Cricket Song Farm

Cricket Song Farm
Showing posts with label cattle panels. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cattle panels. Show all posts

Thursday, April 2, 2015

Getting an Early Start


Living in the high desert mountains of the South-West, I have the challenge of cold nights throughout the entire summer.  To help my plants along in the spring I use many methods to  capture the day's heat and provide a little extra warmth during the night.  With frosts until the 25th of June, tender plants need to be covered nightly to prevent freezing.  
Below are drawings of several of the methods I have used, some have worked well for me, others not at all.  If you have beautiful, warm spring weather, there isn't any need to even read this post, but if you struggle with late frosts you may find this post helpful.  My husband just couldn't believe that in Roosevelt (where we currently live) "you just plant a tomato in the ground and it grows without any covering".  We didn't have to cover them nightly, and uncover each morning, for 2 months (June and July) and then again in mid August when the Fall Frosts hit like we have to do daily at the farm in Southern Utah.


Here is my experience using these methods. 
  
Recycled Milk jugs or 2 liter pop bottles:  cut the bottom out and save the lid.  push the jug a couple of inches into the ground so the wind will not blow it over. Put the lid on in the evenings and remove by 10:00 a.m. to prevent cooking the plant.  This method works fairly well if you do not have to leave them on for too long as the plants will get leggy.  One problem I found when you took off the opaque jug after the weather had warmed sufficiently, the plant would become very easily stressed and often times would sunburn.  I need the extra heat in the spring so the jugs are not removed during the day.  If your springs are mild, simply cover the plant with the lidded jug in the evenings, and remove the entire jug during the day.  Your plants will never be stressed by the sun.

Corrugated plastic sheeting or fiberglass:  I have used this method several times with always the same result.  The sheeting is tied into an arch with baling twine, set over the plants and the ends covered with a flake of hay stood on end for the night.  I always lost my crops to frost using this method.  I wonder if the addition of a blanket at night may have helped. 

Glass bell cloches:  These are expensive to buy so try using glass gallon jars if you can find them. Use a glass cutter to cut off the bottom.  You must vent or remove this cover during the day to prevent cooking the plants.  The glass intensifies the sun's rays.

Plastic storage bins:  These large bins (use the clear ones) can be purchased at your local discount store.  Drill 10 or more holes in the bottom of the bin. This will allow the hot air to escape.   Place up side down over your transplanted warm weather crops and place a large rock on top to prevent the wind from blowing them away.  This method works really well.  You must gradually expose the plants to direct sunlight when the need for protection from frost has passed. 

Wire cages covered with plastic:  Place tomato plants in cages several weeks before your last frost.  Cover the cage with plastic. Secure the top and sides closed with duct tape  Poke a few holes in the top to allow the hot air to escape.  I plant these side by side in large groups so the cages will help support each other.  I also cover them with blankets when hard frosts are expected.  As the season progresses I cut slits in the plastic as the plants grow.  This allows them to harden off and receive more sunlight.  Continue cutting away the plastic until it is no longer needed.  Plants can also be covered easily when the fall frosts arrive.  (At the farm that is August 28th)!




My preferred method for early spring protection of individual plants is using the large 5 gallon black pots trees come in.  Check at your local nursery they often have these for sale.  using a small circular saw cut off the bottom on the pot.
In the picture above I have covered cabbage plants.  Cabbage can withstand early frosts so I do not cover the pots with a plastic bag at night.  The boards have been placed over the top to help prevent the new transplants getting too much sun.  Warm crops will be planted down the center of the rows later in the season.
The large plastic pipes (pictured at the left of photo) are planted with broccoli and Brussels sprouts.  A glass window is placed over them to hold in the extra heat if needed.
Once the cole crops have a good start, the pots are and planted with tomatoes the first of June.  A plastic bag is placed over them around 4:00 each evening.  This traps in the heat and prevents the tomatoes from freezing.  The large pipes are moved and filled with tender plants of peppers, eggplant, cucumbers etc.  A large glass window is placed over the top.  Simply slide open a corner to vent for the day and slide back over at night. 


Cold Frames made from second hand glass doors are placed along the south fence for more heat absorption.  

Use a thick mil green house plastic when building extra large cold frames.  Using baling twine around the edge and stapling over the twine helped re-enforce the plastic edges from the wind.

For rows of warm weather crops this is the best method I have found!
Using Cattle Panels, folded in half length-wise and covered with plastic sheeting is used for starting cucumbers, beans, and other tender crops.  3 or 4 panels are laid end to end.  A large sheet of plastic is laid over the panels and covered with dirt to hold down the edges.  On one end gather the plastic in a way that will allow you to water the rows and also vent during the day.  In late July or early August the plastic and panels are removed to allow the vines to spread out.  I keep a large stash of old bed sheets near by in case of frost.


Here's a post from a few summers ago:

Friday, June 1, 2012


ice crystals--aren't they beautiful


Well, I  think this picture just about describes how my week has been.  Lots of covering and hoping the plants survive.  I wish I had a better camera because they really are beautiful.  The frost Wednesday morning took out several tomato plants from the cold-frame.  Yes, this is typical weather for us.  Just wait til I show you frost pictures in JULY and AUGUST!







                        Thursday morning (May 31) this is what I found out by the far west hydrant


                                                            yip, they are ICE- CICLES



                                      So  I put the boys to work making some more cold-frames.


                                                         Notice it is a 2 coat kind of day





         but it did eventually warm up to a one coat day (extra coat is hanging on the fence)


Hope this gives you a few idea.  If you have any others please let us know.












Thursday, April 3, 2014

GREEN HOUSE made from CATTLE PANELS

Over the past 23 years of raising market gardens and providing for a CSA we have used a lot of cattle panels.  We found that they wouldn't hold in our large steers if they really wanted to get out . And the rams would just beat them with their massive horns until there were holes big enough to get out of so they could join the ewes.  However, we still purchased quite a few panels for our farm.  They do keep the goats in and allow for feeding outside the fence so feed is not trampled and wasted.  Also a buck cannot climb over them if you stack them two high creating a sturdy 10 foot high fence.  But generally we use them through out the gardens.

  Three or more panels arched, tied together, staked with t-posts, and covered with plastic make a nice little green house.  I also use these arched panels over my lettuce beds covered with black shade cloth to extend my harvest.  One of the best uses I have found is to bend the panel lengthwise into a small arch and cover with plastic.  I use these tunnel covers placed end to end over all my tender vine crops, cucumbers, melons etc. this is the only way I can extend my season long enough to get a harvest.  Remove them when the weather has warmed sufficiently.   Put arched panels in an area sheltered from drying winds , growing vine crops or pole beans up them can save space in your garden and allow for easy harvest as the fruit hangs down inside the arch.


notice the panels arched on the right and left sides of this photo
this area in one of my gardens is protected from wind on 3 sides
pole beans were grown over the panels
a thick layer of straw was placed under one of the arches
it made a wonderful, cool spot for the kids to read
...........sadly the kids have all grown and left home

feeding the goats on the opposite side of the panel cuts down on feed waste




we have also used them for:

*wood racks on a trailer

*compost containers

*planting potatoes in straw
  (as a round container and also laid flat holding down the straw over a large block planting of potatoes)

* cut in half and folded, not arched the panels for a 4' high trellis
 (leave 4 feet open on end )
MAKE a salad garden underneath, cucumbers on one side, tomatoes on the other and lettuce, spinach, carrots and chard planted under the trellis.  Cover with plastic to give the vines more heat in the early spring.  The vines of the cucumbers shaded the soil to allow for lettuce harvesting all summer.  Only place one panel ( not side by side) so you can access the middle easily from both sides......place  several of these throughout your garden....

make a pasta sauce themed trellis with tomatoes, plant basil, parsley and other herbs underneath

summer squash plants do well grown up them and plant melons or cucumbers underneath

I plant these mini patches so the side of the frames are placed facing the east and west which allows the plants on the inside to get plenty of southern sun. 

*covered panels with plastic and duct tape for quick cold frame covers placed over a double row of hay or straw bales, make these as long as desired.  When it warms up during the summer, the bales are opened and spread as mulch along the plants.


LARGE GREEN HOUSE MADE WITH CATTLE PANELS

*we made a large 26' by 60' green house using 2 panels joined end to end with staples on a high center wooden beam, supported, by tall cedar posts. ( We used 10 sets of 2 panels to make it 60 feet long).  The panels were also supported and stapled in the center, with more wooden beams, on both sides and then stapled them to large cedar posts laid along the ground.  We covered it with fiberglass and boarded up the ends.  Using a good quality 3/4 plywood the wood was cut to the shape of the arches and the edge of the panel stapled to the plywood.  Framed in a door and made a screen door to fit.  We had this greenhouse for many years until one of our renters tore it down.  Sorry it was about 20 years ago, I don't have a photograph so I tried to do a sketch for you. 



During the winter my Angora Rabbits were moved into the greenhouse.  They helped heat the structure.  Heavy mil plastic was wrapped around the support beams and stretched across the top from side to side to form a green house with-in a green house.  A heat lamp was hung inside the inner green house and plants were grown all winter.  The rabbit droppings were spread through out the green house and tilled in at spring time.  We built this when only fiberglass was available.  I would not recommend using it because it did not hold up in the wind.  The corrugated plastic you can buy now at home improvement stores is my choice for green houses or sun rooms.



Nope, cattle panels are NOT just for COWS.
What have you used cattle panels for?

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Thursday, November 14, 2013

Cattle Panels make a sturdy Chicken Run/ Hoop Coop


As the growing season comes to an end, it is time to put projects around the farm at the top of the priority list.  One of the fall chores is putting the old hens in the freezer (keeping enough laying hens until the new chicks start laying), or selling them.   I like to order my chicks in the fall.   They will begin to lay around March or April, just in time for the new CSA season.  For over 30 years I have had beautiful chickens running around the yard regardless of where we lived.  Sometimes the coops and runs were simple structures, but years ago when we bought the farm we put in more permanent  and sturdy facilities.




This run has protected my hens for many years.  It is made from cattle panels arched and staked with T posts.  Chicken wire was placed over, and wired securely to the panels.  This keeps the hens in and the hawks, eagles, skunks, coyotes and dogs out.  If you have predators trying to dig under the panels line the edges with large flat rocks.  We graze animals alongside the run and wanted to be able to attach fencing to the T posts as a barrier to keep the grazing goats or sheep from climbing on the run.   



This is our fancy "RED NECK"  door latch




Our large hen house hotel is home to about 100 hens.  I wanted a larger run and so we used the cattle panels length wise, stabilizing them through the middle with 2x4's.  




   

I do not like this run as well.  It is not tall enough to stand up in, however the square footage is much  greater than arching the panels.  We also graze animals along side this run without any additional fencing.




These beautiful red comet hens have given me wonderful light brown eggs for the past 2 years.  I especially like this breed.  They are hardy, good layers ,fairly calm, but they are not as meaty as the other breeds of brown egg layers.  I usually sell these hens after a couple of years and put the heavier, dual purpose breeds in the freezer. 


from the outside of the coop we gather the eggs several times a day


straw in the bottom of the boxes help keep the eggs clean and unbroken


add the egg shells to the compost pile, sprinkle around the bottom of tomatoes
to help prevent blossom end rot
or crush them and feed them back to the hens to ensure
hard shells in future egg production

original art work of a rooster we had several years ago

Thanks for stopping by!

A couple of earlier post about my experiences and thoughts about raising chickens



Here are a few photos of our beautiful, organic, vegetable farm.

Our Booth at Market


Just picked radishes.


Turks Turban Squash


Heirloom Beets


One of the Green Houses at Cricket Song Farm


Check out all the information you can find about raising vegetables and animals on this blog by using the search box located in the right hand column.
Thanks so much for stopping by!




Thursday, April 4, 2013

Chicken Run made from Cattle Panels

I adore chickens

A painting of one of our  past roosters who ended up in the freezer because he was so mean and kept
 attacking my 3 year old daughter.  She requested that we put him in the "stew pot".
He was gorgeous, a game bird/aracauna cross.

they make me smile
and they give us the perfect food


 all wrapped up in colorful packaging
extra high in omega 3






Over the past (well dare I say 30 years) I have had chickens
usually they run free range, but as soon as the gardens go in, at the first of June
I confine them to the hen house hotel with the walk out terrace.
We have had many coops and runs--er hotels and walk out terraces-- over the years
we move often and have rebuilt a place for the girls every time.
This is my favorite run thus far.
It is simply 16 foot galvanized cattle panels, arched and staked,
 and covered with chicken wire


our fancy "RED NECK" door latch




We used the tall 6 foot posts as stakes because we rotate grazing animals and wanted to be able to attach fencing along the sides of the run.




This is another example of using the cattle panels for a run.  The roof panels are supported through the middle using 2x4's.  I do not like this as well.  It is more difficult to maneuver in the run because you cannot stand up.  However square footage is more for the same amount of panels used as compared with the arched run.  This method does not require any additional fencing when we are grazing animals next to it.
If you have a problem with predators line the outside of the run with large flat stones.

More of my thoughts or experiences about raising chickens:


We have also used the panels for mini green houses and have bent the panels in half the long way for low tunnels to extend the season for vegetable crops