NNY Ag Development Program

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February 24, 2015 By karalynn

Use NYFB link to support NNYADP State funding request

On Monday, February 23, NY Farm Bureau issued a call for support for NNYADP in an emailing that included the following link for expressing your support for funding renewal for NNYADP.

http://capwiz.com/nyfb/issues/alert/?alertid=64154016&type=ST&show_alert=1

Filed Under: Uncategorized

February 12, 2015 By karalynn

Growing Greens in Winter in NNY

The Northern New York Agricultural Development Program has funded season-extension production and high tunnel research to help NNY growers maximize profitability year’round. NNY CCE Horticulture Specialist Amy Ivy shares this look at Growing Greens in Winter in NNY: How we do it. . .

The first step is to use a full-sized high tunnel. You might think that a smaller tunnel would be easier to keep warm but in fact, the opposite is true. The large volume of air in a high tunnel acts as a buffer, warming up quickly on a sunny day and cooling down more slowly than the outside air at night.

Growers do need to pull covers over their plants every night and on cloudy days, whenever the sun isn’t out. These layers vary between single and double layers of rowcover, the spunbound fabric home gardeners use outdoors, and sometimes a sheet of plastic on top of that on the really cold nights.

Only the most cold-hardy crops will get through the winter without additional heat, but spinach, kale and various mustard greens do fine. Lettuce and chard are less hardy but do well in all but the coldest, darkest months of December, January and early February. By mid-February the days become long enough to really make a difference to winter crops in a tunnel.

Some growers may supply a small amount of heat, either through tubing in the soil much like household radiant floor heat, or with short term heat sources during the coldest weather such as a wood stove or a propane heater.

Another way growers in Northern New York produce winter crops is to plant two sets of crops. One set is planted in late August for harvesting all fall into December. The second set is planted in late September or early October, but will not be harvested until mid- to late February when the days are longer and new growth begins. This second set of crops grows enough in the fall to become established, and is then covered with a couple of layers of rowcover and left alone for the deepest part of winter. This crop is held in a sort of dormant, cold storage until February. Then, once the days lengthen and the sun becomes stronger, they are uncovered on the sunny days to resume growth and can be harvested from late February through spring.

This process of growing throughout the winter is far more complicated than I can fully explain here, but this overview gives you an idea of how it’s done. An excellent resource on this topic is The Winter Harvest Handbook by Eliot Coleman.

Locally-grown winter greens are available at the Winter Farmers Market in Plattsburgh, the first and third Saturdays at the Plattsburgh City Gym. For more information about the market and products available visit http://www.plattsburghfarmersmarket.com/. If you do not live near the Plattsburgh area, ask your local Extension office for winter markets in your area.

Click here for more information on NNYADP horticulture research projects in Northern New York

Contact Amy Ivy at Cornell Cooperative Extension of Clinton County; 518-561-7450, adi2@cornell.edu.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

December 8, 2014 By karalynn

Use NNY-Grown Vegs for Winter Soups & Stews

Northern New York Agricultural Development Program Horticulture Committee advisor Amy Ivy with CCE Clinton County shares inspiration and tips for using NNY-grown vegetables to make winter soups and stews. Click here to learn more and find winter vegetable storage tips.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

April 24, 2014 By karalynn

ASB-Resistance Alfalfa Advancing

New alfalfa variety resists ravenous local pest. . .

Read the Cornell Chronicle story on NNYADP-funded research that has been developing alfalfa varieties able to withstand the destructive alfalfa snout beetle. Learn why this research can only be done in Northern New York.

Click here to read the latest research report results on the NNYADP-funded advanced breeding program

Click here for past research reports on NNYADP-funded advanced breeding program, see Crop Pests: Alfalfa Snout Beetle

Filed Under: News & Press Releases, Uncategorized

February 28, 2013 By karalynn

NNY Maple Research Noted in Elmira, Rochester

News of the research by Northern New York Maple Specialist Mike Farrell on New York’s untapped maple resources has reached Central and Western New York. Read the story by Jeff Murray of the Elmira Star-Gazette that also appeared in the February 27 edition of the Rochester Democrat and Chronicle.

Click here for more info on Northern New York maple research

 

 

Filed Under: News & Press Releases, Uncategorized

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