Volume 23, Week 11


Full share &🦎green🦎half shares

218 Gates Avenue between Classon and Franklin
(IMPACCT Brooklyn at the Gibbs Mansion)
5:00 to 7:30 pm


Week 11 News

Thanks to everyone for bearing with us as we navigated last week’s truck breakdown and subsequent late delivery. We deeply appreciate everyone’s flexibility and teamwork - especially the volunteers who rearranged their schedules to make sure everything ran smoothly! Thank you all!

From the farm: On Thursday, our (still new) truck experienced difficulties with its electronics and stopped running. We were able to rent a truck in relatively short order and transfer the load, but it made us very late getting to several sites. I am sorry for your inconvenience and thank you for your patience. The truck remains in the shop as of this writing - I’m hoping for good news tomorrow morning. Kage suggests we keep our eyes out for a good truck from the ‘80s – something from the electronics before-times!


This week’s share

  • Assorted tomatoes

  • Beets

  • Sweet peppers

  • Fennel or eggplant or squash or melon 🎲

  • Sweet corn

  • Mixed mustard greens

  • Kale

  • Swiss chard

  • Garlic

  • Fruit: Windflower’s organic watermelons, or Yonder Farm’s peaches :)

  • Extras: eggs, bread, coffee


News from Windflower Farm

Distribution No. 11, Week of August 12, 2024

It was another big week here at Windflower Farm, this time for very different reasons.

The tail end of Hurricane Debbie struck on Friday afternoon with straight line winds in the 80-100 mph range. As often happens following heavy rains and wind, the power went out. Jan and Nate hopped on their bikes to investigate a power outage the map indicated was about a mile down the road and came back very upset because our next-door neighbors experienced the brunt force of the wind. At one house, three or four holes were punched through the roof by falling tree branches, a porch was blown off and a barn’s steel roofing was blown off. Dozens of trees were knocked down, taking power lines with it.

At another house, an ancient locust was blown against the roof, crushing a large section and punching a hole. Additionally, three barns lost their roofs, leaving stored hay, equipment, and workshop tools exposed to the elements. The clean-up got underway immediately. Dozens of people showed up, several with heavy equipment. A neighbor used a cherry picker to de-limb the tree, and a relative with a giant excavator removed the trunk. Chain saws and payloaders were put to work by the dozens of people who showed up to help. The rest of us hauled tree limbs out of the way. And by evening’s end, the road and driveways were cleared, and the roofs were temporarily patched.  

The houses will be repaired in short order. The barn roofs are still under assessment and will take longer to repair. But no one was hurt. Meanwhile, a day later, sitting on my front porch listening to the singing of nearby songbirds and the ongoing work of neighbors using power tools in the distance, I’m feeling grateful for this wonderful rural community that we have become a part of, where neighbors really help neighbors.

Next week, among other things, we'll send tomatoes, peppers, sweet corn, cabbage, Romaine lettuce, and arugula or a mustard mix.

Have a good week, Ted



Veronica