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Mano Farm is a 1.3 acre certified organic seed, vegetable and herb farm located in Ojai, California. We farm year-round, emphasizing the use of human labor and hand tools. On-farm apprenticeship, interns, and work trade opportunities are primarily available through the WWOOF-USA network. We offer Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) memberships to residents of the Ojai Valley and sell our seeds through our sister company, All Good Things Organic Seeds. We are also proponents of food justice, a movement that seeks to increase the availability of nutritious, healthy food to low-income individuals and families. Low income and fully subsidized CSA shares are available, and we also accept EBT/SNAP (food stamp) benefits for CSA payments. Contact us for more details.

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    REPORT: 30 Years of the Farming Systems Trial | Rodale Institute

    “As we face uncertain and extreme weather patterns, growing scarcity and expense of oil, lack of water, and a growing population, we will require farming systems that can adapt, withstand or even mitigate these problems while producing healthy, nourishing food. After 30 years of side-by-side research in our Farming Systems Trial (FST)®, Rodale Institute has demonstrated that organic farming is better equipped to feed us now and well into the ever changing future.”

    Posted on Monday, January 16th 2012

    Tags organic agriculture rodale

    WWOOFing: Farm life for the fun of it

    We are proud, if often overwhelmed members of the World Wide Opportunities on Organic Farms (WWOOF) network. This article from the Los Angeles TImes describes a bit of the history of the organization, with a specific focus on the Southern California WWOOF context. Favorite passage:


    “Not all farms are created equally,” said Jess Sullivan, 24, a graduate student at UC San Diego who runs a one-acre WWOOF farm with her boyfriend in southeastern San Diego County. Sullivan worked on farms in Maine and Belize during her undergraduate days at Wesleyan University in Connecticut.

    In recent months, they have been flooded with applications. She has received as many as 110 in one month alone; she takes only about three volunteers at a time.

    She said applicants fall into several categories. The confused — those who have finished college and are avoiding figuring out what to do with their lives; the wanderers — the ones who blithely travel the world with a hunger for exploration; and the ambitious — those who are hooked on the trend of community farming, with a genuine interest in agriculture.

    Posted on Thursday, January 5th 2012

    Tags la times wwoof organic

    Field Notes: Mano Farm’s Community Supported Agriculture Newsletter: December 11, 2011

    Some Important Announcements: 

    ·      We have upcoming CSA picks on Christmas and New Years, respectively. In order to avoid picking on these holidays, we have decided to shift these picks ahead by two days. This means the Sunday, December 25th share will be available on Tuesday, December 27th and our Sunday, January 1st will be available on Tuesday, January 3rd. We’ll remind folks about this next week as well.

    ·      For a limited period of time we are offering yearlong CSA subscriptions to our members. Here’s how it works: you pay $1200 upfront for the year, and you get 52 pickups of Mano Farm vegetables. Paying up front is a win-win: you get a free month of CSA shares (if you were to buy four seasons of 12 weeks@ $300 a season, it would only be 48 weeks) and the longevity and finances of the farm will be substantially improved. This allows us to invest in new tools, seeds, fertilizer, irrigation, and labor – all the usual suspects. If you are interested in signing up for the year, email or call us.

    ·      In addition to all the wonderful vegetable varieties we offer, members renewing for the year can look forward to our fruit orchard (predominantly apples, peaches, and Asian pears, but we’ve also got almonds and mulberries in the ground), which will be in its second year, ideally allowing us to put fruit in the CSA shares. Our asparagus, raspberries, and artichokes will also be in their second year, so members can expect at least some of these items in the CSA shares. Finally, before the year is up, we’ll be adding 11 new first year fruit trees – four cherries, four Pakistan mulberries, two pomegranates, and a persimmon.

    ·      We are presently investigating the specifics of adding egg-laying chickens to the edge of our north field, which means that at some point next year members will also be able to purchase organic eggs as an add-on to their CSA subscription. 

    Posted on Saturday, December 10th 2011

    Tags CSA field notes community supported agriculture organic mano farm

    “Field Notes”: Mano Farm’s Community Supported Agriculture Newsletter: December 4, 2011

    Many find the rutabaga to be an unapproachable food. I had nearly forgotten about the root vegetable Brassica napus (cousin to the Siberian kale, which we’ve been slipping in your stirfry mixes) until I traveled to the Finnish province of North Karelia (which borders Russia) two years ago and met some subsistence farmers who anchored their diet around this mysterious root vegetable they called “swedes.” It took me awhile to realize this term was the more popular synonym for rutabaga. Folks in the northern parts of the world grow them because they are incredibly hardly and can withstand the cold better than any other members of the Brassica genus. The growing season up there in Karelia was about three months, or less. We ate mostly what the farmers or the outlying forest grew: potatoes, peas, and mushrooms. But rutabaga was always the centerpiece. They cubed them and dehydrated them; they ground up their dried rutabaga leaves and made something that resembled kelp flakes. We ate the rehydrated cubes as breakfast porridge along with copious portions of forest berries.

    Beyond porridge, just how else can they be used?

    You can peel, boil and mash them with potatoes to get an extra robust flavor. Or, you might cook them as I – ever the vegetable pragmatist, seeking maximum nutritional impact for the minimum prep time – do: Slice the ‘bagas thin and add them along with a spicy pepper to an onion sauté; crank up the heat and lid the frying pan to sear them (just make sure you have enough oil) before adding your other greens (which require less cooking time). Finally, you can also root roast them. Chunk them up and briefly parboil them with beets; add to a glass baking dish along with some chunklets of winter squash, add olive oil, salt, pepper, garlic, rosemary: roast at 375-400 degrees until soft and/or crisp on the outside.

    *

    We’re starting the feel the impending winter here. We have carrots, parsnips and lettuce in the ground, and a few flats of broccoli in our greenhouse. We’ve begun bringing baby onions into the mix, and have little shoots of pea sprouts coming up. As soon as it makes sense to (temperature and day length), we’re going to direct sow more spinach (this is something that we must grow much more of) and the rest of the usual suspects (chards, kales, collards, radishes). We’re starting to plan out our spring season and would like to hear if there’s anything folks would like to have more of / less of, etc, please do not hesitate to let us know. While it’s hard to accommodate everyone’s tastes at once, hearing feedback allows us to discover patterns, which in turn informs what we plant.

    -Quin

    Posted on Saturday, December 3rd 2011

    Tags rutabaga field notes csa community supported agriculture organic farm