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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.
 
 
Trent, this is a hell of a glog. Interesting things happen to you on a daily basis. Don't know about the widow, but it is said to be deadly down here towards the south. Well, maybe it varies how much venom you receive really. So the best way to do is no to panic and monitor the symptoms?
 
tsurrie said:
Trent, this is a hell of a glog. Interesting things happen to you on a daily basis. Don't know about the widow, but it is said to be deadly down here towards the south. Well, maybe it varies how much venom you receive really. So the best way to do is no to panic and monitor the symptoms?
 
You could make a tv show out of TrentL chili growing, as he have already provided all the horror and excitement without even trying.
 
Sorry to hear about the spider bite man.. We have a lot of black widows by me. They love hiding in the wood piles outside and around the boxes in the garage. They pretty much keep to themselves but they still make me nervous so I need to spray often.
 
karoo said:
Why don't you run the lights during the night to keep up the temps and no lights during the day to keep it cool.

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When I got there yesterday morning it was 60F inside, insulation appeared dry. Kicked on the fans and lights about noon. Ended up going to the ER yesterday (more on that later), got home and fell asleep about 6 PM, woke up at 5 AM. Left the lights on all night long. Going to head out there soon; if there was a day to "switch it up" it would be today, since I ran them overnight last night.
 
Devv said:
Sorry about the spider bite, so far I haven't gotten hit with one here. I see them often enough. But being around here everything either sticks, scratches, stings, or bites, I'm very careful. Especially after 4 hits by my not friend the scorpion. The first time I called the hospital, being we had just moved here (30 years ago) and didn't know if they were deadly. It was more like a bee sting. Same time the second time. Not times 3 and 4 where it made me a little sick and I swelled up like crazy for days at the bite site.
 
I don't know if I posted it here on in my glog about my grow room wanting to go "petri". That moisture needs a way out. I'm going to put in some sort of vent before I start the next round.
 
Perhaps your issue warrants a consultation with a professional that can provide an outline of the measures you need to take to release the moisture? If it's raining inside, be careful the insulation doesn't fall from the water weight...
 
Isn't fun to discover buried goodies? ;)
 
Next year it shouldn't be a problem, since I'll only be sprouting indoors, then transplanting out to a greenhouse. Assuming the greenhouse is built, anyway, I won't have the problem with watering a ton of plants indoors in late April...  the water problem didn't start until the temps outside hit 70+F.  Plants should be OUT by now, but there are farmers all around me spraying pre-emergent 2,4-D on their bean fields. Passed two sprayers on the way to the farm yesterday. I'm not putting them outside until I have a sealed in cold frame building to set them in for hardening off.
 
tsurrie said:
Trent, this is a hell of a glog. Interesting things happen to you on a daily basis. Don't know about the widow, but it is said to be deadly down here towards the south. Well, maybe it varies how much venom you receive really. So the best way to do is no to panic and monitor the symptoms?
 
Exactly, widow bites are rarely fatal, and then, usually only to kids and old people. To a grown man, just an inconvenience; chills, cramps, sweats. Kept me up most of the night Fri-Sat but felt fine by noon Saturday. Fatigued and sore but otherwise no worse for wear. Only time you gotta go to the ER is if you start going tachycardic or have trouble breathing. Mine didn't progress nearly that far. 
 
Chilidude said:
 
You could make a tv show out of TrentL chili growing, as he have already provided all the horror and excitement without even trying.
 
No stranger to TV, did an episode for Adventure Sports Outdoors where I covered concealed carry and defensive pistol shooting.
 
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Edmick said:
Sorry to hear about the spider bite man.. We have a lot of black widows by me. They love hiding in the wood piles outside and around the boxes in the garage. They pretty much keep to themselves but they still make me nervous so I need to spray often.
 
Well, that bite ended up being not the highlight of my day. I ended up at the ER for a totally different reason later Saturday. About to write a little thing on that as soon as I get pictures in order :)
 
So I was unloading the excavator yesterday at the farm, reached down to grab one of the big chains, and caught a splinter from the trailer deck, RIGHT up and under my middle finger nail.
 
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I still had my tools upstairs in the grow room there at the farm so I grabbed a pair of pliers, managed to break the damn thing off under the nail. Got most of it out, but a 1/8" piece was still jammed way up in there.
 
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Tried to dig it out with a razor blade, only manged to get tiny little pieces.
 
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So I cut a hole in my nail and tried to push it out the other way with a needle. All that accomplished was seeing a lot of sparkly things in my vision and my gut flipped over on me. I did get through the nail with the needle, right on target, but it wouldn't move no matter how much I dug and pushed with that needle through the nail.
 
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Anyway, I had dirty hands when it went in there, and had used a bunch of non-sterile tools to try to dig it out (was going to clean it later), so figured at this point the best solution was to go to the ER to have a doc dig the damn thing out. I was out of ideas; my next step would have involved getting pliers to rip the nail completely off.
 
Doc did a digital anesthesia (WOW that needle digging around the base of the finger smarts), then went in with allegator pliers under the nail and pulled the thing out on the 2nd try.
 
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All better. Finger was still numb when I finally hit the sack early, about 6 or 6:30 PM. Woke up at 5:23 AM this morning.  Due to the plumbing break and the widow bite, Friday night I only got 2.5 hours of sleep, so I was pretty exhausted, I guess? 
 
11 hours of sleep I feel a lot better today. Ready to go back out to the farm and prep some more ground for building, as soon as the sun is the rest of the way up!
 
 
 
Chilidude said:
I have had various thing go under my nails few times and damn it hurts to dig it out.
 
Yeah I don't recommend cutting a hole in the nail and trying to push it out with a needle from the other end. I hit the limit of my pain threshold there, saw little sparkles in my vision.
 
There's something that flips in your stomach at a certain point and in your brain, a little voice sounds out "hey dumbass, what the hell are you doing to your body?"
 
The body's self defense mechanism to intrusions like that is to take away your vision, throw weakness at all your extremities, and make you want to throw up.
 
Which reminds me of a particular feat of self-mutilation. When I was on my honeymoon out in the Rockies, many years ago, my wife and I were staying at a hotel in Utah after a week and a half of mountain climbing. We had the news on, and they were covering this man who'd been rock climbing. A boulder shifted, and trapped his arm. He was alone out in the desert. After a week, he used a dull knife (which he'd dulled, trying to chip away rock), to cut off his own hand and wrist, to free himself. He broke the bone, set a tourniquet, cut off his own arm, then trekked back dozens of miles until coming across other hikers. 
 
He survived.
But I can't fathom what it'd feel like to cut off your own arm with a dulled pocket knife. I couldn't stomach digging in to my own fingernail for very long.
 
I hope I'm never in the situation where I have to cut my damn arm off! My pain threshold is plenty high, but cutting off your arm is some next level stuff. I guess after not eating for a week it would be a little easier
 
You can see above how the plants grow so rapidly they remain yellowish for a period of time, in coco, as Chilidude was mentioning earlier. 
 
Within a week or week and a half, they start filling out and greening up.
 
There does seem to be a direct correlation to phosphorous availability and growth rate; without cal mag to push out the potassium and free up exchange sites for phosphorous, plants lag. If you free it up they take off like crazy. If you overdo it with calcium, you delay them for week(s) while they try to recover from nute lockout.
 
It's very tricky to get that balance right when doing organic grows in coco.
 
 
 
Also, the organic soil is providing enough nutrients now on the older plants, I don't think I'm going to need to fertilize again before they go out to harden off. MAYBE one more time with fish emulsion. 
 
Tomatoes I'm having to give extra calmag to, they keep showing deficiencies in magnesium as they grow so rapidly.
 
There is also a trick to "when" to stop calmag addition on coco for peppers. Unlike tomatoes, which scream for more of it, peppers seem to know when enough is enough. At some point you flush the potassium out of exchange sites sufficiently that it's not really needed anymore in great quantities. This last fertilizer run I cut back to just under 2ml / gal from 5ml/gal and there's no more signs of magnesium deficiency. I may skip it entirely on the next fertilizer run of fish emulsion. I'm afraid if I use too much of it, for too long, that I'll completely flush potassium out of the coco, which would leave me in a bind, as I have nothing on hand to restore it. 
 
So, I can't help but think, with the spider bite incident and splinter under the nail.... That this could have all been avoided if you maybe, just maybe, wear some gloves? Just lookin out for you buddy. lol
 
TrentL said:
So I was unloading the excavator yesterday at the farm, reached down to grab one of the big chains, and caught a splinter from the trailer deck, RIGHT up and under my middle finger nail.
 
Oh dear God, I moaned as soon as I read this.  And couldn't look at the rest of the pictures.  You are one brave dude.  And I am such a wuss.  But, I am happy you are better.  You really do need to do a reality show.   :lol:
 
Edmick said:
So, I can't help but think, with the spider bite incident and splinter under the nail.... That this could have all been avoided if you maybe, just maybe, wear some gloves? Just lookin out for you buddy. lol
 

I'm in agreement. Of course learning the hard way...my only source it seems.... :drunk:
 
Man that looks like a jungle in there. They look good.
I think I would rather take the black widow bite over that record book splinter every day.


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That hiking incident you mentioned, they made a movie about it, I believe it’s called “127 Hours “.


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