We are dealing with some energetic mice and voles which have been nibbling on the roots of some crops growing. They seem to enjoy onion roots and nibble on the lettuce. We are catching a few with mouse traps baited with peanut butter. Bucky The Farm Dog, just visible in the picture above, has turned into a good mouser. There is no "catch and release" with him, it's "catch and eat"! It's a bit odd to see him strolling around the farm with a mouse tail dangling from his mouth and this picture always comes to mind when he comes over to lick your face!
Monday, December 1, 2008
Hoophouse Reflectors Increase Light
We are dealing with some energetic mice and voles which have been nibbling on the roots of some crops growing. They seem to enjoy onion roots and nibble on the lettuce. We are catching a few with mouse traps baited with peanut butter. Bucky The Farm Dog, just visible in the picture above, has turned into a good mouser. There is no "catch and release" with him, it's "catch and eat"! It's a bit odd to see him strolling around the farm with a mouse tail dangling from his mouth and this picture always comes to mind when he comes over to lick your face!
Friday, November 21, 2008
Improvements to Hoophouse
Catarpillar Tent Update
In our last post we described two caterpillar tents we constructed -- one to protect a bed of beans and the other to protect some squash. The tents worked very well until a 45 MPH wind blew one to pieces and the other to the ground. We tried some modifications which seemed to help a bit. The first tents used 10' hoops and a four-foot-wide placement. We lowered the height gradually by moving the rebar further apart. At eight feet wide the tent could withstand the wind pretty well. Another problem was that winds caused the weights (dirt-filled pots) to tip over. We decided to fill some feed sacks with dirt to supplement the pots hoping they would blow and this worked pretty well. We also tried putting hoops 4 feet apart instead of 5 feet.
Now we have a couple of wide tents over carrots and broccoli and the new concern is that the first snow will pretty much crush the tents so we plan to try 7-foot hoops and a five-foot wide bed. We will report again as we improve the design.
Our Four Season Hoophouse
We have set an objective to grow cool weather crops through out the winter to deliver to the local market. To get from three season to four season we need to add heat and light and save as much heat as possible. We also want to do it without using any energy other than solar. To accomplish this objective we have put together the following plan:
Add heat: We are building a hot compost pile four feet high, six feet wide, along the 70-foot length of the hoophouse and right up against the plastic. It seems necessary to be against the plastic to keep that side of the pile moist so heat will be conducted into the house. Our first attempt was a twenty-foot pile built from horse manure and wood shavings from a local stable mixed with grass clippings and other materials. This pile heated to 150 degrees in three days and appeared to be working. The inside plastic felt only mildly warm but that seemed reasonable since any heat
1. Add white plastic liner inside plastic on north wall to bounce light and heat onto plants.
2. Add white plastic ground cover on ground outside south side of house.
Conserve heat: 1. Insulate north side of hoophous (between outside poly and white liner). 2. Seal all doors and other openings to eliminate all airflow in and out.
Sunday, October 5, 2008
Caterpillar Cover-Up
On Friday night we had a light frost in low-lying areas but we received no damage that we could find. Last week we constructed our first "caterpillar low tunnel" inspired by Eliot Coleman's design. We bought a roll of 3-mil std plastic, 100' by 12' ($27), 20 10' brown 1/2" PVC lengths ($25) anmd 40 2' pieces of precut rebar. For the last hoop on each end we pounded in some 1" pipes and used 3/4" PVC to add some stability. We have standardized our beds at 100' long by 4' wide so the tunnel covers 90' of the bed. The tunnel is about 3 1/2 feet tall and access requires removing a pot and lifting the plastic.

At each end we anchored the plastic with 2 40# building blocks. We filled 40 5 or 10 gallon plastic pots with compost to anchor the plastic along the sides. We anchored one end and unrolled the plastic along the windward side. We then worked down the side, one person pulled the plastic over the hoops and the other set the pots on the one foot of plastic along the edge. Then we anchored the other end and then the remaining side.
With a 10 mph wind with 20 mph gusts, total time spent was about 2 hours which included the time spent filling the pots with compost. Filling was pretty fast -- we laid out the pots in a square and dumped about two bucket loads of compost on top and smoothed it by hand to fill the pots. We decided to use compost because we have a lot of it and when it comes time to take down the tunnels, we can just dump the compost in the beds. I believe that one the materials have been laid out, two people can put up a house in about half an hour and take it down in about the same time.
After about a half hour some of the lee side pots tipped over as the plastic billowed out during a gust of wind. We watered the pots to make them heavier, moved them a bit to the center between the hoops and tilted them some toward the tunnel to make them harder to fall over. There were no more problems, even the next day when the wind reached 20 mph. We'll work on some modifications so the tunnel can withstand about 40 mph gusts and a light snow load. We can add heavier side weights, tie the hoops together with a rope purlin and add some tie-down ropes between the hoops. Our steel-hooped houses have been fine with winds of 60 mph.
This first tunnel covered a bed of late snap beans that are about ready to blossom. It's pretty late in the season so we don't know if they will produce anything before we get a hard freeze. We're going to build two more and cover two beds of summer squash that started producing about two weeks ago.
Anyway, we are pretty happy about results so far! Our fall CSA starts in about three weeks so these tunnels will help ensure we have enough produce for our subscribers.

At each end we anchored the plastic with 2 40# building blocks. We filled 40 5 or 10 gallon plastic pots with compost to anchor the plastic along the sides. We anchored one end and unrolled the plastic along the windward side. We then worked down the side, one person pulled the plastic over the hoops and the other set the pots on the one foot of plastic along the edge. Then we anchored the other end and then the remaining side.
With a 10 mph wind with 20 mph gusts, total time spent was about 2 hours which included the time spent filling the pots with compost. Filling was pretty fast -- we laid out the pots in a square and dumped about two bucket loads of compost on top and smoothed it by hand to fill the pots. We decided to use compost because we have a lot of it and when it comes time to take down the tunnels, we can just dump the compost in the beds. I believe that one the materials have been laid out, two people can put up a house in about half an hour and take it down in about the same time.
After about a half hour some of the lee side pots tipped over as the plastic billowed out during a gust of wind. We watered the pots to make them heavier, moved them a bit to the center between the hoops and tilted them some toward the tunnel to make them harder to fall over. There were no more problems, even the next day when the wind reached 20 mph. We'll work on some modifications so the tunnel can withstand about 40 mph gusts and a light snow load. We can add heavier side weights, tie the hoops together with a rope purlin and add some tie-down ropes between the hoops. Our steel-hooped houses have been fine with winds of 60 mph.
This first tunnel covered a bed of late snap beans that are about ready to blossom. It's pretty late in the season so we don't know if they will produce anything before we get a hard freeze. We're going to build two more and cover two beds of summer squash that started producing about two weeks ago.
Anyway, we are pretty happy about results so far! Our fall CSA starts in about three weeks so these tunnels will help ensure we have enough produce for our subscribers.
Monday, September 22, 2008

Peppers and tomatoes in some beds died 24 hours after the ground became saturated. It almost looked like we had had a frost as the tops wilted but next day the plants croaked. "Water wilt" seems to be the technical term.
Today is our CSA delivery and we are really going to be scraping to fill the boxes. Overall, due to a cold spring, germination problems and other issues, we have lost at least half of our harvest. At the Batavia, Illinois, farmers' market last week one vendor said, "I was worried about an early frost but not not. Everything is dead." Pretty much sums up the mood around here.
This week we should start to cover some of our summer crops with temporary hoophouses to help extend the season a bit. Eliot Coleman has an interesting design for a low-cost house that can be put up very quickly. We'll cover some of the winter crops later and we're planning a small fall CSA. Ultimately we hope to harvest all winter for our local market.
Wednesday, September 17, 2008
Our New Journal
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