I grow multiple varieties for each planned delivery week to even out variables such as heat causing plants going to seed too early.
If all varieties do well, you recieve a mix of different types and colors.
Extra beans - these are a half bed of romanos I decided to plant to augment the regular harvest. Their will be a limited quantity available throughout the season.
I didn't advertise these as I was not sure if the old seed stock I had was still viable.
Here is your kale, arugula, and tokyo bekana interplanted underneath insect netting. I've interplanted them to save space. The arugula and bekana will be harvested for the first delivery, before the kale grows so much to shade out the other crops.
The netting keeps out flea beatles. These minute insects could overwhelm the kale before it is old enough to outgrow the damage; and fill the arugulas with little holes that in turn will reduce the leaves shelf life.
Tokyo bekana is a close relative of arugula, milder and loftier. I'll be mixing the two together for your harvests.
This is one way the extended lack of rain is causing disruptions for me. I have these beds ready for the next round of potato planting.
I don't want to plant the tubers in extremely dry soil, as their moisture will attract the wire worms and lawn grubs, who in turn could either eat the seed tuber before it can start growing the plant, or damage the potatoes as they develop.
If we don't get rain very soon, I'll have to take my chances and manually water A LOT to keep the soil moist.
Is this the future of farming?
We'll find a way...farmers grew food through the pandemic. They continued working the fields in during WW2, plowing around the wrecks of planes and tanks. New varieties of crops were developed during the solar minimum (snow peas in England). Crops were even grown - though admittedly not very well - during the "year without a summer", 1816.
We'll find a way!