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 International Falls, Minnesota

7/24/22

Took a motel room yesterday for the third night since starting this ride. I had multiple reasons for doing so. First, Deb has sent me a general delivery re-supply package to the post office here and it has not arrived, so I have to wait until Monday. Second, it rained all day so I spent the day doing laundry, mending, food shopping, and having a sit down breakfast at a coffee shop. Third, after three days averaging 80+ miles a day, I need a rest. Fourth, I’ve been wanting some time to put my thoughts to paper.

Pedaling a bike for four to six hours a day with breaks in between offers a lot of time to think. Some of these thoughts are will-o-the-wisp thoughts: there and gone again. Some are calculations of miles and time to the next destination. Many are simple observations of the landscape I’m riding through. Some take the experience of riding and turn it into a metaphor with deeper meaning. And of course, there is the on-again, off-again music in my head.

The evening of the 24th

Used this Sunday to ride without all the gear to Kabetogama VIsitor Center in Voyagers National Park – a 53 mile round trip from International Falls. A nice way to spend an “off” day.

The next morning, 7/25

Have been wanting to finish the conversation that I had started yesterday morning, but last night I fell asleep early. So, on my thoughts while pedaling:

Bicycling back in Washington state from the Cascades to the Idaho border involved crossing 5 high passes: Rainy (4855 ft), Washington (5477 ft), Loup Loup (4020 ft), Wauconda (4310 ft), and Sherman (5575 ft). The approach to each of these passes, as you might imagine, required a slow methodical steady pace – often in my lowest gear and with many, sometimes long, rest breaks. My average speed could be 6 mph or less. On the east side of each of these passes, the ride was all downhill. I could fly at 30+mph, an exhilarating ride. The same was true when riding through Glacier on the Going-to-the-Sun Road. 

My thoughts while on these rides would often be metaphorical. Riding a bike can be a lot like life: times of struggle and even pain, wishing this hill would just end. (Even times when you need help from outside of yourself, like when I stuck my thumb out and the Smyths picked me up.) These difficult parts of the ride are accompanied by those easy downhill stretches when the hard part is behind you and now you’re flying down a 6% grade. The accompanying music in my head while riding these passes was a Joan Armatrading song called “Bottom to the Top.” The refrain I would sing:

To the limit here we go
From the bottom to the top
Gonna tell all of my friends
Say I can run on any track

Some move more quickly
You know they can stand the pace
Others move slow
But they get there just the same
I know I want first and not just a pace
Keep on pushing babe

~ “Bottom to the Top” by Joan Armatrading

I have more thoughts along these lines, but they will have to wait for the next blog post.