Great news just in time for the weekend. Weeping Radish dropped by this morning and delivered Uncured Hot Dogs, Beer Bratwurst, & Linguiça. Hopefully next week they will have our Pastrami & Roast Beef ready for delivery.
Hot dogs $7 lb 4 per pack in pork casing
Linguica $10.50 lb
Beer Bratwurst $10.50lb
We’ll be sampling the new products this weekend, stock up for Memorial Day cookouts.
After the runaway success of our open barn day we are following up with a smaller event on May 27th. We will feature one of our favorite vendors on site to answer your questions and sample their delicious products. We will also be giving FREE tours in conjunction with their free tastings so if you’ve been meaning to come by and take a tour, this is your day! The tours are limited to the number of slots we have available on our calendar so it’s first come, first serve.
So what is going to be featured? Palace Green freezer jams will be on site. What are freezer jams you ask?
Palace Green freezer jams are really really good. They are, quite simply, worse than crack cocaine. No wait, that’s sounds bad. That’s a terrible description. I need something better than that….
Our freezer jams are in jars too small in size even though you opened an entire jar, hid in the corner and ate it all by yourself while looking over your shoulder, hoping nobody sees you and asks for some. Darn, that sounds worse too. Hmm…
My favorite indulgence in the world is vanilla ice cream. Not vanilla and chocolate syrup. Not vanilla and sprinkles. Plain. Old. Vanilla. The planer the better. Homemade with about 3 ingredients is perfect. Simply Natural vanilla is second place.
Palace Green freezer jams are so good, that the best thing I can think of to do with them is to put them on ice cream. Palace Green freezer jams actually make my favorite thing ever, better. I’m sure they are good on toast or biscuits or whatever. Who knows. I’ll never find out unless you folks tell me about it. For me, it’s ice cream and freezer jam.
There, that sounds positive. Much better. (Really, it’s crack. You can’t stop once you open the jar. Run away!)
As for the free tours, we have opened up double the normal number of tours for a Saturday to try and accommodate everyone. The store will be open as normal so if you just want to pop in and get samples without a tour, do some shopping, etc. you are welcome to come by. Tours will be by appointment. For our regulars, don’t shy away. We will NOT have 2000 people here on the 27th. It’s tours only.
To book a tour, you simply need to go to our scheduling page and book a tour at a time that is convenient for you. All available times will be shown. If no times show up, then we are full for the day. You can still stop by the store to shop.
Because of the nature of the event, we will honor Groupons but only at their normal stated rate, which includes a free tour. In other words, if you are a Groupon customer, the 27th is not your day.
I had a few inquiries this week from folks asking, “Are you open? Is there anything there to buy after last weekend?”
The answer is Yes! We are open. While we had thousands of people through here, we only ran out of a handful of items. Most things, except the never ending struggle for ribeyes and our pending restock on squeaky cheese are back in stock.
On Friday, I went to the processor and picked up three hogs worth of products, including an order of bacon so we even have bacon back on hand.
There is even a possibility that our latest cow will be ready today so I hope to run over to Siler City and pick that up, which means we’d have ribeyes later this afternoon. No promises! But it’s possible.
The girls are working 8-5 today so pop in and stock up on fresh goodies. We look forward to see you.
In my earlier post I guessed at how many people we’d have here for our event on Saturday. The math was based on what we knew, which wasn’t very much at all. In the end, I guessed 800 people would show. I actually felt pretty good about my guess. Maybe we’d, <gasp!>, hit 1000 but based on the buzz around our event, I felt pretty good we wouldn’t see just 50 people and have a total bust.
To put this in perspective, I think the most we’ve ever had here at the farm at once is about 75 people.
Saturday we had over 100 people before we even officially opened at 10am.
About 9:40, cars started showing up. And….They…..Never…..Stopped.
Here is a bit of what it looked like. Thanks Dustin for the drone footage.
Before we started, I grabbed our head of parking, Joseph, and walked him through the plan for how to park cars. We had a plan A for parking that involved using the yard all the way from the barn to the back of the house. That was blown by about 10:10. Plan B went into effect, which was to park cars behind the house in the orchard. That lasted another 15 – 20 minutes maybe. Plan C was to park right behind the house between the grape vines and the house. That petered out by about 11am. At that point, we went into our emergency planning mode, which was to shift our parking people to the bottom of the hill and start parking in Dustin’s yard. We made that transition, which was definitely under duress.
Luckily shortly after that plan went into effect, Miguel made it back to the farm and asked about parking in the big pasture. We didn’t want people parking in the pasture because it messed up the flow of people to the tours. Basically it had people coming from all sorts of directions and people wouldn’t be able to work their way through out stations without getting lost and/or confused about what was going on but at this point we didn’t have a choice. With his help we quickly shifted to parking cars in our main pasture. This plan, frankly, wasn’t part of the plan. At this point we were making things up and the cars kept coming.
Luckily about noon the rush was over. Our initial visitors were starting to clear out and we were able to start making progress towards parking in our normal areas. However it was well into the afternoon before we cleared the parking in the big pasture. All other spots were swamped all day.
I mention the parking because it really is our Achilles heel. We can only park so many people here on the farm. We have a one way road on and off the farm, and we had a stead stream of people pouring in.
I spent most of my time either giving tours, checking on our vendors, or bouncing from hotspot to hotspot. There was no such thing as stopping, for me, or anyone else all day.
We had everyone from our farm working, including their children and our children. We also had folks from our leased farm, friends from school, customers who pitched in, and pretty much anyone else we could think of. Despite all that, we were simply swamped. When we started this, we hoped we’d get maybe 100 people.
We did 207 transactions in the store on Saturday. A normal Saturday is 30-50. If you figure each transaction represents a family of 5 that means we had 1035 “people” through the store. One of our vendors told us about noon he’d already counted 1000 people who’d come past him. This was two hours in! So that number seems legit.
Except we had a line out the door ALL DAY. We only have one point of sale system.
We can only ring people out so fast. (We are already working on this for next time.) Many people didn’t want to wait 30-45 minutes to go into the store and I don’t blame them. People said they’d come back another time.
It’s not a big stretch to assume that if 1035 people were represented in our store, that at least that many decided not to wait in line. That puts us over 2000 people for our barn day. Two THOUSAND people at our little farm. We only have 1300 likes on Facebook currently and we had over 2000 physically present! So this is what it means to “go viral.”
And now, some pics from our day.
I’ve never seen a chicken on a leash before. Even I learned something.
We gave tours every half hour, alternating between Spork and I. I’d say we had an average of 50 people per tour. Everyone seemed to enjoy their walk through the farm and we had lots of good questions.
Buh not only grilled samples all day, he also made our dinner for the after party!
2000+ people, no accidents, no fights, no police called, nothing caught on fire.
It was pretty much impossible to really be prepared for an event to get this big this quickly. But with the hard work and help of the Clarks, the Deatons, our friends from school, all of our suppliers, Tamryn, our own family, the guys who work here on the farm every day, and of course Grandma we pulled it off with no major blowups. I’m still torn on the propriety of doing this type of an event. I know people got lost in the crowd. I know people will overcook their steaks because I didn’t get to give them one on one instructions. But we had so many positive comments and people who stopped by for the first time because of the event that we definitely did some good as well.
We’ll see. Till then, thank you everyone who worked, attended, or told your friends about us. We had an awesome day.
This morning at first light I received a text from Dustin. Have you seen this rainbow? I looked out the window and the most beautiful rainbow I’ve ever seen was crossing the sky. The sun had not even come up yet so it was just false dawn. However the rainbow was catching the brighter light that was still not hitting the farm. This made for a deep colored, brightly lit rainbow against a relatively dark world. It was stunning. I ran outside and snapped this picture. A minute later, it was gone. Just a transient beauty, which made it all the more special.
I think it’s going to be a good day.
Update from one of the families on the farm. Better picture.
SWMBO and Lucy were in the store till late last night, receiving in new products, restocks, entering items into the system, and pricing everything so we don’t hear “How much is this?” 200 times today.
This is the first time we’ve had the store fully stocked since we expanded it this winter. It’s starting to look pretty nice.
The new display fridge has already been worth it’s weight in gold. Now instead of everything being crammed into one little fridge we can space things out and have it more organized.
We have lots of new products I haven’t blogged about yet. All are on display and available for sale.
We are as ready as we can be for today. We’ve already had a great start with our rainbow. He have lots of friends coming to help. Now we’ll see who shows up to visit.
10 years ago, if you wandered onto our farm you’d be looking at the wrong end of a gun. This is private property. GET OUT!
5 years ago you had an appointment with me to take a personal tour. I did maybe 2 a week. We had no store, no store hours. We sold beef. That was it. The gate was closed all day and to take your tour I met you at the gate to let you in. You received your tour, then you went out and the gate closed behind you.
1 year ago we agreed to be part of the CFSA farm tour and had almost 300 people come through here over the course of two days. At some points, we had as many of 50-70 people walking around. Some of the time we had nobody here. Everyone on staff had their tongue hanging out after the event but it was a good tired.
Tomorrow is our open barn day here at the farm. We have 1600 people saying they are interested in coming on Facebook and 200 saying they are actually stopping by.
Plus we have signs up at Angie’s in Garner, where about a million people eat breakfast and lunch every day.
We are featured in Carolina Parent Magazine’s website. In fact when I clicked on their web page just now to grab the link, our farm is front and center on the main page.
So we have experience with 300 people, over the span of 8 hours spread over two days. That’s roughly 38 people per hour. No big deal.
If we take the 200 people who are saying they are coming on Facebook, subtract the 100 who won’t actually show, add in the 150 who didn’t say they were coming but actually show, that’s 250 people.
Then we add the 50 people who show from Angies.
Then we add the 100 people who show from Carolina Parent that gives us 400 people who will be coming to the farm tomorrow.
Then heck, lets just multiply that x2 for the WRAL exposure. That would be 800 people coming to the farm. But instead of two days, we’ll have part of one day to see all these fine folks. That’s 133 people per hour instead of 38. Um, that’s 3.5 times the AVERAGE number of people. That means we could have several hundred here at one time with the lulls tomorrow being what our average was for the last event.
So…. There have been tears already. A great amount of angst, and some mad dashes for preparation. It’s been interesting and entertaining.
Today I’m picking up a truck load of meat. Lucy is heading to Celebrity Goat Dairy to pick up cheese. We’ve been stocking the store with new products like mad. We brought in a new display fridge and piled it with goodies. We’ve also invited a number of our vendors to be here for samples and we even have live music through a gracious customer. I’m going to give the Sheriff’s office a call to talk about traffic control and we have a gaggle of teenagers coming to handle traffic and parking on farm. All the girls will be in the store along with adult help al day. Tonight it’s all hands on deck in the store putting prices on items and doing final prep for tomorrow.
This will either be epic, or we will never do it again. Since the weather looks stunningly perfect, I’m guessing epic.
However if you are looking for us after 5 tomorrow, you’ll find us behind the bar telling stories and seeing who won the betting pool on how the event would go. If the day isn’t epic. I’m sure the night will be.
I get asked this question all the time, in one form or another.
“Are you Organic?”
“Oh, I’m looking for Organic.”
Or my personal favorite, “I don’t need your (insert product here.) I buy Organic from Whole Foods.”
If the customer is wanting to learn, I try to educate them. If they have their mind made up, I smile and move on. I already have a flat head from beating it against a wall on completely unrelated topics. No sense making it any flatter on this one.
Basically, a mega player in the Organic milk industry has products, that when tested, are pretty much the same as milk from a conventional dairy. Turns out their Organic milk is anything but what you think it is. Read all about it at the link.
There are a few takeaways from this article.
One, you can tell what the animal ate from its output. It’s measurable. So what you eat, or what your animal eats, matters. It MATTERS. If you are still telling yourself it makes no difference and all farm products are the same, you are wrong.
Two, the farmer has already been cited with some serious violations but by working through the red tape, has satisfied the regulators that all is now good. So basically, if you can dot all the Is and cross all the Ts, then what difference do the actual results make? The answer based on this story? Not one bit of difference. Your government at work.
Three. Buying Organic is no guarantee of getting what you expect. And the larger the store, the larger the chain, the larger the farmer, the less chance you have of getting a wholesome product. You cannot go to BJs and get the same meat, which is Organic, and costs $1 less per pound than mine, and think you are making a good decision for your health. Yes that is a blanket statement. Yes there are exceptions, but as a rule, large corporate interests are going to drive prices down, which leads to cutting corners and as this article points out, the Organic standard has plenty of corners to cut. The larger the player, the better able they are to “optimize production” which is another term for cutting corners.
Four. Farmers are not to blame. Farmers are growing what the market demands. More. Faster. Cheaper. All season production. When we expect to get strawberries in January, Organic strawberries no less, what do we expect the farmer to do. And when we expect them at Costco, in bulk, with bulk pricing, 12 months per year, of course the farmers will do something that suspiciously doesn’t look like the picture on the label.
So what is your takeaway from all this? The same as before. If you want to know what you are eating, then get to know your farmer. Go see their operation. Meet their family, and then make your own judgement for what you’ll eat. There really is no other reliable way to know.
I didn’t even know it was going to rain. I certainly didn’t know it was going to rain 8 inches in 24 hours.
Nobody died. No buildings were washed away. Our road didn’t close. It’s not like this was a big deal on our little farm. But this was as much water as I’ve seen since hurricane Floyd in 1999. Like most places that flood, I judge by the high water mark from previous floods. Folks, this was pretty high. Not the absolute highest, but in the top 3.
I took a short video of the water in our back pasture. It doesn’t come through as loudly as it was in person, but listen. Turn your sound up.
It sounded like I was standing by a stream in the mountains. You know that peaceful, tranquil sound of flowing water? Like this.
Except I was standing in my pasture, where I graze my cows. Yes we back up to Swift Creek, but it’s a swampy, backwater part of Swift Creek. There is no moving water. I’ve seen it go under water, but I’ve never seen it move fast enough to create this sound, even in hurricanes. It was pretty amazing.
No matter how long I live, I still see new things. That’s pretty awesome.
Now is your chance to meet the Farmers and Vendors of Ninja Cow Farm. There will be cows and baby goats to feed and pet, tours, samples to taste, as well as a chance to meet many of the farmers and vendors in the Ninja Cow store. Ninja Cow Farm LLC is a small, 84 acre family farm located just outside of Garner. We are the closest large animal farm to downtown Raleigh, just 15 minutes from the heart of downtown. We raise grass fed, grass finished (an important distinction) cows and heritage and rare breed hogs. We utilize no commercial feed in our operation, instead relying on produce we glean from various sources as our primary food stock for our pigs. Our produce recycling/upcycling efforts now divert approximately 7 million pounds of produce from the landfill each year. In addition, we recycle 250,000 pounds of cardboard, 24 truck loads of pallets, and 12 truck loads of plastic totes per year. We sell our products direct to the consumer and to a few select restaurants. In addition to our beef and pork, we also aggregate products from 11 other small family farms and sell the products in our small store. Unlike many operations that pass off others products as their own, we proudly represent our partner farms in our store, giving them equal billing. We are beyond a family farming operation. We actually have five families directly involved in our operation, not counting our employees. We are a true community effort, all working together.
I think I’m more excited about this than most anything else we have going on. We’ve discovered a way to get our hogs out to the Weeping Radish Brewery, Butcher, and Pub to be processed and returned to us as awesome new products!
This is a big deal, not because I get to drink beer on delivery and pickup, which I won’t. It’s a big deal because it gives us access to what we’ve needed for a good while, new products for our pork and beef.
Some of the things we can have coming from our pork are:
Apple Bratwurst
Beer Bratwurst
Bologna
Hot dogs
Cheese hot dogs
Cranberry, apple, pecan sausage
Ham
Linguica (spicy Brazilian sausage)
Sweet potato liverwurst
From our beef we have coming:
Corned Beef
Pastrami
Roast beef (maybe)
There are more items that are not on this list, and apparently they are adding items to their repertoire as well so I’ll be learning about my options. But for now we’re ordering based on the list above.
We get requests for ham all the time. We also get requests for cured meat like pastrami. Heck, SWMBO wants it. That’s enough of a reason around here. For the past few years I’ve been trying to figure this out. Well now we have it figured out. Some of the items are supposed to be arriving as early as next week so this isn’t a far off in the future dream, it’s now.
Plan on swinging by and checking it out. And all the other new goodies we have in the store. We are open today from 8-5. There is so much new stuff in there I haven’t even been able to talk about it. We’ve just been putting it away as fast as it comes in. But details are coming as I can get the posts up. But rest assured, the store has a LOT of new stuff in stock so it’s worth the trip.