All posts by Mercy Hill Farm

Don & Karen Perkins

A Sunny Day At Mercy Hill Farm

Hummingbird Moth Hovering Near a Flower
This has been a wonderful summer on the farm; full of life, hope and beauty.
Echinacea - Purple Cone Flower
Thank you to all of our customers who bought eggs, tomatos, corn, carrots, squash, beans and truckloads of hearty healthy kale!
leafy green kale
We went for a whole week where we ate kale at least once a day. Even had a kale smoothie yesterday…it’s an acquired taste. 😀 (we have lots more kale and will right up into November if you are so inclined)
Rudbeckia - Black Eyed Susan Flower
The flower gardens are amazing right now. This Black Eyed Susan has been blooming for weeks.
Cosmos Flower
Delicate cosmos dance and bob in the wind.
Corn Plants
Sweet corn has been so delicious! We pick early in the morning for extra sweetness.
Summer Harvest of Vegetables
and those delicious sungold cherry tomatos. We love the harvest – the smells, the sights, the tastes and textures! Stop in and see what’s cookin’!

Photo Credits: Christy E Little – Nice pics girlie. Come get some more kale…

Crops are Loving the Warm Nights and Warmer Days of Summer

cornstalks

It’s funny, we talk to people who drive by all the time and they say: “wow, I didn’t know you grew so much there.” There’s a lot going on out back that can’t be seen tooling by at 6o MPH…

ant on peonie flower

When you slow down and look, there’s an amazing menagerie of life happening all around us.

wide row raised bed gardening

Our daughter Christie took these amazing pictures on her last visit to the farm and we sent her home with a mess of Kale, herbs and such.

bean stalks

She’s got a unique perspective and helps us appreciate even more the bounty that comes from the earth each summer.

Which reminds me.. I better go pick snap peas before they get past me again!

Piper says “Woof!” (translation: “pat me please?”)

 

 

April Showers Bring May Flowers to Mercy Hill Farm

Blossoming Tulip Flowers

The last of our snow melted last week. (a lingering pile out back of the house in the shade) and now tulips and Daffodils are in bloom!

Colorful Tulips and Daffodills in Bloom

 

Tulips Along the Walkway

These Tulips were the first to grace our walkway, poking up through the crushed stone border.

Yellow Tulips in Bloom

Meanwhile, the tomato seedlings wait anxiously to get into their beds. They’re going to need another week or two of protection. We set them out during the day to get used to the sun and wind, bringing them in at night to keep from jack frost from nipping at their noses.

Tomato Seedling Plants

Red Tulips in bloom

What’s blooming and budding where you are?

 

Great Vegan Recipe: Warm Spinach Salad with Lentils & Carmelized Onions

vegan recipe: warm spinach salad with lentils and carmelized onions

This vegan entree is packed with vitamins and fiber and makes a very satisfying main course, even if you are not trying to avoid meat, dairy or wheat products. We make it from memory – having first enjoyed it at our all time favorite lunch eatery: The Chinook Cafe in North Conway NH. Now closed, it used to be a regular dining treat for us about once a month. So in honor of the beloved Chinook Cafe:

Ingredients:

3/4 cup uncooked dry lentils

8 0z fresh baby spinach leaves

2 medium yellow onions

1 tbspn brown sugar

1/2 cup real maple syrup

1/4 cup balsamic vinegar

1/4 tsp each ground black pepper and salt

Recipe

Mix together the maple syrup and the balsamic vinegar in a measuring cup, add 1/4 tsp each fresh ground black pepper and salt. Set aside.

Peel and slice the onions as thin as you can. Begin sauteing them in a wide fry pan (we love our old cast iron pans for this) in a tsp or two of canola oil over medium heat stirring occasionally.

While the onions are cooking, put the lentils in a medium saucepan, cover them over with water to 2 inch above lentils. Bring to a boil. Set a timer for them: 20 minutes.

After about 10 minutes add a pinch of salt to the onions. Allow them to brown, but not burn. Once they are brown, add a tablespoon of brown sugar to the pan. Continue sauteing and stirring occasionally until they begin to stick to the pan, then remove pan from the heat. Set aside.

When the lentils are done, use a collander to drain them well. Then add the lentils to the onion pan and raise the heat to high. Once the onions and lentils are starting to sizzle real strong, add the maple/balsamic mixture. Let them sizzle for about 3 minutes, then turn off the heat.

In a separate wide frying pan, bring a few tspns of canola oil to medium heat. Add the spinach leaves. Stir them occassionally. Get four dinner plates ready. When the spinach is just wilted (about 5 minutes), spread it equally onto the four plates. Scoop the lentil/onion mixture equally onto the middle of the spinach on each plate.

Hope you enjoy this as much as we do! Drop us an email and tell us what you think.

 

Gardening Tips for the Lakes Region of New Hampshire

tomato seedlings

Gardening in the Lakes Region of New Hampshire is trickier than many parts of the country. Here’s some tips we employ at Mercy Hill Farm. These heirloom tomato seedlings started life “under the lights” about two weeks back. They will need to be coddled in a cold frame to protect them from frost until mid to late May.

seedling starting table

Making use of the heat from the lights, we’re sprouting the next round of seedlings on top, right above the lights. We like to add to the soil some flowers and herbs that will grace the beds along with the vegetables we grow. This attracts many beneficial insects and birds, keeps the bad insects away from our food and makes the garden much more appealing to the eye. After all, we’re not just about growing eats.

planting lettuce among the peas

Meanwhile, some frost tolerant things like butter head lettuce seedlings are ready to take their place in the rich soil of our companion planting beds. Unlike traditional gardening, companion planting mixes up varieties of plants in the same bed. There are many symbiotic benefits that companion plants get from growing with other varieties. Here we put the head lettuce right down the middle between two rows of peas. Then we’ll plant flowers and herbs here and there in the bed as well. By the time the peas get big enough to shade the lettuce, the lettuce will be ready to harvest.

onions wintering over

The yellow onions we planted last summer awoke from their winter slumber and started reaching for the sun. A little weeding and a top dressing of compost and they will be a great addition to our summer harvest this year.

brocolli and kale growing in deep dug raised beds

Growing plants love our deep-dug, wide-row, raised beds. Because we don’t till them or walk on them the soil is fluffy and preserves the micro-life and nutrients below. The soil in our garden is so soft you can stick your hand down into it up to your wrist. Tap roots can go deep to grab more nutrients/water and weeds pull up real easy because the soil is hardly compacted at all.

Brocolli seedlings

What a great way to spend part of our Easter Weekend; digging into the rich soil, tucking new seedlings into their beds! In a month or so, we will have a nice variety of garden fresh vegetables to eat and to share.

Got a gardening question, comment or another great tip? email Mercy Hill Farm. We’d love to hear from you!

Sure Signs of Spring at Mercy Hill Farm

The month of March brings with it dustings of snow, like this one last Thursday, but they quickly melt away.

Meanwhile, the Daffodils are pushing up through the mulch,

Brocolli, Kale, Collards, Lettuce and Onions are sprouting indoors.

A thick layer of newspaper weighed down with fresh cut firewood will keep the growing beds free of weeds for another month until the soil temperature gets comfortable enough for our seedlings.

The girls even came out for a spring stroll, a scratch and some foraging.

and then tonight after dark – BONFIRE baby! Woohoo!

 

 

Mercy Hill Farm Presents – “The Snowmeter”

For anyone who’s ever climbed Mt Washington you know it sports all manner of fancy weather instruments, but because we don’t get state and federal funding here at Mercy Hill Farm, we use our farm sign as a snowmeter. Long about January 1, snow starts to hide the bottom of the sign. Come February it pretty much disappears under a blanket of white. Then in March, it starts to poke out again.


Well this year we got a little anxious for spring, so we in fact dug it out a bit by hand. Nature was undaunted and kept on piling up the snow despite our best efforts. My brother, who loves the snow is probably making matters worse with his nordic “snow dance.” No telling what THAT does to the environment.


Guess I’ll just keep on strumming and wait it out.