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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.
 
 
Mine arrived today as well.
 
But really, I got free shipping, but it was $3.50, not $0.80, no cents symbol on the laptop keyboard.
 
I think you lost money on this. 
 
Orekoc said:
Mine arrived today as well.
 
But really, I got free shipping, but it was $3.50, not $0.80, no cents symbol on the laptop keyboard.
 
I think you lost money on this. 
 
Yup, shipping was a killer. But I wanted padded envelopes. Wasn't expecting the USPS to gouge me so bad on first class!
 
I have some 000 padded envelopes that, as long as I spread everything out evenly in the envelope, and make sure it isn't thicker than 1/4 inch, and is flexible, should mail for two stamps.  I have one on it's way to Sawyer, who should let me know if they charged him postage due for it.
 
I've found it better to figure out the rules, put the proper postage on them, then drop them in a mail box, rather than take them in to the PO.  I've even sent over seas without any issues.
 
You were charged package rates, not envelope rates. Not sure if the size of the envelope put you there or not.
 
Chilidude said:
Are you going to do any coco coir growing this time around since you might have plenty of those fertilizers left?
 
I may do a few passive hydro just as a benchmark. Figure I already got the nutrients, why not?
 
Everything, though, will be coco based. I'll be using dry organic ferts in my mix again and fish emulsion, liquid bone meal for wet fertilizer. For drip irrigation I'll be doing fish hydrolysate and one form of screened rock dust or another for soluble via mazzei injector.
 
Total coco grow will be 200x 15# pots (401 cu/ft, or 14.85 cubic yards), plus approx 8,000 4" pots (90 cubic feet, or 3.33 cubic yard), for a total of 490 cubic feet / 18.14 cubic yard.
 
So yeah, lots of coco getting used. :)
 
ETA: that doesn't include starting tray coco, not sure of the volume there, figure about 100 starter trays worth of mixed sizes (72 cell, and 36 deep cell inserts)
 
 
Ethansm said:
Got my package today! The penis pepper freebie cracked me up, definitely making it on my grow list this year
 
Right on! I *really* hope one of us gets it to grow true. In hindsight I should have cloned that damn plant so I could have run isolated indoor clones through the fall & early winter, spend a few years recursively inbreeding clones to see if I can get a stable phenotype. If I get any "good penis pods" off of any of mine, that's the plan. I'll clone that plant, and self pollinate subsequent generations back off that original penis parent, to see if I can stabilize the genetics at all. 
 
(That would also let me experiment with crossing it with Giant Aconcagua, Elephant Trunk, Aleppo, and other "big swingers" to see if I can get a Big Dick pepper.)
 
 
m1hagen said:
Thanks Trent, got my seeds yesterday and starting sprouting this morning.  The penis is planted!  Thanks for the extras!
 
Oh wow, dude that is an annuum, and this is still very early. That thing is going to be a monster by the time you plant it out. I'm not starting my penis seeds until early March. :)
 
TrentL said:
Unless I can't get 'em to grow any bigger. Then it'll be "Trent's Little Penis" as soon as another dude comes along with a bigger, badder variety.
 
 
Lol.

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