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2018 - The Farm

Well, I've been gone a few years from the board, and away from growing peppers, but looks like life is pushing me back that way again. 
 
I recently (last month) closed on a 25 acre farm in Central Illinois with some primo soil, and I'm going to give a commercial grow a test run. 
 
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From up on the roof, when I was doing some roof repairs on the outbuildings. Not much as far as the eye can see, but cornfields...
 
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Has a 4 stall garage and a horse stable on the property
 
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Probably do my grow room upstairs here after I insulate it
 
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Built some doors for the horse barn and patched the roof last month
 
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Anyway just dropped a cold grand on seeds from pepperlover and buckeye, going to hit a greenhouse supplier up for other materials next week.
 
Have plans to build a 30x72' greenhouse in the spring, and a ~1200 sq foot dedicated grow room. Too late really to help with this year's grow, but next year it'll save me a lot of hassle on hardening off. 
 
The greenhouse, I am going to do a piped infloor heat slab, with a horizontal loop geothermal system (I own a mini excavator) that is solar powered. So heating should be nice, uniform, not create heat / cold bubbles, and not dry out plants like forced air would. I build circuit boards in my day job, so I will also build a microcontroller to handle the automated watering system with soil moisture monitors and actuated plumbing valves on the water supply.
 
Also plan on building a "deep winter" greenhouse for year round production. Got blueprints I made from a couple of years back, those are walled on three sides with heavy duty insulation, with the glass wall side angled to face winter solstice, so you can grow in the deep freeze months of the north. In the summer, those get hot enough to use as a natural dehydrator, replace the tables with racks for bulk drying.
 
Only doing a half acre or so of peppers to start with this year, the balance will be put in corn. I can't manage more than that with the labor I have available. (When you start talking thousands of plants, simple tasks like up-potting grow in to hundreds or thousands of man hours...)
 
Going to hire some local kids to help, school has a good ag co-op program for high schoolers, they can get school credit working on local farms. Since the plant out and harvest doesn't conflict too badly with corn, shouldn't have a problem finding labor around here.
 
Anyway, that's the plans.
 
We'll see how it goes.. er.. grows.
 
 
Bryan from Michigan sent the Bonnie brand cayenne seeds. I hope you have better success germinating them than I have. [emoji16]


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Dogs got up before I did today. This is unfortunate as our black husky knows how to open doors. 
 
Yesterday I transplanted a bunch of peppers and tomatoes; about 200 in all.  These were laid out on the basement floor in nice neat rows waiting to get boxed up and taken to the farm today.
 
So our black husky, Kojak... he opens the door. I heard this just as I woke up, along with the patter of dog feet down the stairs (which sounds kind of like bowling balls rolling around, they're not exactly small dogs).
 
As I'm busy rubbing sleep from my eyes as I run down stairs, the white husky and black husky decide to investigate the organic fertilizer bucket. On the far side of the rows of plants.
 
Two huskies can make a hell of a mess quick.
 
When one steps IN a 4" container, it compresses the soil down until it's about half the volume it was before. (This is fatal to the plant inside, as a side effect.)
 
But when he then gets it stuck on his foot and shakes it off, when Dad yells "WHAT THE HELL ARE YOU DOING", spinning around kicking pots every which way trying to dislodge the one stuck on the furry husky foot... it just gets truly tragic.
 
So I lost about 20 Amish Paste transplants and a few MOA scotch bonnets this morning.
 
 
Walchit said:
Damn dogs!
 
Yeah this is the second "animal incident" of this year's grow. First was when a cat got down there with the dogs, walked over some sprouting trays. No big deal, they hadn't sprouted yet and I loosened /fluffed the compressed cells back up again in about 5 minutes.
 
This.. was something else entirely. This was a massacre.
 
You need one of those invisible fences that shocks them when they get too close. Works like a charm
 
Well that sucks.
I have to keep my big dumb Aussy/Border Collie in a kennel at night. It keeps him out of trouble.


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TrentL said:
Dogs got up before I did today. This is unfortunate as our black husky knows how to open doors. 
 
Yesterday I transplanted a bunch of peppers and tomatoes; about 200 in all.  These were laid out on the basement floor in nice neat rows waiting to get boxed up and taken to the farm today.
 
So our black husky, Kojak... he opens the door. I heard this just as I woke up, along with the patter of dog feet down the stairs (which sounds kind of like bowling balls rolling around, they're not exactly small dogs).
 
As I'm busy rubbing sleep from my eyes as I run down stairs, the white husky and black husky decide to investigate the organic fertilizer bucket. On the far side of the rows of plants.
 
Two huskies can make a hell of a mess quick.
 
When one steps IN a 4" container, it compresses the soil down until it's about half the volume it was before. (This is fatal to the plant inside, as a side effect.)
 
But when he then gets it stuck on his foot and shakes it off, when Dad yells "WHAT THE HELL ARE YOU DOING", spinning around kicking pots every which way trying to dislodge the one stuck on the furry husky foot... it just gets truly tragic.
 
So I lost about 20 Amish Paste transplants and a few MOA scotch bonnets this morning.
 
 
No man! That is so unbelievably F%$@ up - shit man, my condolences! My biggest issue is dogs at the farm running through the seedling beds. That is just so not cool!
 
 
Gotta love ya dogsters!
 
This is exactly what got me started with fencing the garden. They always want to help, right after I plant ;)
 
TrentL said:
 
Ooooooh that's a load of bull. I only got one envelope from Texas and it had nothing more than a PO box listed!
 
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I got one with no return address post marked New Jersey with Bonnie Cayennes in it. I will have to dig through PM's if they don't fess up here. :)
 
I got one from Bryan, in Michigan. He put his name on the envelope.
 
I got one from Andy, in Topeka. He put his on too.
 
Then Justin sent me his with no name lol. I know it's his because it was postmarked the next county over from me. :)
 
OK, you got me. The wifey sent it out. I just assumed she put our name on it.
 
Bhut you figured it out ;)  Not too many of us here in Tejas on these glogs... I know I sent P. Dreadie, Scotchbrain, and I think B.O.C. I just grabbed what I knew was isolated and that I had a lot of. I hope my plants make this year, cuz that was all of them..LOL
 
 
Given that that package bomber in Tejas is now FedExing stuff I removed that image with addresses in it. That's some crazy shit happening down south. Was just catching up on the latest news coming out of that area. Ugly business. Anonymous, random bombers are the lowest forms of life. Hope they find that bastard and shove the needle somewhere painful before pushing the plunger.
 
Anyway, back to the farm business.
 
Daddy's little helper doing some documentation;
 
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Baby Gabby grabbed Jami's phone out of her purse, unlocked it, and started taking pictures for the Glog. I think I might hire her. She's pretty bright for a 3 year old. :)
 
Here's one of her pictures;
 
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I moved the rest of the first batch of peppers out (all of the first 32 trays that survived are now out there).
 
And finally.. FINALLY.. I have confirmation of what I suspected.
 
The organic Mix N and the Super Organic Cocktail are working together harmoniously to grow MASSIVE PEPPER PLANTS.
 
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And 'maters too!
 
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I'll post up a "in memorium" sometime this week, showing you guys the "toll" it took on the first 19 failed experiments. I have a sad display of over 300 used pots and tags which will be set up to commemorate those who have fallen in the line of duty to develop this organic growing regimen. It's quite sad, but progress has a cost.
 
Meanwhile, the farm is definitely "getting greener."
 
I screwed up here - I actually added one TABLEspoon of pH down to a gallon of water at the farm, instead of one TEAspoon. AND I WATERED ALL OF THE PLANTS WITH IT SUNDAY.
 
I mixed up a 5 gallon bucket today and did the same stupid mistake out at the farm. But I have gotten in the habit now of testing pH of EVERY liquid that goes in to the plant pots. I was blown away when the 5 gallon bucket came back 3.35 pH! 
 
"OH SHIT."
 
On a hunch I scrambled over and grabbed one of the 1 gallon milk containers I used for watering Sunday which still had water in it. 
 
3.31 pH.
 
"OH SHIT OH SHIT OH SHIT."
 
I get up, go looking everything over.
 
These plants which were soil Mix M which were TOTALLY locked up, nutrient wise, suddenly had QUADRUPLED in size in the last two days. They had received *3 ounces* of 3.31 pH water, each!!!! 
 
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I'd written them off as "goners" because Mix M had proven to be straight up fatal to peppers. (Tomatoes, meanwhile, thrived in it)
 
So that was interesting. Something as strong as STRAIGHT FRIGGING VINEGAR was not only NOT lethal to the plants, but actually FIXED some which were horribly stalled out. That Mix M had crept up on pH over time and locked the nutrients out of the plants. Once I gave them what amounted to an "acid bath" they pulled out of it!
 
The hydro plants did kind of look rather sad, though, they didn't respond nearly as well to 3.31 pH water, but ... mistakes were made, and I doused them each a half of a cup of 5.81 pH today to flush the pots out.  They'll get a rest period before they get nutes again.
 
More organic Mix N with the Super Organic Cocktail I have been developing;
 
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A long view shot
 
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4 and 1/2 tables are filled up now which means I'm finally at the 30% mark on farm capacity. (And I'm STILL frigging waiting on 11 lights from GrowAce to show up.... but that's another rant for another day)
 
BTW I'm running the lights at the farm 24/7. No sign whatsoever of "plant fatigue" after a week and a half.
 
They ARE doubling or tripling in size each day though now, so I might have to cave in and buy some timers. Otherwise I might find myself overwhelmed with a jungle by the time May rolls around. :)
 
 
Devv said:
 
OK, you got me. The wifey sent it out. I just assumed she put our name on it.
 
Bhut you figured it out ;)  Not too many of us here in Tejas on these glogs... I know I sent P. Dreadie, Scotchbrain, and I think B.O.C. I just grabbed what I knew was isolated and that I had a lot of. I hope my plants make this year, cuz that was all of them..LOL
 
 
I'll be taking an inventory of stuff here pretty soon. I'll shoot you a list of leftover seeds pretty soon, see if there's anything on there you want for next year. The ones you guys sent (or, a select 16 of them) will be grown out in isolation at my house, down in the basement, bagged to keep the fans from "helping" and hand pollinated. I probably won't have ripe pods on them until November or so. Another 36 varieties (TBD) will be grown out at the farm in 10x10 isolation cages in larger qty. That'll be my seed crop for next year. If things go well I'll have some extras from that as well to kick back to folks who tossed in this year. (Along with an assortment of other goodies.. sauce, powder, etc). 
 
If it wasn't for you guys throwing in when you did, I wouldn't have been anywhere remotely CLOSE to my goal for plant-out. Y'all 'saved the farm' this year.
 
All of the field stuff is going to be packed together and I have bee hives coming in May to kick off the pollination festival, so I expect ALL of those to be crossed up to hell and gone. Not saving any seed out of those. Well, maybe a few, just out of sheer curiosity. :)
 
The isolation group; looks like 30 isolation cages to build. Had 6 varieties from two vendors not pop at all. 
 
7 Pot Primo Red
Aji Cereza
Aji Dulce
Aji Limo
Aleppo 
Bhut Jolokia Brown
Big Sun Habanero
Carolina Reaper
Cayenne Long Red
Criolla Sella 
Fresno
Giant Aconcagua
Jalapeno Biker Billy
Matay
MOA Scotch Bonnet
Moruga Butch T
Moruga x Reaper
Moruga Scorpion Red
NuMex Vaquero
Pimiento Cristal
Poblano (maybe, only had one of 144 sprout so far...)
Santa Fe Grande
Sugar Cane
Sweet Anaheim
Sweet Charlston
Sweet French Bell
Teken Dolmasi
Thai Orange
Turkish Cayenne
Yellow Fatalii
 
 
I also have some of justin's open pollenated ones throwing the occasional oddball, which is fine. As well as a single orange thai from Buckeye, which popped with dark purple leaves - stark contrast to the rest of the green ones. I will probably grow some of those in isolation just out of morbid curiosity to see what they bring; if it's tasty I'll see if I can cultivate it more. If it's not, it'll go in to the compost pile at the end of the year. :)
 
I'm a sucker for purple leaves, so seeing a "NuMex" Jalapeno pop with purple cotys sure raised my eyebrows.  :)
 
 
Here's that NuMex tray with the oddball. "one of these is not like the others"
 
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Really curious to see what that one produces. :)
 
 
At 2791 sprouts as of tonight.
 
Thinking about doing another run of tomatoes to fill out the field. 
 
 
 
Ok so ordered more stuff
 
1500 more maters ordered (three different organic heirloom slicing types - Rose, Moskvich, Nepal)
 
9000 super sweet corn seeds (3 different types, 3k each; Sweetness, SS2742, Xtra-Tender 20173; all F1 unfortunately.. )
 
3 types of melons (Eden's Gem organic melon, Chrimson Sweet watermelon, and Divergent organic melon)
 
The sweet corn is going to be my "barrier crop" in case another farmer decides to violate the organic production herbicide drift laws. Hopefully the corn will take some of the brunt out of the hit if 2,4-D or dicamba heads my way.
 
The melons are .. because hell, I want to grow some melons. :)
 
And the 'maters are for some variety, I figured it'd give something else to sell at farmers markets, and might be able to push some through local smaller restaurants and grocers.
 
 
 
I was really expecting the friends from other countries (including Chicago) to chime in about your guns and the gun crazy Americans.  Thank you for exercising your right!  I always feel safer in a store or restaurant when I see someone else carrying.
 
PodHopper said:
I was really expecting the friends from other countries (including Chicago) to chime in about your guns and the gun crazy Americans.  Thank you for exercising your right!  I always feel safer in a store or restaurant when I see someone else carrying.
 
Well if I'm doing everything right you wouldn't ever see the gun I carry. 
 
Or maybe I should phrase that "if you're doing everything right"? 
 
:)
 
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