Higher Ground Garden Blog

Thursday, March 28, 2019

HG Gardening season to start

Higher Ground Gardeners,

The official start of the 2019 garden year will be Saturday, April 13th at 9 am. If you are a new Higher Ground gardener please read the Garden FAQ at the link below.

Gardening decision making is done by the Garden Leadership Team. We are always looking for new members. The garden leadership Team meets weekly to plan the Saturday garden work days. Please let Perry or Tom know if you are interested in being a part of the Team.

Your household gardening obligation includes a $45 annual membership and a commitment to garden a minimum of 2 hours a week from mid-April to mid-October. Garden work days are held every Saturday morning and mid-week weeding is always needed.  You needn't garden every week but averaging 2 hours a week ensures that garden tasks gets done. We also need cooks for the Saturday lunch and drivers to take surplus vegetables to the Community Kitchen. There are many ways to participate.

If you have any questions regarding the Higher Ground garden please contact Tom or Perry.

See you in the garden!


FAQ  https://drive.google.com/file/d/1ufXlUgC136NkyH_EuDMsdwE2BUHVmj9D/view.


Thursday, March 14, 2019

InFARMation meeting notes

Carol's InFARMation meeting notes, 3/6/19, 3 presenters

Statewide, based in Salem, with CO chapter
Future of farming in CO

Mahonia sustainable farms, Sisters.  Less than acre, 18 week CSA, maybe feeding 150 families
32 yo...estimates at 45 they'll be more ready to teach and manage. Glad they don't live on the property. 
All 48" beds built by broad fork. 1' path. 
Lots of compost, says soil is best tool
Bio-intensive
Dense plantings helps with weeds and moisture. 
Mulching creates vole habitats, not good
Closed system compost (all on site)
"Humanure" is part of a closed system, though they don't use that for political reason. Use too many plastic bags for salad greens. 
Sustainability means staying local, eating local, eating in season. Creating relationships with wealthy landowners so small farmers could afford to farm

Claire Sullivan, OSU extension:  how to keep healthy soils (sounds Canadian)
Sandy, dry, not much organic in typical CO  soil
Pasture ground (perennial grass) meets most good soil practices. Annual crops are one of the hardest systems on the soil. No direct monetary payback from cover crop. (Other than building soil). There are spring and summer cover crops. Fall cover crops are better than nothing.
SARE Sustainable Agriculture Research &  Education has a good website
Carbon is not really stored by farming; you need to be using it
Agreed to have a hemp trial on every research station in Oregon. 

Linda, Jeff, DD Ranch. Own 250 acres, lease some of it , over 200 head cattle, lambs, pigs...some in petting zoo. 
Use agro-tourism with plus/minus
Expensive to operate ag in CO, so agro-tourism helps pay the bills.  Passion is raising healthy animals. 
Permitting in Deschutes co is challenging for agro-tourism. Try to do it by not remove land from production. 
They find that people want to see farms, and they want to sell the life. Kind of resent hobby farms have the same rights to agro-tourism. Agro-tourism works if you up sell. 

Friends of Family Farmers— policy issues. Lobbying etc. 
average age of farmers is 60

Hershey's cattle 4-yr aged horse manure is Mahonia farms source. 

Central Oregon —- Madras, compost (where??)
Rain Shadow makes great compost. 

Producing food in high desert is expensive because it's a desert. But if we don't do it locally it's not sustainable. 





Tunnel vegetable production

Tom's workshop notes, Saturday, March 09, 2019

 

Wow, did I learn a ton of stuff at the High Tunnel workshop. The speakers were from University of Utah and have a very similar growing climate. Here is one of their fact sheets on tomatoes. 

 

https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?referer=&httpsredir=1&article=1291&context=extension_curall

 

Here are some take a ways.

·         Best tunnel temp range 45-90 F

·         Test greenhouse soil

·         Must track temp and soil moisture

·         They are using heat tape in the soil to push crops earlier

·         We are not getting tomatoes plants in the greenhouse early enough

·         Three keys to successful tunnel tomatoes

o   Plant in plastic mulch

o   Low tunnel hoops of plastic or row cover inside high tunnel

o   Shade cloth in summer

·         To Minimize plant and insect issues

o   Add organic material

o   Maintain soil fertility

o   Discard all greenhouse plant material (don't compost for reuse)

o   Monitor insect populations

·         We are letting our greenhouse temperatures get above 90 F

o   Heat stress for plants and growth slows

o   Sun damage to fruit

Tuesday, March 12, 2019

Two-foot snow

This is Feb. 28, one sunny morning after our 2ft snow, having snow-raked four garden structures the night before.