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| Fields filling up, plants getting big | 
During our first year at Holly Hill Farm we ate at a Chinese  restaurant called Feng Shui a lot. This was 2006, a pretty lousy farming  season due to really a wet May and June. Hannah and I were trying to  make a good impression so we were working hard despite the foul weather,  trying in vain to get things to grow and keep up with our cropping  schedule. Not much was working out, but we kept at it full tilt, without  much success. At that time I got a now infamous fortune cookie that  said something like, "It's been a good start, now try harder," which  made me laugh pretty hard.
This  year, by contrast, the weather has been pretty cooperative and, once  the soil warmed up enough to break down all the rye straw, we've been  doing pretty darn well. There still is a feeling similar to back in '06  though. I think it has to do with just plain how hard you work in your  first year on a new piece of land. Maybe it's muscle memory going back  to then. But the good news, despite the haunting feeling, is that things  are growing great. The bad new is we have to harvest it all. This is  the time of year when the harvest ramps up dramatically, so basically,  it's been a good start, now work harder.  
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| Farmer, fully cooked, on a bed of baby lettuces |  
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Hannah snapped this shot when I joked about wanting  to dive in to a bed of baby lettuces that were getting too big to  harvest. She said, "why not, we're not going to sell them." And so I  did.
We were pretty spoiled at Holly Hill Farm when it  came to marketing. Demand at the farm stand was strong and grew right  along with our increased success over the years. We didn't always sell  everything, but we got pretty close. Things are different here for sure.  There is a lot more competition from other, more established farms. Our  crop plan was pretty ambitious so we're ending up with more unsold and  unharvested crops than we're used to. That can easily be adjusted this  off-season when we can do simple things like drop our salad mix  plantings from 100 feet to 75 or 60. But right now, it's been hard to  make that call. "But what if sales really pick up when everyone's home  gardens are through producing...or when it gets hot...or when that cool  restaurant decides we're awesome...." We're scared to scale back. We got  so used to demand being greater than supply. The fun side affect is  that we get to lie in the salad mix--feels so naughty.
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| Here come the flowers! | 
And, just when we thought it wasn't possible to get more done during a day--look who's about to demand LOTS of out time:
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| Tomatoes! | 
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| Hannah says, "put down the camera and get to work." |