ENHANCED HOOPHOUSE PICTURES

In 1992, I was in the first group of people to be trained as Docents for the Konza Prairie Research Natural Area (now called the Konza Prairie Biological Station; see http://kpbs.konza.k-state.edu/), and I started helping them burn (about 5000 acres every year) in 1999.   In 2000, the "RaMPs" (Rainfall Manipulation Plots) research project (see http://www.konza.ksu.edu/ramps/ for more information) started, and in '03, while helping with a burn, I learned that the project replaced all twelve "rainout" covers (30x50-foot sheets of clear plastic) every year and would give old covers to anyone who could use them.

I had heard about "hoop houses" (an inexpensive form of greenhouse also called "high tunnels") somewhere, and by the spring of '04 I had acquired a cover and had built my own hoophouse by draping the plastic over "hoops" of PVC pipe and anchoring it with loops of baler twine tied to rebar "stakes" driven into the ground.   (FWIW, my first hoophouse blew down in a 65-mph wind that toppled an 18-wheeler on Interstate 70 about the same time, so I have since doubled the number of "hoops" (from 20 to 40), now use a dug-into-the-ground structure with people-size doors on each end, and added a center support "ridge pole" to help it withstand Kansas winds!-)

For the technically-inclined, the hoops are about 24 feet (7+ meters) long and 1-inch (2.5 cm) diameter schedule-40 PVC pipes spaced 20 inches (~50 cm) apart; the resulting inside floor space is 17 feet (5+ meters) wide by 34 feet (10+ meters long, and the center is about 7 feet (2+ meters) high.

So here are several pictures of our hoophouse taken in mid-November, 2010 (BEFORE the number of hoops was doubled!).   Any white vertical or sloping pipes you may notice in the background of some of the pictures are part of an amateur-radio antenna.   The pictures were taken by an amateur (me) with a $13 WalMart-special camera, so they are not as good as they would have been had Nancy taken them with her "real" camera, but they are small and should download relatively fast.

The (closed) north door is a "real" door compared with the roll-up "door" on the south end:
The (opened) north door; the water-filled bottles around the inside of the outside edge of the hoophouse hopefully ameliorate cold coming through the plastic.   (The bottles were a nuisance and I eventually removed them.)   You can't see the wire in the pictures, but the bottom half-meter (below the horizontal 2x4 boards) of both doors is blocked with chicken wire to try to keep smaller critters out when the doors are open during the summer.   (I think it fools 'possums, but raccoons routinely climb over and eat the watermelons and early sweet corn!-)

Looking leftward/eastward just inside the north door; the dark green stuff is spinach and the light green stuff is lettuce.   Plants between rows, are "volunteers" from earlier plantings, including the tall herb (Basil) which Nancy occasionally uses in cooking and whose flowers are loved by bees. $nbsp; (Speaking of which, I have not seen a single honeybee anywhere on our place since about 2020.)

Looking farther inside the north door, with the late-afternoon sun on the right/west; the taller plant on the left 'way in the back is a bell pepper not mentioned elsewhere herein.

Nancy standing outside the rolled-up south "door", with my shadow in the low foreground.

Nancy inside the south "door" obscuring a "grape" tomato plant, with lettuce just inside the door and radishes behind her.

Grape-tomato plant without Nancy in the way.

Just past the grape-tomato plants are Arugula (Wiki:   "ah rue' guh la, a yellowish-flowered Mediterranean herb of the mustard family cultivated for its foliage which is used in salads; also called garden rocket, rocket, roquette, rugola" -- basically a very-spicy lettuce!), lettuce, spinach, that Basil plant mentioned earlier, plus several volunteer usually-edible things scattered here 'n there.   The vertical stick marks the remains of a volunteer UNedible native-prairie "bundle flower" which probably snuck into the hoophouse in some not-completely-composted compost.

On the left across the center path from the grape tomatoes are one jalepeno pepper plant (the last of a whole patch of volunteers; we've already given away two peck buckets of hot peppers this year!-), with a row of perennial "winter onions" behind it.

Still looking toward the north door:   on the left, just past the previously-mentioned pepper plant and winter onions; the first big batch of light-green stuff is lettuce, the middle batch of middle-green stuff is something that is NOT lettuce, but which tastes "OK" raw on sandwiches or when cooked as "greens", and the farthest batch of dark-green stuff is more Arugula (the stuff volunteers everywhere and -- even this late in the year and after several freezes -- is still growing well OUTside the hoophouse!)

Nancy about three-fourths of the way down the aisle

Looking across the south end of our bramble patch (mostly thornless blackberries, but raspberries north of the posts with white buckets on top) toward our tractor and two trailers.   Unfortunately, that Farmall "H" won't fit in the hoophouse, so we use a little battery-powered "tiller" instead.

And that's the end of this tour.
Six boxes preserve our freedoms:  cash, soap, ballot, witness, jury, & cartridge
Barbershop Tenor and Life member of SPPBSQSUS
Amateur Radio Operator (WØPBV)
Life Member of both the NRA and GOA

This page was last modified on Wednesday, 13 November, 2024.