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Succession Planting for Continuous Vegetable Harvests
Plan for continuous supplies of popular summer crops, such as beans, squash, cucumbers and sweet corn; year-round
lettuce. Avoid gluts and shortages.
©Pam Dawling, author of Sustainable Market Farmingwww.sustainablemarketfarming.com
www.facebook.com/SustainableMarketFarming
Our StoryWe garden 3.5 acres of land, producing vegetables and berries for 100 people all year at Twin Oaks Community. We have a mixed garden system: • 60 permanent raised beds,
each 4' × 90' (1.2 × 27.4 m), • 10 plots of 9,000–10,600 ft2
(836–985 m2), in three areas of “flat” garden.
Measure and map:East Garden227’ x 265’ (Includes asparagus in half of one plot)Map shows plots of 9,275-10,600 ft2
Fitting in succession crops
After locating the major crops (including sweet corn), following our rotation plan, we look for any extra space in the plots, to fit in the minor crops: succession plantings of beans, summer squash and zucchini, cucumbers, edamame and cantaloupes. Green bean flowers, Photo Kathryn Simmons
Succession Crops Planning Chart
• We list the spare spaces in the plots (in order of availability) on the left
• and the crops we hope to plant (in date order) on the right.
Succession Crops Planning Chart We pencil in arrows,
fitting the succession crops into the spaces available.
At the beginning and end of the season, and in mid-season when space in the main plots is tight, we also look for spaces in our raised beds.
Planning for continuous harvests Many vegetable crops can be
planted several times during the season, to provide a continuous supply. Don’t stop too soon!
Typically, plants mature faster in warmer weather.
So, to get harvests starting an equal number of days apart, shorten the interval between one sowing date and the next as the season progresses.
Keep records and use information from other growers in your area to fine-tune planting dates.
CREDIT: Kathryn Simmons.
Several approaches to succession crop planning – which suits you?
1. Rough plan: “every two weeks”
2. “No paperwork” methods3. Sow several varieties on
the same day4. Plan first and last sowings,
guess the rest5. Plan a sequence of
sowings to provide an even supply, using graphs
6. Use Accumulated Growing Degree Days data
Squash drawing by Jessie Doyle
Rough Plan: Every 2 weeks for beans and
corn,
Every 3 weeks for squash and cucumbers and edamame
Every 4 weeks for carrots
2 or 3 plantings of muskmelons (cantaloupes) at least a month apart.
CREDIT: Kathryn Simmons.
“No Paperwork” methods
Sow another planting of sweet corn when the previous one is 1”–2" tall
Sow more lettuce when the previous sowing germinates
Sow more beans when the young plants start to straighten up from their hooked stage
Determine your first spring planting date
Most growers are probably adept at planting as soon as possible in the spring. Don’t plant too early! Keeping old cucumber transplants on hold through cold early spring weather is just not worthwhile.
Spacemaster bush cucumber in the hoophouse CREDIT: Kathryn Simmons.
Last worthwhile planting date
Figure out the last date for planting each crop that gives it a reasonable chance of success.
Virginia Co-operative Extension Service Fall Planting Guidehttp://pubs.ext.vt.edu/426/426-334/426-334.html
Formula for frost-tender crops
Count back from the expected first frost date, adding: • the number of days from seeding to
harvest, • the average length of the harvest period, • 14 days to allow for the slowing rate of
growth in the fall, and • 14 days to allow for an early frost (unless
you have rowcover - there is often a spell of warmer weather after the first frosts, and you can effectively push back your first frost date.)
Zephyr Summer SquashCREDIT: Kathryn Simmons.
Example: Yellow Squash• number of days from seeding to harvest 50• average length of the harvest period 21• 14 days to allow for the slowing rate of growth in the fall 14• 14 days to allow for an early frost (but we have rowcover) 0 days before the first frost = total of these = 85 last date for sowing, with October 14 first frost date = July 21
But using rowcover to throw over the last planting during cold spells, the growing season is effectively 2 weeks longer, and we sow our last planting of squash on Aug 5.
We sow our last sweet corn July16 (90 days before our average first frost) and we harvest from around Sept 22.
We sow our last edamame July 14.We sow our last beans 8/3, cucumbers 8/5.
Credit Brittany Lewis
Making a close-fit plan
Collect three pieces of information for each sowing of each crop:• Sowing date• Date of first harvest• Date of last worthwhile
harvest of that sowing
Veg Finder
Example: Squash#3 WEST Plot JPlant 6/23 120’Planted…..Harvesting…..Finished…..
BEANS CUKES SQUASH CORN CARROTS EDAMAME #1 29W, 29E Plant 4/16 180' dbl Planted Harvesting Finished
#1 BED 13W Plant 4/20 90' Planted Harvesting Finished
#1 BED 23W Plant 4/20 90' Planted Harvesting Finished
#1 EAST Plot G 4x265’ Plant 4/26+4/29 1060' Bod Planted Harvesting Finished
#1 BED 9E Plant 2/14 Danvers Planted Harvesting Finished
#1 BED 21W Plant 4/26 90’ Planted Harvesting Finished
#2 EAST Plot G Plant 5/14 176’ dbl Planted Harvesting Finished
#2 EAST Plot I Plant 5/24 180’ slice 90' + pickle 90' Planted Harvesting Finished
#2 EAST Plot I Plant 5/24 88’ Planted Harvesting Finished
#2 EAST Plot G 4x265' Plant 5/21 1060' Bod/KK/SQ Planted Harvesting Finished
#2 BED 25E Plant 2/28 Danvers Planted Harvesting Finished
#2 EAST Plot G No-soak Plant 5/18 88’ dbl Planted Harvesting Finished
#3 WEST Plot J Plant 6/7 240’ dbl Planted Harvesting Finished
#3 WEST Plot J Plant 6/23 120’ Planted Harvesting Finished
#3 WEST Plot J Plant 6/23 120’ Planted Harvesting Finished
#3 WEST Plot A north 4 x 180' 6/6 1080' Sug Pearl /KK/SQ Planted Harvesting Finished
#3 BED 12W Plant 3/13 Danvers Planted Harvesting Finished
#3 EAST Plot I Plant 6/7 60’ dbl Planted Harvesting Finished
#4 EAST Plot K Plant 6/29 175' dbl (5x35’) Planted Harvesting Finished
#4 CENT Plot D Plant 7/15 240' slice 120' +pickle 120' Planted Harvesting Finished
#4 EAST Plot K Plant 7/15 105’ (3x35’) Planted Harvesting Finished
#4 WEST Plot A 6 x 180' 6/19 1080' Bod/KK/SQ Planted Harvesting Finished
#4 BED 12E Plant 3/27 Danvers Planted Harvesting Finished
#4 CENTRAL Plot D Plant 6/26 60’ dbl Planted Harvesting Finished
#5 25E 22W Plant 7/19 180’ dbl (2x90’) Planted Harvesting Finished
#5 BED 15E Plant 8/5 90' slicers Planted Harvesting Finished
#5 BED 13E Plant 8/5 90’ Planted Harvesting Finished
#5 WEST Plot A 6 x 180' Plant 7/2 1080' Bod/KK/SQ Planted Harvesting Finished
#5 BED 19W Plant 4/10 Danvers Planted Harvesting Finished
#5 EAST Plot K Plant 7/14. 70’ (2x35’)dbl Planted Harvesting Finished
#6 BEDS 9W, 9E Plant 8/3 180’ dbl Planted Harvesting Finished
#6 CENTRAL Plot D 7 x 200' Plant 7/16 1400' Bod/KK/SQ Planted Harvesting Finished
#6 BED 17W Plant 5/14 Danvers Planted Harvesting Finished
#8 BED 1 CARROTS#8 BED 30W Only if needed Plant 7/8 Danvers Planted Harvesting
Finished #7 Not this year, perhaps never
again
#7 BED 27E Only if needed Plant 6/11 Danvers Planted Harvesting Finished
#8 BED CARROTS #9 Overwinter Raised Beds Plant 7/28 Danvers Planted Harvesting Finished
Gather sowing and harvest start dates
Sowing Date
Harvest Start
4/18 6/1 4/21 5/19 4/23 5/25 5/14 6/3 5/15 6/21 5/20 7/5 5/25 7/4 5/29 7/7 6/12 7/20 6/15 7/20 6/30 8/2
7/1 8/8 7/2 8/11 7/4 8/8 7/5 8/10
7/14 8/14 7/18 8/17 7/19 8/28
8/3 9/9 8/4 9/5 8/5 9/15 8/7 10/2 8/9 9/25
8/12 10/5
For each crop, gather several years’ worth of planting and harvesting records in two columns (this example is squash).
Use sowing and harvest start dates to make graphs. Four steps.
1. Plot a graph for each crop, with sowing date along the horizontal (x) axis and harvest start date along the vertical (y) axis. Mark in all your data.
2. Mark the first possible sowing date and find the harvest start date for that.
3. Decide the last worthwhile harvest start date, mark that.
4. Then divide the harvest period into a whole number of segments, according to how often you want a new patch.
Step 1. Plot a graphX axis = Sowing Date, across the bottom
1-Apr 21-Apr 11-May 31-May 20-Jun 10-Jul 30-Jul 19-Aug11-Feb
1-Apr
21-May
10-Jul
29-Aug
18-OctY axis = Harvest Start Date
Step 2. Mark the first possible sowing date and find the harvest start date for that. Draw a line up
from your first possible sowing date on the x axis to the graph line.
Draw a horizontal line from the point on the graph line to the y axis.
This is your first harvest date. (Yum!) Ours is around May 19.
1-Apr 21-May 10-Jul 29-Aug11-Feb
1-Apr
21-May
10-Jul
29-Aug
18-Oct
Y axis = Harvest Start Date
Step 3. Decide the last worthwhile harvest start date, mark that. • Decide your last
worthwhile harvest start date of the season.
• Draw a line across from this date on the y (harvest) axis to the graph line.
• Draw a vertical line from this point on the graph line to the x (sowing) axis to show when you need to sow this batch.
• On this graph, an Aug 7 sowing produced an Oct 2 harvest start. That’s too late!
• Now we sow August 5 and harvest from September 24.
1-Apr 21-May 10-Jul 29-Aug11-Feb
1-Apr
21-May
10-Jul
29-Aug
18-Oct
Y axis = Harvest Start Date
Step 4. Divide the harvest period into a whole number of segments, according to how often
you want a new patch. Count the days from first harvest of the first sowing to first harvest of the
last sowing: May 19 - Sept 24 is 128 days of squash! (Plus the 30 days from the harvest start of the last sowing to the end = 158 days of squash!!)
Decide roughly how often you want a new patch coming into production
Divide the harvest period into a whole number of intervals. If we want fresh squash every 32 days, we’ll need 4 equal intervals between plantings (32 x 4 = 128).
Four intervals means 5 plantings. (P-I-P-I-P-I-P-I-P)
The harvest start dates will be May 19, June 20, July 22, Aug 23 and Sept 24.
Use the graph to get the planting dates needed. April 21, May 17, June 21, July 16, and Aug 5.
Sowing intervals are 26, 25, 25, 20 days – a bit shorter later in the season.
Squash Succession CropsSowing date Harvest start
Apr 18 Jun 1Apr 21 May 19Apr 23 May 25
May 14 Jun 3May 15 Jun 21May 20 Jul 5May 25 Jul 4May 29 Jul 7Jun 12 Jul 20Jun 15 Jul 20Jun 30 Aug 2
Jul 1 Aug 8Jul 2 Aug 11Jul 4 Aug 8Jul 5 Aug 10
Jul 14 Aug 14Jul 18 Aug 17Jul 19 Aug 28Aug 3 Sep 9Aug 4 Sep 5Aug 5 Sep 15Aug 7 Oct 2Aug 9 Sep 25
Aug 12 Oct 5
Ap
r 1
2
Ap
r 2
2
Ma
y 2
Ma
y 1
2
Ma
y 2
2
Jun
1
Jun
11
Jun
21
Jul 1
Jul 1
1
Jul 2
1
Jul 3
1
Au
g 1
0
Feb 26
Apr 17
Jun 6
Jul 26
Sep 14
Nov 3
Squash Succession Crops
Sowing Date
Ha
rve
st
Sta
rt
Smoothing the graph line
The line of the graph is often uneven, due to differences in weather from year to year, and to growing varieties with differing maturity dates.
Practice with a pencil, drawing a line in the air just above the graph.
When you’re fairly confidant, draw a smooth line, trying to hit most of points, leaving equal numbers of them above and below the graph line.
Another Example: Sweet CornUsing our graph of corn sowing and harvest dates (on the next slide) I estimate that April 26, May 19, June 6, June 24, July 7, and July 16 would be good dates for 6 plantings to provide fresh eating every 2 weeks. The planting intervals are 23, 18, 18, 13 and 9 days. The intervals get noticeably shorter as the season goes on.
Reminder of the main goals of planned succession planting:
Continuous supplies of popular summer crops, such as beans, squash, cucumbers and sweet corn; year-round
lettuce. Avoid gluts and shortages.
Cucumber Generally. Photo credit Kathryn Simmons.
Fine tuning your succession planting:1. Save space and work
You may find you can plant less often, saving space and work.
• We used to do 6 plantings of cucumbers. • The intervals between sowings were 50, 30, 20, 16, and 17 days.
• By using the graphs, we have been able to go down to 5 plantings, at intervals of 52, 25, 25 and 20 days. The sowing intervals decrease as the season warms up, as it takes fewer days for plants to mature. The first planting uses transplants and is very slow to mature — probably we could just start later still and lose nothing.
• By moving the second planting 10 days later than it used to be, we are able to direct sow rather than transplant, which saves us time.
• This revised schedule saves us from dumping cucumbers on our neighbors’ porches!
Cucumber Succession CropsSowing Date Harvest Start 0.880152 4622.504
4/23 6/184/25 6/3 38832 38900.58 38871
5/9 6/185/14 7/35/15 6/225/27 7/15 #REF! #REF!
6/12 7/296/21 8/96/25 7/276/28 8/16/30 7/23
7/2 8/167/4 8/157/5 8/207/7 8/21
7/14 8/287/18 9/87/19 9/10
8/3 9/218/6 9/29
8/11 9/258/12 10/5
5/19
5/29
6/8
6/18
6/28
7/8
7/18
7/28
8/7
8/17
8/27
9/6
9/16
9/26
10/6
10/16
4/13
4/23 5/
3
5/13
5/23 6/
2
6/12
6/22 7/
2
7/12
7/22 8/
1
8/11
Har
vest
Sta
rt D
ate
Sowing Date
Cucumber Succession Crops
Fine tuning your succession planting:2. Keep it simple
• Cucumbers also take a little longer to mature than squash. • These two features would suggest making more plantings
of cucumbers than of squash, • BUT. . . after looking at the graphs, we decided to plant
both on the same set of dates, for simplicity. • If we could be satisfied with a new patch coming on-stream
every 36 days, we could sow only four times.
• Our squash plantings stay productive for around 40 days, but cucumbers sometimes only last 35 days.
Fine tuning your succession planting:3. Mexican bean beetles Clemson University - USDA Cooperative Extension Slide Series, Bugwood.org
• Mexican bean beetles used to destroy our beans.
• We needed 7 plantings at 15-day intervals.
• After 2 weeks of harvesting a planting, we did “Root Checks.”
• Now we buy the parasitic pedio wasp, and sow 6 times, not 7.
• These sowing intervals are 28, 28, 22, 20 and 15 days.
• We also get more beans than previously, and they’re prettier.
• Bean photo credit Kathryn Simmons
Bean Beetle Parasite(Pediobius foveolatus)
• These tiny wasps do not overwinter, so buy them each year unless you don’t get enough MBB to worry about.
• Wasps are shipped to you as adults or as parasitized Mexican bean beetle larvae, called mummies. The adults emerge from the mummies, and the females lay eggs in your MBB larvae.
• Timing is critical: order as soon as you see larvae.• Release 20 mummies = 400-500 wasps for every 1000 sq. ft.
of beans (40 units/acre). 2013 prices $60/1000 adults, $30/20 mummies. Plus UPS Next Day Saver, about $20.
• NJ Department of Agriculture Beneficial insect rearing laboratory contact: Tom Dorsey at (609) 530-4192. See http://www.state.nj.us/agriculture/divisions/pi/prog/beneficialinsect.html
Bean Succession CropsSowing Date
Harvest Start
4/16 6/134/18 6/204/20 6/164/21 6/14
5/2 6/235/7 7/2
5/11 7/85/12 7/55/13 7/15/14 6/305/16 7/15/17 7/35/22 7/16
6/5 7/306/8 8/2
6/10 8/36/13 8/16/24 8/96/29 8/246/30 8/15
7/8 8/217/14 8/287/15 9/27/19 9/37/20 9/17/22 9/67/25 9/11
8/3 9/188/4 9/268/6 9/308/7 9/20
Dates are from several years records
40
64
5
40
65
5
40
66
5
40
67
5
40
68
5
40
69
5
40
70
5
40
71
5
40
72
5
40
73
5
40
74
5
40
75
5
40
76
5
40
77
5
40650
40660
40670
40680
40690
40700
40710
40720
40730
40740
40750
40760
40770
40780
40790
40800
40810
40820
40830
Bean Succession Crops
Sowing Date
Ha
rve
st
Sta
rt D
ate
Fine tuning your succession planting:4. Avoid chancy sowings: sweet corn• We used to make 7 sweet corn plantings: April 26,
May 17, June 2, June 16, June 30, July 14 and July 28. The intervals were 21, 15, and then 14 days.
• We eliminated the late (and sometimes unproductive) 7th planting and increased the size of the 6th, sowing our usual range of 3 varieties.
• Using the graph of our corn sowing and harvest dates, I estimate that April 26, May 19, June 6, June 24, July 7, and July 16 would be good dates for 6 plantings to provide fresh eating every 2 weeks. The planting intervals are 23, 18, 18, 13 and 9 days.
Silver Queen Sweet Corn. Credit Kathryn Simmons
Year-round lettuce part 1Photo Credits Kathryn Simmons
The short version is that we sow • twice in January, • twice in February, • every 10 days in March, • every 9 days in April, • every 8 days in May, • every 6-7 days in June
and July,
Year-round lettuce part 2Photo: Cold-hardy (not heat-tolerant) Tango lettuce. Credit Kathryn Simmons
• every 5 days in early August,
• moving to every 3 days in late August,
• and every other day until Sept 21.
• After that we ease back to every 3 days until the end of September.
• Those last plants will feed us right through the winter.
Hot weather lettuce sowing Lettuce likes 40°F–80°F (4°C–27°C). Optimum 75°F (24°C) (germinates in only
2 days). Max germination temperature is 85°F
(29°C). Sow late afternoon or at nightfall - better
emergence than morning sowings.
Lettuce Succession CropsSowing Date Harvest Start 1/0 1/13
1/5 4/121/15 4/151/25 4/172/5 4/20
2/15 4/262/25 5/13/5 5/5
3/15 5/113/25 5/184/5 5/25
4/15 6/44/20 6/115/6 6/23
5/17 7/15/25 7/76/1 7/136/8 7/20
6/15 7/316/22 8/66/29 8/127/6 8/18
7/13 8/247/20 8/307/27 9/58/3 9/118/5 9/13
8/15 9/278/25 10/129/5 11/10
9/15 12/16 9/15 9/20 12/169/25 1/13 #REF! #REF!10/5 2/2
10/15 2/1510/25 2/2511/5 2/25
11/15 3/1811/25 3/2812/5 4/4
12/15 4/612/25 4/9
Dates from Coleman
Italic dates approximate, from Twin Oaks
4/134/23
5/35/135/23
6/26/126/22
7/27/127/22
8/18/118/218/319/109/209/30
10/1010/2010/30
11/911/1911/29
12/912/1912/29
1/81/181/28
2/72/172/27
3/93/193/29
4/84/18
1/1
3
1/2
3
2/2
2/1
2
2/2
2
3/4
3/1
4
3/2
4
4/3
4/1
3
4/2
3
5/3
5/1
3
5/2
3
6/2
6/1
2
6/2
2
7/2
7/1
2
7/2
2
8/1
8/1
1
8/2
1
8/3
1
9/1
0
9/2
0
9/3
0
10
/10
10
/20
10
/30
11
/9
11
/19
11
/29
12
/9
12
/19
12
/29
Harv
es
t S
tart
Date
Sowing Date
Lettuce Succession Crops
Spring and fall crops: carrots• We start sowing carrots as early as possible: mid–late February. • Then we sow every 4 weeks in March, April, May, and, if needed, June and July. • We make a huge fall planting in late July or early August. If we miss those dates,
we wait till late August to avoid the high numbers of grasshoppers here in mid-August.
• We don’t do succession plantings for fall carrots, just one big one, because we are growing bulk carrots to store for use all winter and don’t need multiple harvest dates.
With fall crops, even a difference of 2 days in sowing dates can make a difference of 2-3 weeks in harvest date, because plants grow slower as days get shorter and cooler.
Winter succession crops in the hoophouse
To maintain continuous supplies of salad and cooking greens, as well as radishes and small turnips, we plan several winter successions of hoophouse crops.
Growing Degree Days
A measure of heat accumulation can indicate when it’s warm enough to plant tender crops, or when they might be ready to harvest. GDDs can also be used to plan dates for succession sowings. GDDs reflect actual conditions, rather than simply the calendar, a
method which will not work well now climate change has taken hold.
For most purposes a base temperature of 50°F (10°C) is used –roughly the temperature at which most plant growth changes start to take place. Each day when the temperature rises above the threshold, growing-degrees accumulate.
Growing Degree Days
Average the maximum and minimum temperatures for the 24 hour period, and subtract the base temperature. Add each day’s figure to the total for the year to date. This is the GDD figure.
Wikipedia has a good explanation at www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Growing-degree_day and www.farmprogress.com has a free mobile phone app!
There’s an article on using GDDs to plan dates for succession sowings for sweet corn at http://www.hort.uconn.edu/ipm/veg/htms/scpltsched.htm
Resources 1 ATTRA Market Farming: A Start-up Guide,
https://attra.ncat.org/attra-pub/summaries/summary.php?pub=18 ATTRA Scheduling Vegetable Plantings for a Continuous Harvest,
www.attra.ncat.org/attra-pub/summaries/summary.php?pub=20 ATTRA Intercropping Principles and Production Practices (mostly field
crops, but the same principles apply to vegetable crops), www.attra.ncat.org/attra-pub/summaries/summary.php?pub=105
ATTRA Season Extension Techniques for Market Farmers, https://attra.ncat.org/attra-pub/viewhtml.php?id=366
SARE at www.sare.org -A searchable database of research findings SARE’s Season Extension Topic Room SARE Crop Rotations on Organic Farms, A Planning Manual, Charles
Mohler and Sue Ellen Johnson, editors. http://www.extension.org/organic_production The organic agriculture
community with eXtension. Publications, webinars, videos, trainings and support. An expanding, accessible source of reliable information.
Resources 2 Virginia Co-operative Extension Service Fall Planting Guide
http://pubs.ext.vt.edu/426/426-334/426-334.html Growing Small Farms: http://growingsmallfarms.ces.ncsu.edu/ Debbie Roos
keeps this site up to the minute. Click on Farmer Resources Cornell Extension website:
vegetablemdonline.ppath.cornell.edu/NewsArticles/All_BactSeed.htm Good detailed information on seed treatments.
Manage Weeds on Your Farm: A Guide to Ecological Strategies, Chuck Mohler (not yet published)
Purple Mountain Organics, Tacoma Park, MD. Tools and supplies http://www.purpletools.net/protek-net-insect-pest-netting/
Brad Burgefurd, Cultural Practices And Cultivar Selections for Commercial Vegetable Growers. Slide show. Wide scope.www.slideshare.net/guest6e1a8d60/vegetable-cultural-practices-and-variety-selection
Crop Rotations slide show http://www.slideshare.net/SustainableMarketFarming/vabf-2013-crop-rotations-for-vegetables-and-cover-crops-pam-dawling?from_search=5
Resources 3 - books The Complete Know and Grow Vegetables, J. K. A. Bleasdale, P. J. Salter et al. Knott’s Handbook for Vegetable Growers, Donald N. Maynard and George J.
Hochmuth The New Seed Starter’s Handbook, Nancy Bubel, 1988, Rodale Books The Organic Farmer’s Business Handbook, Richard Wiswall, 2009, Chelsea
Green Sustainable Vegetable Production from Start-up to Market, Vern Grubinger,
1999, The New Organic Grower, Eliot Coleman, 1995, Chelsea Green Extending the Season: Six Strategies for Improving Cash Flow Year-Round on
the Market Farm, a free e-book download for online subscribers to Growing for Market magazine
Nature and Properties of Soils, fourteenth edition, Nyle Brady and Ray Weil Garden Insects of North America, Whitney Cranshaw
Succession Planting for Continuous Vegetable Harvests
Pam Dawling, author of Sustainable Market Farming
www.sustainablemarketfarming.comwww.facebook.com/SustainableMarketFarming