this week's 
HARVEST  LIST

This list may change,
Rushton Farm Bag but here's our best guess of what you'll be getting in your share this week.
 
                                     

Hakurei Turnips
Hot Peppers
Lacinato Kale
Red Onions
Salad Mix
Spaghetti Squash
Sweet Peppers
Yellow Fin Potatoes

2015 CSA MANUAL
Just about everything you need to know about the Rushton Farm CSA is located HERE!
CSA manual

KEEP US IN  

THE LOOP!

 

Email is our primary means of communicating all CSA matters, so please contact us if your address changes, or if you'd like a family member's address to be added to the CSA mailing list.   

WHEREABOUTS
RQP sign

Rushton Farm is located within the 85-acre Rushton Woods Preserve on Delchester Road, just south of Goshen Road in Newtown Square, Pennsylvania. 

Address: 
911 Delchester Road Newtown Square, PA 




Fred de Long- Director 
Noah Gress- Field Manager
Chelsea Allen- Field Manager
Eliza Gowen- Outreach Coordinator
Todd Alleger-  Agroecology Project Coordinator
Jared Ingersoll-  Rushton Farm Apprentice
Katie Pflaumer- Research Student- U. of Penn.
ARCHIVES
See prior email communications from Willistown Conservation Trust, including recipes and past issues of the Wild Carrot. Go to the archive.   

Aquaponics is a sustainable, closed loop food production system where fish and plants are raised symbiotically. Utilizing this method of growing minimizes inputs while producing high yields with absolutely 0 waste. To find out more information about Greenstone Aquaponics click here.  
Week of September 22, 2015 Issue No. 18
IN THE BAG Tidbits 

Food and Feathers  
On first appearance Rushton Farm looks like your traditional example of small scale intensive sustainable agriculture. Crops sit nestled within the landscape surrounded by meadow and trees. The gardens and fields reflect the hard work of farmers trying to grow a wide assortment of fruit and vegetables in a way that is beneficial to the surrounding environment. Occasionally the wildlife that inhabits the farm may become briefly visible with a rabbit darting through the fields or a groundhog scuffling into the hedgerow. What is not so apparent is the wide, diverse population of migratory birds that visit Rushton Farm throughout the year.

"Food and Feathers" is our term for learning about the relationship between the food we grow and our fine feathered friends who visit our fields.  Bird population and diversity are key indicators to the health of an ecosystem.  From the beginning of Rushton Farm the WCT Bird Conservation Program has studied the population and diversity of the migratory and resident birds.  Consistently year after year the numbers have proven that Rushton Farm is providing a beneficial habitat for the birds flocking to the farm and surrounding woodland.

In the spring and fall visitors can visit the bird banding station and see a wide variety of birds being banded so that they can be tracked as they make their annual pilgrimages both north and south.  In the fall our sights turn to the little sawhet owls who stop by Rushton on their way south from the boreal forest in Canada.  In October and November our bird banders join the owls and become nocturnal creatures of the night spending long hours banding these beautiful raptors.
Being able to walk the fields throughout the season and see the diversity of the bird population feeding in our crops has been one of my great joys since we started Rushton Farm. A spring harvest often features tree swallows diving the fields feeding on insects. A summer harvest often means harvesting tomatoes around the songbird nests that often inhabit the rows of tomatoes. Fall harvest is the most active with migratory birds flocking into the fields to feed on the seed from foxtail and other plants as well as insects. Our feathered friends provide a great service to us by clearing our crops of weed seed and invasive insects while in turn we provide them with food to make it to their final destination. It is "Food and Feathers" at its finest and we look forward to continuing to study how this relationship can be enhanced.
-Fred
BEYOND THE FARMSHED
Come join us for Beers at the Barn! 
Friday, September 25th
 from 5-7pm 
 
Come enjoy the sunset and listen to WCT's Erik Hetzel and his band, The Hetzel Brothers.  Sit back and enjoy the start  of Fall with the farmers and fellow CSA members.   Stay after your pick up or just stop by!  We will have beer and cider and would love to say hello! Tuesday pick- ups members are welcome too! 
 
If you can't make it this week, we look forward to having our last Beers at the Barn at the end of October.  Hope to see you there!

 

About Us

  

Rushton Farm is part of Willistown Conservation Trust's Community Farm Program.  donate nowWillistown  Conservation Trust is a non-profit organization working to preserve and manage the open land, rural character, scenic, recreational, historic, agricultural and natural resources of the Willistown area and nearby communities, and to share these unique resources with people of all ages and backgrounds to inspire, educate and develop a lifelong commitment to the land and the natural world.
 
To learn more or to find out how you can get involved visit

  

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