Entries in Maine (3)

Tuesday
Dec222009

Books We Like: The Winter Harvest Handbook

I first heard about greenhouse guru Eliot Coleman from Jesse Hopkins, farm manager of Colinwood Farm in Port Townsend and the star of our video about four-season farming in the Pacific Northwest. Jesse said that if Coleman could grow vegetables year-round in Eastern Maine, it should be even easier for him to grow salad greens in the winter on the Olympic Peninsula of Washington.

Because of his success, there's plenty of hype surrounding Coleman and his farm in Harborside, ME. Since he started experimenting with greenhouse production in the mid-1990s, rumors have swirled that Coleman grows vegetables in unheated greenhouses in the Maine winter, and that he even has a lemon tree. Those rumors are all true.

Coleman's latest book, The Winter Harvest Handbook: Year-Round Vegetable Production Using Deep-Organic Techniques and Unheated Greenhouses, lays out his four-season farming methods in plain English. This is Coleman's second book on the topic of greenhouse farming - his first was the self-published manual, Four-Season Harvest: Organic Vegetables From Your Home Garden All Year Long - and it's written for serious farmers and backyard gardeners alike.

The first secret to Coleman's success is that he doesn't try to grow warm-weather crops in his unheated greenhouses. (The lemon tree is in the only heated greenhouse on the farm.) Coleman says that not only can some hearty greens tolerate cold conditions, but "they actually thrive and are sweeter, tenderer, and more flavorful." Another key is planting at the right time for winter harvest, and for Coleman, that means planting winter crops in the beginning of August, during what he calls the "second spring."

Click to read more ...

Thursday
Oct152009

Interview with a Maine Lobsterman

At the Common Ground Country Fair, Mark and I got a chance to talk with Ty Babb, a charming lobster fisherman from Tenants Harbor on the coast of Maine. In this video, Ty talks about sustainable fishing practices that help maintain a healthy lobster population. He also tells the story of the biggest lobster he's ever caught and reveals his favorite way to cook lobster!

Want to know more about sustainable lobster fishing? Check out Mark Andrew Boyer's recent article for GOOD magazine online: Reconsider the Lobster.

Photo by Zack Bowen.

-Dorothee

Wednesday
Oct142009

Organic vs. Local in Portland, Maine

While in Portland, I got a chance to talk with Maine native Alex Steed (who is also a member of our Board of Advisers) about the food culture in the area. Alex explained that "local" actually trumps "organic" in the region, because people want to support their neighbors and the producers in their area, and because so much great food is produced in Maine.

Portland is known for its excellent seafood (particularly lobster), maple syrup, cheese, apples, blueberries and flatbread, among others. For more about our adventures with Alex Steed in Maine, check out our posts about Portland's Rosemont Market & Bakery and the Common Ground Country Fair.

-Dorothee