June 30, 2010 - 09:20 AM
We believe that our beef is some of the best grass fed
(finished) available. This does not come by accident.
We start with a breed of cattle that are
pre-dispositioned to fatten on grass only. Then we make
an extra effort to ensure our cattle have the very best
grass available during the growing season. We also do
the same on our hay meadows so we have excellent, high
quality hay to feed in the winter. This year we plowed
30 acres and planted
Red River Crab Grass. This is a
summer grass that is as good or better than the
most expensive bermuda grasses that require a lot
of irrigation or rain and herbicide treatments to
control weeds.
We wanted to improve our forage options with a grass
that will provide the cattle good grazing until frost
and it appears this will. When our cattle were
introduced to a pasture with it growing, they went to
it first. We also planted with the crab grass
Alyce clover and
Lablab. The clover and lablab are
both high in protein. Both fix nitrogen into the
soil during their life cycle so they are a natural
fertilizer.
With this additional forage grass, we have several
different types of grasses to give the cattle variety
as they rotate from paddock to paddock.
Cattle on pasture at the Greer Farm
Hay field of improved bermuda grass.
Field of Red River Crab Grass for forage
June 28, 2010 - 06:25 PM
One of our customers took a photo of this blueberry ad
in a store in Oklahoma City this week The blueberries
have been marked down from $4.39 to $3.99. What a deal.
Our farm fresh berries are much better I am sure and a
lot less expensive. The customer did not buy any and
said they are going to pick at our farm on Saturday.
June 24, 2010 - 10:42 PM
A friend that follows our blog read the one about my
tractor being so dirty last winter and it reminded her
of Kenny Chesney's song
"She Thinks My Tractors Sexy". It
is summer and we spend a lot of time on tractors
doing what ever farmers do on tractors. In a way,
I think a tractor is sexy.
June 24, 2010 - 09:18 PM
Not wanting to be left behind in the latest ways to
enjoy the lake on the farm, we now have several Paddle
Boards Ours are SUPATX ( short for stand up paddle
board Austin Texas). Having a choice,we went with a
Texas supplier. Ours are 34 inches wide and 11 ft 11
inches long.
They are not as hard to use as you might suspect. This
is a simple
instruction video.
These photos are of our son Karl who is normally
surfing the waves in Galveston. He had no trouble
getting up and on his way on our lake.
The paddle boards join our kayaks, canoes, paddle boats
and jon boats. Now you have one more reason to come to
the farm.



June 24, 2010 - 09:07 PM
This season is our best blueberry crop since we started
the berry farm. Every morning in two hours Eva and one
helper pick 130-150 pounds of lush berries without
making a dent in the supply in the field. Many have
told me they picked over a gallon off one plant in just
minutes. Now is the time to pick. there is no limit to
the ripe berries.
These photos were taken in a collection tub before we
packed the berries in pint containers.
June 13, 2010 - 10:45 AM
Bank of America/Merrill Lynch picked out Eva and I to
profile in a special streamed program this week.
Reinventing Retirement: Second Acts featuring former
ABC news host Charles Gibson and others will look at
three families that moved from their first career to a
second.
A New York based film crew spent two days last week at
the farm interviewing us and capturing life on the
farm. After the program streams Thursday a longer
version will be online and we will post the address.
June 11, 2010 - 07:44 AM
I wrote about picking berries with my grandmother in a
recent farm news update and many said I should post it
on the blog. The Update is below and my story.
Blackberries and
Blueberries.... Oh So Sweet! June 7,
Daingerfield
The time has finally arrived when we have both
blackberries and blueberries. There are many
blueberry bushes to be picked. Over the next few
days there will be a lot more ready. Pickers are
having no problems finding the number of berries they
want. The blackberries are in prime condition to
pick; lush, large and sweet. These berries were
picked June 5.
Our prices are the same as in 2009. Pick-your-own
are $3 per pound. Pre-picked are $38 for a flat
of 12 pints. Please order pre-picked berries at
least a day ahead. If coming very far for
picking, feel free to call us on availability before
you leave home.
We anticipate having blackberries until mid-July and
having blueberries a bit later. It is hard to gauge
this due to the excessive heat and dry weather we are
experiencing.
We provide the buckets for picking and fresh ice water
from our well. Bring a picnic lunch and enjoy the
berry patch. Toilets are available.
Cabin Availability & Summer Discount Special
We have had a cancellation for June 18 and 19 (Father's
Day Weekend). Several cabins are now available for that
two night rental period. We also have three
cabins for the three night rental period July
2-4. Both of these weekends are in the middle of
berry picking season and a great time to visit the
farm.
There are other dates available in the summer on
weekends and during the week. Our lakeside log
cabins are so relaxing.
We are offering a special discount of 10% off for a
four night rental Sunday through Thursday nights
through August. This will give families a chance
for a short vacation on the farm and perhaps the
discount will cover the fuel cost to get here.
Mention the summer discount when making your
reservation.
From Our House to Yours
Like many of you, I had
grandparents that lived on a farm and all things about
their life reflected the rural heritage they were a
part of. In my youthful summers spent on their
hard scrabble south western Oklahoma farm, I will never
forget picking fruit for making jam and cobblers.
Granny would load up as many grand kids as there were,
of all ages, into an old 1954 Chevy sedan and
over the dusty red dirt roads she would fly to that
place she knew was ready for picking. Some days
we picked blackberries growing on a fence, on another
day wild American plums in a creek bed thicket or my
least favorite, prickly pear cactus fruit that grew on
the steep banks of those dirt roads. These
experiences became part of my memory of
childhood. Now as an adult, with my own
grandchildren, I can look back and remember those hot
summer days as a child as being very special.
Granny has been gone for many years. I remember
her, her sun bonnet and cotton dresses and the taste of
her jam and cobbler will linger with me always.
Bring someone special in your life to the Greer Farm
and pick a few berries or spend a night in a log
cabin. Create a memory for them that will last
forever.
If you missed our early summer newsletter, you can read
it here.
We do little advertising, so please forward this on to
your friends or post it on your facebook page.
Word of mouth from satisfied visitors is the best
advertising of all.
We thank you for supporting our family farm and look
forward to your visiting.
Sid, Eva and all of us on the farm
June 07, 2010 - 02:30 PM
The links are not active, but email us and we can
forward you a copy on which they work.
Summer
on the Farm
It is only
the end of May, but the hot afternoons have convinced
us that summer has arrived on the farm. It is not
hot all the time. We can still have our coffee in the
cool of the morning on the front porch as the sun comes
up and a glass of tea after dinner outside as the
evening cools. The summer birds and butterflies
are everywhere to be seen. Our
display gardens have been
beautiful since early spring. Our seasonal work
is only beginning. We have finished the first
cutting of hay and the summer vegetable garden is
trying to get started. Breeding season for spring
2011 calves has begun. We have not finished
plowing and planting summer pasture. It has been
a good year already for our lakeside log cabin rental
business. Many weekends and some week days are
fully booked. Kids are running all over the farm
unaware it is hot. Most important is that much
anticipated opening of the berry patch which occurred
May 29. Yes, summer has arrived at Greer Farm and the
circle of life continues.
The
Berry Patch
This past
year has been good to our berry plants for the most
part. Most of the time there was more than
adequate moisture from Mother Nature and we had no
killing late frosts like last year. The
blackberries are now being picked and I believe they
are the tastiest we have ever raised. They are
very large and very sweet. The bushes are loaded
and there will be plenty for everyone. The
blueberries are not yet ready. The cooler nights
we have had delayed the crop. We anticipate the
first blueberries will be ready in 5-10 days.
Please call before coming if you are driving far so we
can update you on availability of blackberries and
blueberries. Check out photos
taken in the
last few days.
Both
blackberries and blueberries are $3 per pound
pick-your-own. This is the same price as last
year. Pre-Picked are available for $38 per flat
of 12 pints or individual pints for $3.75 each.
Pre-picked must be ordered in
advance.
We planted a
row of different table grapes and raspberries this
winter. We shall see how they do in our
climate. One row of raspberry froze just after
being planted in January, so if the others live we will
re-plant next winter. The variety we planted is
supposed to take the Texas heat and produce July
berries.
Farm
to Fork Cooking Classes
Chef Eva's
cooking classes have been a great success this
year. Only a couple of spaces remain for June 12
and July 10. Due to demand, a special class has
been scheduled June 5. It is "Sweet &
Savory: Cooking with Greer Farm Blackberries and
Blueberries". This class will feature black and
blue lemonade (destined to be a family favorite once
you learn to make it), a blueberry pesto appetizer,
blackberry salsa, goat cheese with wonton salad served
with blueberry dressing, pork tenderloin with curried
blueberry sauce, sauteed portabella mushrooms and a
treat from heaven.... fried blueberry
pies.
I am not
sure which of her next
classes are going to
be my favorite. August 7 is a traditional "Too Hot to
Cook" class that takes advantage of all the fresh
vegetables and fruit available in late summer featuring
blackberry sorbet in chocolate wafer cups. During
Labor Day Weekend September 4 it's "Picnic Fare for
Labor Day". The extensive menu for this class
will be a holiday feast including chili spiked grilled
corn with cotija cheese. October 9 is a time when
things are cooler and the menu is "Fall Fest with
Winter Squash". Six different menu items all
feature different kinds of hard winter squash. A
basic cooking class October 23 gets everyone ready for
winter; "Prepping for Winter: Savory Stocks and healthy
Breads". November 13 is a different kind of class
and offers six different items that you can use to
entertain during the holidays. They all sound so
good and I know they will be. Enrollment in all classes
is limited. Please sign up early. We still have
cabins available for some of the cooking class weekends
(two nights minimum).
Private
classes have been very popular this year thus far, with
a combination of groups attending. Some family, some
friends or couples and some corporate. One of the
most interesting was preparing a menu from the recipes
in Julia Child's first cookbook, Mastering the Art of
French Cooking. That class went through a lot of
butter and cream!
In April,
Texas Co-Op Power magazine had an article
on learning
vacations. Our farm and Chef Eva's cooking
classes were featured. Her hands on classes are a lot
of fun as demonstrated in a few of these class
photos.
Life
on the Farm: Lakeside Log Cabin
Rentals
We are so
pleased with the number of nice folks that pick our
farm as a place to get away from their normal
life. The June issue of D Magazine has a rather
special article called Calling
all City Slickers: Get out to the
Farm. We
hope you enjoy it.
We made a
few changes this year. We added some nice cedar
yard swings outside each cabin. The sand in the
beach was replaced. Once again we added Tilapia
to the lake to eat the moss on the edges, mosquitoes
and to provide forage fish for the bass. Very
soon we will add recycle bins as Daingerfield now has a
recycling center. The landscape was improved with
a few more crape myrtles and various plants that will
require little to no water once
established.
Hopefully we
will soon have enough eggs from our free range
hens to provide a few eggs for each party as they
arrive. We raised 50 chickens from day old chicks
and in July they should start to lay eggs. They
are five different types of brown egg laying heritage
breeds. We moved most of the pigmy goats out of the old
barn by the house to the pasture for summer
grazing. Remaining in the barn area area new mama
and baby (Sammy), our oldest pigmy goat Dijon and "Miss
Fancy" that is bottle fed for chidren to pet. We also
have three cuddly kittens that are quite tame and love
to be held.
If you wish
to stay on the farm this summer we encourage you to
make your reservations soon. Many weekends are
fully booked. We have maintained the same prices
since opening in 2008. The most consistent comment
we get from our guests is how relaxing and pleasant it
is to be on the farm. These photos
were taken
this week.
Cattle,
All Natural Beef and a Beef CSA
A lot
continues to be written regarding the virtues of grass
finished beef versus grain finished beef. I
believe that grass finished has to be more
healthy for you. The reason being that, the cattle
themselves are healthier on grass only versus those on
a diet with a lot of grain. The greatest
difference in buying our beef is not so much what they
eat, but how they are raised. Our cattle are on
large clean paddocks and rotated to fresh grass
often. We raise special grasses for them.
This year we planted Red River Crab Grass which is
extremely high in protein. They get plenty of sunshine,
fresh clean water and a lot of TLC. We do not
feed antibiotics in their feed; we use no growth
hormones or any artificial supplements. There is
absolutely no comparison in how our cattle are raised
versus those raised in feed lots. This continues
through the harvest and packaging process. Our cattle
go to Mineola Packing (full time USDA inspected)
where only a few cattle are harvested daily versus the
tens of thousands harvested daily in commercial
slaughter plants. There is a great difference in
our cattle versus others.
As you can
see from these photos,
our cattle are enjoying a lot of fresh green grass. We
appreciate all of you that have purchased beef from
us. We continue to strive to provide the very
best beef you have ever had. Giving you what you
want, we continue to have a mix of grain finished
cattle and those that are finished on grass. We
will have our next set of cattle ready for harvest in a
few months. Details are on our
website regarding
this. Basically, our beef averages about $4.90
per pound packaged. This is about $700 for a
split quarter (2-1/2 normal freezer
shelves).
We realize
that this is more than many families can store in a
freezer or afford at one time. We are considering
selling beef through CSA shares if there is enough
interest to justify the expense to build a state
certified storage facility. There have been CSA's
(Community Supported Agriculture) for vegetables for
years, but recently some have started for beef.
The basic concept is you sign an agreement to take a
given portion of beef (for example a split quarter) for
a fixed price over a given period of time (6-12
months). You pick-up or have delivered to you the
beef you have agreed to take monthly. This allows
you to pay as you take delivery and not need as much
room to store the beef. You would get to make
your own cutting and packaging decisions. This
beef would be like all our beef from cattle that are
raised naturally. We would be able to
furnish grain finished for those that like this or all
grass finished for those that want this type of
beef. IF YOU ARE INTERESTED, please email
(info@greerfarm.com)
us so we can get more details to you. This will
only work if we obtain enough customers to justify the
expense.
In the
meantime, we have beef available at the farm or for
purchase by the split quarter or
half.
From
Our House To Yours
The days are
hot, the nights are cool and our berries are the best
in Texas. Isn't it time to visit The Greer Farm
again?
From our
family to yours we wish you a wonderful summer. Thank
you for supporting our family farm.
Sid, Eva and
all of us at the farm
Please feel
free to forward this to any of your family or friends
that may be interested in our family farm.
June 05, 2010 - 07:48 AM
This photo was taken June 5. the berries will be used
in today's cooking class.
June 02, 2010 - 07:06 AM
"When a hen crackles, she is either laying of lyin".