
Just two weeks and my entire life has changed! (No that's not my illegitimate child.) I've been a farm-hand in Knoxville, Tennessee for about 10 days now and it's hard to believe I've ever done anything else. We planted 4 different heirloom varieties of broccoli on my first afternoon, and we've been racing against the impending heat/avoiding the deadly late frost ever since.
Our days are beginning

Their family farm is located just outside of Greenback, a tiny little town southwest of Knoxville and of the 'burb of Maryville:
http://maps.google.com/maps?q=greenback,+tn&oe=utf-8&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&client=firefox-a&um=1&ie=UTF-8&split=0&gl=us&ei=UXjVSefqJI7ItgeG2IjhDw&sa=X&oi=geocode_result&ct=title&resnum=1

We are usually met by Brendan, the other 'farm-hand' and amateur mycologist, permaculturist, gardener, social worker, artist, and handy-man extraordinaire.
First, we have to take care of the ladies... our 6 gorgeous egg-producing

Today the girls broke a laying record- 7 eggs in less than 24 hours! At least we'll be able to subsist on eggs and broccoli this summer if all else fails.
Next I'm off to the greenhouse to water our lettuce crop and the tomato starts. Chris is committed to all-heirloom varieties, and so far we've got about 8 ft beds of 20+ kinds of lettuces (or letti, as Brenden says) to try out. Ditto for the tomatoes. The farm is still very much in the infrastructure phase

In addition to growing organic and heirloom vegetables, we are trying be biodynamic in our planting and harvesting. I don't understand the concept entirely, but basically by following the cycle of the moon and stars, one can grow much stronger and tastier vegetables. This means that some days are better for planting root veggies, others for leaf veggies, etc. Luckily the powers-that-be make a handy laminated calendar that they sell to "idiots like us," says Chris.
I've been doing much of the planting, freeing up the boys to do the 'beefcake' jobs of infrastructure (irrigation, plumbing, logging, etc), which I very much enjoy. We plant into a mix of worm castings and cow manure, and so far, kale, spinach, peas and broccoli are thriving.



One last thing: We are having trouble naming the farm. Chris had a far-out name picked out, but he's been group-veto'ed. We'd love suggestions because the farm desperately needs a name! Criteria: organic, sunshine, heirloom, baby, tomatoes, valley, greenback, tennessee
The winner will get a chicken named after him/her!