Yesterday the PD wrote a wonderful article on CSAs... Program guarantees fresh, local vegetables -- by contract written by Debbi Snook. They even furnished a list of local CSAs...
And in case anyone noticed an omission and is wondering, we are still here and kicking. Our season will start in a few weeks and we have 35 members for 2008.
Perhaps we were omitted because of our small size? But with 35 members, according to their list, we would be the fourth largest in the region. And CSAs with 4, 8, 10, 12, ect were mentioned.
Maybe it is because we are way out here in Summit county, in between Hudson and Cuyahoga Falls? But CSAs in Ashtabula, Geuaga, and Stark Counties were all mentioned. In fact one CSA is only a couple miles from us...
Maybe it is because we are so new to being a CSA? Actually, 2008 will be our fifth season of running one, making us one of the older ones in the region.
Maybe we were not listed because of our obscurity? But the article lists a source as the Cuyahoga Valley Countryside Conservancy (which they misspelled), and we are listed on their CSA list, as were a majority of those in the PD article. We are also listed on Local Harvest a major local food search site, and our website will pop up with a Google search for local CSAs...
Maybe we were not mentioned because we have never gotten any press before? But we have been mentioned in PD articles as a CSA at least twice, once when we were awarded the lease on our farm in the national park and once when our local Slow Food sent us to Terra Madre'.
Maybe it is because our CSA is full? But of the 17 farms listed 10 are listed as sold our or wait list only.
So in case anyone was wondering we are still here... We are thriving, and this is going to be our best season yet! Thanks to everyone who emailed to bring this to our attention, we appreciate your support of local food!
And in case anyone would care to there is a place to leave comments on the bottom of the PD's list...
Tears and joys of a new farmer on a new farm with people relying on us for their local food! So much to grow in a 20 week season!
Thursday, May 29, 2008
First Market June 7th...
After much thought we have decided not to attend market this coming weekend (May 31.) Instead our first week will be June 7th. We just do not have much to offer, so we decided to hold off one more week.
Sorry for the inconvience this might have caused anyone, but we hope to see you on the 7th...
Sorry for the inconvience this might have caused anyone, but we hope to see you on the 7th...
Labels:
2008,
CSA,
farm bill,
farmer's market,
market
Tuesday, May 27, 2008
Market this weekend...
Our first market of the year will be on May 31rst! This coming Saturday 9-12.
What will we have, you may ask...
UM! I'm asking myself that as well...
The cool weather recently has really SLOWED down our crops. When in the middle of April we planted 18 day radishes we were worried that they would be ready before our first market. We were confident that our 30 day Broccoli-Rabb, our 34 day turnips ,and the 28 day cress would all be ready....
Now we are crossing our fingers that those 18 day radishes will make it!
We will have a little rhubarb (a little being the key word.) We will also have some tomato and pepper starts (some Ark of Taste varieties) and then their will be honey caramels!
But we will be there, so if we look particularly sad and pitiful standing there in front of an almost empty table, please come and visit with us a little...
What will we have, you may ask...
UM! I'm asking myself that as well...
The cool weather recently has really SLOWED down our crops. When in the middle of April we planted 18 day radishes we were worried that they would be ready before our first market. We were confident that our 30 day Broccoli-Rabb, our 34 day turnips ,and the 28 day cress would all be ready....
Now we are crossing our fingers that those 18 day radishes will make it!
We will have a little rhubarb (a little being the key word.) We will also have some tomato and pepper starts (some Ark of Taste varieties) and then their will be honey caramels!
But we will be there, so if we look particularly sad and pitiful standing there in front of an almost empty table, please come and visit with us a little...
- Countryside Farmers' Market at Heritage Farms
- Time: Saturdays 9 a.m.-noon
- Dates: May 31st — October 4th
- Location: Heritage Farms, 6050 Riverview Rd., Peninsula (south of Rt. 303 & Riverview Rd. intersection)
When it rains...
When it rains it...
Wait a minute, it didn't rain! After all the talk for a week of the "Memorial Day Storms!" we had exactly NO rain, and we were counting on it!
We put in a few thousand more feet of row crops (lettuce, carrots, beets, turnips, parsley, ect, ect), 300 more feet of potatoes, and hundreds of starts, tomatoes, peppers, and cucumbers. And then we waited for the rain, which never came...
Farmer's Prayer:
Please let it rain,
But not to much...
So this morning poor hubby gets to water all of our transplants! As we have yet to expand our irrigation system (ouch, more money: seems to have been going out like water this year, thank goodness for my mom's kind gift and our CSA deposits!) he'll do it with old fashioned hoses...
Wait a minute, it didn't rain! After all the talk for a week of the "Memorial Day Storms!" we had exactly NO rain, and we were counting on it!
We put in a few thousand more feet of row crops (lettuce, carrots, beets, turnips, parsley, ect, ect), 300 more feet of potatoes, and hundreds of starts, tomatoes, peppers, and cucumbers. And then we waited for the rain, which never came...
Farmer's Prayer:
Please let it rain,
But not to much...
So this morning poor hubby gets to water all of our transplants! As we have yet to expand our irrigation system (ouch, more money: seems to have been going out like water this year, thank goodness for my mom's kind gift and our CSA deposits!) he'll do it with old fashioned hoses...
Friday, May 23, 2008
Am I a softie?
So, I’m a softie, I admit it.
My niece loves chickens. Other girls want ponies. She wants chickens. Other girls talk about being doctors or teachers or anything else when they grow up. Anything other then the owner of a chicken food store, and maybe a chicken vet. She even wrote me a chicken book to keep at my house so when she is ready to open her store I’ll have it for her. Because, of course, the chicken store will be on my farm.
Because I think this is all so cute I just ordered absurdly expensive chickens for my niece which will be delivered next week. Expensive because I only ordered 5. Typically you have to order 25 chickens at a time, but I found one place that will ship boxes as small as 3 chicks! Catch is you have to ship them express and you have to pay a “small batch” fee of $25. This fee pays for a box with a little heating pad in it so the chicks stay warm in transit (why most hatcheries send them at least 25 at a time so they can keep each other warm!) So these 5 chicks cost as much as 25… almost.
So why would I pay so much for chickens. Well, my little chicken fanatic niece (5) is coming up to visit starting May 28th for about 2 weeks. Our order of 25 Dominique pullets is not due for delivery until around June 11th. Either they will just miss her or I will be sending home a very unhappy little girl who got to see chicks for only one day.
So my sister and I talked and I said I’d try to find chicks. I looked and looked for someone who had some locally with no luck, and then on a chicken message board (there are such things) where I was begging for chicks, I ran across a mention of MyPetChicken.com. A company that will sell fewer than 25 chicks! So I called and they actually had some pullets (female chickens) with availability next week! The catch of course being the cost, but what a great thing for someone who only needs a few! It really opens up chickens to people who could not get them before.
My niece loves chickens. Other girls want ponies. She wants chickens. Other girls talk about being doctors or teachers or anything else when they grow up. Anything other then the owner of a chicken food store, and maybe a chicken vet. She even wrote me a chicken book to keep at my house so when she is ready to open her store I’ll have it for her. Because, of course, the chicken store will be on my farm.
Because I think this is all so cute I just ordered absurdly expensive chickens for my niece which will be delivered next week. Expensive because I only ordered 5. Typically you have to order 25 chickens at a time, but I found one place that will ship boxes as small as 3 chicks! Catch is you have to ship them express and you have to pay a “small batch” fee of $25. This fee pays for a box with a little heating pad in it so the chicks stay warm in transit (why most hatcheries send them at least 25 at a time so they can keep each other warm!) So these 5 chicks cost as much as 25… almost.
So why would I pay so much for chickens. Well, my little chicken fanatic niece (5) is coming up to visit starting May 28th for about 2 weeks. Our order of 25 Dominique pullets is not due for delivery until around June 11th. Either they will just miss her or I will be sending home a very unhappy little girl who got to see chicks for only one day.
So my sister and I talked and I said I’d try to find chicks. I looked and looked for someone who had some locally with no luck, and then on a chicken message board (there are such things) where I was begging for chicks, I ran across a mention of MyPetChicken.com. A company that will sell fewer than 25 chicks! So I called and they actually had some pullets (female chickens) with availability next week! The catch of course being the cost, but what a great thing for someone who only needs a few! It really opens up chickens to people who could not get them before.
So my sister and I are splitting the cost and I will go pick them up and bring home the chicks, to a very surprised little girl (who’ll be the best aunt ever?) These are White Cochin and are on the Livestock Breeds Conservancy’s watch list so they fit with our goals of helping to preserve heritage breeds. The chickens will be hers, but they will live at my farm. I think my hubby thinks I am silly, but how often can you make a little girl’s fondest dream come true and for only half of $60?
Strange new theory on Colony Collapse...
This article is pretty scary...
I have to say (KNOCK ON WOOD) we have yet to loose a hive to CCD, although we have lost 2 in the past 2 years to other causes. If bees are the proverbial canary in the coal mine I think they are warning us of many things wrong with our world, and CO2 is just one part of that... Before we reach a greater tipping point...
In my day work we always recommend that clients install carbon dioxide sensors in conference rooms and other high occupancy areas so that if the CO2 level rises above 800 ppm the mechanical system of the building will bring in more outside air to lower that level to a healthier range.
This article suggests that bees are their own CO2 montoring system in their hives. Bees can sense CO2 and when the levels get to high they will adapt to try to lower it.
Is it possible that bees are sacrificing them selves to lower the CO2 in the hive? I kind of doubt this is the whole answer, because hives affected with CCD find only a few bees left... Certainly at some point of the CO2 induced exodus the remaining bees would sense a lower CO2 level. CCD hit in 2006-2007 the CO2 has not jumped that precipitously that more then a handful more bees would leave. Then also you would have expected to see much greater losses around major cities then you have...
Is it possible that bees are sacrificing them selves to lower the CO2 in the hive? I kind of doubt this is the whole answer, because hives affected with CCD find only a few bees left... Certainly at some point of the CO2 induced exodus the remaining bees would sense a lower CO2 level. CCD hit in 2006-2007 the CO2 has not jumped that precipitously that more then a handful more bees would leave. Then also you would have expected to see much greater losses around major cities then you have...
But perhaps this is just one more thing, which in combination with mites, diseases, feeding with corn syrup (made with bt producing GMO corn), Israeli acute paralysis virus, increase pesticide use, trucking colonies thousands of miles a season, and all the rest have caused us to reach the tipping point for bees...
I have to say (KNOCK ON WOOD) we have yet to loose a hive to CCD, although we have lost 2 in the past 2 years to other causes. If bees are the proverbial canary in the coal mine I think they are warning us of many things wrong with our world, and CO2 is just one part of that... Before we reach a greater tipping point...
Tuesday, May 20, 2008
Lag in Posts and Workday...
We are NOT going to have a workday the coming weekend. There has just not been much intrest. It is a holiday weekend, of course! We will schedule more this summer...
Sorry, I have not posted much recently. The almost constant rain has kept us inside recently. The cold soil means nothing is growing fast! This week is supposed to see a warm up and a dryout so I'm sure we will have more to report soon!
Sorry, I have not posted much recently. The almost constant rain has kept us inside recently. The cold soil means nothing is growing fast! This week is supposed to see a warm up and a dryout so I'm sure we will have more to report soon!
Friday, May 16, 2008
Any one want to work?
We are thinking we will hold our first ever farm work day Sunday, May 25th... We realize that lots of people have things going on at this holiday weekend, but if only a handful of people are interested it will help us a ton!
This is still tentative and weather permitting. We are thinking of starting around 2:00 and going until around 5:00, or sooner if we get done...
If you plan on coming, or are thinking you might, please let us know, so we can coordinate with people and cancel at the last minute if the weather turns bad or it is to muddy to get onto the field! If you are bringing children please let us know so that we can send you a quick form to fill in. Please do not bring other people's children and just use your best judgement on if your kid is ready to help! Many of our seedlings are still tiny, so they need gentle hands to plant, discression to pull weeds and not seedlings, and care not to step on rows. I know several 5 year olds who would be great help, and many 8 year olds who would not be ready yet. There is no reason you have to stay the whole time, but we would like people to come all at 2:00 so we can talk to everyone and assign tasks at the same time.
This is just an email to determine interest, if we get none we will not do one, and if we get a ton we may need to reconsider how to do the event, so please do NOT show up at the farm unless you get a confirmation email from us! We will ask everyone to bring some basic stuff with them including a reusable water bottle for each person, gardening gloves, and boots (if it is muddy.)
Please email if you are interested to basketoflifefarm@yahoo.com. Let us know how man of you there are and if there are any kids and their ages. We are not planning on limiting this event to CSA members, but may need to if we have a strong response...
Hope to hear from you soon...
This is still tentative and weather permitting. We are thinking of starting around 2:00 and going until around 5:00, or sooner if we get done...
If you plan on coming, or are thinking you might, please let us know, so we can coordinate with people and cancel at the last minute if the weather turns bad or it is to muddy to get onto the field! If you are bringing children please let us know so that we can send you a quick form to fill in. Please do not bring other people's children and just use your best judgement on if your kid is ready to help! Many of our seedlings are still tiny, so they need gentle hands to plant, discression to pull weeds and not seedlings, and care not to step on rows. I know several 5 year olds who would be great help, and many 8 year olds who would not be ready yet. There is no reason you have to stay the whole time, but we would like people to come all at 2:00 so we can talk to everyone and assign tasks at the same time.
This is just an email to determine interest, if we get none we will not do one, and if we get a ton we may need to reconsider how to do the event, so please do NOT show up at the farm unless you get a confirmation email from us! We will ask everyone to bring some basic stuff with them including a reusable water bottle for each person, gardening gloves, and boots (if it is muddy.)
Please email if you are interested to basketoflifefarm@yahoo.com. Let us know how man of you there are and if there are any kids and their ages. We are not planning on limiting this event to CSA members, but may need to if we have a strong response...
Hope to hear from you soon...
Thursday, May 15, 2008
Our newest toy. It is used to pick any type of roots including nusrey stock. We will be using it mainly for potatoes and sweet potatoes... This thing is HUGE! To bad it will be months untill we can use it...
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Tuesday, May 13, 2008
Why to grow slowly...
So many people ask us "If you have a long waiting list why don't you add more spots?"
We say that we are growing slowly and deliberately so we can be sure of the quality of what we give our members and can grow the amount that we need to provide fair, reasonable shares. We see growing slowly as a key to our long term success, although we could easily have taken 150-200 members this year (based on willingness of people to buy a share, not our ability to support that!) we are just around 35, which with also adding a farmers market will mean growing more then twice what we did last year.
Today I ran across this website for Covered Bridge Produce (please note, this is not the local Covered Bridge Farm.) They grew from 300 members in 2005 to 600 members in 2006 and were out of business before the end of the season, and sold their farm (one assumes from the site) in 2007.
We hope our farm will be sustainable for the long term. Embracing the triple bottom line; Planet (Environment), People (social), and Profits (Economic). We want to grow sustainable food, create a community around it, and support our family financially.
We do not want to be another story of a small farm that failed... Grow smart & grow slow until you know what you really can grow!
We say that we are growing slowly and deliberately so we can be sure of the quality of what we give our members and can grow the amount that we need to provide fair, reasonable shares. We see growing slowly as a key to our long term success, although we could easily have taken 150-200 members this year (based on willingness of people to buy a share, not our ability to support that!) we are just around 35, which with also adding a farmers market will mean growing more then twice what we did last year.
Today I ran across this website for Covered Bridge Produce (please note, this is not the local Covered Bridge Farm.) They grew from 300 members in 2005 to 600 members in 2006 and were out of business before the end of the season, and sold their farm (one assumes from the site) in 2007.
We hope our farm will be sustainable for the long term. Embracing the triple bottom line; Planet (Environment), People (social), and Profits (Economic). We want to grow sustainable food, create a community around it, and support our family financially.
We do not want to be another story of a small farm that failed... Grow smart & grow slow until you know what you really can grow!
Sunday, May 11, 2008
Onions.
The onions are looking great... We should have lots of wonderful leeks and onions this summer.
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Saturday, May 10, 2008
Fence supplies.
Not including 7 four thousand feet spools of wire and a 50 pound box of staples, this is what $2,200 of fencing supplies look like. That is enough to fence 12 acres of fields with some left over for trellises. Of course, the wood posts are more but we bought a couple hundred of them (black loctus) last year. It is fence time!
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Wednesday, May 7, 2008
Rush to plant.
Last minute frantic rush to plant more seeds before it rains for 3 days. This is when it would be more convenient to have been home all day and not to have gotten home & rushed before it started to pour. But where would be the fun in that?
The tray is Pac Choi, and we also put in radish, Kale, turnips, and more!
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Weather forcast...
More rain... Not necessarily bad, but 2 inches plus in the next 4 days is a lot! Hopefully our little seedlings do OK and it is a slow steady rain, not a hard, pounding wash things out rain...
The better news! The 15 day forecast which puts us to May 21rst is for no frosts! Happy Dance! If the rain is not to bad between now and Sunday we will probably put some stuff in the garden... Oh, and our Hatfield Transplanter actually works the way it is supposed to! Amazing, that such a relatively inexpensive little thing can so hugely improve the time it takes to put plants in... Look here, and then click on the little camera at the bottom of the description for a video...
The better news! The 15 day forecast which puts us to May 21rst is for no frosts! Happy Dance! If the rain is not to bad between now and Sunday we will probably put some stuff in the garden... Oh, and our Hatfield Transplanter actually works the way it is supposed to! Amazing, that such a relatively inexpensive little thing can so hugely improve the time it takes to put plants in... Look here, and then click on the little camera at the bottom of the description for a video...
Tuesday, May 6, 2008
Utterz Test...
Just a test to try to post from my cell phone .
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Monday, May 5, 2008
Lazy farm weekend...
The weather this weekend and last week lead to help us have a lazy weekend, probably one of our last for months! Because it had been so dry the past week few of our seeds have germinated and their was little weeding to do. Because of the heavy rain on Friday and Saturday it was to mucky to plant or be in the fields much...
On Saturday it was rainy and yucky, so we took the chance to straighten the house a little (it needed it!) and then go get our cell phone plans switched about to a family plan from two separate ones, it seemed like it should have been pretty quick and easy, both of us were out of contract and up for new phones, so give us our new phones, and stick our plans together and we'll be done. Instead the process took two hours, but the guy who helped us was nice and made it less painful and less expensive, but it was still two hours! After that we went to a late lunch and then did very little the rest of the day! I made roasted root crops for supper, yummy!
Sunday, we slept in and finally started the day with a bit more cleaning. Then my mom came over and we started a bunch of cucumbers and winter squash (more to do tonight.) Hubby was laying out what will be our fence lines in another week and doing Internet research (we could not farm without the Internet, I swear!)
Around 3 I decided to be ambitious for supper so I made a roasted tomato sauce and homemade ravioli. Hubby walked into the kitchen, saw the pasta machine out, and a pile of flour on the cutting board and asked, What you doing? "Making ravioli!" He asked if I should not start with something easier, like noodles? I said "I've made ravioli before!" He pointed out (correctly) that not in the 4 years he knew me before we were married, or the 18 months since we have been... It'll be fine, I assured him... And it kind of was...
Kind of...
After the pasta dough sat for the requisite hour, I realized it was WAY to hard... So I tried to add some water to it, which was messy, but worked. Thankfully he was not in the room when I was rolling the dough, because the first couple passes through the machine and I was SURE this would not work... But eventually I ended up with perfect (looking) dough strips.
I had made my filling (mushrooms and cheese) before and let it cool, but remembering my last ravioli making experiment (which I had not mentioned to hubby) I was terrified of my ravioli exploding because they were overfilled, so I went SO FAR the other way, and in the end we had rather tough little squares with very little filling!
Well, I tried...
It was a nice weekend, and their is a lot to do the next couple weeks! First and foremost being the fence, as with the rain, I'm sure our seeds will start to pop... The next couple nights I have another dozen trays of squash to start, and we when it dries a tiny bit (maybe tomorrow) we will run the hand tiller down the center of the rows and plant white clover between our rows, and buckwheat at the edges... We did also come to the realization that we need more field area, so hubby will be turning more ground in the next couple weeks...
Stick with us, it's going to be a great year!
On Saturday it was rainy and yucky, so we took the chance to straighten the house a little (it needed it!) and then go get our cell phone plans switched about to a family plan from two separate ones, it seemed like it should have been pretty quick and easy, both of us were out of contract and up for new phones, so give us our new phones, and stick our plans together and we'll be done. Instead the process took two hours, but the guy who helped us was nice and made it less painful and less expensive, but it was still two hours! After that we went to a late lunch and then did very little the rest of the day! I made roasted root crops for supper, yummy!
Sunday, we slept in and finally started the day with a bit more cleaning. Then my mom came over and we started a bunch of cucumbers and winter squash (more to do tonight.) Hubby was laying out what will be our fence lines in another week and doing Internet research (we could not farm without the Internet, I swear!)
Around 3 I decided to be ambitious for supper so I made a roasted tomato sauce and homemade ravioli. Hubby walked into the kitchen, saw the pasta machine out, and a pile of flour on the cutting board and asked, What you doing? "Making ravioli!" He asked if I should not start with something easier, like noodles? I said "I've made ravioli before!" He pointed out (correctly) that not in the 4 years he knew me before we were married, or the 18 months since we have been... It'll be fine, I assured him... And it kind of was...
Kind of...
After the pasta dough sat for the requisite hour, I realized it was WAY to hard... So I tried to add some water to it, which was messy, but worked. Thankfully he was not in the room when I was rolling the dough, because the first couple passes through the machine and I was SURE this would not work... But eventually I ended up with perfect (looking) dough strips.
I had made my filling (mushrooms and cheese) before and let it cool, but remembering my last ravioli making experiment (which I had not mentioned to hubby) I was terrified of my ravioli exploding because they were overfilled, so I went SO FAR the other way, and in the end we had rather tough little squares with very little filling!
Well, I tried...
It was a nice weekend, and their is a lot to do the next couple weeks! First and foremost being the fence, as with the rain, I'm sure our seeds will start to pop... The next couple nights I have another dozen trays of squash to start, and we when it dries a tiny bit (maybe tomorrow) we will run the hand tiller down the center of the rows and plant white clover between our rows, and buckwheat at the edges... We did also come to the realization that we need more field area, so hubby will be turning more ground in the next couple weeks...
Stick with us, it's going to be a great year!
Saturday, May 3, 2008
When it rains...
When it rains... IT POURS! But only if you happen to get a flat tire on the express lanes of 271 AND the little spare tire lock that is supposed to keep someone from stealing your spare is rusted shut, so your husband has to pry it off with the end of the tire iron, and then your jack (the one that came with the car) actually bends under the weight of the truck! And because you are dealing with all that by the time you actually get to the tire change part of changing a tire it is raining absolute buckets and being the express lane are getting spray from both sides, and by the time you finish this procedure 45 minutes later you are soaked to the bone!
But on a positive note the onions and leeks are looking happier already, and everything should be getting enough water to germinate happily! Today is squash and cucumber starting day!
But on a positive note the onions and leeks are looking happier already, and everything should be getting enough water to germinate happily! Today is squash and cucumber starting day!
Friday, May 2, 2008
Rain!
Doing the happy rain dance! It looks like we will have enough rain in the next couple days to really soak things in! That will be good, we have a market in a month and only a handful of sprouts! Well, and we have a lot of starts, but many of those are for slightly later season items... And our onions and leeks will appreciate some more rain... We may go to market with not nearly as much as we hoped, but when our season gets going it is going to get going big!
This weekend we hope to: lay out our fence, plant our new potatoes, and start more plants (cucumber and squash)...
Potatoes!
Last night we put in 50 pounds of seed potatoes - fingerings and heirlooms. Today we are expecting a UPS shipment of another 50 pounds of yukon golds. That may seem like a TON of potatoes, but the yield on them is not that high, and with all our members, saving some for the optional Thanksgiving and Christmas baskets they will go quick! This is our first year doing them on any scale so we are keeping it pretty small...
100 pounds of seed potatoes is 1,000 feet of potatoes. That is a lot of potatoes to manually hill, so we bought a potato plow. After we prep the soil we make hills, using our hill maker. Then we run the potato plow down the middle, which makes a trench in the hill. By doing this we do not have to manually dig almost 1000 holes with a hoe! Talk about a time saver!
After we drop the seed potatoes, about every 12" in the rows, we go back with a hoe and cover the potatoes with about 2" of soil. We were worried that this would take forever, but with the soil still being light and dry it was a pretty quick job! As the potatoes grow we will continue to hill more soil on top, until they are at least 6" deep. Once they are fully hilled and growing well we hope to mulch them with straw...
Then comes the fun part! Picking... One of the things that has stopped us from growing them on a large scale before is the thought of having to manually, with a pitch fork turn over hundreds of feet of row to find the potatoes hidden beneath! That brings us to our newest piece of equipment... This potato picker. It is an older model and not one of the high tech ones that puts the spuds in a bin (those run multiple thousands to tens of thousands of dollars) but it will do the job! And we found it on eBay and got a bit of a deal on it... It runs along under the row and pulls up anything it hits, kind of shakes some of the dirt off (that's what the fingers do) and then drops the potatoes onto the ground, where all we have to do is pick them up! We are hoping it will also work on the sweet potatoes, another experiment, we have a couple hundred plants coming in the next couple weeks...
It still amazes me how much equipment there is to buy when you decide to farm. That is if you want to avoid undue (and unnecessary) amounts of manual labor...
100 pounds of seed potatoes is 1,000 feet of potatoes. That is a lot of potatoes to manually hill, so we bought a potato plow. After we prep the soil we make hills, using our hill maker. Then we run the potato plow down the middle, which makes a trench in the hill. By doing this we do not have to manually dig almost 1000 holes with a hoe! Talk about a time saver!
After we drop the seed potatoes, about every 12" in the rows, we go back with a hoe and cover the potatoes with about 2" of soil. We were worried that this would take forever, but with the soil still being light and dry it was a pretty quick job! As the potatoes grow we will continue to hill more soil on top, until they are at least 6" deep. Once they are fully hilled and growing well we hope to mulch them with straw...
Then comes the fun part! Picking... One of the things that has stopped us from growing them on a large scale before is the thought of having to manually, with a pitch fork turn over hundreds of feet of row to find the potatoes hidden beneath! That brings us to our newest piece of equipment... This potato picker. It is an older model and not one of the high tech ones that puts the spuds in a bin (those run multiple thousands to tens of thousands of dollars) but it will do the job! And we found it on eBay and got a bit of a deal on it... It runs along under the row and pulls up anything it hits, kind of shakes some of the dirt off (that's what the fingers do) and then drops the potatoes onto the ground, where all we have to do is pick them up! We are hoping it will also work on the sweet potatoes, another experiment, we have a couple hundred plants coming in the next couple weeks...
It still amazes me how much equipment there is to buy when you decide to farm. That is if you want to avoid undue (and unnecessary) amounts of manual labor...
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