A walk in the greenhouse

One of our experiments this winter has been growing produce in the ground in our unheated greenhouse.  We first learned about this idea from Eliot Coleman’s writings, and got many more specifics from several of John Bierbaum’s presentations at the MOSES conference last winter.

The whole idea of keeping vegetables of any kind alive all winter in central Indiana without supplemental heat when it’s below zero outside may seem a little crazy.. but what’s starting to seem crazy now is leaving the greenhouse empty in the winter!  Take a look inside of our hoophouse, as of today.

Long view - greenhouse
Spinach, kale, lettuces, arugula, chard, cilantro, and a few assorted mustard greens are growing right now.  We’re standing in front of a hay bale wall.  Later on in the spring, we’ll pull down the bales to build tables for our seed starting flats.

Weeding with a hoe

Between the rows, that white stuff is polyester row cover.  We put two layers of it on the wire hoops over the rows.  Sometimes we use old greenhouse plastic instead, which is stiffer.  Greenhouse plastic handles better when frozen and/or wet, but we don’t have enough of it yet for all of the beds.

Watering is kind of a hassle, but we don’t have to water very often during the winter.  We have an outdoor spigot about 100 feet away from the hoophouse.  When there’s a sunny day above freezing, we haul a hose out to the spigot, hook it up, uncover the greens, and do the watering.    Then we unhook the hose, haul all the hose back into the hoophouse, and let the leaves dry off before covering the plants back up.  We try to water every 10 days or so.  The plants stay pretty moist with the two layers of row cover on.

With this arrangement, the limiting factor in growing greens becomes day length.  Right now, in early January, days are very short and everything is growing very slowly.  Greens grown for cut & come again use just don’t grow back very fast.  We’re planning to put up a second hoophouse during the 2011 growing season that is twice as long, so that we can have more greens and other items available throughout the fall & winter.

There are definite limits on what can be grown this way- notice that we are growing cold-tolerant leafy greens.  We had radishes and salad turnips in the beds earlier, which also did well.  Certainly nothing is in the beds that can’t handle a frost.

spinach bed

Spinach anyone?  It gets sweeter after every cold spell.  The sugars are a natural form of antifreeze.

Assorted kale

However, kale is what will really get you to live forever.

One, and only one, of our barn cats has figured out how to get inside.

cat

 

3 thoughts on “A walk in the greenhouse

  1. Mike B. says:

    Your hoop house is looking really great! Glad that you were able to get the great hay wall built before winter set in. The greens look yummy. Hope to be able to try some soon.

  2. Brian b says:

    woo woo go cousin! Piper and I have been getting our urban farm up and running. I’m growing 9 heirloom tomato varieties this year! planning on building a greenhouse in the backyard for next winter. I like the idea of not heating it and growing what you can. I’m definitely envious of the space you have – our yard pales in comparison. I also plan to tear up our front yard landscaping next year and switch to edible landscaping. its always nice to have more room to grow veggies! and if the economy goes sour and we lose our jobs, piper’s uncle farms 2000 acres just north of us. he has already offered us some land if we want it. who knows, we may have our own farm blog soon, too! the thought definitely crosses my mind more and more everyday – to leave behind the stress of the 9 to 5 day and do something that connects you closer to the roots of life. I can definitely appreciate that about what you guys are doing. well, I just wanted to say hi. hope all is well. Brian.

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