Thursday, May 5, 2011

Do Baked Potatoes Grow on Trees?

If you've taken a close look at Seeds Farm lately you may have noticed some shiny "decorations" on some of the trees. A number of our trees--mulberry, fig, guava and pomegranate--have what appear to be foil-wrapped baked potatoes skewered onto their branches. In actuality, these trees are being propagated by a technique known as air layering.

As part of Paul Maschka's Organic Fruit Tree Care class offered here at City College, students have had the opportunity to practice pruning, grafting and propagation techniques on the Seeds Farm fruit trees. While many students in the class were familiar with the concept of grafting trees, air layering proved to be a new technique for most.

Air layering is typically started in Spring on a pencil-sized diameter branch, which has grown within the last year. From this branch a clone of the mother tree will be created.

The first step in the air layering process is to girdle or wound a 1 to 1 1/2 inch wide section of the branch, cutting through and removing its outer layers of bark, cambium, and phloem. One has to be careful not to cut too deeply because the xylem layer which transports water and nutrients to the future clone must be left intact.

The girdled area is then wrapped in a series of layers that act somewhat like an aerial pot. The first layer consists of very damp sphagnum moss--the medium in which the clone's roots will grow. The next layer is plastic wrap which holds the moss in place, retains moisture and serves as a window to view whether the clone is successfully rooting. Aluminum foil, the final layer, reflects sunlight and keeps the moss packet a cool and inviting place for new root growth. Snuggled in an optimal environment--dark, moist and mossy--the girdled area of the branch is stimulated to form a callus from which grow buds are able to develop new roots.

The rooting process requires patience on the part of the propagator since it can take from a few months to a year before the branch grows a hearty enough root system that allows it to be removed safely from the parent plant, potted and eventually thrive on its own.

If the students' endeavors prove successful, Seeds Farm will eventually have a number of new baby trees that are genetic clones of their parents. Because so little material is required, air layering promises to be a cost-effective way of propagating trees.

Monday, April 11, 2011

Poppy on fire!
de-rooting our soon-to-be new garden space
Daikon Suza... aka Suza w/ some daikons.
Pictures of people taking pictures
Helpful Lamba
Kevin and I with the Tuesday harvest.. or some of it

Joseph working on our sign

Working w/ our mother earth

Every morning that I spend at the Seeds at City Farm is a blessing. I'm surrounded by wonderful people, in a wonderful place with healthy and delicious food.. that I get to grow! As I learn more I get more excited about my plan of having my own self sustaining farm someday. I really aspire to have my life as intertwined with mother earth as it can be; taking only the little I need and giving it all back in a practical and respectful way. She provides us with all that is beautiful and pure. And Julia and Paul recognize that and build their practices on like-minded philosophies, which is an attractive factor of the Seeds at City Farm. As you'll see by the photos, the Farm attracts lots of people! Happy volunteers have become regulars now at the Farm. It's great to witness the awareness in everybody of society's dire need for local sources of food, health, and community.

Monday, March 21, 2011

Laughter Bulb

There Was a Young Person Named Blair
Who grew plants in his hair
He raised red tomatoes,
Green peas, and potatoes,
And Kept a small gardener up there


Tuesday, March 15, 2011

A day in the life of an Aphid


Well what an interesting tale this is.
Once there was the aphids that lived on the brassica.
Some like Collards. Some like walking stick Kale.
While the aphid goes on her way sucking sap from the greens. She's asexual and lays identical daughter aphids. These little sisters can develop rapidly. But just when the Mama thought she was going to have all these children the parasitic wasp comes along. They insert there egg in the body of the little sisters and the larvae consumes it internally. Once they have been killed by the wasp they turn brown or black and bloated. The little sisters are now known as Aphid Mummies.
And the aphid just continues to go on reproducing. Aphids, it seems, find security among the corpses of their peers.
Oh and lets not forget about the Lady Beetle with there lady larvae being particularly voracious predators of aphids.

Yes the life of an aphid.
So the next time you are walking by an aphid colony take a few minutes to see what is happening.
The End