Thinking outside the box with Season Extension

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Season extension @ Kilpatrick Family Farm

Transcript of Thinking outside the box with Season Extension

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Season extension @

Kilpatrick Family Farm

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Soils for Season Extension

• The best soil for season extension is the soil that you currently have...... But...

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Soils

• Sandy loam to Sandy is ideal

• Too sandy can be hard to irrigate early and late

• Too wet can be fine but needs to be bedded up well.... good for spinach and long season crops as holds nutrients well

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Soil temperature

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Matching crops to soils

• different crops have different soil requirements

• sweet potatoes loves very sandy soil

• carrots need deep friable soils

• spinach is fine with clay as long as it is bedded up

• Melons love dry fertile soil

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Fertility management

• Season extension is not easy on the plants...

• therefore we want the best environment we can create

• Our goal is to create the BEST soil we can

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Disease management

• Season extension is exposing crops to sub-ideal environments

• Early and late plantings are more vulnerable to wet, cold conditions which make them ripe for disease.

• As well, the soils are not warm which means that leaf yellowing/dieback is more pervasive- which leads to more disease.

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Plant Health=

Disease Resistance

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Fighting disease...• good soil health

• variety selection

• adding mycorrhizae

• not working the soil too early or too late- the clump test

• good air circulation- giving plants necessary space, and uncovering so they can dry out

• clean seed, propagation trays, equipment

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Sprays a last resort

• Regalia, rootshield, actinovate

• Oxidate

• Double nickel, greencure, milstop, copper

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Planning our Season Extension

• look at what the market needs/is missing

• look at your weather patterns

• think about the growth patterns depending on the season

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We need to make $40,000 an acre

Also need to make at least $40 an hour picking the crop

Works out to be $4.50 a bed ft

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Micro Climates

• Occur on the top of a slope, by large bodies of water, in areas shielded by large natural barriers

• Can be 3-5 degrees warmer than surrounding areas

• Our Granville field is consistantly 3-4 degrees colder than the home farm

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5-8˚

8-15˚

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Growth rates

0

5

10

15

20

1/1 2/1 3/1 4/1 5/1 6/1 7/1 8/1 9/1 10/1 11/1 12/1

Outdoors Greenhoue

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We always double our last few plantings

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Frost-sensitive crops• Tomatoes

including cherries

• peppers

• eggplant

• cucumbers

• squash

• okra

• beans

• potatoes

• basil

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Hardy Crops• Arugula

• Mesclun

• Lettuce Mix

• Spinach

• Asian greens

• Carrots

• Beets

• Scallions

• Leeks

• Brassicas

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Succession plantings• Squash and cucumbers

• beans

• lettuce and greens

• radishes

• beets, carrots

• herbs

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Pick an date...

And then just keep on planting.....

Get rid of the pre-conceived notions of when crops can be produced

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Looking at frost dates

• how early can you reasonably plant sensitive crops without heat?

• use a construction heater for those few days that it gets cold

• have rowcovers at the ready...

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Equipment

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Flaming for early weed control

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Flaming basics

• either used for stale seed bedding (before the crop is planted or blind cultivation (before the crop is up)

• idea situation: plant, wait till seeds are germinating but not above the soil yet, flame, seeds come up in weed free bed

• flame midday when plants and ground are dry

• hot as possible

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For smaller droplet size

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Transplanting

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‘/ |:}} Ω

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Mulches

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Why Mulch?

• ADDS ORGANIC MATTER!

• stops erosion

• reduces water requirements

• keeps workers and produce clean during harvesting

• Keeps worms happy

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Bio-360

• starts to breakdown within 2-3 months- gone by spring

• twice the cost of regular plastic($350 for 5000 ft)

• NOT OMRI yet- Certified in Europe, Canada

• has changed the way we farm- we are now adding organic matter easily while growing crops

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Rowcover

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What do row covers actually do?

• Trap heat and warms the soil

• reduce wind desiccation

• cut sunscalding/burning on crops

• keep frozen greens from thawing too quickly

• traps moisture reduces irrigation needs

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Rowcover Weights/thicknesses

• .4 oz (PRO 15

• .5 oz (PRO 19

• .9 oz (PRO 30

• 1.2 oz (PRO 40

• 1.25 oz (Typar 518

• Nursery covers

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Row cover thoughts

• Cheap, thin covers are not worth the money

• multiple layers trap heat between them

• hoops (ours are custom) keep rowcover off growing tips and from burning greens in the fall

• covers can increase disease pressure through trapping moisture

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Fill with pea gravel so they don’t freeze

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Crop Specifics

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Field GreensSee Session one

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High Tunnel crops

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tomatoes

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Cultural techniques• greenhouse plantings are

trellised- 2 leaders clipped up

• hoop house plantings are basket-weave with 7 ft rebar in between 8 ft 2 x 2 stakes

• we pick into 2 gallon mushroom buckets and sort in washing shed

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Tomato culture

• All are grafted

• Maxifort Rootstock

• Geronimo, Big Beef, Rebelski

• Great White, German Johnson, Black Prince, Cherokee Purple, Indigo rose

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Peppers

• Almost all done inside now

• Ace for green

• Carmen, Flavorburst for colored

• stake for maximum production

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Hoophouse planting

• transplanted through black landscape cloth

• 2’ x 2’ spacing

• drip under cloth, 1 run per row

• plastic put on several days after planting to reduce stress on plants

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Staked 3-4 weeks after planting

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Varieties

• Socrates- smaller euro type- really good flavor

• Tasty Jade- long japanese type, customers love them!

• Diamant- good pickling variety- really productive!

• Need to pick self-pollinating varieties because of pollination

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1st week of May

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last week of may, our last frost date!

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Strawberries

• Annual bed system- plant fall, harvest spring, till under

• Variety Chandler

• Buy in tips, propagate ourselves, plant in September

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Paul Arnold Pleasant Valley Farm

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French Beans

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Can be direct seeded in a hoophouse 3rd week of April

rows 24” apart seeded with Earthway seeder

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Transplanting

• 2-3 seeds per cell, planted as a multi-plant

• Transplants need to be much smaller (10 days max)

• water in well (reduce stress as much a possible)

• Maxibel best variety

• we transplant 2 rows apart on the bed (plants 12 inches apart) with drip tape down the center

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• Need to pick every 2 days to keep small

• Early season beans can command up to $6 lb

• 1.6 lbs per bed ft = $9 per bed ft

• need consistent irrigation

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Alliums

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Seeded February transplanted April

• Prince/Pontiac

• Redwing

• Gold Coin

• bridger and forum for overwintering

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Planting overwintered onions

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Ambition or Picador for shallots

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Leeks

• plants custom grown in Florida

• 3 rows on plastic, 8” apart

• Megaton and Lexton, Bandit for winter

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Green Garlic

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• planted with regular garlic

• great mild garlic flavor

• harvesting by May 1st under covers

• $9 per bed ft.

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Cover with mini-tunnel in the spring for up to 3 weeks earlier

Scallions

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Winter Squash

• mix of varieties to keep it interesting

• butternut and kubocha store best

• Green plastic can increase yeilds and prevents discoloration

• Honey bear, jester, sunshine, pinnacle, waltham, metro

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Brussel Sprouts

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Planted June 1st

Churchill and Dimitri

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Store until February

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Cabbage

• Storage #4

• Ruby Perfection

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Deadon

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Roots

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Kohlrabi

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• Spring seeding April 1st or so

• Fall planting seeded July 1st -10th

• transplanted on biotello- 3 rows 8” in row

• harvest before severe freeze

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By the numbers...

• We charge $3 a lb or 2.50 each for large fist sized

• good yield equals around $8 per bed foot

• transplanted as soon as will come out of trays.

• average fertility, although needs extra boron

• varieties: winner, kolibri, kossack

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Celariac

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Sweet potatoes

• Favorite variety Covington

• on plastic, 2 rows 1 ft apart

• Planted with waterwheel

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Yield 4 lbs per bed ft

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Parsnips

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Cultivating constantly

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Growing mid-summer

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Spring harvest for sweetest flavor

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Pulling them out of the mud

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Parsnip Numbers

• 2.5 lbs per foot @$3/lb = $7.50 bed ft

• strong demand for holiday season

• balance left in ground till spring

• * does take entire season 7-10 months for crop

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Potatoes

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Early Potatoes

• greensprout or chit

• grow on clear plastic, under row cover

• water regularly

• dig when first flowers appear

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Turnips/radishes

• Member of the Crucifer family so appreciate high boron as well as steady moisture

• Hakurei turnip variety preferred during the summer and fall

• For radishes, Rover and Cherriette preferred.

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Specialty Radishes

• Red Meat

• Nero Tondo

• Alpine

• Miyashige

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Carrots

• Weed control is critical, a mixture of stale bedding, flame weeding and mechanical cultivation is key

• Bolero, Nelson, Rainbow and Yellow Sun are preferred varieties

• Watch fall carrots for alternaria and spray with copper

• Carrots LOVE loose friable soil, bed up or grow on loose, sandy soil.

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Seeded by July 10th

• Bolero

• Yellow Sun

• purple haze

• rainbow

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Sunchokes

• Plant in October

• Harvest in Fall or early spring

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Beets

• Kestrel, Chioggia Guard-mark, and Touchstone Gold preferred varieties.

• keep well irrigated and supplied with boron to decrease scab

• Need lots of nitrogen to keep tops healthy

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value added

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