Today is our 12th wedding anniversary. Lara and I celebrated by spending the entire day in the field weeding the plants and digging out side crowns from under the plastic while the kids wandered in and out of grandpa's house. The gas-powered picking cart I built works great. No back-breaking work sitting down low between the rows and motoring along from plant to plant.
More repercussions from the problematic planting issues we had last October. The water wheel planter I built had too small diameter planting wheels and too long plant spikes. This caused several problems. The plant spacing didn't work out right due to the dragging/skidding effect when the long spikes contacted the bed; the effective rolling radius of the wheel was bigger than anticipated and so the plant spacing got long. Then the hole in the plastic tended to be offset from the hole in the bed. Come spring one side of the plant tended to get stuck under the plastic and we spent too much time fixing that problem.
The plugs were too deep as the holes were oversized due to the long spikes and the skidding effect. This also gave the plants space to grow under the plastic and get stuck. I hope we don't have disease trouble with the crowns being depressed.
The beds were so bone dry at the time of planting that I ran the drip in advance at times. Got them too wet in areas and the water wheel compressed the bed, leaving air space under the plastic. Another lesson learned. More space for the plants to get stuck under the plastic.
We picked out a lot of vetch from around the plants. This field has not been farmed since my great Uncle gave up farming watermelons in his late 80's around 1990. It has had a lot of time to accumulate an abundance of weeds. Looks like the plugs arrived with some volunteer weeds too, maybe a couple percent of them had a weed.
If customers wonder about the cost of strawberries, this is one reason why. There is an enormous amount of manual labor involved in raising these plants.
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