Navigation

Join our Mailing List

  • You are currently browsing the archives for the Pick Your Own category.

Archive for the ‘Pick Your Own’ Category

Farmers start every year 3 weeks behind.

Thursday, April 8th, 2010

Thanks to Old Man Winter hanging on to every day he could, everyone around here has been working double time to get the farm ready for planting. The cold, the rain, the cold again, then the floods from the melted snow, then the wind…finally, we can do something outside. And, we’re already 3 weeks behind.

Apple trees are pruned, the flower and vegetable gardens are now prepared, and we’ve begun to plant what we can. Another 1200 Christmas trees just arrived, and they have to be planted right away, so that means finding a spot for them and preparing the soil.

The huge snow before Christmas crushed our high tunnel and everything in it, so we’re now erecting new one. It’s crucial to get it up again, because of course, it holds Ridgefield Farm’s Halloween International House of Panic. We were making a lot of progress until we discovered that we were missing parts, and that much of what we got was wrong. So we shifted gears again and went back to fertilizing and weeding.

Manuel has a couple of newcomers working with him in the fields this year, George and Ovi, and we’re delighted to have them on board.
The pick your own strawberries look to be fantastic this year. I can’t imagine how they survived the winter with several tons of snow piled on them for 3 months.

A freshly cut Christmas tree will last forever (sort of).

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009

People who cut their own Christmas trees each year do so because they appreciate the freshness, the color and the unparalleled fragrance the tree brings to your home at the holidays.  Equally important, though, is the fact that fresh trees hold their needles far longer than store-bought trees.

True story:  in late May this year, a gentleman and his family had just finished picking strawberries at Ridgefield Farm, and as he was checking out, he made a point of telling me he had just thrown out the Christmas tree they’d cut from our farm last year.  Naturally, I had to tell him I hoped it hadn’t been in their living room the whole time, and thankfully, it hadn’t.  Nevertheless, he said that all the needles were still on the tree when they threw it out in May.

Now that’s a testimonial!

You really thought Christmas trees grew that way?

Friday, November 13th, 2009

Judging from a random sampling of our customers, I’d have to say most people assume fir trees just grow naturally into lovely, conical Christmas trees.  Truth be told, we spend much of the summer shearing West Virginia Balsam, Douglas, and Concolor Firs, so they’ll be perfect for the holidays.  They can be pretty wild looking.  Here are before and after shots of one such West Virginia Balsam, the hands down favorite at Ridgefield Farm.

Beautifully shorn Balsam Fir ready to be chosen and cut by a lucky family.

Beautifully shorn Balsam Fir ready to be chosen and cut by a lucky family.

West Virginia Balsam Fir in need of a trim.

West Virginia Balsam Fir in need of a trim.

What people will do for a Honeycrisp

Saturday, September 5th, 2009

Got a call Friday from a longtime customer. Breathlessly she asked if we had any Honeycrisp apples, as she’s bought them from us before but seemed to miss them for the last couple of years.

I told her we had plenty for this weekend. She then said she’d be driving 114 miles to buy them. Sure enough this morning at 10:01, she pulled in and bought her bushel of Honeycrisp.

Before she left for the 114 miles to get home, she gave me a huge jar of homemade chocolate chip cookies. Dee lish us!

Why Picking Flowers is a Good Object Lesson for Kids

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

With the explosion of flowers in our cutting garden over the last week or so, dozens of moms have brought their kids to pick bouquets.  The kids represent all ages and temperaments, from those ecstatic to pick flowers to the little ones who need naps, and most of them have a ball wandering around the maze of flower beds in search of the perfect color.

But we’ve been struck by the number of kids who, after spending quality time picking over thousands of flowers, announce “these are for my dad, and these are for my mom.”

We have limited pairs of scissors and baskets on hand for groups, (well, actually fewer and fewer scissors, as they seem to evaporate each season!), and we are seeing kids happily sharing theirs with their siblings and friends.  No squabbles.  No possession disputes.

We never imagined our flower garden could become the training laboratory for positive child behavior mechanisms.    Sharing, generosity, giving, thoughtfulness.  What powerful concepts to arise from a lovely day in the flower garden!

Feelin' tall after picking flowers

Feelin' tall after picking flowers

Picked too many strawberries? Here’s one solution.

Sunday, May 31st, 2009

When you find yourself caught with too many berries and not enough time or inclination to make a pie or a jam, try freezing them like this.

First, trim the stem and any bad spots.

Rinse on a cookie sheet lined with waxed paper, place the strawberries so they don’t touch each other.

Put the sheet in the freezer for a couple of hours, or until hard. Then put all the hard strawberries in a Ziploc freezer bag.  Since they are already frozen, they won’t stick together.

You can then enjoy them one at a time for some time to come, like mini popsicles…without the sugar.

Strawberries arranged on a cookie sheet for freezing

Strawberries arranged on a cookie sheet for freezing

World’s Largest Strawberry

Friday, May 29th, 2009
Noah Rudick's Strawberry

Noah Rudick's Strawberry

Noah Rudick picks World’s Largest Strawberry at Ridgefield Farm.

He and his brothers Caleb and Levi joined dozens of enthusiastic strawberry pickers over Memorial Day Weekend, in search of the perfect strawberry.

The farm is now open weekends 10-5 for strawberry picking.  Of course, we have plenty of pre-picked berries at our store.