One major attribute of the House Wren is – like a morning Rooster – they keep you from sleeping in too long. However, having had many roosters over the years I prefer the chatty voice of the morning wren. In actuality they are not the first to wake; robins are the harbingers of dawn. Some mornings I swear they get going before dawn! And at the close of day, robins are one of the last to bid the day farewell. A bird of many moods and voices, the Robin never ceases to amaze me with beautiful songs. Its evening song can be the most urgent, and most sorrowful at the same time. Alas, here we are with the birds again…
Birds can tell much about the health of a place, as fish can with a stream. When I see a multitude of birds in our fields it gives me a boost and makes me think that the soils are alive and things are “good in the hood” so to speak. Time will soon tell because as the full Flower Moon begins to fade, I recently finished sowing the first field of our Einka einkorn. I always try to use the power and pull of the full moon in hopes the high energy within will give the seeds extra vigor. Once again, we worked to select out our top grade seedstock here at Bluebird – mostly in thanks to our lead Steve White who these past years has perfected the seed-cleaning line – and made sure I had top shelf, high density grain to fill our grain drill with.
Given the mild spring, soil temperatures are plenty warm enough for germination despite sowing seed the first week in May which is on the earlier side for us up here against the North Cascades. Combined with all the residual moisture from the heavy late-fall rains, ground that never really froze and following our heavy cover crop of winter peas, I expect a great stand to pop up here any day. Of course, Mother Nature could once again prove me wrong. I will soon let you know. There is also the off-chance that it may start raining one of these days, too! We didn’t get a drop the whole month of April after the first couple days. Not unusual here. Our spring rains often come in the second half of May, and in June.
Spring in the Methow is rivaled by nowhere that I know of. This marks my 33rd year farming here in the Methow and with the varying green hillsides of bunchgrasses, the lime-green of fresh popping aspen leaves, the full bloom of balsamroot and lupine – the air is filled with the sweet, poignant smell of the earth’s juices. It is an easy reminder to this farmer to treat our Earth with the up-most of respect and grace and this is sometimes conflicting because, as I have mentioned before, “farming”, per se, is an invasive activity. While this is not lost on me, it is one reason we began Bluebird with the ancient emmer and soon added the more ancient einkorn. These are wild varieties and are gentler on the earth having learned to thrive for 10,000 years.
The nutrition that they give us is what all wheat used to contain. While not big yielding grains that our modern farm systems strive for, nutrient-wise they are a power punch of vitality that is easily digestible for most. Truth to tell, this is one reason we coined the phrase here at Bluebird: Ancient Grains for Modern Times.
Farm Bill update… Argh! I will try not to sink here. It is no secret that most “ Agriculture” is up against the wall for a myriad of reasons. However, the recent 850 page version of the 2026 Farm Bill passed the House on the final day in April, and is on the way to the Senate. The 2018 version has been running on extensions for over 3 years now. Some refer to this version as a “skinny bill” but it contains 12 titles and endless provisions and sections and… well, in large, continues to prop up a broken food system through loans, price support insurance etc. all with continued tax dollars even as 41% more farms went out of business last year than the previous.
One bright spot is the lip-service paid to Local Farm to Community Program wherein the USDA must enter into cooperation with groups that support local producers with the distribution of fresh and frozen produce – at least 25% of the time. Funding for this remains unclear? Meanwhile, how about organic provisions…? Ha, even the small cost-share program most of us Organic Farmers partook in so far has disappeared. This was to help with our certification fees, or as I like to say “penalty” for growing organic. I would say the very best news from the latest bill is that many of our legislators held strong and did not let Bayer Crop Sciences off the hook with all the Round-up lawsuits by passing provisions that would lay the blame on the users. Complicated, but this would have been a huge loop-hole. As MAHA stands in the shadows, both at odds, and caving into the current Administration I am confused like many as to what the USDA’s real path forward is? Or isn’t.
Meanwhile ‘back at the Ranch’… No glyphosate, no subsidies, no problem. Because we have so many of you loyal and informed customers who want to purchase clean food from our tried and true small custom mill that always delivers fresh whole grain flours and grains week in week out and has for over 20 years now. Thank you, and a special shout out goes to all the graduates nation-wide who will be moving on from college and into a new journey this month. You are a smart generation who has as many challenges as any to resolve. Rest up, and eat well!
Cheers,
Farmer Sam





