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Mechanics of a Diversified Farm Field Day

October 4th, 2011 @ 8:53 am by Sally

Eric and Ann Franzenburg opened their farm up to 60 friends Sunday, September 18. They discussed how they have diversified to increase profitability and create a resilient farm. Read more about their operation in last winter’s newsletter here.

The rain kept people from the Regi obstacle course Eric had set up in the field, but didn’t keep people from learning about their high tunnel, greenhouses, machinery, and GAP certification.

Eric Nordschow from Windridge Implements brought some additional machinery to demonstrate some options available for specialty crop farmers.

Here are a few notes from the field day:

Eric and Ann have insulated their side by side greenhouses underground to hold in heat that is introduced subsoil through water lines. Read more about their system here. They use a corn boiler to provide heat to the greenhouse. When the system was installed, corn was selling for $3.50/bushel. This year it will likely sell for almost $7/bushel. Add the sweat equity is requires to fill the boiler daily, and Eric is not convinced that corn is the most efficient or cost-effective product to use in his system: “Industry is just starting to explore alternative energy options. Hopefully we will see some good innovations.” When Eric visited the manufacture of his boiler, Year-a-Round Corporation, in Mankato, MN, they were burning chipped tires in their heaters. He is interested in seeing more energy-dense crops pelletized for use in his corn boiler.

I sat in on the GAP discussion, so missed the machinery discussion. If you want to know more about farm machinery shown in these photos, you’ll have to ask Eric Franzenburg, Eric Nordschow from Windridge Implements, or any of the other folks shown in the pictures.

Ann discussed the process they went through last fall to become GAP (Good Agricultural Practices) certified. She summarized some pros and cons of the process:

Pros:

  • It helps you assess your food safety plan and procedures.
  • It formalizes training for employees and family.
  • It makes you think carefully about why you do what you do.
  • It holds you accountable for the products you introduce into the market.
  • It creates a simple way to track items in case of a recall.

Cons:

  • It is expensive: the farm has to pay for the certifier to make at least two farm visits a year including travel, and there are no certifiers in Iowa currently.
  • The process is currently set up to certify by crop. Ann and Eric only got certified for grape tomatoes. Certifiers need to see the actual harvest of each crop to be certified, and have a GAP plan for each. This is laborious and expensive.
  • The new USDA Food Safety Modernization Act requires farms to have written food safety plans. The Tester Amendment exempts farms with less than $500,000 in revenue from this requirement. However, some aggregators and wholesalers are requiring GAP certification for all producers who sell to them.
  • Requirement discrepancies between certifiers: USDA requirements differ from Primus requirements, a certifier currently working with some Iowa businesses. This is causing minor confusion and differences in food safety plans.

Ann and Eric are not going to re-certify next year because their markets don’t currently require GAP certification. Ann does feel she learned a lot of practical lessons during the process, and has an implementable food safety plan the farm will continue to utilize.

Different entities in Iowa are working to getting GAP requirements more in line with small producers. For instance, they are working on whole farm certification rather than a per crop certification. They are working to change the requirement to see each crop harvested to crop families (i.e. bunching greens, roots, etc.). They are also training people in Iowa to be GAP auditors, so farms won’t have to pay for an out of state certification visit. Some of these changes to improve the certification process may have already taken place.

Ann recommends all farms create and adopt a food safety plan. Here is her plan, as well some of her farm logs. She adapted these from a template she received from USDA.

Here is a link to blank templates:

Food Safety Plan Templates

Ann shared a few tips for recordkeeping components of the plan:

  • Don’t put it in the plan, unless you want to do it (if the plan says you will clean the bathroom daily, and you end up cleaning it twice a week, you will not be complying with your plan).
  • Only report what you’ve done. Don’t check off future activities (again with the bathroom: “I know I clean the bathroom every Wednesday, so I’ll go ahead and check all Wednesdays for October.”
  • If you use examples from the template, tweak them to conform to the realities of your farm.

The field day wrapped up with a wonderful local dinner. Ann and Eric’s daughter Ellen crafted some delicious peanut butter bars for dessert. She promised to share the recipe, so if you were there and want it, send me an email!

Field Day Report: Juan O’Sullivan’s Secrets to Successful Salsa

August 10th, 2011 @ 4:06 pm by Sally

On August 3 approximately 80 people visited Sean and Becki Sullivan’s business near Cumming to learn their secrets to expanding their love for making salsa into a profitable business. Sean started off asking people, “What’s your lightning in a bottle? What differentiates your product from all others out there?” For Juan O’Sullivans, one of their trademarks is their chile roaster, and the fresh waft of goodness it creates weekly at the Des Moines downtown farmer’s market. Plus, according to Sean, their product tastes different than any in the world.

Sean attempted to get into Hy-Vee for some time, and each time he tried, the gentleman told him he already had plenty of salsa. Finally, Hy-Vee’s buyer acquiesced, likely so Sean would stop “bothering” him. Sean showed up to the initial sales meeting with a jar of salsa and a bag of chips, and selling his salsa and getting it into Hy-Vee stores with that single meeting.

Juan O’Sullivan’s is now sold not to individual Hy-Vee stores, but through their distributor, and rests on shelves in over 35 Hy-Vee stores. Their salsa is also available in six Dahl’s outlets, online, and weekly at the Des Moines Farmer’s Market.

Sean applied for a Value-Added Producer’s Grant to help ramp up his business. This opportunity allowed him to fund scaling up personnel, infrastructure, and marketing, with the idea that the business will have stable enough legs to be viable without financial assistance once the grant period is over. Business sustainability looks promising for this central Iowa salsa business.

Kate Sand from USDA attended the field day to discuss opportunities the Value-Added Producer Grant provides to growers and grower cooperatives. Both planning and working capital grants are available, but the deadline to apply, August 29, is fast approaching. Sean utilized a grant writer to assist in preparing for the grant, and he recommended others without this skill set consider doing so; the process could be considered labor-intensive.

John Whitson of Sunrise Gardens and Sean led a tour of chile gardens on Sean and Becki’s property. Due to the extreme heat of July, including warm nights, the peppers were lacking in size and flowers. However, with the break in heat and cooler nights we have experienced since the event, those pepper plants are likely rejuvenated. Sean and John provided these tips for growing peppers:

10 Quick Pepper Gardening Tips From Juan’s

Planning: If you are starting plants from seed, buy the seed in January from reliable sources to avoid shortages and back orders. Plant Peppers 8 weeks and Tomatoes 6 weeks before target garden planting dates (Midwest Zone 5 is May 5-10 for Tomatoes and May 15-20 for Peppers).

Composting: All season long, put everything you can in the garden for fall or spring tilling; grass clippings, compost, fine wood chips etc… the more material you can get in the garden the better.

Soil Testing: Be sure to have your soil tested through your local Extension Service or Ag University. Knowledge is our best tool to success in the garden.

Patience: Don’t try to plant too early.  If you buy bigger, older, more expensive plants and get them in the garden a couple of weeks early, not only do you risk weather damage but even if everything goes well, you may harvest a pepper or a tomato only a few days earlier than plants planted under normal procedure.

Variety Choices: Know what you are going to do with your produce. What will you cook, where will you sell it or give it away and what does your target market want to use and eat? Choose varieties that make sense. Do you need peppers for sauce or salsa? Big difference.

Irrigation: Peppers especially do very well with consistent water and under conditions where the plants are not subject to fungus / virus infected soil splashing up on them with the rain. Using drip tape and plastic puts your plants in a controlled and more likely to be successful environment, especially in a dry year.

Spacing While Planting / Mapping: Space your plants with easy harvesting and growing environment in mind. Don’t try to put too many plants in your space, or you may pay a price with no/low production. Pepper plants need to breath, especially in a wet year. I recommend spacing plants over two plus feet apart in the row and double rows at least five plus feet apart.

Varmints: Varmints , especially rabbits, love to eat tender young pepper seedlings. Chicken wire at least two feet tall works best. Take the fence down and save it for next year, after the plants are a foot tall or so.

Newspaper and Straw: In a smaller non-irrigated environment, you may want to use newspaper and straw to keep weeds out, moisture in the soil and fungus infected soil from splashing on your plants. After your plants are a foot tall and really growing well, weed the garden, lay two sheets of newspaper everywhere and put a light layer of compost, straw, hay, mulch, really anything to hold the newspaper down. Wet the job with water to keep it in place until it rains. Till the newspaper and straw right in the soil in the fall or spring. This works!

Pick Early and Often: Peppers proliferate and rebloom if managed with early picking. Pick a few of the small peppers off of your plants while still immature to allow the plants to get bigger and framier, and promote new blooming on the plant. You may double your per plant production.

Juan grows chiles at his home, but these only provide a small portion of the peppers that go into the approximately 940 pounds of salsa bottled each week in their kitchen. Sean subcontracts with John Whitson and a handful of other growers and purchases all the peppers they are able to grow. He likes that chiles and garlic he purchases from other Iowa growers are spread across farms- it mitigates risk of crop failure. John also imports chiles from New Mexico to fill in supply gaps.

Becki and full-time employee Thomas Burkhead led a tour of Juan’s certified kitchen where their product is prepared and bottled. They overviewed basic design requirements to be able to certify a kitchen, including: washable surfaces, access to a bathroom, separate sink for handwashing, proper ventilation, and that the kitchen be able to be closed off from the rest of Sean and Becki’s home. Becki and Thomas would seal off the kitchen regardless of this regulation, because failure to do so leads to everything, including clothes in closets, smelling like salsa.

Sean and Becki have provided an ingredient list and their salsa-making process to regulators, and have the ingredient-list stated on their label. They measure the pH of each batch to ensure there is a level of acid present to create a shelf stable product. After Becki and Thomas chop, mix, and cook the product, they hot pack the items, so this acid level is crucial.

Linda Naeve from ISU Value-Added Extension, a sponsor for this field day, highlighted some of the services Value-Added Extension provides. She also overviewed MarketMaker, a tool that connects producers and buyers.

The conversation was wonderful and attendance great, so these things were on the agenda and didn’t get as much attention as planned: preparing value-added for products for sale in retail stores and branding. I was excited to participate and listen in on Sean’s creative branding exercise, so hopefully we can recreate this in a future event.

The event ended with some magnificent roasted green chile served on pork sandwiches, chips and sauces (of course), watermelon, green bean salad and carrot slaw. Sean conducted a roasted chile demonstration, proving these a worthy “lightning in a bottle.”

RAGBRAI Rolls through Templeton, Practical Farmers of Iowa gives away FREE local produce

July 27th, 2011 @ 4:53 pm by Luke

On Monday, over 500 riders detoured through the Practical Farmers of Iowa (PFI) tent in front of PFI members Art and Rose Behrens’s “Templeton Veterinary Clinic” in western Iowa. Fifty signed up for more info and will receive the first e-newsletter from PFI in the coming weeks.

Some photos below describe the fun; time spent listening to great folks from around the country that love Iowa – and fresh blueberries it turns out. $118.00 worth of the fruit was consumed in less than two hours. Riders downed two dixie cups at a time, their bodies demanding nutritious food.

“I didn’t know you could grow blueberries in Iowa!” exclaimed riders from as far away as Washington, D.C. Riders enjoyed the blueberries purchased from longtime Practical Farmers of Iowa member farmers Dean, Judy, and Mike Henry, grown at Berry Patch Farm near Nevada, IA.

Grape Tomatoes was the next most popular produce consumed, grown by Julie and Scott Wilbur of Wilbur’s Northside Market.

“You can eat green beans raw?” questioned another rider. Beans cared and harvested near Ames by Nature Road Farm’s Linda and Randy Naeve.

“Mmmmm carrots and summer squash! This is the food we are looking for on the route but all we see is State Fair food – deep fried or grilled on a stick,” exclaimed rider after rider throughout the afternoon. Gary Guthrie (Growing Harmony Farm, Nevada, IA) and Joe Monahan (Heavy Horses Farm, Boone, IA) supplied carrots, fresh, sweet, and crunchy.

Here is to a safe ride for everyone on the route this year, thanks for sharing your energy, and investing your money across the state each summer.

 

Note: Joe Monahan also sold his tasty cherry tomatoes to the enjoyment of riders.

Community to Ag Field Day

August 10th, 2010 @ 12:29 pm by Luke

Two weeks in a row, in two parts of the state, farmers and eaters came together to share and celebrate farms and an agriculture of support.


On July 31 PFI beginning farmers Kate Solko (ISU Student Organic Farm), Alice McGary and Nick Leete, (Mustard Seed Community Farm) opened their farm to 20 visitors outside of Ames, IA. On August 8th experienced horticulture farmers Jan Libbey and Tim Landgraf (PFI’s board president) hosted 75 guests to their farm’s 15th anniversary celebration of art, agriculture, and community. See photos of the events below.

Kate Solko manages the Iowa State University Student Organic Farm located on University property at the ISU Horticulture Research Station. Their market is a small CSA with student “work” shares and community member shares.

Beginning farmers Brian Hayward (right) and Greg Van den Berghe (left) share experiences – opportunities and concerns in horticulture.



***

On to stop 2: Mustard Seed Community Farm.



This small vegetable farm collaborative is experimenting with a non-heirarchical business with profit as only 1/3 of the goal. In addition to profit, the farm seeks to
build community among farmworkers and shareholders, practice non-violence, hospitality, land stewardship, and educate.
For more details on the mission follow this link: http://www.mustardseedfarm.org/?q=about


Alice McGary shares the challenge of running a farm with all volunteer labor.




Tours of the vegetable garden

Nicholas Leete in the tomatoes with their trellis system. This included a trial of different mulches (straw, black plastic, and clover).


***


One Step at a Time Gardens has grown fruits, vegetables, and pastured
poultry for 15 years near Kanawha, IA. The following are photos of the August 8th, 2010 celebration.

Bluegrass musical group “The Porchstompers” entertained the crowd in heat in excess of 100 degrees.


CSA shareholder from central Iowa led a group session on easy food preparation.


Neighbor and farm supporter leads duscussion on drying methods to preserve the harvest at home.


Beginning farmers tour and visit the farm. Tim explains struggles his farm has seen this year with gray leaf spotting in the hoophouse tomatoes.

Tim (center) directs children and adult visitors on a farm tour.

Discussions about soil, planting, rotations, and weather




Interns of the past 2 years at the farm – good laborers are vital to the success of the farm.

Wesselius Field Day

June 11th, 2010 @ 12:54 pm by Suzi


Field day season has officially arrived! Saturday Sally and I (along with Amber from the Energy Group) took the trip over to northwest Iowa and visited the Wesselius’ farm. What a beautiful day! They are doing many neat things on their farm and they gave us a glimpse into what they do.

The Wesseliuses garden approximately 2 acres and market their produce through a small CSA (Community Supported Agriculture) and farmers markets in Sioux Falls, Sioux City and Sioux Center. They also feed out a few Berkshire hogs and raise Cornish Cross chickens on pasture.

To start off the day, we were introduced to Amber from The Energy Group in Des Moines who did an energy audit on the farm’s walk-in coolers. She gave a presentation about what they did and how the Energy Group figured out how much insulation to add to the coolers and whether that investment would pay off in what period of time (If you are interested in this type of audit, contact your energy provider). She also brought along a thermography camera and showed the attendees places in the caulking and around the door where the cooler was leaking. She also talked about replacing seals, and other easy and inexpensive fixes that producers can do to increase their energy efficiency. Also, she briefly touched on rebate programs that MidAmerican Energy offers on energy saving steps people can take.

From there we went out to see their poultry operation. The Wesseliuses use a model called the Chicken Tractor, popularized by Joel Salatin. The chickens live in a pen that is moved twice daily to fresh pasture. At  approximately 7 weeks the chickens are processed and then sold at the 3 farmers markets that they vend at weekly.
On the farm they also have a few laying hens which also live in a moveable cage. The cage is moved once or twice daily to fresh pasture, and provide fresh eggs for the family.
We then chatted about their two and a half hoophouses. Two are already built and are being used, and a third hoophouse is being measured out and the beginning stages of construction are already started.

John had many thoughts about how to effectively use a hoophouse, but Janna’s #1 suggestion was to make sure that crop rotation is used. She also cautioned that there is only a few degrees of protection in a hoophouse, so make sure to grow cold hardy crops in them.
John and Janna also led us through their gardens, and there were many questions from those in attendance. I was quite impressed at how clean their fields were with so many different crops.

John prides himself in his earliness with potatoes to the market, and has about 1/2 an acre in different potato varieties! That is alot of storable starch!
As always, the field day provided many great opportunities for networking and learning from each other. We hope that you will be able to join PFI for a few field days during the summer! Check out our field day guide at http://www.practicalfarmers.org/events/field-days.html or give the office a call at 515-232-5661 and we will mail one out to you!

Blooming Wooly Acres

August 25th, 2009 @ 9:26 am by Suzi

A somewhat rainy Saturday, August 15th brought us to Loyd and Renee Johnson’s place outside of Nashua for a field day. It never really rained, but the wind and temperature kept the large crowds away. Ultimately we had a group of about 20, but those who came were very interested and had alot of questions to ask.

The field day started off with Loyd giving an introduction of his farm and talking through some of the struggles and successes that he has had.
Loyd currently has approximately 4 acres in production, but his goal is to have 10 acres under production. They own 40 acres with the farmstead, and the remainder of the land not in vegetables is rented out to a neighbor for row crop production. There is currently one greenhouse and the goal of another 6-8 to be built.

Loyd puts a large emphasis on collaboration and supply pooling. He talked of the efforts of the Northern Iowa Food and Farm Partnership, which is working to bring growers together to have a larger supply for grocery stores in the area. There have been some struggles with bringing the group together, but things seem to be being worked out.

Mark Gleason from the Department of Plant Pathology at Iowa State University was on hand to talk about some disease possibilities in Sweet Bell Peppers. He gathered a few examples from the field, and talked about some ways that people can avoid those diseases.
Loyd then showed us around his farm, and talked about some of the crops that he works with. He plants many Sweet Bell Pepper plants every year, and this year planted approximately 7,000 plants. He is also doing a disease trial with ISU in his bell peppers. Loyd talked about how it was difficult to keep weeds controlled, and also the leaning and bending involved in harvesting peppers was “hard work”. It may be hard work, but his pepper patch looked beautiful, and he had great looking fruit growing!
The next stop on the farm tour was the Broccoli patch. Loyd was frustrated that after you harvest the crown, the plant isnt going to produce another crown. To solve this problem, Loyd began harvesting side shoots and bagging them for sale. A great solution to a problem!
We also looked at Loyd’s Greenhouse where he is producing Tomatoes. He said that the week before we were there, he picked 600 lbs of slicing tomatoes, and 600 lbs of Romas. Thats alot of tomato! The plants inside the greenhouse were climbing towards the roof, and looked wonderful!
And of course they were good to eat!
And always a fun part of field days is getting to see the farm pets. These two kids were really enjoying Loyd and Renee’s kitty, and the cat was enjoying it too!

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