Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Workshop on Ecosystems, May 25, FREE

On-Farm Habitat To Provide Multiple Ecosystem Services


Wednesday, May 25 9:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m.
(Carpool leaving Carthage Ag Center 7 sharp, back around 3. Call Ag Extension for more info:  947 3188)

Location: CEFS, Goldsboro, NC

Registration Fee: FREE
This workshop will provide an overview of ecosystem services and practices and programs designed to enhance them. Field demonstrations will focus on establishment and maintenance of habitats to provide life cycle needs of native plants, farmland wildlife, predatory and parasitic insects, and pollinators.

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Backyard Chicken Care, CCCC, April 9

BACKYARD CHICKEN SCHEMES

Instructor: Judy Hogan, Hoganvillaea Farm, Moncure
April 9, Saturday, 9 AM-4 PM. CCCC, Sanford, Civic Center and Hoganvillaea Farm

Farmer Hogan will introduce students to backyard or urban chicken care: appropriate facilities, chick care, nutrition, litter management, laying, egg sales, and killing as needed. We begin in Sanford and then move to Judy’s Moncure farm in the afternoon to see her flock.

With limited space and experience, plus a sense of humor, raise a small flock of happy chickens. Hogan shares her learning curve on basics, chicks to healthy eggs and meat. Topics include: Everything wants to eat chickens, Spoiling your chickens and why, Outwitting your not so dumb chickens.
Students will gain confidence in starting and maintaining their own small backyard chicken flock, have a handle on potential problems, solutions, and additional resources.
Judy Hogan of Hoganvillaea Farm is a sustainable farmer whose main goal is self-sufficiency and growing her own food. She began raising White Rock chickens in 2003, and she sells extra eggs, vegetables, fruit, herbs to restaurants and individuals. She’s a member of Carolina Farm Stewardship Association. A published poet, free-lance writer, and creative writing teacher, she lives in Moncure near Jordan Dam.
For more information: Judy Hogan, (919) 545-9932
To enroll: Lee County Continuing Education, CCCC. (919)775-2122, x7793

Sunday, January 23, 2011

Ready. . . Set. . . Planting Schedule, Moore County

Planting dates specific to Moore County's weather and soil types

March 1 (4 - 5 wks before avg. last front April 4)
  • Arugula, asian greens, broccoli, cauliflower, cabbage, collards, kale, mustard, rutabaga, radishes, turnips
  • Cilantro, lettuce, spinach
  • One planting of carrots, English peas, Irish potatoes, onions
April 5
  • Corn, celery, snap beans
April 20 (10% frost chance)
  • Cucumber, melon, watermelon, squash, beans, tomato, pepper
May 1
  • Okra, eggplant, southern peas, sweet potato

Sunday, January 16, 2011

Low-Energy Seed Starting

Low Energy Seed Starting [from Depletion and Abundance by Sharon Astyk]


The first thing you need to remember is to think ahead, and bring in the compost before three feet of snow and ice lands on top of it. That was my big discovery two years ago, and like so many big discoveries was a. unpleasant and b. completely obvious - in retrospect. Living in a linear society, it can be difficult to get cyclical.
You see, I knew you could start seeds in lightly sifted compost – in fact, I’d seen Rodale Institute tests that showed that seeds did best in finished compost. So, the year before, I’d gone out in February, dug up some compost, let it defrost, and then sifted it through an old screen and used it, with lovely results. All those living organic bacteria made a very happy arrangement, and the seeds I started that way did far better than those I did in potting mix.
Because that winter was an extremely mild one, it didn’t occur to me that normally, getting compost out of the pile in February in upstate NY was going to be trouble. If I’d thought about it for 2 seconds, I would have realized I had to do it in October, but I didn’t, and thus, the trouble. This year I took 20 minutes to shovel and haven’t regretted it.
Which is all just a reminder of how seed starting, as most of us do it, is a heavily energy intensive process. It can involve lights, heating mats, lots of purchased seed starting mixes and various liquid substances that make your house smell vaguely of rotting fish for a week after you use them. All of these substances have to be transported to you. How do you get along without all those things, either if you have to or if you want to?
Well, the first thing you’d do is rethink how much you need to start inside. I do a lot of transplanting, from preference – I enjoy it, and I think it saves me time on weeding later and works better with my mulching techniques. But there’s no reason why I have to do so much. There are a few crops that need an advance start, but even a few cherry tomatoes will self seed and make a late crop. Now I want tomatoes earlier than that, and different varieties, but I could make do, and start fewer inside. Some crops I get a head start on, like broccoli, could easily be entirely direct seeded.
The next strategy I’d probably use is starting things a little later – my house is quite cool in February, and since space by the stove is always limited, I’d probably need to cut down on the things that simply don’t germinate well without some bottom heat in cold temps – peppers, eggplant and basil being some of the biggies. But a smaller number of these could be germinated by the stove, and waiting until late March would mean later harvests (late August, September), but would require less supplemental heating. In March, the windowsills are warmer, because there’s more sun and the outdoor temps are higher – not high, mind you, but higher.
Another alternative would be a hotbed. This is a coldframe with a thick layer ( a foot or so) of uncomposted horse or pig manure, covered with a layer of soil, and a cover on top and insulators on the side. The manure, decomposing, heats the soil and creates a great environmental for little seedlings.
What about those little flats? Well, they really aren’t hard even for a klutz like me to knock together with scrap wood, and we aren’t going to run out of old food cans for a long, long time. With some holes in the bottom, they make find pots for seed starting. Same with old plastic containers. I don’t think we’ll see a shortage for some time.
What about seed starting material? Well, you can plant things in straight, *finished* (that is, no longer heating up) compost, but that does use your compost apace, and you do have to plan ahead in cold places. Now the next part is controversial. If you use soil, the conventional wisdom is that you are supposed to sterilize it by baking the soil at 250 degrees. That’s supposed to spare you damping off disease. My own feeling is that this is stinky, unpleasant, a waste of energy and kinda nuts. That is, I think killing all the good soil bacteria so that you can get rid of a single bacteria is a bad idea.
If you use light dirt (you can mix some sand or compost in to lighten it up – I find 1-1 compost and dirt to be nice, I don’t bake it, I dig it in the fall (remember, cold weather people have to plan ahead), and bring it in. I mix in the compost, and let it sit. And then I give everything a nice bath of chamomile tea periodically to prevent damping off. In 5 years of doing this, I’ve had damping off two or three times, mostly when I’ve overwatered – but I’ve had it at least 5 times with plants started in a seed starting mix.
What about light? Well, windowsills are still a good idea, particularly if you make a reflector from tinfoil and cardboard and put it behind the plants to maximize light access. But if you haven’t sunny windows, you’ll have to use hotbeds and cold frames – that is, plants will have to go straight from germination outside, in a protected way. An easy cold frame is an old window and some hay bales, but you can get more complicated and build some structures. I’ve also seen (but not tried) pop up greenhouses, that can be set over a row in the garden. The big problem with starting out in the cold isn’t the cold, but the heat, I find – a bright sunny day can fry your seedlings even when it is quite cold. So either keep a close eye on the temps and open them up a little, or acquire an automatic opener – these are powered by temperature changes and don’t need any energy, but they are pricey.
How about fertilizing? Compost and manure teas will do it – they do get a little ripe smelling in the house, but no worse than fish emulsion or most kelp-fish mixes. And if you use compost as a large portion of your seed medium, you won’t need much fertilizer, another plus.

Thursday, May 6, 2010

Keep 'Em Coming!

Well done, Friends!  Thanks, to all who've recycled your plastic pots to me!

Please keep on doing that, ok?  I still have hundreds of seedlings to pot up for market:  tomato, pepper, various herbs both annual and perennial.

Small size preferred, but if you bring larger, I'll cycle them on to other farmers and nurserymen.

Monday, April 26, 2010

Farm2Table Sites for Box Pick-up

Sandhills Farm to Table Cooperative
Gathering Sites for Box Pick-up

Here are the Gathering Sites, days and hours. If you know you need to change from the site on your subscription, please notify info@sandhillsfarm2table.com immediately.
These are starting points for time. You will be contacted by your gathering sites shortly with specific directions and instructions. If you really need a different time talk to your site coordinator. If the needs of the site community are different from the starting point, adjustments will be made.  If you are not contacted by your site by Friday, please let us know at info@ as above.

Gathering Sites:
Wednesdays
Pinehurst - Village Chapel Noon to 2:30
Robbins - Deep River Coffee 3 to 6
Carthage - Ag Center 3:30 to 6:30
Southern Pine - SP Elementary 3 to 6
Aberdeen - Poplar Knight Spot 3:30 to 6:30

Thursdays
West End - WE Presbyterian Church 3 to 6
Pinehurst - PElementary School 4 to 6:30
Vass/ Whisper P - New Mathews Mkt. 3 to 6

Farmer's Mkt, SCC, Wednesdays

The Sandhills' Farmers Green Market Go Green with Sandhills!
Wednesdays ALL SUMMER until August 25th (except Wednesday, July 7th)
Aristotle Parking Lot, Sandhills Community College
Call John Frye for more information 910-949-2185
Or email aussiefryefamily@gmail.com