Extending The Season
How to lengthen the growing season without a greenhouse, with plastic tunnels, including the tunnel cloche, the cold frame, how to use a cloche or frame, the big hitch.
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Bob harvests fresh greens from the tunnel cloche.
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All right, so don't have a $5,000 solar greenhouse. That
doesn't mean you can't grow your very own fresh winter
greens.
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by Susan Glaese, Bob Kornegay, and MOTHER's staff
Fall. A few lights frosts, some frantic scrambling to pick
everything salvageable from the garden, and then—
wham ! A hard freeze hits. All your plants die.
Time to call it quits... another gardening year is
finished.
Ahhh, but wouldn't it be nice if you could keep
your crops growing? If you could step outdoors in the
winter and harvest a few vegetables to sustain you through
those long months of preserved and purchased produce?
Well, the good news is that you can do just that.
The better news is that doing so won't cost you an arm and
a leg; we're not talking here about building a full-sized
solar greenhouse. And the best news is that—if you
hop to it—you can do it this very fall, in time to
have your own cold-weather harvest.
This article will tell you how to build MOTHER's gardeners'
two favorite low-cost, season-extending devices . . . how
to use and maintain them . . . and what crops to raise in
them.
THE TUNNEL CLOCHE
Collect some 2' pieces of rebar, 5' to 10' lengths of 1/2"
PVC pipe, one sheet of 6- to 8-mil clear plastic, and two
pieces of rope, and you've got all the ingredients for a
tunnel cloche. It's easy to build, portable—you can
even construct it right over a bed of already established
fall greens—and quite inexpensive (it'll cover 48
square feet for around $15).
And this simple crop saver really works! Last fall Bob
Kornegay tunnel-cloched a 20-square-foot bed of spinach
behind the low-cost permaculture homestead at MOTHER's
Eco-Village. The greens—which had been sown outdoors
in September—made it fine through the winter in our
4,200-degreeday climate . . . including the record-breaking
night when the mercury hit 16°F below zero! During
those cold months, they grew sparsely: just enough so Bob
could harvest fresh leaves for salads about every other
day. By the end of February, though, he was giving salad
leaves away. And come March, he had all that he could cook
up, eat raw, and freeze!
Fig. 1 shows the parts of a PVC tunnel cloche. To put one
together, all you have to do is drive two-foot lengths of
rebar (iron reinforcing rod) into the ground every three or
four feet on either side of the growing bed. Bend a PVC
hoop over each set of rebar pieces. (The exact length of
the PVC will depend on the width of your bed: five feet of
pipe for a two-foot-wide bed, eight feet for a three-foot
bed, nine for four, and ten for five.) Drape your plastic
on top and then secure it at the base to keep that cold
night air out. You can do this by simply weighting down the
sides and ends with rocks, or by bunching the ends together
with ropes and snugly securing those lines. Bob has found
that the only time he really needs to tie his cloches' ends
is during March, when our area receives strong spring
winds. Then he uses an adjustable slipknot—shown in
Fig. 2—to keep those cords tight.
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