August 2011

Why we prefer open-pollinated seeds

. . . Aug 29, 2011 | posted by Josephine

Country Gentleman corn features kernels in a random fashion and is called "shoepeg" cornLately I have been investigating what variety of open-pollinated corn to grow.  At first I could only find a few varieties, but as I dug deeper names like "Howling Mob" and "Six Shooter" started to appear.  My likely favorite is still "Country Gentleman", a corn whose kernels are not lined up neatly in rows but just thrown in willy-nilly.  

I am going to hazard a guess, gentle reader, that you have never had open-pollinated sweet corn.  I don't think I have either.  Open-pollinated corn is not as sweet and does not hold as well as modern hybrids - it has to be eaten right away.

So what does open-pollinated mean, anyway? 

Open-pollinated seeds are just regular seeds.  It's easiest to describe them by describing what they are not.  The converse are hybrid seeds.  Hybrid seeds are the offspring of two different strains or varieties of the same plant.

Most of what we eat is grown from hybrid seeds.  All our grocery store tomatoes, for instance.  Hybrids are not GMO's.  Hybrid seeds are produced using traditional plant breeding techniques (think Gregor Mendel).  Often, hybrids have increased vigor, making them more productive and therefore popular with commercial growers and home gardeners alike.

Often, consumers assume that unique or different colored and shaped eggplants, peppers, and other vegetables at the market must be heirlooms.  In fact, they are often hybrids.  Take the adorable fairy tale eggplant, for example.  Heirloom tomatoes have been the exception, but now so called "Heirloom Hybrids" have the look of heirlooms but are in fact hybrids.

For a seed-saver, hybrids have one main draw back - the second generation will have significant genetic variation.  You may get some plants with the desired traits of the parent, but it is highly unpredictable and you will get lots of unusable stuff.  Hybrids seeds must be bought from a seed company each year.

Why save seeds when you can just buy 'em?

In explaining why we at Tubby Creek Farm think open-pollinated seeds are important, I guess I had better start by explaining why seed saving is important.  

There is one argument that goes something like, "hybrids produce higher yielders therefor will feed more people, therefor hybrids will end global hunger", and there is another argument that goes "open-pollinated seeds put food production capacity in the hands of local communities and increases self-sufficiency, therefor the only way to ensure a global food supply is through open-pollinated seeds."  As with most idealogical arguments, the two sides are mostly talking past each other (here's a hint: it's not an argument about seeds, it's an argument about power).

It is my belief that, ultimately, food security stems from farmers having control over their seeds.  People eat every day, most of us a few times a day, so food is big business.  There is a lot of greed in this world, and there are a lot of people who are trying to wring was much money as possible out of the food system.  This makes me uncomfortable about the future of our food.  It makes me a little uncomfortable about handing over the ability to produce seeds - the stuff that all our lives depend on - to someone whose main interest is making money.  

OP seeds have other benefits.  By growing OP varieties, we are preserving genetic diversity and keeping regionally adapted varieties alive.  These varieties have biological value, as well as unique culinary attributes and a cultural history.

Farmers should have the capacity and the right to save their seed from year to year.  We shouldn't give up our freedom and independence just for the convenience of buying new seed every year.   

Sure, we may save money by saving seeds, but it takes time and effort.  Probably more time and effort than justifies the savings. We will never be seed independent because of the isolation requirements of certain types of crops.  Seeds from slef-pollinating plants like tomatoes?  No problem.  Seeds from wind pollinated plants like corn?  With acres of GM corn all around us?  I think not.

As for the corn, we are probably going to compromise and grow some hybrid sweet corn next year along with the open-pollinated stuff.  We know that if you dipped an ear of sweet corn in sugar it still wouldn't be too sweet for some!  If the OP stuff grows well and is well received by market and CSA customers, maybe we can wean ourselves off the hybrids.

Little Red Tractor

. . . Aug 25, 2011 | posted by randy
Russ and Gary working on our Farmall Cub

Ok, so there is a little something special about the Farmall Cub, it has a fan club.  Yes, the Farmall Cub was and still is a very popular little tractor.  There are folks all over that collect these little gems even in France. Then there are folks like us that pull them out of retirement and put them to work.  They are so popular that there is even a great bulletin board at farmallcub.com where I have been learning a lot about these particular tractors and folks share info, ideas and more.  It has been a great resource.

We have been looking for implements for the tractor and some of the folks from the bulletin board have been very helpful but none as much as Russ and his friend Gary.  On a hot August day Russ not only delivered a disk harrow we were buying but also fixed a fuel line issue, loaned us a plow, showed us how to hook it up and coached Jo on how to use the little tractor to do some serious plowing.

The fuel line was a rubber hose so Russ offered to change it over to a steel fuel line.  It really is much safer especially considering the line runs right by the exhaust.  Like all favors it ended up being more work than he expected, but he did a top notch job.  He really went above and beyond, it was a lengthy job with a couple of technical obstacles because of the tractors age.

We then hooked up the plow.  It’s an old moldboard plow he wanted us to try out.  We want to keep our plowing to a minimum but some of this ground has been pasture for years.  Jo climbed on board and out to the small field by the house we went.  These little tractors only have 8+ horsepower so the setup needs to be just right.  Russ gave Jo some pointers and for the first time we were turning the earth on our own farm.  Russ coached Jo along a bit more, helped her make some adjustments and in no time she was cutting the earth.

We were both very excited!

Next weekend we’re headed back to finish the plowing and many other jobs to get ready for our big open house October 1st and all the stuff needing prepped for fall planting wich starts Sep 15. WOW, that’s close, it just gets a little more serious every week, especially since right next to me sits a good sized box with a all our fall planting seeds.  

Till next time, Zbogom

SLEEP-OVER!

. . . Aug 24, 2011 | posted by Josephine

Jacob and Josephine get started on the rampThis past weekend Randy and I spent our first night in our will-be home.

Our friend Jacob graciously gave up his Sunday to follow us to Mississippi at 6 am and help us build a ramp to the trailer.  We are so grateful!  Randy and I would never have been able to finish the project in one day.  And a long and hot day it was!  Thankfully clouds kept it cool in the morning, but the afternoon sun was blazing.

Since we don't have electricity at the trailer yet, Jacob and I had to keep running back and forth from the big field every time we needed to cut a board.  That and a little bit of rain slowed us down a bit.  

By the time we finished, the sun was getting low.  I ran into town to claim the last of the hot food from Citgo and we ate dinner sitting on our porch.  The clouds cleared and the stars came out in the moonless sky.  It was blissfully dark.  We heard coyotes howling, surprisingly close, but everything sounds closer in the dark.

I still had to wrestle the mattresses in (they had been sprayed with Lysol and set out in the sun) and set up the bed in the dark.  Randy's chair battery was dead, and my battery was dead, too.

The finished rampRookie would not go into the trailer until she was convinced that we were spending the night!  She thought we were going to leave her there and go back to Memphis without her.  She kept running to the truck every time I went down the ramp.

We were only able to open half of the windows, since some had broken screens or didn't have hand cranks - so it was a bit hot in the trailer.  Of course no electricity so no fan.  That and the fact that I have never ever been more tired made me a little too miserable to bask in the glory of the first night in our new home.  The first home either of us have ever owned.  

The next morning we slept in until six.  I was surprised how well I slept.  We drank coffee looking out over fields hung with mist.  I am looking forward to many more mornings of waking up right there.

First CSA meeting fun and tasty!

. . . Aug 23, 2011 | posted by Josephine

On Saturday evening, fifteen or so friends, old and new, gathered at the Memphis Center for Independent Living to learn and talk about our Community Supported Agriculture concept.

It was really exciting for me and Randy to get to talk about the farm, what we've been doing, and what we have planned for our first year as new farmers.  Being part of a CSA means being at home in the kitchen, and the potluck spread demonstrated that would be no problem for the people at our first meeting.  The food was great!

I was surprised and excited to learn that many of our potential members at the meeting were new to CSA, I think only one person had been part of a CSA before.  

The feedback we got for our plan was positive, so we will have details about how you can sign up for our inaugural season soon!  If you want more information, check out the Community Supported Agriculture page under the Get Veggies tab.

We are equally excited to have our friends and members come visit the farm and see it first hand.  Mark your calendars, we are going to have a "farm warming" party on Saturday, October 1st!  The official event details have not been set yet, but we'll probably open our doors around 4 p.m. and people are welcome to stay and camp out.  It will most certainly involve a bonfire.  I hope you'll be able to make it!

Arrival of our home-sweet-home

. . . Aug 12, 2011 | posted by Josephine

Hopefully you have seen our pictures of the grand arrival of our mobile home.

Monday morning we took off work and headed out to the farm at our usual 4:00 am departure.  We drove to Byhalia and woke up Pat so that we could pay him for the trailer.  It was dark when we arrived but by the time he had walked me through the trailer to show me all the work he had done and give me lots of details about the electrical system that went in one ear and out the other, it was daylight.

Sorghum Sudan Grass and Cowpeas coming up in the big fieldSo we proceeded on to the farm and drove out of the big feild to find two wonderful surprises!  #1, Wayne bush-hogged the mares tail and the big field is wide open and beautiful, and #2 our cover crops were up!  

We spent a couple hours lobbing mares tail, cutting kudzu away from the power pole, taking more meaurements for the hand controls on the Cub, and taking the riding lawnmower out for a spin.

By then the sun was getting high and we started into town to eat lunch and wait for our trailer.

And wait we did.  We still had time after lunch to visit the grocery store (we were pleased to see watermelons from right there in Ashland!) and the dollar store.  The rain came in the afternoon, which cooled things off, and we did a little driving and exploring around.

Still no trailer.  

At around 5pm the trailer moving guys finally arrived at Pat's.  We hoped they would get it hitched up in time to move it that evening, but it was not in the cards.  Larry did drive out to see our homesite, and once he left we headed home.

We got home around 8:30 pm - which makes for a long day when the alarm goes off at 3:00.

We both ditched work on Tuesday and hit the road at 7:00.  We beat the movers and had time to run into down for some Citgo breakfast before they arrived shortly thereafter with our mobile home in tow.

the mobile home struggling around the tight corner onto Gray Academy RoadWith some manuevering the trailer was put in position and the guys started drilling the ground screws.  Larry had to hit the road to find blocks and was gone for what seemed like an eternity.  It was another long day of waiting.  This time I had wisely brought my crossword puzzle in anticipation.

It was 2:30 or so when they finished.  Once the crew moved on we took measurements for the ramp, and managed to register the trailer with the County Assessor, get documentation of our 911 address, and run that to the power company in Holly Springs to apply for electrical service!!

It took two long days, but now we have a home.  We both agreed that with the house and something coming up in the field, it felt a lot more "real" than it had only a couple weeks ago.