Vegetable-Lovers Take A Look At Their Roots - 27 East

Real Estate News

Real Estate News / 1408922

Vegetable-Lovers Take A Look At Their Roots

icon 4 Photos
A thread-waisted wasp on goldenrod in Hampton Bays.  DANA SHAW

A thread-waisted wasp on goldenrod in Hampton Bays. DANA SHAW

A bee lights on goldenrod in Hampton Bays.  DANA SHAW

A bee lights on goldenrod in Hampton Bays. DANA SHAW

The late artist's Holocaust works include collages of Anne Frank. KYRIL BROMLEY

The late artist's Holocaust works include collages of Anne Frank. KYRIL BROMLEY

The Green Thumb gave its CSA members a tour of the farm recently. ALEXANDRA TALTY

The Green Thumb gave its CSA members a tour of the farm recently. ALEXANDRA TALTY

author27east on Oct 24, 2015

Bill Halsey stood near a tractor, welcoming members of the Green Thumb’s community-supported agriculture group to their biannual tour on October 17 at the Water Mill farm. Hailing from all over Long Island, the members had been invited to hear the stories behind the tomatoes they ate all summer, as well as to pick some pumpkins.Helping families up into a hay-lined trailer, Mr. Halsey chatted, asking members how they were and what was new with the other participants. He no longer drops off the CSA produce on his own, but “Farmer Bill,” as some call him, is still a familiar face.

This is the 21st year of the Green Thumb CSA, and the 20th year of the CSA tours at the farm.

“He was one of the first farms that we worked with,” said Paula Lukats, program director at Just Food, who was among the visitors in Water Mill. In the early 1990s, Just Food was one of the first organizations to link farmers and consumers by establishing one of the first drop-off points for CSAs in New York City.

“Small-scale farmers don’t receive the same government subsidies that make food cheap,” Ms. Lukats said, explaining that CSAs can be a boon to family farms.

Fostering a direct relationship between the farmer and consumer, CSA members pay an annual fee that covers the cost of production in exchange for a weekly share of fresh produce. Members typically pay at the beginning of the season, which allows farmers to purchase seeds, make repairs and plan ahead.

The Green Thumb sold produce at the Union Square and Locust Valley farmers markets for one year but discontinued, as it required picking vegetables on the weekends and wasn’t a consistent way to sell perishables.

“You go there one rainy day and come back with three-quarters of a truck [unsold],” said Mr. Halsey.

The next year, the farm started a CSA membership with help from Just Food. Green Thumb would drop off fresh organic produce every week to city dwellers, starting in Astoria, Queens, and Cobble Hill, Brooklyn. Now there are four pickup spots, including the Green Thumb farm stand in Water Mill and locations in Huntington and at Brookhaven National Lab, where Green Thumb will have a winter CSA for the first time this year.

The cost of membership is $18 per week, which entitles the member to fresh vegetables, fruit, flowers and plants from June 1 through December 1. Currently, Green Thumb has around 400 members.

“This one is a special [CSA],” said Joyce Bridges, a Huntington resident who joined this year with her daughter and son-in-law, Kim and Andrew Bykov, when she learned that the Green Thumb gives leftovers to Huntington charities.

In addition to the “amazing variety” of vegetables, Kim Bykov likes the fact that the Halseys send out recipes each week in the boxes.

Mr. Halsey began the tour with an overview of the past season, explaining that the dry summer meant great peppers and tomatoes, but added stress to greens like Swiss chard. As he continued narrating the life of the vegetables before delivery, one could sense that they shared a common enemy.

“Every year they seem to increase their diet,” Mr. Halsey said, about deer, with a laugh. Jumping off the tractor, he pointed to some brazen bite marks on the turnips. “Once they start on a crop, they get a taste for it,” he said.

So far onions are only family of vegetables completely safe from deer. The farmers try to plant tasty crops like lettuce inside a fence, but they fence in only the land they own.

Crops grown on leased land are unprotected, because you never know what’s going on with land out here,” Mr. Halsey said, and “we’ve lost quite a bit of land to development over the years.” Ranked the number-one organic farm stand in New York State, the Green Thumb farms 100 acres, 25 of which are leased.

Mr. Halsey recounted that his late father, Raymond Halsey, had switched to vegetables from wholesale potatoes after World War II, realizing that there were higher profits in the former. Green Thumb is known today for its range of vegetables, but that was not always the case.

“He didn’t even know what arugula was,” Mr. Halsey said. Raymond Halsey and his family gradually added vegetables as they were requested, also experimenting with new ones, so that they now grow more than 300 varieties.

“It is great, because we try vegetables we’ve never had before,” said Melissa Rodman, a Centerport resident who joined the Green Thumb CSA in Huntington six weeks ago and plans to sign up in June for the next season.

“Farmer Bill introduced me to sorrel.” said Isaac Carlos, a soon-to-be 8-year-old from Astoria, Queens, who wanted to go on the tour as part of his birthday celebration.

“I like to see where my sorrel comes from,” he explained.

"

You May Also Like:

Agency News: Yorgos Tsibiridis Joins Sotheby's International Realty

Yorgos Tsibiridis has joined Sotheby’s International Realty’s East Hampton office. “With a distinguished career spanning ... 15 Jul 2025 by Staff Writer

Quail Ridge Residents Scramble After Apartments Are Purchased for Redevelopment | 27Speaks Podcast

The tenants of Quail Ridge — the two dozen studio and one-bedroom apartments spread over ... 3 Jul 2025 by 27Speaks

Water Mill Property Where Hal Buckner and Dorothy Lichtenstein Left Their Marks Is for Sale

A Water Mill property that hosts a former dairy barn turned artist’s studio and a ... 30 Jun 2025 by Brendan J. O’Reilly

Sundays on the Bay Hits the Market

Sundays on the Bay restaurant and marina on Dune Road in Hampton Bays has hit ... 29 Jun 2025 by Staff Writer

Hamptons Rental Market Remains Alive and Well

To paraphrase Mark Twain, reports of the demise of the Hamptons summer-rental market are greatly exaggerated. “Any hint that the Hamptons rental market is anything but robust is completely wrong,” said Corcoran associate broker Gary DePersia in East Hampton. An interesting dynamic is stirring in the Hamptons vacation-rental market. Although there has been an unprecedented rise in short-term rentals and the aftershocks of the COVID-19 pandemic linger, it has been a bumper crop year for Wall Street, interest rates have remained steady and a new breed of demanding customer is emerging. Despite it all, the Hamptons vacation-rental market remains as ... 19 Jun 2025 by Joseph Finora

Jon Vaccari Joins Noble Black & Partners at Douglas Elliman

Jon Vaccari, a longtime resident of Sag Harbor, has joined Noble Black & Partners at ... 18 Jun 2025 by Staff Writer

Appeals Court Sides With Landowner Over Southampton Village ZBA

Southampton Village has lost an appeal that sought to reinstate a Zoning Board of Appeals ... 12 Jun 2025 by Brendan J. O’Reilly

Last Parcel of Startop Ranch in Montauk Sells

The last plot of land at Startop Ranch in Montauk, 107 Startop Drive, has sold ... by Staff Writer

Hamptons Real Estate Roundtable, Memorial Day Weekend 2025 Edition

With Memorial Day weekend about to kick the Hamptons into high season, The Express News ... 22 May 2025 by Moderated by Brendan J. O’Reilly

Au-Delà Real Estate Vows To Go 'Beyond'

Au-Delà Real Estate, a new boutique real estate firm based in East Hampton, is now ... 20 May 2025 by Brendan J. O’Reilly