Posts by megtobin

Feeding the Soil

I recently caught up with Glynwood’s CSA program manager, farmer Dave Llewellyn, to get the scoop on veggie growing practices here at the farm. His scientific approach to farming focuses on feeding the soil, which feeds the plants, which feed us. The health of a farm rests on the health of its soil, and understanding and improving soil fertility and micronutrient content is another focus of practices here on the farm.

Dave believes that feeding the microorganisms in the soil helps transfer energy to the plants. In addition to practicing sustainable farming techniques like cover cropping, crop rotation, and composting, he carefully tests the soil for 16 basic nutrients that are essential to plant health. Dave told me that in the years since he has been farming with a focus on soil fertility management, he has produced noticeably healthier crops with improved pest resistance, higher yield, and better flavor.

In order to better understand how to address deficiencies in micronutrient levels in the soil, Dave sends soil samples to three different labs in the spring and the fall. For each field’s sample, he takes four bits from different spots in that field, to gain a comprehensive understanding of its soil composition. Two independent labs and Cornell’s agricultural lab, AgroOne, test the soil using both strong and weak acid tests. Dave explained that the weak acid test subjects the soil to an acid that is only slightly stronger than water, and determines what nutrients are actually being made available to the plants in the short term. The strong acid tests what nutrients the soil potentially holds that are not immediately plant-available, but that might become so in the long term. Conducting both types of tests gives a broader picture of the nutrient content of the soil, and helps Dave determine how to address whatever deficiencies might be found.

Dave is a master brewer of nutrient-dense liquid plant foods, and he can often be found in the greenhouse mixing up appetizing brews like the one pictured above, which he then pumps through the drip irrigation system in a particular field, somewhat like feeding the plants through an IV system. This one’s fulvic acid, liquid fish, and molasses; a regular in the drip line IV system. Dave has also been known to brew micronized Calcium in stockings, and to inoculate his potting soil with mycorrhizal fungi.

One of Dave’s pumps for adding micro-nutrients to the drip line system.

Now that it’s officially summer, the 2011 season is in full swing on the farm here at Glynwood! Stay tuned for updates about what’s been going on around the farm- information about the day-to-day operations of the farm as they change throughout the season, as well as insight into the unique mechanics that contribute to the success of our unique farm.


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Greetings from the 2011 Growing Season!

There’s been a lot of experimentation going on around the Glynwood farm. The diversity of its operations mean that there is never a dull moment for Ken Kleinpeter, the director of Glynwood’s farm and facilities, or Dave Llewellyn, the manager of Glynwood’s CSA program, which doubled in size this season. In addition to opening up 5 acres of land for vegetable growing, the farmers of Glynwood have incorporated a stunning new barn into their livestock raising practices, and have received funding from two different USDA grants to respectively construct an enormous high tunnel for vegetable production and conduct extensive research on rotational grazing. This is all in addition to growing high quality, nutritious food for 100 households in the local community, and managing the grazing practices of hundreds of pastured goats, sheep, cattle, pigs, chickens, and laying hens, all while keeping the improvement of the fertility of the soil and the health of the surrounding environment as the foremost goal of stewarding these acres. These guys give new definition to the idea of a busy workweek!

Last season Ken wrote a great post about rotational grazing, and I was lucky enough to get a detailed visual explanation of the results of his thorough research.

Foreground: Ken pointing out the Multiflora Rosebushes. Background: One of Glynwood’s mobile chicken houses

The invasive and tenacious Multiflora Rosebush has made itself quite at home on the farmland of Glynwood. Sheep and cattle can’t eat the Multiflora Rose, which prevents much of the land from being cleared and used as pasture. Ken has been engaged in studying the best ways to sustainably and efficiently eradicate its presence so the land may be used for pasture or put into agricultural production. His research has primarily focused on grazing goats intensively on the same land. Ken explained that using typical rotational grazing practices, the goats would consume the leaves of the plant, but the plant would continue to thrive once the goats moved on. Ken has been studying what happens if the goats don’t move on, measuring the effects of intensively grazing the goats on the same plot of land. He found that after two entire seasons, eight goats were able to completely eradicate even the stumps of the bushes. Ken’s theory is that if the goats are put through the same parcel of land a sufficient number of times, the seed bank in the soil will be emptied- since the goats will eat the plants before they have the chance to mature, new seeds will not be added, and the goats will consume the existing seeds as they sprout, eventually emptying the seed bank. Then the land will be able to return to pasture and take part in the complex choreography of the farm.

An experimental section of land- the dead bushes where goats grazed intensively for two seasons


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