Showing posts with label farming. Show all posts
Showing posts with label farming. Show all posts

Saturday, May 14, 2011



Planting, Part II

We have planted every square inch of available space in the green house and hoop houses, now the real work begins. A crew of volunteers, good friends willing to crawl around in the dirt, is on standby. After a glorious day of sunshine the soil is still too wet to work but the tension is mounting and the maestro declares we will plant tomorrow morning. I assemble the troops and make cake!

RT, aka the big boss with the hot sauce, drops the plugs in place for proper spacing and we set them in.

Planting in the field is just like planting in the green house except that the plants are much more spread out. RT cultivates each row then lays two rows of underground drip tape. Then we pull a roller over each row compressing the soil just a bit. Running water through the drip lines prior to planting revels each drip and we plant the seedlings accordingly.

Field planting is low dirty work. We are fortunate to have good friends who enjoy being outside crawling around in the dirt. We call it Bindweed yoga, each practitioner develops their own unique postures. RT demonstrates the squat and drop while Carey and Kath practice the one knee planting stance.

Carrie, good friend, talented musician and first year volunteer, demonstrates the two-kneed sideways pose--difficult to maintain, a rookie mistake.

Kath opts for the open leg frog squat, easier to maintain and allows more freedom of movement--truly a seasoned professional.

The rows outside are very long and seem to stretch out forever...
breathe, plant, stretch, breathe, plant, stretch, and move a foot, repeat. This is our planting mantra.
Just focus and breathe (and remember there is cake at the end of the day.)

Namaste









Thursday, May 12, 2011

Planting

We have such a short growing window that instead of direct seeding all of our plants we order seedlings in plug trays. This gives us a six week jump on some tender annuals and a good head start for perennials. Our plants need to be seeded and started weeks before we plant and there is a high demand for seedlings each spring so we must make our orders in the fall. Second guessing the weather is the real challenge, we check the long term weather forecast (ha--may as well consult the Tarot deck), look at prior years, pick a shipping date and hope for the best. This year has been a real crap shoot and seedlings have been arriving daily in the pouring rain. UPS and FedEx trucks roll up and down the drive leaving boxes and boxes of plants--seedlings, annuals, perennials and shrubs.

A new shipment of seedlings from Bluebird Nursery.

Upon arrival I unpack the boxes, water the trays and hope for a break in the weather. The forecast is good, but the ground is so saturated we cannot work it.


Unpacking nursery shipments is always exciting--I'm challenged by some of the creative packaging, thrilled with the contents of each box and curious to where it will all go!


Plug trays--plastic trays filled with seedlings packed in finger-sized plugs of soil--watered and waiting to be planted. As you can see by the shadows, we have sunlight!

RT, the maestro, gets creative, re-purposing space in the green house and hoop house for some of the new seedlings. Planting plugs is low work--I crawl, squat and duck-walk down the rows planting seedlings in the support netting. (As the plants grow rows of netting support the stems and prevent the plants from foundering.) Carey, our new wonder woman helper, makes the work go much faster. We start out stiff and chilly but soon the sun has warmed the hoop house and the work goes quickly.

An excellent shot of the support netting, the plug trays and Carey, our new wonder woman!


Carey and I are planting snap dragons. The seedlings are very small and the plugs themselves are only the size of the tip of my finger. They must be pulled gently from the tray and then set into the soil. The snap trays hold 250 seedlings. In no time we have set out planted several trays-whew!

Tuesday, March 29, 2011


Tulips
Each fall we plant tulips for the following spring. Our first year we planted 2000 bulbs and that spring had such success we planted 4000 the following fall. In the following spring we sold every tulip and could have sold more so again we doubled our planting to 8000 bulbs. This pattern continued and so last fall we planted 36,000 bulbs. It's a big job but with a lot of prep work and some organization we can do it in less than three days.

Tulip bulbs ready for planting.

After the last delivery of the season we clean out the green houses and dig trenches down their entire length. The trenches are three feet wide, six inches deep and about 100 feet long. Space is very limited in a green houses so the trenches must be dug by hand, for the past few years we have been fortunate to have a much younger employee to do this task.


Roger planting bulbs. Kohl reading the next pit with fresh soil.

The tulips are shipped from Holland to a port in the northwest and then trucked to us. As soon as the bulbs arrive and are unloaded we start planting. Now the real physical work begins--it is not hard, just very uncomfortable. We climb into the pits and set the bulbs into the soil about a half an inch apart in row upon row. The bulbs come in crates of 500; I can plant a crate in about fifteen minutes, but I am the fastest bulb setter on this farm.

RT, the maestro, in the tulip pit.


After the pits are filled with tulip bulbs they are covered with a layer of soil and top coat of sand. When the entire row is planted we lay lines of drip tape and give them a good watering.

KT and Miguel planting crates of bulbs.

We are fortunate to have good friends that enjoy grubbing around on their hands and knees for hours at a time, which is asking a lot as we are all over fifty! Kath has been on the tulips crew for years and is our number one non-employee. (There have been times when we could not have operated with out her--thanks again honey.)

Kath, our number one non-employee and dear friend
After the tulips are planted we put the farm to bed and things really wind down. The first day of February we fire up the heat in the green house and wait for the tulips to emerge. In six weeks the tulips are ready for delivery.

My Sprinter loaded and ready to go!

Tuesday, March 15, 2011









Spring at Last

We spotted a robin Sunday morning along the river, yesterday there was a robin just out the kitchen window on the pergola, today I watched robins play in the puddles all day. The cats are happy to get out and play. It must be spring.

The tulips in the greenhouse have been slowly blooming for a couple of weeks and we have been cutting a few bunches everyday. Saturday we woke to sunshine and the first real warmth of the season and harvested four hundred tulips! My long respite is over and I start deliveries Monday.


We ordered from a new supplier and have some beautiful new tulip varieties, including these gorgeous White Parrot tulips.


We are experimenting with a new way of planting some of the tulips and hyacinths. Rather than planting directly in the ground, the bulbs are planted in crates, covered with a soil and sand mixture and left on top of the soil in the greenhouse.


The hyacinths look and smell fantastic and we are able to easily harvest the flowers with bulbs intact.


Freshly harvested hyacinths--dreamy colors, heavenly scents!