solar heating of high tunnels

32
Dallas Flynn Mary Flynn Thaddeus McCamant Frazee, Minnesota

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Presented by Northland Community & Technical College Specialty Crops Management Instructor Thaddeus McCamant and grower Dallas Flynn at the 2009 Minnesota Statewide High Tunnel Conference in Alexandria, MN on Dec. 2-3, 2009.

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Solar Heating of High Tunnels

Dallas FlynnMary Flynn

Thaddeus McCamantFrazee, Minnesota

Page 2: Solar Heating of High Tunnels

Ground is slow to warm

Cold soils inhibit plant growth and can cause nutrient deficiencies

Require supplemental heat during cold spells

Page 3: Solar Heating of High Tunnels

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Traditional Outside

The high tunnel warmed the air to 80F by 11:00 AM, but the air temperature dropped quickly at night. Nighttime lows in

tunnel equaled outside (empty tunnel).

Page 4: Solar Heating of High Tunnels

Heat the soil beneath the high tunnel

Air is heated in solar panels, pumped through tile two lines three feet below the soil surface.

Page 5: Solar Heating of High Tunnels
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Page 7: Solar Heating of High Tunnels

Fans push air from the soil through the solar panels back to tile lines

Fans are controlled by thermostats:

Fan starts when air in solar panel reaches 125F, stops when temperature in soil panel drops to 85F

Page 8: Solar Heating of High Tunnels

Two lines of T-tape per bed

“Dick’s Super Soil”◦ Decomposed peat,◦ pH 7.4, high CEC,

low potassium

Page 9: Solar Heating of High Tunnels

Cold soil can cause nutrient deficiencies, root diseases, reduced germination, poor growth

Heating the soil could cause the air temperature to be warmer at night

Page 10: Solar Heating of High Tunnels

Sun warms soil,

Soil emits infrared radiation, which heats air

Soil continues to emit IR

Infrared transparent Infrared trapping

plastic

Page 11: Solar Heating of High Tunnels

Warm soil would emit a large amount of infrared radiation, altering the nighttime temperature of the high tunnel

Page 12: Solar Heating of High Tunnels

Unheated Tunnel – April 10-11

Heated tunnel – April 10-11

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Heated Tunnel Outside

Page 13: Solar Heating of High Tunnels

Solar panels could not keep tunnel above freezing during coldest part of the winter◦ Cold winter -40 two times in January

Soil-heated tunnel was warmer than unheated tunnel◦ 10 degrees warmer (mean temperature)◦ 20 degrees warmer (overnight lows)

Soil temperature: 31.4 Overwintered spinach, kale in heated tunnel

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Temperature in heated tunnelBlue line = airBrown line = soil

Page 14: Solar Heating of High Tunnels

Soil rose above freezing on March 4 in heated tunnel Soil rose above 45 on March 15 Nighttime lows stayed above 45 on March 15 10-15 degrees warmer than unheated tunnel between

March 7 and April 15

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Heated Tunnel Traditional Tunnel

Soil temperature in raised bed: March-April

Page 15: Solar Heating of High Tunnels

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Heated

Outside

Page 16: Solar Heating of High Tunnels

Planted tomatoes and cucumbers on March 15

Tomatoes grew well, but cukeswere stunted

Started cutting spinach and kale first week of March

Radishes in early May

Page 17: Solar Heating of High Tunnels

• Started picking tomatoes on June 8

• Started selling tomatoes and cucumbers at local farmer’s markets on June 16

Page 18: Solar Heating of High Tunnels

High yields both in tomatoes and cucumbers

Quality was excellent at first

Page 19: Solar Heating of High Tunnels

Roll sides manually Put shade cloth on

first week of July Thermostatically

controlled exhaust fan at the peak of tunnel

Page 20: Solar Heating of High Tunnels

Core of tomatoes was hard Yellow shoulders Okay for processing, but not for fresh market Gave extra tomatoes at the market Assumed problem was weather related

Page 21: Solar Heating of High Tunnels

Gray color right inside the skin

Difficult to see without cutting tomato

Hard center core Not in heirloom

varieties Most likely due to

potassium deficiency

Page 22: Solar Heating of High Tunnels
Page 23: Solar Heating of High Tunnels

Began in late July Applied weekly foliar

potassium (KDL) and continued to early fall

Problem disappeared three weeks after starting the KDL sprays

Amended soil with greensand

Page 24: Solar Heating of High Tunnels

Green beans Radishes Kale Carrots Lettuce

Everything was good except onions

Page 25: Solar Heating of High Tunnels

Aphids in peppers, eggplants in August

Controlled with ladybugs

Poor fruit set in eggplants and peppers in spite of enormous plants

Will buy bumblebees early next year

Page 26: Solar Heating of High Tunnels
Page 27: Solar Heating of High Tunnels

Overwintered KaleOverwintered Spinach

Page 28: Solar Heating of High Tunnels
Page 29: Solar Heating of High Tunnels
Page 30: Solar Heating of High Tunnels

Sales increased 35% in 09

Tomatoes and cucumbers were 8 weeks earlier in heated tunnel than in unheated tunnel

Page 31: Solar Heating of High Tunnels

Good year to have a heated high tunnel

All crops were better in the heated tunnel than in unheated tunnel or outside garden

Good quality Few diseases Picked tomatoes

from June 8 to November 15

Page 32: Solar Heating of High Tunnels

Special thanks toMinnesota Department of AgricultureSustainable Agriculture Grants

Questions