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    season extension

    Explore "season extension" with insightful episodes like "Season Extension and Low Tunnels" and "Oceanside Farms: Small Plot Intensive Farming in Alaska" from podcasts like ""Hort Culture" and "Fresh Growth"" and more!

    Episodes (2)

    Season Extension and Low Tunnels

    Season Extension and Low Tunnels

    In this episode, we will be taking a closer look at options to help you extend your growing season both in the fall and in the spring.  Whether you're growing flowers, vegetables, herbs, or fruits, you'll want to know how to protect them from frost, pests, and diseases. We'll share some information on using  season extenders  such ground covers and low tunnels to create a cozy microclimate for your plants, and how to choose the best materials and methods for your garden and fields. 


    High Tunnel Overview

    Greenhouses, High Tunnels, & Low Tunnels


    Questions/Comments/Feedback/Suggestions for Topics: hortculturepodcast@l.uky.edu

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    Oceanside Farms: Small Plot Intensive Farming in Alaska

    Oceanside Farms: Small Plot Intensive Farming in Alaska

    In this episode, we talk with Don McNamara and Donna Rae Faulkner from Oceanside Farms in Homer Alaska. They raise a wide variety of vegetables, fruits, berries, and chickens, ducks and turkeys. They grow all of their produce and nine varieties of Alaska Certified Seed Potatoes without the use of synthetically based chemicals, pesticides, fungicides, or fertilizers.  The farm serves their local market.

    Don and Donna Rae practice Small Plot Intensive Farming (SPIN) and started out borrowing space in neighbor’s yard and selling their produce on surf boards places on saw horses. They now have land near a road for their farm stand and built 10 high tunnels with drip irrigation. They have an honesty box at the farm stand and also sell to the local market through the Alaska Food Hub.

    They have worked in Kodiak Island villages, which typically has expensive imported food available, to set up hydroponics and growing their own food. Donna Rae, “They’ve gone from in many cases no in community veg growing to producing quite a lot of food” some are old airport sites

    They are enthusiastic about Korean Natural Farming, creating their own videos for others to learn from. “We want to be soil farmers as much as plant farmers”, says Don.

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