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Hoop House Seminar, 2002- Press Release, 2002
Media advisory
issued April 11, 2002, effective immediately.
For media inquiries, contact Caroline Booth Lara, Communications Specialist, (580)
224-6379.
email: cblara@noble.org
Note:
This event occurred in 2002. Please see our news releases
section for upcoming events.
Hoop houses allow for longer seasons, earlier harvests
Home and market gardeners alike benefit from the technology
ARDMORE, Okla. Hoop house mania is sweeping the country,
and Oklahoma is no exception, according to Noble Foundation horticulturist Steve Upson.
Upson will present a free public
short course about building and using hoop houses for crops from 6:30 to 9 p.m.
on Tuesday, April 23, in the Kruse Auditorium on the Noble Foundation campus
in Ardmore.
"People frequently ask me if
hoop houses are greenhouses they are not," said Upson. "Hoop
houses look similar to greenhouses, but they are best described as a garden
with a cover over it a cover that you can walk under."
One basic difference is that greenhouses
are climate controlled by natural gas or electricity, while hoop houses are
heated and cooled passively.
"With hoop houses, we use Mother
Nature to our advantage in cooling and heating," Upson explained. "The
poly-film cover traps the heat from the sun for warming, and vents are used
for cooling."
The main advantage hoop houses offer
to home or commercial gardeners is growing season extension, Upson added.
"If
you use a hoop house, it allows you to plant earlier you can be the first
in your neighborhood or at market to have fresh tomatoes," he said.
Hoop houses also offer protection
against stormy weather such as wind, driving rain and small hail, along with
reducing the incidence of foliar disease. But with the advantages come management
challenges that are unique to hoop houses.
"Hoop
houses are less expensive because the heating and cooling is passive, but because
of that they don?t provide the same level of climate control," Upson said. "The
level of management needed for climate control in a hoop house is greater than
that needed for a greenhouse, because you have to manually adjust things. Additionally,
conditions conducive to plant growth are also conducive to insect growth, which
is a factor to consider when thinking about hoop houses."
Among the topics to be covered are
hoop house characteristics, benefits, construction, bed preparation, temperature
management, water and nutrient management and crop growing tips. Participants
will also see the pros and cons of permanent versus moveable hoop houses and
growing on level ground versus in beds and containers.
"The seminar will be useful for people
with any level of hoop house expertise, from those who are just thinking about
using them to those who have been using them for years," Upson said. "There
will be handout information, refreshments and time for discussion."
A tour of the Foundation?s on-campus
Horticulture Center will precede the program. Attendees should meet at the Kruse
Auditorium at 6:30 p.m. and then will travel over to the hoop houses, weather
permitting.
Although the program is free, people
interested in attending should contact Melissa Castleman at the Foundation at
(580) 223-5810 to ensure enough handout materials are available.
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The Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation, headquartered in Ardmore,
Okla., is a non-profit organization conducting agricultural, forage biotechnological, and plant biology
research; providing grants to numerous non-profit charitable, educational and health organizations;
and assisting farmers and ranchers through educational and consultative agricultural programs.
To learn more, visit the Noble Foundation Web site at http://www.noble.org.
More news releases available at www.noble.org/Press_Release
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