my account    view basket

 
 
Home Shop Farms CSA Forum Events Newsletter News Blogs Photos

Bloom Where You're Planted Farm

  (Avoca, Nebraska)
A family-owned educational farm & pumpkin patch near Avoca, Nebraska
[ Member listing ]

Twenty-Three Days!

Its just twenty-three days until we open for our fifth pumpkin patch season!  Things have been moving along surprisingly quickly this week, thanks in no small part to my father-in-law, Richard.  A full-time farmer, Richard used to and still does work occasionally as a carpenter.  Both these skills/occupations have been a God-send to us since Terry's accident, as Richard has been putting up our hay and helping Terry build our new hay racks.  Now we have big, round hay bales ready for the kids to play on (and later for the horses to eat), the first hayrack is nearing completion, and as I write this the contractor just pulled in to trench a water line over to the Schoolhouse Cafe!

 

We're really excited to finally offer hay rides to our customers and think it will be a lot of fun for us as well.  A hay ride ticket will be included with our base admission fee.  The ride will take customers out to our southern pumpkin fields which will now be "U-Pick".  I'm especially looking forward to this, because it will mean less pumpkin picking for me!  :-) 

 

Here's a glimpse at how the pumpkins are coming along.  They're starting to ripen and are looking forward to going home with our happy customers!

 
 

Pumpkins & Pollinators

It has been almost seven weeks since we first started planting this year's pumpkin crop.  The average pumpkin takes 90-100 days to grow, so this means we are approaching the half-way point for many of the varieties. 

The plants are looking pretty good, thanks to our regular rains and minimal amount of hot, windy days.  Pumpkins can handle a lot of heat, but hot wind is very tough on them.  We've had our usual bug problems, and plenty of weeds to deal with (they've enjoyed the rain, too!) but it could be much worse.  Overall, we're pleased and grateful for the growth we can see every time we visit the fields.

 

We're also very grateful to see lots and lots of bees, as we rely on them to pollinate the flowers.  Many of the flowers I looked at this morning had two or more bees apiece!  Did you know there is a type of bee called the "Squash Bee"?  These make up the majority of our pollinators.  Here is some information about squash bees from Auburn University's website:  "Unlike honey bees, squash bees do not live in social colonies.  Each female digs her own vertical tunnel in the ground, usually near the host plants, and spends the morning gathering nectar and pollen to feed her offspring. A squash bee's foraging activity is highly synchronized with the host plants' bloom: the bee emerges from her burrow near dawn as the flowers open, quickly gathers pollen and nectar, and ceases foraging by late morning when the flowers close. Males, in contrast, patrol host flowers all morning looking for unmated females, then crawl into a wilting flower to pass the afternoon and night." 

Fascinating, isn't it?? 

 
 
RSS feed for Bloom Where You Right-click, copy link and paste into your newsfeed reader

Calendar

Search

Navigation

Topics

Tag Cloud

Feeds

BlogRoll



home | about us | contact LocalHarvest |

© 1999-2008 LocalHarvest, Inc.
Your use of this site constitutes your acceptance of our