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----- Original Message ----- 
From: Susan Houghton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, July 06, 2001 2:28 AM
Subject: CSL Freeze out!


Well, July 2nd we got a FREEZE!  not just a frost, unh, unh... not us.......

I arrived at the farm at about 6:15 am.......and Ray went with me.  I got
out of the van, walked into the office, cleaned the old grounds out of the
coffiee maker, and Ray came in the door and said that it
was frost.  I dropped everything, we went out and hooked up every hose we
could, and spent the next hour "washing" the frost off the plants we could
reach.  First we had to take the ends off the hoses and blow the ice/slush
out of them!  Never, never seen a frost in July, much less a freeze.  I knew
the farm was low, and prone to late frosts, and early frosts, but certainly
did not expect this.

The sweet potato plants  (350 of them ) had a glazed, slimy green look
already, the potatoes had tips/tops that were definitely frosted, all the
green beans (900 feet), yellow beans (900 feet), purple beans (900 feet) we
black, the peppers and tomatoes and basil are gone (over 1,000 transplants),
the celery (well we don't know, the book says it will bolt to seed if the
temperature goes below 50) looks ok.

I am trying real hard to say this is a blessing in disguise. - I was already
thinking we needed to focus on lettuce, kale, parsley, leeks, carrots and
beets.  That is what that our low muck ground will produce well, and none of
them are
likely to freeze out.

The farm's new Board was meeting that morning, and showed up just before 8
am to see us drenched, already tired from dragging hoses.   They saw what
happened (once in over 100 years! and with no warning that there was a
chance of freezing!) and couldn't believe their own eyes.!

I had just thrown the last of our transplants into the compost pile last
week,
and it really is too late to expect tomatoes/peppers/basil to produce a
marketable crop on this piece of ground in this state.   I have called other
organic farms
in the state and found a few tomato and pepper plants for the CSA members,
but it certainly won't be for any market crop.

Just gotta tell you all, I am so glad we started a CSA - everyone has been
soooo supportive!  It probably hurt my pride worse that I didn't see it
coming, than the members are worried about not having tomatoes...

What an incredible job of education I did before people bought
shares......you know, I convinced everyone that it was about supporting the
farm, and the farmer, in the event of a "natural disaster".  I did not plan
the disaster to prove a point, never thought anything would really happen,
but, well we have had two already - first a 5" in one day rain (I have
pictures of the garlic under water), and now this freeze.  And still no one
has said even once that they are disappointed.  My Board is so excited that
people are telling them it is ok - they are not going to get mad and sue us-
In fact, many will come Saturday to help replant - they want to help us make
it - team building! community interdependence!  all of us in this together!
Incredible!  Wonderful people that bought shares!

I can't begin to tell you how that feels - and then I stop to think of other
farmers around me like the ones that lost their apple  trees last summer
because of fireblight, and see how much they are missing because they don't
have community support......

Or my friend L , who has lost the dairy because consumers just don't get
it......

My real goal is to show other farmers that it DOES work and to show
consumers that farmers and neighbors are worth supporting -

but marketing myself and the farm is the secret, not marketing a crop.

Susan Houghton
Giving Tree Farm
Lansing Michigan 48906


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