vue - Winter Greenhouse Farming
Rick Steffen could be thought of as a small farmer for all seasons. That's because he grows a variety of crops, some unusual like his fruit orchards—inside a series of 55 greenhouses, some up to a half-acre in size, near Portland, Oregon. As a result, he has been able to extend the growing season, and bring earlier to the local Portland Farmers Market food (like cherries) that traditionally are still out of season here. Food Farmer Earth - a journey of wide discovery about our food http://www.youtube.com/ffe Subscribe to Food Farmer Earth-receive the latest videos http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=foodfarmerearth Visit Cooking Up a Story for more stories, recipes, photos, and complete written posts http://cookingupastory.com Follow us: Google+ https://plus.google.com/+foodfarmerearth/posts twitter http://twitter.com/cookingupastory Facebook http://www.facebook.com/cookingupastory Pinterest https://www.pinterest.com/foodfarmerearth/ Website RSS Feed http://cookingupastory.com/feed Cooking Up a Story channel on YouTube http://www.youtube.com/cookingupastory
Commentaires
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ammazing
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Good work. Great stuff
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Love it!
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thankyou what you done for us god bless every one
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enjoyed watching,... thank you.
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It really takes time, will, & dedication eh ☺
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Excellent rational for greenhouse gardening - thanks for doing this Rick!
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Im trying to write an essay for my agriculture degree on the absolute advantage of greenhouse farm in the dry arid and drought prone farms of sub saharan africa..could you help me by recommending channels that deal in greenhouse for the climatic conditions that i just described.. Thank you in advance..
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it is a good thing, I guess more then the supper market,
these people will never go hungry and can have large family
since feeding kids is not a problem. -
is this a USA thing or a worldwide thing having growing food.
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Liked your video. I saw you struggling with your door. Take a 90* piece of pipe, attach it to the frame of the door. The 90 will point out away from the door. Now attach a 6' lever bar to the 90. balance it so the heavy end hangs down. Now attach 2 large lawn mower wheels to the working end. So as you lift the lever, it applies the weight of the door to the wheels,and you are already facing the right direction for pushing the door open. hang a chain to connect while you have the door open and while your inside. You may also want to put down some 16" pavers to track the wheels on when it's muddy.
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Nice Vide
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I'd eat that!
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This is really interesting!
Thanks for sharing,
Scarlett -
thanks for the vid
this is the good side of youtube -
Beautiful radishes! Thanks for sharing this story.
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how do you get bees and humming birds in when it is still snowy outside?
How much do you spend on heating the greenhouses?
Don't you have to maintain 65 degrees or warmer in the greenhouse in the winter?
Lots of cloudy days with no sun, long winter nights with ice and snow. Sounds VERY expensive to operate. -
amazing, VERY impressive.
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"Wow, I did that", that's pride!
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thank you gentle man, it's nice
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