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June 30th, 2011 2011 is the Chinese year of the rabbit, but in Durango, it must be the year of the aphid. Every farmer/gardener I’ve talked to has aphids this year. Adobe House Farm has their share of them too. The good news is that there are a lot of lady bugs in the garden as well. The average lady bug eats 6 aphids an hour which doesn’t seem like enough given that one aphid produces 70 offspring a week. When factoring in exponential growth along with their short life cycle, one aphid can end up producing 24 million aphids a month later. Makes me want to go out to the garden and squish as many as I can find right now!
Praying mantis and lacewings also eat aphids, but I haven’t seen these guys around yet. I don’t feel like the aphid population is out of control just yet thanks to those lady bugs. The beneficial bug population is always affected more from sprays because they don’t reproduce as quickly and all it takes is for one little aphid to escape the spray and we’d be infested with 24 million a month later! And aphids do a much better job at escaping sprays than their predators since they feed in the curled up sections of the undersides of leaves.
This gives me a wonderful opportunity to promote how I farm. The US uses a lot of systemic insecticides. These are chemicals that are taken up by the plant and spread throughout the plant tissue through the vascular system (as opposed to contact insecticides which just coat the surface of the plant). In other words, wash all you want, when you eat it, you will still injest it! For example, the US uses 4-5 million pounds of acephate a year for aphids. This lovely chemical, in small doses, is known to disrupt the navigation of songbirds. One of the most widely used insecticides worldwide is imidacloprid, and like most insecticides, it is highly toxic to honey bees. If you have the time and you are curious, one way to get to know these chemicals is to read the environmental protection agency’s pesticide fact sheet (it is 63 pages for the systemic insecticide dinotefuran, good luck with that one!).This information will hopefully help you feel good about eating the food from our farm – even if it does include an aphid or two! Hopefully the diversity of the farm will keep things in balance and if not, let’s hope they prefer the radishes over the tomatoes!
June 12th, 2011 Getting started farming is extremely difficult. Before anything else, you need a place to farm and, if you don’t have land in the family, that means a down payment and mortgage. Acreage is expensive close to cities so often farms end up several miles out of town. Next an investment in infrastructure is required, including irrigation and fencing. In Durango, with an average of only 90 frost-free days, hoop-houses and greenhouses are also needed to extend the growing season. In addition, Durango has clay soils with a very high pH (the pH is around 8 in most places). Most crops like lighter soils and a pH of around 6.5 so organic matter, such as composted manure, hay, and peat, need to be added to the soil. Tools such as drills, saws, roto-tillers, and shovels are a necessity. Vegetables need to be cleaned, packaged and kept cold until market requiring cleaning stations, salad spinners, and refrigeration. Every year an investment in plants, seed, trays, and potting soil is required. In addition there are fees for permits, organic certification, farmers market attendance, and insurance. No wonder there are not enough small, organic farms to support our local food economy.
The start up cost is one reason why the average age of the American farmer is 55. The good news is that there are a lot of young people that want to farm, and many of us are getting creative in order to make it possible. Adobe House Farm only exists because we are farming on a friend’s land. For us, starting a farm along with a mortgage and down payment would have been impossible. This type of arrangement is becoming more common nation wide and not only allows landless farmers to get started, but also allows for food production right in town. Another farmer at the Durango farmers market is growing in 3 different yards in town and is providing the landowners free produce (yourbackyardharvest.net). Landowners willing to allow landless farmers growing space are promoting a more sustainable form of agriculture and helping the next generation of farmers get started.
May 26th, 2011 Linda Illsley, local chef and owner of Cocina Linda, once asked me why I farm. I couldn’t come up with an immediate answer. There are a million ethical reasons to be a small-time, diverse farmer. The veggies at the grocery store are laden with systemic pesticides, fungicides, antibiotics, herbicides and fertilizers, the land they are grown on is eroded, low in fertility and biodiversity, the watershed is contaminated with nitrogen run-off and pesticides, the farm workers may not be fairly treated, and most of the money I spend at the grocery store disappears from the local economy.
Unfortunately, trying to make a living farming on a ¾ acre plot to avoid supporting conventional agriculture is not very practical. The hours are long, the work is backbreaking, the money is pocket change and you are tied to the land every singe day. We’ve invented machines to do these things, right? So why aren’t I using them? Do I have some sort of masochistic pre-combustion engine nostalgia? I don’t think so. There are very good reasons why sustainable farmers often keep things small and diverse, but they are complex. Machinery used in conventional agriculture is specialized, requiring farmers to grow one crop in order to make back their capital investment. Often only one crop cultivar can be grown, chosen for mechanized growing (for characteristics such as uniform ripening, the ability to withstand mechanical harvest and shipping, i.e. tough skin and no flavor). To put it simply, you have to grow in large monocultures to grow enough to make back the cost of production. Large monocultures require chemical inputs to withstand disease, insect and weed pressure. Plain and simple, it just doesn’t work to be pesticide-free while growing a single variety of a single crop.Unfortunately, the USDA organic standards allow for monoculture organic farming by allowing “naturally occurring” but toxic pesticides and insecticides such as copper, sulfur, neem, pyrethrum, Bt and many more. In my opinion, an organic farmer should be required to be highly diverse because farm diversity reduces disease and pest pressure mitigating the need for chemical inputs. Diverse farms act more like naturally occurring ecosystems. If pests or diseases were to escalate naturally, the loss of a few crops or cultivars in a given season would not cause the farmer to resort to chemicals to make ends meet. In my mind, organic farming, diversity and the idea of small must go together.
Still, these environmental and ethical reasons do not answer Linda’s question: why do I farm? I guess the best answer is that it is just in me. This is what I was born to do. Hard as small-scale, diverse farming is, I’m not happy doing anything else. Despite the difficulties, I just can’t help myself!
June 7th, 2009 As a government employee for the U.S. Department of Agriculture, I often find myself having to justify my job. Since the mid‐1940′s and the start of the green revolution, many believe that there has been no need for agricultural research or education. Advances in breeding, mechanization, fertilization, and pest control have brought food surpluses and kept prices low in the grocery stores for the last sixty years.
Lately, however, additional costs associated with the way we farm have come to light. We’ve contaminated our drinking water with the herbicide atrazine and damaged the ozone layer with the use of methyl bromide. By planting in monocultures, we’ve facilitated the evolution of pests that overcome the resistance we breed into crops and the chemicals we spray. Our soils are eroded and reduced in fertility from over‐tilling. Our fisheries are disrupted by the over‐application of fertilizers leading to nitrogen run‐off and algal blooms. Most importantly, we’ve increased our dependence on fossil fuels to manufacture fertilizers, power farm machinery, and to transport produce over long‐distances. Pollution, UV radiation, global warming, red tides, infertile land, and fossil‐fuel based wars are no doubt among the most serious problems facing society today, all of which are directly intertwined with the way we farm.
Despite all our technological advances, there is much to be gained from growing vegetables the old‐fashioned way. This year I am gardening in Maryland on the Sandy Spring Friends School campus. No doubt many parents are wondering why they are paying good money to send their child to a private school to learn about farming (among other things of course)! In the process of getting the garden started, however, I have found that I am not the only one with the desire to have a sustainable farm associated with the school. Thanks to the support of many in the community, the maintenance department, and a school chef with an enthusiasm for local fresh produce, the school garden is really growing (cheesy pun intended). It is my hope that the garden goes beyond supplementing the school cafeteria and will help facilitate thought on the source of our food and our impact as consumers. Students may better understand why the recent cut back in farm subsidies will benefit sustainable agriculture. There is no doubt that the application of sustainability to contemporary farming practices will remain a pertinent political issue for decades to come.
While planting seeds, spreading compost, or weeding, students have familiarized themselves with the living things, soils, and nutrient cycles in the garden. Students in the 7th and 8th grades have learned about the scientific method, hybrids, heirlooms and plant families by comparing seed germination rates. Their pea and lettuce seedlings from these experiments have already made their way to the garden. I’ll never forget the amazement in their faces when they realized how quickly their bean plants grew when compared to the other crops or the similarity of pepper, tomato and eggplant seeds, all from the same plant family. Through projects like these, students are beginning to learn just what goes into the production of healthy food.
Beyond the practical and educational reasons for having a school garden, we hope that students realize the pleasures that gardening can bring. Gardening connects us to the natural world. Gardeners are aware of overnight frosts or the next forecasted rain or bright green bathwater after walking through the tomato patch! Gardeners eat new things like beet greens, bok choy, kohlrabi, and swiss chard. They appreciate their food and finish every last bite, because they know how much work and resources went into the production of their meal. Ultimately, gardeners are out there year after year, only in part because of the environmental benefits of producing their own food, but largely because of the thrill of a new start in the spring and the joy in realizing the abundance that their hard work can bring.
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Contact AHF (970) 317-0309
linley@adobehousefarm.com
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