Sunday, January 2, 2011

Reflections on 2010



The pictures above capture the Farmville Reality Project at three different points of time. There is about two months in between each shot. The first picture is just before the ground was worked prior to planting. I really should have taken a picture a couple weeks before this one was taken to show how ungarden like this site was. I had to spray the waist high weeds two times to knock them down enough to see where all the trash was to pick up. The boy and I spent close to two weeks cleaning things up between the too often spring rains. Even after disking, rototilling, shoveling, and finally raking the seedbeds, we continued to find odd items all season long. These items ranged from old beer cans to horseshoes.

The picture in the middle shows how much bare dirt there was between the various things growing. I bring this up for a couple reasons. One, by the end of the season, there wasn't much bare dirt to navigate around on while picking things. It always amazes me how much corn, melons and tomatoes grow in just a few months time. The second reason I bring this up is to somehow burn into my brain to leave more space between some of these things when planting. I tend to crowd things a bit too much when planting. I'm always trying to get the most from whatever inputs are being used, but I did learn a long time ago that crowding plants that don't want to be crowded doesn't turn out very well. The first time we grew watermelons commercially, we made this mistake. We did end up with roughly twice as many melons per acre than the traditional spacing would have yielded. The punchline was the biggest melon was only about twelve pounds, which for the variety we grew, was not very good. It was a seeded variety and at ten to twelve pounds, each melon had roughly two or three small bites in the middle before you had to work around the seeds. The next season we planted on a wider spacing and had twenty two to thirty pound melons, which sold much better than the prior year's crop. The one major spacing change I'll make next year will be for the heirloom tomatoes. Their plant type is much larger than some of the new hybrids and they need the extra room to spread their branches out. It looked like I crowded them to the point that their branches became too intertwined and did not allow enough sun to hit the plants. I think this reduced the number of blossoms and subsequently, the amount of tomatoes. It also allowed the stinkbugs to build massive subdivisions of stinkbug tract homes deep inside the canopy. This population explosion meant quite a bit of the tomatoes were damaged. These enemies of Farmville feed on the fruit and leave yellow spots on the surface of the fruit. Just under the skin, the yellow spots turn into white blotches that make the fruit taste bitter. If there's not too much damage, you can cut the bad parts out, but if there's a lot, then it's not worth it. For the sake of my mental health, I need to move on now. I can easily lose myself in the never-ending war on stinkbugs and spend every waking moment developing strategies to try and prevail over them.

The third picture above shows how it all comes together with enough sunshine and water. Although the three pictures were not taken from the exact same vantage point, with the old, dead oak tree in the background, you can hopefully get a good sense of perspective on how things went from a weed patch to having eight foot tall corn in just four months time.


The two pictures above have special significance in the context of reflecting back on 2010. The shot of the young melon plants with the morning sun bringing out the glow in the leaves was taken in early June. When this picture was taken, I had the good fortune to reunite with someone that shares this passion for growing a garden that feeds one's self in many ways and on many different levels. Beyond the countless meals that were amazing simply because the ingredients were freshly picked, the garden brought much more to the table. In our small circle of folks, it became a center of many conversations. These ranged from people asking when this or that might be ripe to planning future meals based on harvesting things we were literally planting seeds for at that moment. The picture of the sun going down behind the garden hopefully captures the simple calmness of finishing the day taking care of garden chores. On this evening, it was about watering the thirsty plants. We spent many evenings watching the sun set while doing simple chores like this. I could go on for pages describing the many things you see when you're out at sunset in a garden, but it still wouldn't scratch the surface. We saw everything from intricate spider webs getting the finishing touches to an owl setting up its perch in the dead oak tree. Actually the owl came along a bit past sunset that evening, but it still counts.

All in all, 2010 was an amazing year. The plan is keep the Farmville Reality Project going strong in 2011 and every year into the future. It's very likely the location will change but the concept will stay the same. I plan to continue posting blog updates in 2011, much the same as was done in 2010. The big wild card is that we will be embarking upon a new adventure that will become material for another blog. Then again, it might be the right time to roll everything together into one site with sections for each "adventure". Stay tuned and we'll see where it all takes us...

1 comment:

  1. Nice way to summarize an amazing year in many, many ways. Can't wait to see was the new year will bring.

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