On December 7th, we here at the field school were fortunate to host Pam Dawling as our speaker for a workshop on Crop Planning and Year Round Production. Pam has almost 40 years of experience in sustainable agriculture and authored the book Sustainable Market Farming, which is a vital resource to growers with operations of all sizes. Along with her farming know-how, Pam is a phenomenal educator and is contributing editor for Growing for Market magazine and writes a blog at SustainableMarketFarming.com. Pam lives at the Twin Oaks Community, an intentional community and ecovillage of around 100 people, where she oversees the vegetable and berry gardens.
Winter is upon us, seed catalogs are starting to come out, and now is the time for crop planning! At the field school meeting, Pam shared her “12 Step” program for creating a useful (and ultimately stress-reducing!) crop plan. By taking the time to plan out your farm’s production in the winter, you can increase production and hopefully profits by ensuring that every time a crop is harvested, there are plants or seeds waiting to be put in for a new round of crops. It reduces the stress of having to think critically during the busiest times of the season. Rather than trying to figure out what’s next when there’s already empty rows, you can just refer back to your crop plan (or better yet, set up a series of timely reminders on your calendar) and put in the next thing.
For farms with CSAs, crop planning also ensures that there is enough variety week to week to keep your customers happy. No one wants 5lbs of radishes because that’s all you have to harvest! A good plan lets you set target harvest dates for dozens of crops, so you can have a steady week to week supply of customer favorites plus backups in case something fails.
The first time you sit down to create a crop plan, it’ll probably take a few days of work. But in following years, you will spend much less time, just going over your notes and making tweaks where necessary. Pam recommends that you keep meticulous records of when you actually started seeds, transplanted, and harvested. You can create your first crop plan using days to harvest info from seed catalogs, but then make adjustments year to year as you get to know your land.
Here are Pam’s 12 Steps for Crop Planning:
Resources for every step of the planning process can be found on Pam’s blog and her PowerPoint presentation.
For free downloadable excel spreadsheets, check out these developed by Dr. Joel Gruver from NC State University:
https://growingsmallfarms.ces.ncsu.edu/growingsmallfarms-farmrecords/
For free crop planning software, follow this link for download information: https://github.com/claytonrcarter/cropplanning
Mother Earth News also has an interactive vegetable garden planner that is free to use for 30 days.
http://gardenplanner.motherearthnews.com/gardenplanner/gardenplanner.html
Happy planning!
We keep at the constant work. It’ll be worth it between the future pumpkins for the neighborhood kids and the promise of blue fries! Even with all the weeding and maintenance, watching our garden grow bigger each day makes it rewarding.
~ Erin Jasenak
