We grow a lot of stuff. Squash, green onions, leeks, Walla Walla onions, arugula, some lettuce.
No peppers, berries or toms though.
There's a fairly organized share co-op on my street because we live in an older neighborhood and some people have heirloom fruit trees. Cherries, plums, apricots, lemons.
i commute 20 miles mostly through farm lands, unless I take the Beemer out the valley way.
This month was a harvest of green row crops. Lettuce, chard, broccoli. A sad thing is that commercial farming only yields about 60% of the crop for market. This I know from a friend of mine who is the farm operations manager for a huge business in Salinas.
Look at a picked lettuce field and there are heads, partial heads and small plants everywhere. There are occasional efforts to organize gleaning operations, but the difficulties of access to private property, pesticide exposure and safety of the fields themselves tie it all up. Farm operations dislike the idea.
Well, John.That car doesn't know what a parking lot is. I have a space at work, otherwise it goes on round trips. Speaking of work, in addition to my big projects (hospitals and we are super busy redesigning for the October surge ); I'm renovating a 1949 mid-century modern house that was designed by the founder of our firm.
Bill