hard day's work. I love the creative challenge of putting together meals with whatever vegetables have debuted in the garden in a particular week, the satisfaction of eating healthy, homegrown food, the feeling of self-reliance that a day's gardening brings. And I can think of no better way to pass these passions on to my kids than to invite them into the garden.
After this awakening, there was just one thing missing. My husband and I differ in many ways, but perhaps the most profound is that he prefers permanence while I constantly crave change. He is content and focused while I am restless and, well, scatterbrained. After nine years in the same house, the same career, the same routine, I needed to try something new.
And the garden provided that for me, too.
At our New Year's Eve party two years ago, my husband struck up a conversation with a guy who sells greenhouses. They became friends, and the following spring we broke ground on a greenhouse behind our already over-abundant garden.
If we'd had more vegetables than I knew what to do with before, we were really over our heads now. So last fall, after I'd put up yet another batch of ratatouille and cranked out yet another loaf of zucchini bread, I started pondering the idea of trying to make a little money off our surplus.
Like my 4-year-old, scissor-wielding self, I just couldn't stop once I'd started. I signed up for not one, not two, but three farmers markets, got a friend to join me in the venture and lay awake at night trying to think of a trade name. I attended a conference, wrote a brochure and cleaned out a corner of the garage to stow my supplies. Oh, and just for the heck of it, I applied for my homestead license so I could sell baked goods on "slow" weeks, a process that involved water tests, product lists and a visit from a health inspector (The idea of me becoming a baker is even more improbable than the idea of me becoming a farmer, but that's not stopping me either.)
Finally, farmers
Not to be outdone or to give up his freezer full of ratatouille so easily, my husband began pursuing his own pet project: a second, much larger greenhouse - large enough, in fact, to drop our house inside and still have room for a pool and a modest garage. As winter slowly receded, he began cutting down trees, and by the time the ground had thawed he was digging up the yard and erecting the frame.
And now, here we are. Farmers. Granted, a couple of greenhouses and a garden stocked with five or six lettuce beds, 120 tomato plants and sundry other produce is still small potatoes to some. But to us, it feels like an awful lot.
Our first farmers market started last week, a week that my husband also happened to be out of town building a greenhouse (this thing has truly taken over our lives). So I watered. I picked. I washed. I weighed. I bagged. I baked. I packaged. I labeled. I fretted. I whined. I watered and picked and weighed some more.
On Thursday I picked up my friend and headed to Northwood. The other vendors were friendly, helping us set up our canopy and sharing their wisdom, and the shoppers didn't laugh at my bread as I'd feared they would or raise their eyebrows at our prices. At the end of the day, we'd made just enough money to pay our vendor fee for the season.
How that income translates into hourly wages I cannot bear to think about right now, even if I were able to calculate all the time we've invested in this.
But the truth is, I don't care. At least not that much. When I'm crouching in the dirt beside bouquets of kale, or in my kitchen chopping fragrant greens, or even muscling another load of filthy laundry into the washing machine, I feel something of my grandmother in me. Something that makes me feel strong and capable and authentic.
When this farming thing first began taking shape at dinner table conversations, I told my husband we should give it 10 years, then cut loose and build a yurt on a lake.
Maybe we won't make it that long, or maybe we'll love it so much we'll go to our graves with dirty fingernails and sunburned arms.
Maybe this venture will turn out a little better than my first attempt at cutting hair.
Sunday, May 22, 2011
Be on the alert for late blight!
UNH Cooperative Extension notes that cases have been detected, so be careful and follow safe practice.
Stink Bugs - Keep Your Eyes Open
Here's some information about the brown marmorated stink bugs that have been ravaging crops further south.
Friday, May 20, 2011
Our first video
We shot this video to give you a sense of how big our market has gotten, even early in the season. There is no place to stand where we can take a still picture of the whole market. Let us know what you think.
Tuesday, May 17, 2011
Have you heard the BUZZ? “Queen of the Sun: What Are the Bees Telling Us?” is premiering in Portsmouth, NH at the Music Hall playing for ONE NIGHT ONLY on 5/25!
This film is a profound, alternative look at the global honeybee crisis & what people can do to help, from Taggart Siegel, award-winning director of the grass-roots hit, The Real Dirt on Farmer John.
SHOW TIMES
This film is a profound, alternative look at the global honeybee crisis & what people can do to help, from Taggart Siegel, award-winning director of the grass-roots hit, The Real Dirt on Farmer John.
SHOW TIMES
Keep Farming
Join Virginia Kasinki for an evening discussion about how farmers, food and agricultural stakeholders, representatives of municipalities, agricultural commissions, and interested citizens can work together to address this key question:
What role do we want farming to play in the future of our community, and how can we make it happen?
More information here.
What role do we want farming to play in the future of our community, and how can we make it happen?
More information here.
Friday, May 13, 2011
A beautiful sunny day for the first market of 2011!
Mother Nature smiled on us. It had clouded up in the morning, but by opening time at 3 pm there were only a few pretty white clouds in a beautiful blue sky, a gentle breeze, not too many black flies, and lots of vendors and customers celebrating spring!
The rest of the pictures from the market can be seen here.
The rest of the pictures from the market can be seen here.
Monday, May 9, 2011
THURSDAY IS OPENING DAY!
Are you ready? Thursday, May 12th, is opening day for the market. Usual time, 3-6:30, usual place, corner of Rts. 4 and 202/9, some old vendors, some new, fun, food and friends!
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