With consumer interest in locally raised foods steadily
growing, vegetable farmers are discovering they can add an important income
stream through high tunnels-a cost-effective means to extend production and
sales into the traditional off season. One Maryland farmer started using a high
tunnel to raise spinach and tomatoes from early spring through late fall, and
in the first three years earned an extra $32,000 at the farmers' market.
The farmer was one of 41 in the Mid-Atlantic who built high
tunnels from 2004-2007 as part of a SARE-funded project to
share knowledge about the structures and promote them as a primary tool of
season extension.
Now, in-depth information about high tunnels can be found
in SARE's new Season Extension Topic Room
- a one-stop collection of dozens of guidebooks, curricula, webinars, bulletins
and other how-to materials to help farmers, educators and researchers across
the country implement effective season extension strategies.
Information products in the Season Extension Topic Room
derive from SARE-funded research and education projects, and are organized
according to key topic areas: Overview; Types and Construction; Variety Trials and Selection;
Fertility Management; Pest Management; Water Management; Energy; and Marketing and Economics.
While the Season Extension Topic Room includes extensive information on high
tunnels (also known as hoop houses), some materials also address greenhouse and
nursery production, low tunnels and winter storage.
Examples Season Extension Topic Room features include:
- High Tunnel Specialty
Crop Production in Colorado. This April 2011 webinar, presented by
Colorado State University Extension and USDA Natural Resources
Conservation Service (NRCS), gives an introduction to high tunnels and
addresses design considerations, summer and winter production, economics,
and future research needs.
- Greenhouse Energy
Conservation Strategies and Alternative Fuels. This series of
bulletins, curriculum materials and other resources was developed by the
University of Wisconsin, and is intended for Cooperative Extension
educators, college instructors and high school vocational agricultural
teachers.
- Organic Control of White
Mold in High Tunnels. This Kentucky State University video
describes two organic practices for controlling white mold-solarization
and biofumigation.
- Expanding Winter Harvest and Sales for New England Vegetable Crops. This website, hosted by University of Massachusetts Extension, includes information on high tunnels and low tunnels, winter storage, and strategies for marketing produce in the winter.
Recognizing the role that high tunnels can play in
diversifying farmer income while meeting growing consumer demand for local
food, NRCS offers grants that help pay
for high tunnel construction. In 2010, its first year, the program led to the construction
of 2,400 structures in 43 states in 2010.
The Season Extension Topic Room
will be updated with new resources as they become available, so check back
often!
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