Wednesday, December 11, 2013

First Season Thoughts



It’s December: it is 20 degrees outside and the soil is frozen 2 inches down.  The first season of the homestead has come to an end.  In looking back on the first year it was over-all a successful year; especially for first-timers.  Our garden produced enough veggies to be used in multiple meals, our potatoes were prolific enough to provide dishes for months, our chicken meat will be available until at least the spring, and our hens are healthy and still laying a prodigious number of eggs.  It was a great achievement to serve our visiting family this October a meal completely grown on our property.  It wasn’t fancy but chard, potatoes and chicken is a hearty and super nutritious meal.

There are a few areas where we will be working to improve things next season.  As is always the case, learning comes with success and failure.  We’d like to mention a few of these areas.

Planning and organization:  For our first year we did pretty well identifying crops and varieties to grow, but some basic improvements will help a lot.  For one, some of our crops were just planted in the wrong season.  For example, the broccoli actually grew well but we planted it in mid –June, which meant it was maturing in the hottest part of the summer.  This made it unbelievably bitter, because broccoli is a cool weather veggie.  So, next time we’ll plant at appropriate times.  Also we didn’t space our crops very well in some cases.  All our lettuce came in at the same time so we had way more than we could eat and much of our lettuce crop went to the chickens once it was past its prime. With our climate we can grow multiple crops of lettuce, so timing again is important.  Finally, due to disorganization (laziness) some of the crops were not kept track of for future planning purposes. For example, we didn’t note which potatoes varieties we planted.  So for next year we don’t know which varieties did really well and which did not.  Obviously this is an easy fix but well worth making.  It’s the little things that make a difference.

Starting seeds:  This is one area we will really need to work on. This past spring we goofed on just about every aspect of starting.  First, we started our seeds too early so the seedlings were too mature when it was still cold out and could not be safety transferred outside.  Second, we struggled to find a good place to start the plants.  Our 100-year-old farm house does not have big sunny windows and it can get quite cool inside in the spring, which didn't help.  Finally we used cheapo soil which actively killed many of our seedlings.  This next spring we will be starting at appropriate times and are hoping to build a few cold-frames to help direct the warm sun on to the seedlings even when the temps are cool. As we found with the watermelon, starting properly is a big deal in Idaho where we have a relatively short growing season and wide day/night temperature swings.

Water:  As mentioned previously this past summer was literally the hottest summer ever in southwest Idaho.  So water was a huge deal.  Although we did pretty well with a combination of our water well and irrigation water, our water application was done simply with a hose.  This obviously worked OK but two big negatives presented themselves.  First was that the water falling from a height, even with low pressure, compacted the soil in our double-dug beds, partially negating both the work of digging and the function of the loose soil.  The other obvious negative was someone had to be there to water.  We are very much looking in to a simple drip system for next year.  These systems have many advantages.  They are inexpensive to set up, easy to operate (even automatically), most function on very low water pressure (~5 psi), they provide water directly to the root base and are up to 90% efficient in delivering water instead of wasting it do to evaporation and runoff.

Harvesting:  A surprisingly difficult aspect of growing is knowing when to harvest.  Reading books makes it seem that everyone has their own mysterious formula for knowing when to harvest certain plants.  For us this season it was basically trial and error.  "The tomato was red, so pick it" kind of thing.  This worked out over-all pretty well.  We did learn that okra needs to be harvested at a certain time or it's hard and fibrous.  We are not sure if we harvested the onions and garlic at the right time because they were small and have all gone moldy after just a few months.  The potatoes were done well however;  they were pretty large and healthy.  Harvesting again comes down to timing and when the planning and starting (see above) is done properly the proper harvest time should be more easy to discern. 

As the winter progresses we will continue to update on keeping chickens and bees over winter.  That will present their own challenges.  Also as we begin planning next year we'll keep the blog up-to-date with our goals, ideas and aspirations.

2 comments:

  1. Re: Onions and Garlic.
    Harvest the onions when you can *easily* flop/fold the necks over for at least 30-50% of the crop. (Or if you are selectively harvesting, just harvest those you can fold the necks over for.)
    The mold may be a result of insufficient curing. Both garlic and onions should be cured similarly. At our farm, we set up a stack of racks on cinder blocks in a shady but ventilated area like our packing shed, lay out a single layer of bulbs on each rack, then aim a fan on them. We do this for several weeks. Be sure to also clip the necks off all bulbs, leaving no more than an inch above the bulb, prior to curing.
    The small size could be a number of factors, like spacing/thinning, soil compaction, nutrient availability, or perhaps as you thought, early harvest. Timing is certainly an issue. Onions, for example, are the crop we start first in our greenhouses here in KY. We start them from seed as early as late January. All other early spring crops don't get started until Feb/March, but onions can really benefit from early start.
    Hope this helps!

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  2. That is helpful, thanks. I think the biggest problem with our onions and garlic was not curing them. They were wet and fresh and in the refrigerator, which was a bad idea. It's good to know curing takes a long time.

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