This provides us an eyeball on
some of the simple things that can be done out in face of dry conditions. The advent of farm machinery made a range of
strategies possible and not yet enough time to sort them all out. Thus work like this provides real guidance outside
of traditional sources.
The simple idea of rolling the
top of the soil is one such. Spacing
trees better is another obvious move that should have long since been adopted.
We need to rethink grading so as
to capture the added value of water stressed food in general. It is obvious that a massive root system will
produce better quality and that a simple ABC grading system will capture
that. There is a really good reason why the
wild cousins always taste better. It is
also core to organic crops.
Farming without water
Guest Post By Brie Mazurek
Cross-posted from The Center
for Urban Education about Sustainable Agriculture
###
Farmer David Little of Little Organic Farm grows potatoes without
irrigation in a dry part of California.
This week, as the nation grapples with the worst drought in decades,
the USDA
added more than 218 counties to its list of natural disaster areas,
bringing the total to 1,584 — more than half of all U.S. counties. Farmers in the
Midwest and Great Plains have been the hardest hit, but the drought is a
growing reality for farmers across the country, including California. While the secretary of agriculture won’t
comment on the drought’s link to climate change, it’s at the forefront
of everyone’s mind, and as global warming unfolds, knowledge of dryland
agriculture will become increasingly valuable.
David Little of Little
Organic Farm has had to adapt to water scarcity in California’s Marin
and Sonoma counties, where most farmers and ranchers rely on their own
reservoirs, wells, and springs, making them particularly vulnerable in years
with light rainfall. Through a technique known as dry farming,
Little’s potatoes and squash receive no irrigation, getting all of their water
from the soil.
Mediterranean grape and olive growers have dry-farmed for thousands of
years. The practice was common on the California
coast from the 1800s through the early 20th century, but it became a lost art
during the mid-century. Today, it is experiencing a modest resurgence along the
coast, where temperate, foggy summers offer ideal conditions for dry farming
grapes, tomatoes, potatoes, cucumbers, melons, grains, and some tree fruit.
“In the beginning, I searched out people who were known dry-farmers,”
says Little, who started farming in 1995. “It seemed like no one had done it
for 30 years or so.”
To find mentors, Little made the rounds at local bars, asking older
farmers about their experiences. “They were very humble,” he says. “They told
stories about how things were done, and I would pick up tidbits.” After years
of trial and error, he now considers himself an expert.
To help people understand how dry farming works, Little often evokes
the image of a wet sponge covered with cellophane. Following winter and spring
rains, the farmer will cultivated and break up the soil to create a moist
“sponge.” Then the top layer is compacted using a roller to form a dry crust
(the “cellophane”). This three- to four-inch layer, sometimes referred to as
a dustmulch, seals in water and prevents evaporation.
“It’s very challenging because you have to hold the moisture for long
periods of time, and you don’t know how different crops are going to react in
different areas,” Little says. Much of the land he farms is rolling hills and
valleys, which present additional challenges because they hold and move
groundwater differently than flat land.
Deprived of any surface irrigation, dry-farmed plants develop deep,
robust roots to seek out and soak up soil moisture. Because they absorb less
water than their conventionally irrigated counterparts, dry-farmed crops are
characteristically smaller but more nutrient-dense and flavorful.
“When you water a tree, it
dilutes the flavor a lot in some cases,” says Stan Devoto, who dry-farms more
than 50 varieties of heirloom apples at Devoto Gardens. “Instead of
having a really hard, crisp, firm texture, your apple will be two or three
times the size of a dry-farmed apple, and you just don’t get the flavor.”
Devoto has been dry-farming in Sebastopol,
Calif., since the 1970s. “We had
no choice,” he says. “There’s just not enough water. Pretty much all the
orchards are dry-farmed, with the exception of the orchards where trees are
planted super close or use dwarf rootstock.”
Having wide orchard rows, which allow tree roots to spread out, is
essential for dry-farming apples, as is thinning (removing much of the fruit
early in its development) to ensure that each apple gets as much water as
possible. In drier years (like this one), Devoto must work extra hard to
control weeds, which drink water needed by thirsty trees. As the summer
progresses, the ground slowly dries out, stressing out the fruits as they
ripen, which helps the sugars become more concentrated.
But while water conservation and intensely flavorful crops are the
clear benefits of dry farming, the major tradeoff is yield. Devoto says that
apple growers in West Sonoma County, which was once home to a booming apple
industry, only get about 12 tons per acre, compared to 30 to 40 tons produced
by large apple farms in the state’s Central Valley.
Similarly, Joe Schirmer of Dirty Girl Produce says
that his famous dry-farmed
Early Girl tomatoes sometimes yield only about a third of what their
irrigated counterparts produce. Meanwhile, Little estimates that he gets about
a quarter to a third the yield of large organic potato growers. “It it’s hard
to compete with some of these big organic farms that are watering,” he says.
Without irrigation, his crops are at the mercy of seasonal rainfall and
varying soil conditions from year to year. “You’re on the edge constantly, and
one little thing could tip you over,” Little reflects. “We’re barely making it,
really, but I believe in coastal farming. I believe we’re going to come back to
it.”
While dry farming has geographic limitations, it could pave the way for
more coastal agriculture and offer techniques for farmers in drier areas to
farm with less water. “The coast of California
used to be our main source of food in the state, until they started developing
farms in the Central Valley because of all the
water,” Little continues. “Now they’re running out of water.”
Devoto’s Gravenstein apples are coming into season as we speak.
They may not be picture-perfect or super large, Devoto adds, “But the flavor is
just phenomenal.”
No comments:
Post a Comment