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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.
 
 
Wow this glog is impressive! Really love the guns too! Both are my passion so what not to love from a ton of peppers and guns crammed in the same place :) 

That Kalashnikov tree was glorious. 

I'll stay put for update :)
 
charlesquik said:
Wow this glog is impressive! Really love the guns too! Both are my passion so what not to love from a ton of peppers and guns crammed in the same place :) 

That Kalashnikov tree was glorious. 

I'll stay put for update :)
 
Update coming! Prepare for massive photo dump!
 
So, Friday I bottom watered all plants 9 gallons (!!!!) and left for 3 days. That's 9 gallons of water for 216 plants, per table.
 
Come back today, and they were nicely moist, and OMFG GROWING.
 
Sigh. I'm gonna run out of room before plant out. Not a bad problem to have, but not a particularly GOOD problem either!
 
JUNGLE O' AMISH PASTE
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JUNGLE O' HOT PEPPERS (these are mix N, from February's sprouts)
 
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to think, Friday before I left I interspersed small ones with big ones, to give them all a little room and alleviate crowding. 
 
And to think.. STILL HAVE AT LEAST 5 MORE WEEKS BEFORE PLANT OUT. CRIPES.
 
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Mix M; previously fatal to peppers, figured out how to make it work (just needed a couple very low pH waterings to get rid of lockout)
 
I would have to say "these are fully recovered from the brink of death"
 
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These are some of the peppers that I inadverantly overdosed calcium with a few weeks ago. They are recovered now as well. (I lost about 10% of them, fatal)
 
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Last weekends transplants, mostly annuums, with a few straggler chinense tossed in:
 
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The "death watch" table. Down to about 140 on the life support table now. Many greened up while I was gone, but many are still in full lockout. (Calcium overdose)
 
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Right 8 rows are new transplants, 72 of the 'death watch' plants have graduated back to the 'good tables'... or hit the boneyard.
 
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Hydroponic table - these got a full strength dose for the very first time, before I left. Seemed to tolerate it well.
 
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Last weekend's transplants (second batch). They are doing well, managed not to lock them out like I did with the batch *before* these.  (They got a 20% dilution of fish emulsion, 20% dilution of liquid bone meal, and 40% dilution of cal-mag at time of tranpslant, plus mycorrhizae treatment)
 
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Last wednesday's transplants. These are "Mix O" peppers, which has 100% more phosphorous (guano) in the soil mix than the Mix N plants have. So far so good.
 
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As far as "what was Trent off doing for 3 days instead of tending plants..."
 
Was getting my Walking Dead fix on. 
 
This is one of the rare times it's a blessing to have deep pockets. I work my ass off, take no breaks. 
 
But when it comes time to play, I play hard. :)
 
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(Met some others last year...)
 
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Well, maybe a bit of Supernatural too.
 
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Just happens I have Lucifer's eyes going on here, pure coincidence, I tell you...
 
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And notice.. this one isn't at the convention, but.. rather, after. Just a few dudes out in Chi-town together.  :)
 
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Good to see the farm plants kicking ass!
 
I know it's been a trip and all ;)
 
And I think neither car would do much more than spin the tires unless we "hit it" from a 55+ mph roll....LOL. But they sure are fun to flog ;)
 
Devv said:
Good to see the farm plants kicking ass!
 
I know it's been a trip and all ;)
 
And I think neither car would do much more than spin the tires unless we "hit it" from a 55+ mph roll....LOL. But they sure are fun to flog ;)
 
Since I went to a smaller pulley on the supercharger I can't even get them to stick on a roll on if the road is cold, even with DOT slicks on. On a prepped track I'm hoping it'll do better - but last fall, I was spinning the mickey thompson drag radials on the wheels when I launched (the tires would rotate around the wheels when it hooked, too much power for the bead to hold the tires in place). So I have to do locking wheels (the kind you can drive screws in to the tire beads) with inner tubes this year.
 
Anyway, yeah dude, if I roll on at 55 right now in, say 4th, a couple seconds later around 110-120mph when I hit 5500 RPM the rear end will suddenly cut loose on me, on a normal road. Kind of shit the pants moment, first time it happened. Now it's.. well, just kinda fun. :)
 
But yeah any gear, from a mellow roll on, once it hits that 5000+ rpm power band the wheels suddenly no longer stick to the road and it'll light them up. Traction control manages to keep it from spitting me in to the nearest cornfield (barely) each time but it happens so fast the computer has a hard time compensating for it, so it's still kinda sketchy. 
 
Never owned a car with this much juice. It's the only 4 wheeled vehicle I've ever driven that'll give my Kawasaki ZX14 drag bike a run for it's money though. Pretty sure how it's set up now the stang would beat the 14 in a quarter mile run - and that ZX14 does 0-100 mph in 4.1 seconds..
 
charlesquik said:
Oh! I'm a fan of supernatural! Must be nice to sit in that car :)

Also the amount of plants is overwhelming even for on my screen lol! 
 
Thanks man, yeah it is overwhelming. We got another 450 transplants done today, the last of the tables and lights set up. There's only 4 more tables (plus a partial) left to fill tomorrow then the farm is at capacity at 3,240 plants. (About 900 transplants left to go)
 
Then I start the next round of tomatoes. I'm REALLY worried about the Amish Paste, they are already a foot tall and growing exponentially and I still have (probably) five more weeks before plant out. I can NOT pot those up to 1 gal, they're gonna have to live in the 4" pots until it's time to go to the field, so they might end up getting watered 2x a day or some crazy stuff like that.
 
I was worried that I was gonna be too late starting the next tomatoes but with the cold / late spring and the rapid growth of the tomatoes in the organic mix, hell. I STILL might be starting this next round too early. The Amish paste hit > 12" tall a mere *3 weeks* after being first seeded. It's crazy. Stunning, even. That soil mix I honed in on is GOOD.
 
Genetikx said:
Helluva comeback here, Trent -- Good on ya!
 
Thanks man! It's steamrolling now, I just put out another call on Facebook for more temp workers.
 
Will have the construction crew working on isolation cages next week, do a little earthmoving and stuff.. gonna be fun again soon once I get to play in the dirt and build shit.
 
Chilidude said:
Cant you just top the longer chilis to make them do some side stems.
 
Yeah, probably will on some of them. I have some (Aji cereza) starting to bud up, they'll get a haircut before long. 
 
The chinense, I have the opposite problem, they are crowding each other. No risk of swamping the lights, like the Aji's and other plants are. It just seems each of them are trying to take up a couple square feet.
 
We have about 1,000 transplants to do today (896 spots on the tables free, if I pot up some tomatoes to 1 gal and can get them moved outside, could free up another 100 spots)  have a bunch of temp help showing up this morning. Hopefully get the rest of these knocked out today.
 
We got over 900 transplanted today. 7 workers on various tasks. 60.5 hours clocked today. Only 100 spots remaining on tables, out of 3260. Only 74 peppers still need transplanted, ran out of steam today and spent all my temp workers budget. Get 'em done tomorrow.

Three peppers show 2,4-d herbicide damage, all from same tray. Must have caught a whiff when I drove them out one foggy morning. That crap lifts off in a fog, and there's been a lot of spraying around here recently.

Working on ventilation tomorrow. With all 30 lights on upstairs temp raised to 91F upstairs while downstairs was 71. Going to install fans to circulate the upper and lower air.

Was nasty up there today. Spent 5 hours doing fertilizer on plants while the others worked downstairs. Lost a gallon of sweat, at least. Last three hours were spent mixing soil to keep up with the transplanters.

Had 4 transplanting (each 8-9 hours), wife helped with training, qa, fertilized new plants and placed them on tables. I fed the older plants, took 50 gallons of various cocktails of organic fertilizer to get them all, plus another 30 gallons on tables that just needed watered. Each table got a custom mix based on how the plants looked. I'm getting much better at reading what they need. They are growing just about perfect now!

The organic dry mix is working out real well. Most plants went over 2 weeks without a sip of anything more than water, and most didn't need much. Just very diluted fish emulsion and liquid bone meal, plus a small dose of Cal mag for those which had cupped leaves.

Tomatoes are proving challenging, they are growing SO fast in this potting soil mix I worked up. I have to give them even more and more calcium and magnesium as they get bigger. Also upped their phosphorous intake. Amazing difference between batch M soil and Batch N. Batch M didn't have any dry fert with phosphorous so I got a great visual comparison of P deficiency on both peppers and mater's. Without P they stall out and turn DARK green with a wild yellow fringe pattern on the leaves. Give em a dose of liquid bone meal and they take off again.

I have two new experiments running now (the last of the experiments) to dial in the best amount of seabird guano. Next year I need to get dry bone meal re-integrated, so there is a soil based calcium source. Want to reduce dependence on liquid Cal mag. Maybe find a mix where the dry bone meal doesn't ramp up pH to toxic levels next year.

Of the experiments, the new mix O looks very promising. Plants with that mix are doing fantastic without any liquid fertilizer so far which was the original goal I was hoping for. The plan is to only give them Cal mag as needed and watch for deficiency in P. I think that seabird guano is a miracle source for P nutes though. Stuff kicks ass, solidly.

Anyway photo update of the fully populated farm incoming tomorrow!
 
Sounds like you’re kicking some ass over there! I hear ya with the maters... they literally grow before your eyes. It’s ridiculous.

Looking forward to the photos.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
OK, here it goes. I tried to get a picture of everything.. over 3000 plants so might have missed a couple here and there.
 
 
Table 2 - these are survivors of cal mag lockout (on right side of table), 1.5 week ago Mix N transplants left side
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Table 3 - these are mix M (left) and mix N (right), along with some transplant overflow. Every other plant (gridded) is cal mag lockout survivors on Mix N.
 
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Table 1 - Amish Paste. Left are survivors of cal mag lockout, with a couple new experiments up front. Right (bigger plants) are 1.5 week old transplants in Mix N
 
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