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Hoop Houses for Early Crops - Press Release, 2002
Media advisory
issued Febrary 20, 2002, effective immediately.
For media inquiries, contact Caroline Booth Lara, Communications Specialist, (580)
224-6379.
email: cblara@noble.org
Hoop House Profits Begin with
Early-Bird Work
Horticulturist
Steve Upson says now is the time to get hoop houses ready for early crop production.
ARDMORE, Okla. There may still
be a chance of snow flying outside, but now is the time for gardeners who relish
the idea of getting an early crop to market to be readying their hoop houses
for spring planting.
Growers should have hoop houses in
place and be concentrating on winter maintenance. This would include repairing
torn plastic, checking irrigation/fertigation systems, and accumulating tools
and supplies such as fertilizer, plastic mulch and trellis materials such as
twine or wire, said Steve Upson, horticulturist at the Samuel Roberts Noble
Foundation, Inc. based in Ardmore, Okla.
Hoop house growers are also encouraged
before planting to get a standard soil test to determine fertilizer needs. The
tests are available from the Foundation for $10 or from any Oklahoma State University
and Texas A&M Cooperative Extension office. Growers should also be considering
use of row or crop covers to provide additional protection from freezing temperatures.
In addition, hoop house producers
should be looking for a source of transplants, if one has not already been located.
Seeds for transplants should be planted in late January to early February, depending
on the crop.
"To take full advantage of the
hoop house growing system, you need to use transplants, not seeds plants
that are already growing," said Upson. "The bottom line is earliness."
Hoop house success depends on establishing
transplants about two weeks prior to the earliest standard field planting date
for the same plants. The growth-enhancing conditions in the enclosed environment
result in warm-season crops, such as tomatoes and peppers, maturing about a
month earlier than those grown outdoors.
"And, you don't have any energy
cost output," Upson pointed out. "These are passive systems we're
dealing with. There is no electricity or propane. We're dealing with radiant
energy."
Besides tomatoes and peppers, hoop
house crops that have proven successful for Noble Foundation horticulturists
include colored bell peppers, strawberries, cucumbers and cut flowers. Crops
that can be profitable if two harvests are made in a season include summer squash,
muskmelons, eggplant, broccoli, green bell peppers and hot peppers.
Produce growers face a variety of
constraints, including government regulations, escalating production costs,
labor shortages, competition and unpredictable weather, Upson explained. "Hoop
houses can't solve most of the grower's problems, but they can reduce the risk
associated with inclement weather. It's a tool growers can use to better their
lot."
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Photos & Cutlines:
HH08 (295k jpeg)
Bell peppers produce well in hoop house environments.
Photo/Courtesy the Noble Foundation
HH07 (272k jpeg)
Solarization of beds helps control soil-borne disease in hoop houses.
Photo/Courtesy the Noble Foundation
HH06 (170k jpeg)
Fitting beds with plastic mulch in a hoop house.
Photo/Courtesy the Noble Foundation
HH05 (165k jpeg)
Adjustable end wall vents provide additional ventilation for hoop houses.
Photo/Courtesy the Noble Foundation
HH04 (302k jpeg)
Side vents can be rolled up. A shade cloth over the roof provides additional
cooling in hoop houses.
Photo/Courtesy the Noble Foundation
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Horticultural Information Index
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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