Experiments

Our colorful interplanting of lettuce and scallions

Several weeks ago, I was down in southern Maine for an appointment. While in the area, I decided to visit Frith Farm in Scarborough. Over the winter, I read a number of farming books, one of which was written by Daniel Mays, the farmer at Frith. The farm is beautiful and Daniel and his crew are implementing many cutting-edge practices there. One that has excited me for a number of years now is interplanting, also known as companion planting.

I first encountered this idea in the context of permaculture. Plants in wild places don’t grow separately from one another. Take a look at several square feet of a forest floor or wild meadow and you’ll count many different species growing amongst one another. Each species attracts different soil microbes, takes and leaves different nutrients in the soil, and attracts or deters different pests. Like humans, plants naturally form communities and partnerships that benefit each individual in various ways. Permaculture seeks to emulate nature in order to create sustainable and even regenerative ecosystems that benefit all residents, not just the human ones. One aspect of this is to interplant multiple species to intentionally benefit one another and fill different roles within the created ecosystem. 

Back to Frith Farm. At Frith, Daniel has been experimenting for several years with planting several species of traditional farm crops together in the same bed. He isn’t alone in this practice. There are many books out there describing other farms that have found this to be beneficial. In some cases, it can save on bed space, but the major benefits are to the health of the plants and soil. 

You may have noticed that here at Hope’s Edge, we’ve been doing some of our own experiments with interplanting. Some of our interplantings are straight up imitations of those Daniel describes in his book. Others are based on our own research for the prevention of specific crop problems. For example, we’ve planted alliums among our lettuces and leafy greens because onion family crops are known to deter leaf-loving pests like aphids and beetles. Several weeks ago, we had quite a lot of cucumber beetles bothering our squash, cucumber, and melon plants. At Frith, the cucumbers were trellised vertically and interplanted with nasturtium. Nasturtium (as well as other flowering plants and aromatic herbs) can deter pests, attract predatory insects, or act as a “trap crop” by holding greater appeal to insects like aphids than the crop at risk. We followed suit, trellising our cucumbers and planting nasturtium and parsley along both sides of the row. We also planted some calendula throughout our squash patch, since calendula (as a member of the marigold family) will serve a similar purpose in deterring pests. Planting flowers in the vegetable garden doesn’t just look pretty, it benefits the vegetables too!

An early photo of our 3 sisters interplanting
Chard and onions grow happily together

Another tool that has proven beneficial in saving our cucurbits from cucumber beetles is a smelly, but nutrient dense ferment Jason has made by steeping comfrey and stinging nettle in water for several weeks. The resulting “tea” is then diluted and sprayed on the leaves of at-risk plants or even used directly on the roots of seedlings as they are transplanted. This miracle spray has revived many a yellowing leaf and seems to have contributed to the departure of those pesky beetles! Next target: potato beetles!

A third experiment, related to the first, was begun before Tom left. Tom has used cover crops to build Hope’s Edge soil for many years. New research is showing that the benefits of cover cropping are multiplied when multiple species are planted together. A MOFGA article notes that four species are ideal, while farmers like Gabe Brown, author of Dirt to Soil, and Patrick Sullivan of Ananda Gardens in Vermont both assert that 8-10 species provide the most benefit. We decided to start small, using the seed we had, and planted oats, peas, clover, and daikon radish in our spring cover crop mix. We’ll do further cover crop planting as the season goes on, but so far our mix seems to be thriving and the soil coverage is keeping weeds at a minimum in those beds. This week we scythed down the oats before they set seed, producing lovely oatstraw mulch. We’ll report back on the next phase of our cover-cropping adventure as the experiment continues.

Our spring-planted cover crop mix of oats, daikon radish, crimson clover, and field peas

The next time you visit the farm, feel free to wander and take a look at some of these experiments in process. Regardless of their impact on our crops, they certainly make for a beautiful patchwork of color! 

~ Rachel

Greetings from Tom in Bottineau, North Dakota (written July 16th)

Tom near the Continental Divide in Glacier National Park

I’m sitting at a picnic table in a city park in Bottineau, North Dakota where I plan to spend the night. A 60 mile ride today with temperatures in the high 80s and a slight headwind has worn me out. So how did I get here from the snowy peaks of Glacier National Park? Here’s the story:

I was able to ride the Going-to-the-Sun-Road through Glacier without car traffic. The last five miles were taxing. I even walked some of it, but finally managed to reach the pass at 6,600 feet, then downhill to St. Mary Campground. The next morning, I began to ride to Brownsville, where I had hoped to visit a Plains Native museum. The road to Brownsville, however, turned out to be a 7 mile uphill ride and I found myself, after the previous day’s ride, unable to sustain a steady pace. In a state of frustration and defeat, I stuck my thumb out, hoping to get a ride.

After just 10 minutes, a refurbished bus pulled over. Nick, the driver, attached my bike to the back of the bus and helped me load my panniers into the bus. Off we rode, not to Brownsville, but to a magical campground called “Two Medicine.” Nick, his wife Amy, their two children, Zak (5) and Lysa (3), and their dog were another example of angels coming to my rescue.

The Smyth family

It turned out that Amy was interested in herbal medicine and was familiar with Deb Soule and Avena Botanicals. I stayed with the Smyths overnight at Two Medicine, where they had a small celebration in anticipation of the end of their year long bus journey through the west coast. They then drove to East Glacier where we parted ways. They continued back to Whitefish and I booked a room in a hostel.

The following day, I had booked a train journey from East Glacier to Minot, North Dakota. I had come to the conclusion that the plains – at least the miles of plains that lay in front of me – was not a journey I was very interested in taking. Starting in Minot offered me the ability to ride through some of these high plains without the monotony of long hot days of hay, corn, soybean, rape seed (canola) and wheat.

The train ride to Minot was supposed to be about 12 hours. I was scheduled to arrive in Minot around 10 in the evening. However, there was a freight train derailment in Williston, ND, which prevented our train from getting by. Most of the travelers on the train with me were traveling much further than Minot, so their plans were far more disrupted than mine were. We all had to sleep in the train where it was parked overnight. The following morning we were bussed to Minot, where my trip ended and where those traveling further boarded another train to take them to their intended destinations. The buses were met by another group of folks who were traveling west. Anyway, you can imagine the chaos, frustration, sleep deprivation, etc, etc…

In Minot, while loading my bike with my retrieved panniers, a young man approached me and asked, “Are you Tom from Hope’s Edge Farm?” He turned out to be the eldest son of Lisa Packard. I remembered him as a young kid. Lisa and her two sons volunteered at the farm years ago. He recognized me, but I would never have recognized him.

As a result of these above described events, I hadn’t pedaled for more than a few miles in almost four days. Now I’m on the road again.