Tamarack Farm Camp

A Farm & Wilderness Camp

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Archive for July, 2009

Hay, Trips and Visiting Day

Last Wednesday was hay day.  Our spirits have been doing well in this wet summer, but we were less certain about the hay - hay generally needs three full days of sunshine to dry between when it is mown and when it is baled, and Vermont was not cooperating.  After waiting as long as she could, dsci0498Chantal (the farmer)crossed her fingers on Sunday afternoon and mowed the hay, and we almost made it - we had some sprinkles Tuesday afternoon, but Chantal judged that much of the hay would be usable, and on Wednesday afternoon we turned out to the fields to load the hay bales onto trucks, and unload them into our dairy barn.  It was a day filled with sweat, patience, and mechnical failures, but by the time the last of us returned for a late dinner, the hay was in.  The day and unsteady weather was a blow for many New England farmers, whose farms often rely on the summer hay crop to feed their cattle over the winter.

Tom riding high on the Pachyderm

This week also saw several out-of-camp adventures - the entire camp was hosted by Flying Cloud for their first naming ceremony of the summer, and a vanful of campers travelled with Kuenzi to her family’s farm near Montpelier to see a local vegetable-production farm firsthand.  The farm has an in-house biodiesel production facility, a heavily customized ‘tractor of the future’, and a host of other innovations that allow the farm to flourish in an era when industrial scale agri-business is tough competition.

Trips

Next week (July 17-23) is our trips week, and all 66 campers and most of our staff are heading out for a week of farm service, hiking, canoeing, and unknown adventures.  All of us are excited, both for the trips and for the return next weekend to our beloved farm, warm dry clothes, and the reunited community.

Visiting Day

Visiting day is next Saturday, July 25.  We look forward to seeing the many family members and friends who we hope will come to briefly be a part of Tamarack Farm 2009.  We ask that visitors arrive no earlier than 11 AM; feel free to bring a picnic lunch for your camper if you like, but please bring enough to share with a few campers who don’t have visitors.  After a picnic lunch, we’ll have activities and time to visit in the afternoon and an extended shared dinner.  At 9 PM we will ask our visitors to say goodbye, and will officially kick off the second half of Tamarack Farm 2009.

-Dave

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Tamarack Farm (the physical veggie-pumping part) is already filling our bellies!  We’ve been enjoying deliciously prepared meals full of garden vegetables (and one delicious fruit): broccoli, radishes, garlic scapes, swiss chard, lettuce and strawberries!  We’re drinking milk from our own cows, pasteurized in the dairy barn and carried (literally) to our camp’s kitchen.  Meal after meal, we are preparing delicious, nutritious, and as-local-as-it-gets food.

It has been raining a lot, nearly every single day, but spirits are high.  Saturday morning the entire camp went to the garden to give our crops some breathing and growing room.  Our “All-Camp Weed” was hugely successful.  The rows look wonderful and it felt so good to get hands and toes dirty and to get to know new people while working en masse. It might be cliche but it is certainly true that many hands make for light work.  Postum House is Tamarack Farm’s version of a variety/talent show. We are a camp full of musical, dancing, funny, witty, entertaining campers and staff. Awesome to see the talents of those you live with shining and on display as we did on Saturday night.
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And Sunday the Sun shone! All day long!  All in all we’re settling nicely into the rhythm of life at TF. We rise early, some of us tend to the animals while others tidy up.  A bread crew has been baking fresh, hot bread for us daily.  We share silence amidst the beauty and bird calls of nature in our outdoor circle for Silent Meeting.  We sing.  We get to work in the morning, out in the garden, in the woodshop, in the kitchen.  And in the afternoons we do everything from exploring the lake by canoe to building kinetic sculptures with what some might call ‘junk.’  All Farm and Wilderness camps celebrated Interdependence Day Tuesday afternoon. Tamarack Farm wowed the assembled with our song and outrageous costumery.

We are off to a good start building a cupola and barn doors for the new Livestock Barn.  The contractors raised the walls this week.  And tonight (Thursday) we are all going to a Naming Ceremony at Flying Cloud.

Summer is roaring off to a good start and we will soon be posting detailed schedule for Visiting Day (July 25 mid-morning to 9:30 pm)
-Leonora

In the garden

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Welcome to Tamarack Farm 2009!

Misty TF Morning

Summer in the verdant Vermont valley. Does it get any better than this? Inspiring, enthusiastic human beings gathered to live simply and well together. A lake for swimming. Woods and fields for exploring and sanctuary. In addition to a superstar staff we’re sharing the land with a milking cow called Strawberry, a dozen laying hens, Halifax the pig, Sapphire the calf and 98 meat birds growing every day.

The year-round crew has tended this land lovingly. We, the 66 Tamarack Farm campers, two dozen summer staff and a cadre of others will reap the fruits of the year-round labors: healthy farm animals, rows of flowers, herbs and vegetables that will nourish us as we tend and cultivate them this summer.

The foundation for a new, more functional, livestock barn has been poured and construction is underway. Campers will build a cupola and barn doors in Work Projects this summer.

It is the campers who make summer camp. It is the community of support with a healthy dose of challenge — dancing on the precipice being stretched while being lovingly held…

that makes Tamarack Farm. Welcome, campers. We’re thrilled you’re here.
-Leonora

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