Produce Farm since 2007
Local, organic producefrom Aurora, Oregon.
Self-reported practices. This farm has provided information about their practices, but they have not yet been independently verified by Bhumi.
We're a small, certified organic family farm located in Aurora, Oregon, just 25 miles south of Portland in the heart of the Willamette Valley. Our goal is to provide vibrant, local, organically-grown produce at a fair price. We grow over twenty varieties of heirloom tomatoes alongside a full range of seasonal vegetables — from kale, collards, and chard to fennel, radicchio, treviso, and padron peppers. Sustainability is at the heart of our growing: we use raised beds with drip irrigation, black mulch to trap heat and reduce evaporation, hoop houses for heat-loving crops, and cover cropping to build soil health. We run a 100-share CSA from June through October, with weekly produce delivered to partner pickup locations from Portland to Dundee. You can also find us at the Beaverton, PSU, Oregon City, Wilsonville, and Lents farmers markets, and at New Seasons, Food Front, and Green Zebra grocery stores. We come from a family of Oregon farmers and educators — some ancestors traveled west on the Oregon Trail to homestead in the Willamette Valley, while others came from Arkansas farms to the Vanport community.
The Farm About Us Retail & Restaurants Photo Gallery Hello again Farm Share members. It seems that the hot weather is here to stay. At the farm, this means that things are growing very fast and the water is always on. We are getting our summer crops a month earlier than usual, as evidenced by the first of the season’s heirloom tomatoes in this week’s shares. The heat and irrigation also make it so that the weeds grow like crazy too. With a lot of ground to cover and not that many bodies, we needed a mechanical edge to make it so our newest transplants have a the best growing environment they can get. Our newest member of the farm equipment collection: the surf board weeder. This weeder can hold six people at a time, so during one pass we can weed a full nine rows of crops, which is a major advantage over hand hoeing, and a bit more precise than tractor cultivation. With some improvements on the device since its premier, such as padding, head straps and more narrow shoulder supports for more arm movement, everyone was even smiling while about to embark on an afternoon of weeding. This is the weeder in action. While laying down on a board, our arms are free to weed about a bed an a half at a time, greatly increasing the speed at which we can cover ground. This has been a really helpful device, especially as of late with all the neccessary overhead irrigation in the heat. Also, though a bit akward at times, it beats bending over and squatting to pull weeds and is easier on the back than hoeing. All this weeding makes harvest much easier and the quality of our produce higher. Weeds at times grow faster than the vegetables, robbing them of needed light, space and nutrients. On the subject of nutrients, this week’s shares contain every color except blue. With tomatoes, carrots, beets, kale, collards, chard, salad, onions, squash, cucumbers, broccoli or cauliflower and cabbage in the shares, it will be easy this week to eat a full spectrum of colorful, (nutritious), food. Usually fruits and vegetables that are darker greens, reds and purples tend to contain more nutrients. Try slicing fresh tomato on salads or sandwiches. Add shredded carrots and raisins to a broccoli salad with honey dijon dressing. Slice cucumbers onto a bagel and cream cheese, grill whole onions and sliced squash as a side for your Fourth of July barbeque or shred beets into your next coleslaw. This might make your coleslaw hot pink if you use red beets, but the striped chioggia or gold beets bleed less color. Broccoli/Cauliflower Salad 1-2 heads broccoli or cauliflower, cut into bite sized pieces3 carrots, shredded1/3 cup raisins or dried cranberries1/4 cup sunflower seeds, hemp seeds or sliced almonds 1/3 cup mayonaise or vegan substitute1 Tbs. Dijon mustard1 Tbs. honey Combine first four ingredients in a large mixing bowl. In a separate bowl, combine the last three ingredients and mix well. Season to taste with salt and pepper and pour over salad. Toss to coat salad ingredients. If you like a creamier salad, double to dressing recipe. This will serve about four as a side or two as a main dish. Shredded chicken on top turns this easy salad into a fast week night meal. We hope you are all enjoying your vegetables and look forward to more colorful and healthy shares in the future. Have a happy Fourth of July and be safe! –The Simington Gardens Team Week Eighteen Farm News Yolandaon Spring Forward
Meet Mike Simington
Farm Owner · Since 2007
Bulk & Shares
CSA shares (100 shares, $650/year, June-October), wholesale to restaurants
Markets & Stores
Beaverton Farmers Market, Oregon City Farmers Market, Wilsonville Farmers Market, PSU Farmers Market, Lents International Farmers Market
Retail
retail: New Seasons Market, retail: Food Front Cooperative Grocery, retail: Green Zebra Grocery
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| monday | Closed |
| tuesday | Closed |
| wednesday | Closed |
| thursday | Closed |
| friday | Closed |
| saturday | Closed |
| sunday | Closed |