Contact us

We practice sustainability at the farm. Crop rotation, use of drip irrigation and re-using the flower water each week are some of the ways we are being kind to the earth.

We have two harvest boxes available for this coming 2019 season as of May 19th. If interested please email Lorrie at shadymaplefarmcsa@gmail.com and leave me a note. I will send you information. 18 weeks of fresh produce, herbs, berries and tree fruits when they are in season along with a weekly bouquet of beautiful flowers for $500.
We do have just flower subscriptions available.
A Full Flower Share is 18 weeks of gorgeous bouquets for $230 or a Half Share, every other week for a total of 9 weeks of flowers for $115.
Please email Lorrie at shadymaplefarmcsa@gmail.com if you are interested.

Pick up would be on Tuesdays between 4:00 - 6:00 pm at Shady Maple Farm, 8005 Portland Rd. N.E. Salem, Oregon. Our season lasts from May 28 to September 24, 2019.


Tuesday, June 14, 2016

Week 3 Many helping hands and a few showers

Cafe au Lait Dahlia. One of the first this season.

Levi loves to taste all things on the farm.

Helping with the harvest even though her hands are pretty full!

Many hands helping to pick today.

Time out to follow a lady bug crawling up his hand.

Pea picking, all hands on deck.

Occasionally a taste is necessary for quality control. She might have been picking berries earlier by the looks of her hands. 

Happy boy out among all the veggies and people. Love that grin.

Colorful kohlrabi.

Dad's picking and Levi's eating. I wonder if the bucket ever filled up? :)

Beautiful, colorful beets.

Two colors of kohlrabi.

Delicious lunch, thanks Anna. Pasta salad with vegetables from the garden and basil from the greenhouse to make pesto. The watermelon on the farm isn't ready, this is from the store.

Lisa waiting out the downpour from inside the dry flower house.

The new gutter is allowing the rain to move to the end of the chicken house. The flowers directly under the roof line appreciate the gentler rain.

Freshly picked tea (before the downpour) is packaged in the "potting shed".

Some of the blueberries today are HUGE. This is an adult's hand.

A few yummy raspberries and one raspberry sized blueberry.

Kent Beauty Oregano is ornamental and delicate.

Beautiful, large, pink hydrangeas.

One of Lisa's pretty creations today.

Another one. Goat's Beard (tall, white, feathery) go together with white and blue scabiosa along with large dahlias.

Blue Russian sage mixes well with some of the first gladiolas and a white hosta blossom.

PINK! My favorite combination of flowers.

Kent Beauty Oregano and Dusty Miller await placement into more bouquets.

Lovely lavender.

Tubular orange Cape Fuchsias, bicolor dahlias, blue and white scabiosa, white fluffy Goat's Beard.

The rain stopped in time for pick up today.

The list of today's goodies.

Just in case the rain comes back, we are ready! Lettuce on the cart to the right is awaiting pick up as well as extra vegetables on our pallet table.

Today's contents. (Only one bouquet per box.)

Side notes for everyone.

A few more flower photos. I couldn't help myself.
Love pink hydrangeas.

So delicate and beautiful.

Frothy pink buds. A perennial astilbe.

Various shades of yarrow with pink spires of Veronica.

Light on the Kent Beauty bracts. A small pinkish flower shows here and there.

The soft green and the raspberry colors are so wonderful.

The Cape Fuchsia looks like a starburst with 4 stamens draping out.

Lisa's side kick, Cody curls up in her jacket.

More hydrangea petals up close.

Loving these Kent Beauty colors with the Dusty Miller. Mom used to grow several Kent Beauty plants each year.

Tuesday, June 7, 2016

Week 2 Greens & Hydrangeas stand out

Beautiful beets. 
Angie may or may not be snacking on a Sylvanberry as she carries in the flat she just picked. 
Shelling peas. Plump with strings. These are shelled and just the sweet little round peas inside are eaten.
This one is too small to pick. Light can sometimes let you know they aren't ready just yet.
A sunflower was planted here, not by us but probably by a bird. It will be pretty when it blooms here in the pea row (which will be a bean row by then).
Lavender lemonade. Delicious. The lavender in this pitcher is inside the ice cubes. 
Blue hydrangeas.
Light pink hydrangeas.
A variety of pink hydrangeas.
Pale pink ones.
Blue and lavender-ish hydrangeas.
Roses.
Blue pin cushion flowers with pink cluster roses.
Pink hydrangeas at different stages.
A yellow lily amidst blue and pink Veronica.
A dark maroon hollyhock.
The pretty red stemmed foliage of goats beard.
Grams and Bryan are in out of the rain while they weigh out the peas into individual bags.
Violetta baby pac choi.
Florencio harvesting purple kohlrabi.
Yellow Swiss Chard, green and purple baby pac choi.
Green and red Swiss Chard.
Anna put together this wonderful beet salad as part of our lunch today.
She had a few raspberries left in the freezer from last summer. She decided to make us a delicious sorbet with chocolate chips in it. Wow.
Angie found something else that makes her break out. Allergies are a good "out" for not picking some things. :)
Hot Tuesdays result in many things sitting around in cold water to keep them crisp.
Grams sorting kale into 20 stacks.
Kohlrabi in all its pretty colors.
Bryan finishes sorting the colorful Swiss Chard into 20 stacks.
One of Lisa's pretty bouquets.
Today's harvest box contents.
Today's list of items.

See you next time on the blog.