During our 100 farms project, we learned that a lot of Minnesota high tunnels go unused throughout the fall and winter. Research with high tunnel farmers shows that those who use the "shoulder seasons" are the most profitable, and keeping living roots in the soil over the winter can improve soil health and moisture dynamics in tunnels. As your high tunnel crops wind down for the season, consider a few options for continuing to use your high tunnel throughout the year.
Option 1: Plant a winter crop
More and more growers are planting winter spinach or other winter hardy greens in unheated high tunnels. This can be a fairly low-labor crop, and a way to provide your customers with local greens at a time when fresh local food options are few and far between. If you're thinking of planting winter greens, you'll need to do so very soon.
Johnnys has a great chart
for helping growers decide when to plant various winter-hardy
vegetables in a high tunnel to allow for winter harvest. All of these
dates are in relation to the “Persephone period” where we have less than
10 hours of sunlight per day, at which point plants slow down
significantly. For example: Spinach should be planted 7-8 weeks before the Persephone period. Persephone periods in Minnesota
include:
- Rushford: November 7 - February 4
- St. Cloud: November 4 - February 6
- Duluth: November 2 - February 8
- Thief River Falls: October 31 - February 10
So, now is the time to plant your winter spinach!
Spinach (baby leaf) and baby leaf Brassicas can be planted just 5-6
weeks before the Persephone period, and full leaf spinach, baby kale,
and claytonia can be planted 7-8 weeks before.
What if you have
plants in the greenhouse until mid to late October? You can start your
winter crops early and transplant later. Often this doesn’t work out
well with tomatoes, but it can work well to follow a shorter season crop
like cucumbers with a winter spinach crop.
Late fall lettuce crop |
Option 2: Plant a cover crop
There are two big reasons to plant a cover crop in your high tunnel.
1. We often see tunnels with bone-dry soil in the spring. This can pose challenges for irrigation, as soil that becomes too dry can become hydrophobic, repelling water. Keeping living plants in your tunnel helps to retain soil moisture, while adding valuable organic matter to the soil and sustaining microbial communities.
2. Adding sufficient nitrogen to high tunnel crops is a challenge. Using too much compost or manure often results in sky-high phosphorus concentrations, and products that contain only nitrogen may also add salts to the soil. Legume cover crops (e.g. peas, beans, clovers, vetch) can add nitrogen from the atmosphere to your soil, and are an excellent way to balance your high tunnel soil fertility.
Extension is currently doing a participatory research project where farmers can receive free cover crop seed to try in a high tunnel. We'll send you free seed, and simply ask that you fill out a 5-minute survey after planting, and another one next fall to let us know how it went. This will help us to develop recommendations for the best species and methods for high tunnel cover crops in our region. Sign up and learn more here. This trial is being done in collaboration with the Grossman lab (UMN) and the Sideman lab (UNH).
Winter cover crop trials in St. Paul. Photo: Adria Fernandez |
Option 3: Use your high tunnel for curing
Author: Natalie Hoidal
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