Part of our potato harvest[/caption]
UNRELIABLE SUMMERS
One thing that you can count on each summer is that summers in Alaska are completely unreliable. Some summers are cool with lots of precipitation, other summers are hot and dry. This makes planning tricky. For instance, on a good summer, we can grow our green beans outside. However, if the summer is cool and wet then green beans must be planted in a greenhouse.
One crop we grow commercially on our farm is cantaloupe. We’re the only commercial cantaloupe growers in the state and we’ve been growing them for eight years. We start the plants inside in March and move them to a big greenhouse in May. We do have to heat the greenhouse at night in May, but by June, it’s always warm enough that we no longer need a heater. We’ve never had a summer that they didn’t produce well for us. Until last year. Last year was very cool and very wet, and we ended up having to clean out the greenhouse mid-June because the plants never rooted and grew. We can’t afford to heat the greenhouse all summer, so we just didn’t have a cantaloupe crop last year. It was a bummer but hopefully that won’t happen again for a while.
*One tip about growing cantaloupe in Alaska, we do three soil warming techniques PLUS we heat the water for them. First, they are in the greenhouse. Second, we put landscape fabric down (partially to control weeds but also to warm the soil). Third, we mound the rows slightly so there is extra heat hitting the sides of the rows. Last year, none of that helped.
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Here's a cantaloupe ripening in our greenhouse[/caption]
However, there are some really cool advantages to growing crops in Alaska.
BUGS, CRITTERS, DISEASES, NOT HERE!
Okay, that’s not quite true - but we don’t have near the bugs or nuisance critters that are prolific in the lower 48 so that certainly helps the fight. Also, we don’t have moles, gophers, or snakes! (I know snakes don’t hurt your garden, but they scare the bejeezus out of the gardener!)
Many of the diseases that folks in warmer climates are fighting, we simply don’t have to worry about. That’s a blessing for sure!
HAVE YOU SEEN THE SIZE OF OUR VEGGIES?
The first time I planted cabbage here, I planted with Oregon spacing. Haha! I had a disaster of squished cabbages as they thrived in the cooler summer air and grew to GIGANTIC sizes! I’ve learned to plant less than half the number of cabbage, and I still have more than enough.
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Giant cabbage![/caption]
It’s not just cabbage, though. Carrots, broccoli, and other crops that like to bask in our cool sunshine can get huge! It’s pretty fun.
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Here's Abbi's prized onion[/caption]
NEW FOODS TO TRY
Another fun thing about Alaska is that it seems like, even though there are things we can’t grow here like oranges, peaches, and some berries - there’s always another plant that does well up here to replace it! For instance, we do well with Sea Buckthorn Berries - but we can’t grow oranges. That’s okay! The Sea Buckthorns have more Vitamin C, and the trees are gorgeous! Rather than blueberries (which only grow wild in our area, domesticated ones don’t do well), we plant honeyberries and saskatoons that thrive - and have a higher antioxidant count! They are crazy good and we never would have tried them had we not lived in Alaska.
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A handful of honeyberries[/caption]
Overall, farming and gardening in the arctic is a challenge that’s well worth the effort. We just had to learn how to work with the land and the climate instead of working against it. Now we grow a majority of our food. It’s very possible, even in Alaska!
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