#cofarm

CoFarm Cambridge increases food security & hits headlines!

We’re delighted that CoFarm Cambridge’s Pete Wrapson and Dom Walsh have been celebrated on the front page of the Cambridge Independent over the past week for their amazing achievements in transforming a bare field into a thriving market garden. The farm donates 100% of its produce to local community food hubs to support people experiencing food insecurity during the pandemic.

You can read the article online here.

COFARM CAMBRIDGE FEATURED BY GUARDIAN FOR COMMUNITY GROWING DURING PANDEMIC

Guardian journalist Mattha Busby approached CoFarm Cambridge for a piece which highlights communities coming together to provide food for those most at need during the pandemic.

We’re delighted that CoFarm Cambridge features so prominently in the piece and flattered to be alongside some amazing community projects all over the UK.

The national exposure has also attracted a number of enquiries about collaboration.

You can read and share the piece here.

Spring haircut!

We all feel better for a bit of a spruce up now and again, and we thought it was about time that the field off Coldhams Common we are going to transform into a community farm had a good haircut!

Over the past couple of years, the site has become quite overgrown with tall thistles and shrubs. To tackle 7-acres of thistles with scythes and loppers would have been quite an undertaking - and taken us well into the nesting season for ground nesting birds - so we contracted the City Council to help with ‘topping’ the thistles with tractor-mounted mowers.

Our intention is to invest in a two-wheeled tractor with different attachments for different jobs on the farm, which should be more than enough from now on to help prepare the land for growing and keep on top the thistles that will, of course, be back. As the project starts to gather some momentum and more people get involved, we will also be able to tackle the weeds together by holding regular work parties - good fun as well as good exercise!

The rest that the field has had over the past couple of years will have done the soil some good, as it hasn’t been disturbed at all. It also hasn’t had any chemical pesticides, herbicides or fertlilisers sprayed on it and this is how we intend to keep it.