Room To Grow
Boissevain, Manitoba
Phone: (204) 534-2303
Box 478, Boissevain, Manitoba, R0K 0E0
Visit our website
Welcome.
Magdalene and I (David) became the caretakers of this piece of paradise
in 1985 by scraping together every cent we had. Both her parents and mine
looked at us and asked, “How are you possibly going to make a living on
a quarter section of bush land?” Maggie’s father had been a full time
teacher and a part time farmer on rich flatland country north of Saskatoon
and my parents had farmed on the rolling prairie just north of the Turtle
Mountains. But when we walked this land and dreamed of where we would
build a house, the question of how we were going to make a living was
not the most pressing on our minds. All we saw at the time was a place
where we could make a home, raise a family and learn how to cooperate
with the earth-ways around us.
We now make a fair portion of our income from this land. Magdalene is
keen to be involved in the local school as a teacher. I prefer to work
at home. Providing a happy and healthy home is our priority. We are content,
for the time being, knowing we could make more of our living on this land
if we chose to make that the priority.
Our Greenhouses
We
grow mostly herbs, vegetables and perennial flowers for spring bedding
plant sales. We’ve developed a unique growing system based on our own
compost and compost tea. Our insect and disease management processes have
also matured nicely. I’m quite satisfied with the growing process (propagating
mostly by seed and root division) we’ve developed over the years. The
learning process has been a bit ponderous and painful at times because
we haven’t had mentors nearby to consult with. What we now have, though,
is a growing method based on local conditions and resources.
At Room To Grow we remain distinctive by:
- Specializing in a diversity of medicinal and culinary herbs. My preference
would be to concentrate and expand on the 80 to 100 herb varieties we
now grow. We also carry an assortment of open pollinated vegetable,
some native perennial flower and a few annual flower varieties of bedding
plants. The whole list can be found on our website - www.roomtogrow.info.
- Being the only commercial greenhouse in Manitoba that offers certified
organic bedding plants – since 1994. We’re certified by Organic Producers
Association of Manitoba.
- Blending our own soil mix using mostly local ingredients. (Commercial
soil mixes have wetting agents that are not acceptable for organic growers.)
We use compost (made from our horse manure and plant residue), flax
shives (a waste material from the flax straw rendering process), Manitoba
peat moss and local sand.
-
Basing
the business at home on our Turtle Mountain property so that we can
have a fairly sane family life (if that’s possible with four teenagers).
Our location makes it possible to heat with wood that we harvest from
the poplar forest around us.
I’ll lead you through a more detailed look at our growing process. If
you’re interested in a less detailed tour, feel free to scroll down to
the Guesthouse heading.
The Compost.
All winter we feed our two horses (Solstice and Tecumseh) hay - made by
our neighbour. In spring I push the manure and trampled, left-over hay,
along with any kitchen and garden scraps we’ve collected, into a pile
with our tractor. Until a few years ago I could pile and turn it by hand
with the help of travelling WWOOFers (Willing Workers On Organic Farms.
The fresh pile now is two to three meters wide, about two meters high
and ten meters long. Our compost thermometer (available at most garden
centres) helps me read the temperature in the middle of the pile. When
it reaches 140 degrees in at least two places I turn the pile with the
tractor. The pile needs to reach at least 120 degrees to kill most of
the weed seeds but if it goes over 140 degrees it begins to burn away
nutrients. When this happens the hot spots turn gray – a sure sign we’re
losing the vitality of the compost. I land up turning the pile about 6
times until it cools off and has become a fibrous black pile of goodness.
Because I pile up the compost just after the snow melts and because the
pile sits in a partly shaded and sheltered location, I find I don’t need
to add any water to the pile. I sieve the compost in fall or early spring
through a half inch mesh. The only down side I see to using compost as
our growing base is the weed population we get in the greenhouse when
we don’t manage to kill them all in the composting process. Some years
are better than others.
The Growing Mix. We’ve
made plant residue compost and we’ve used pig, chicken and goat manure
and various combinations of the above in our compost heaps. For the greenhouse,
I find horse manure compost to be perfect because it’s so fibrous, so
available and has the balance of nutrients we need. We mix the compost
with local sand (we sieve through a ¼ inch sieve), Manitoba peat moss
and sieved flax shives (a by-product of the flax rendering process). We
do the mixing by hand in a sieving/mixing box made for the greenhouse.
Compost Tea. When
we transplant into the growing mix (beginning at the end of March) we
soak the transplants in a compost tea solution. We make tea by putting
about 15 liters (4 gallons) of compost into a grain sack and hanging the
sack in a 75 liter barrel or plastic garbage container. We leave it to
steep for 24 hours or so and then lift the sack and let it drain for a
couple hours before using the tea. I usually use the tea straight if I
need to treat damping off in the germination chamber, or one to one with
water in the soaking tray or two parts water to one part tea when fertilizing
the plants with a watering can later in the growing process. My sense
is the tea should be used within a few days unless it can be kept cool.
I can’t provide any scientific data to prove the value of the tea – although
the Soil Soup website has some of this. What I have learned, though, is
that I no longer need to use any imported nutrient in the growing process.
I used to bring in fish emulsion and kelp products. Compost and compost
tea do it all now. The plants hold their colour and vigour to the end
of June.
Insects Are Us. Over the last 9 years we’ve had very little insect
stress in the greenhouses. We expect this is so because we grow a wide
diversity of plants in our greenhouses and so any insects that take a
liking to any specific plant have to contend with a bunch of plants they
don’t like as well. We don’t use any insecticide (except a bit of insecticidal
soap if severely tested by aphids) and so we rarely harm the beneficial
insect population in the greenhouse. In warm weather we leave the doors
wide open for any insect that wishes to visit and have had few destructive
callers. And, as I stated earlier, we try not to push the nitrogen in
our growing mix, which allows the plants more resources to combat insect
and disease challenges. New studies are showing that plants need to be
tested by insects in order to develop the antioxidants we need to fight
off the diseases we are challenged with. When we use pesticides on our
crops we may get more productive crops but we suffer more disease because
of it. So we consider the insects’ world to be a friendly place – most
of the time.
Challenges
Marketing remains our greatest challenge – mostly because we live
three hours from the folks in Winnipeg who, in greater numbers, appreciate
the distinctiveness of our plants. We’re encouraged by the expanding markets
for organic bedding plants in general and organic herb plants in particular.
But we’d prefer to be dependent
on folks who can get to our greenhouse from a reasonable distance. The
question that keeps coming back to me these days is: With the limited
greenhouse space we have and the amount of time I have to dedicate to
this part of my business, should I grow more annual flower bedding plants
preferred by local buyers or do I hold to my preference for growing medicinal
and culinary herb bedding plants – most of which are sold to customers
in Winnipeg? So far I’m tending towards growing the plants I like to grow
while trying to convince the markets to come our way.
We
heat the greenhouses (200 square foot starter greenhouse attached
to our house and 1200 square foot free standing double poly greenhouse
100 feet away from the house) totally with poplar wood we harvest from
our and our neighbours’ properties. We would like to design the greenhouse
to store more of the daytime heat in water containers so we would not
need as much wood. It’s a bit difficult to calculate because we heat the
greenhouses, our house and the straw house all with one external wood
boiler system, but I would estimate we use about 20 cords of wood to heat
the greenhouses from beginning of March to the end of April. That seems
excessive to me, but heating a greenhouse in Manitoba is an extreme activity.
We just need to get smarter at it and put the investment of labour and
money into a better system. Keep in touch or send ideas
Cooling the greenhouses is difficult, again because of poor design.
When we recover the greenhouses this year or the next we’ll add vents
at the bottom and the top to allow for more natural cooling air currents.
At present we only have the doors at either end and a large exhaust fan
to get air moving.
Our water is not the best for greenhouse production as it comes
from a deep well and is high in minerals. We’re looking for a way to either
pump water from our conservation dam or collect more snow runoff and rain
water on the yard or drill a shallower well. Some folks in the area have
found less abundant but softer water closer to the surface.
I
would like to develop a growing medium that totally eliminates peat
moss. Peat bogs take 1000 years or more to grow. Greenhouse, nursery
and landscape businesses are dependent on these bogs in a big way. We
are destroying so much life every year when we support that dependency.
We have managed to phase out half of the peat moss we used a few years
ago by blending in flax shives. The reason we can’t eliminate the peat
at this time is because the shives take up more nitrogen from the mix
than the peat does. We find the shives need to age in the rain and sun
for a year or two before we can use them effectively in the greenhouse.
Once the shives have broken down they absorb water better and use up less
nitrogen in the growing pots.
Finally
we would like to cut down on and eliminate the plastic we use in
our production and even in the construction of the greenhouse. Once we
are serving a more local market, we may be able to make this move. At
present we need the plastic pots and trays to transport the plants. We
also need a bit more income to be able to afford a glass covered greenhouse.
For those of you who found this tour a bit tedious, my apologies. My
family marvels (is that the right word?) at how long I can go on talking
about organic greenhouse production. For those of you who want more, please
call or email. I can be generous with free advice but I am also open to
teaching the process (as I know it) in a more systematic way within a
contracted arrangement.
Our Guesthouse
You may wonder why we include a guesthouse on this organic farm website.
When we first began to build on this property we felt the healing influence
of the land, it’s wetlands, plants and wildlife. Ever since we’ve been
keen to share it with those who need this kind of natural environment
for their own healing. I am active with the
Organic Food Council of Manitoba (a chapter of Canadian Organic Growers
– see www. cog.ca) through which we try to build bridges between urban
folk who are looking for locally grown organic food and growers who are
committed to providing quality food to local homemakers. It seems natural
for us to attract folks who are looking for a more ‘organic’ lifestyle
to stay in our straw bale guesthouse from which they can wander the parkland
around us or settle into a relationship with this land, our family and
our way of life. Call it education, shameless self-promotion or thinly
veiled brilliance. We hope the guesthouse provides a temporary home for
individuals, families or small groups who wish to become familiar with
our family and the earth-ways we are blessed with daily. The following
ad, written for the provincial travel guide, might help illuminate the
spirit of the place.
“We got caught up in the magical spell that exists here. Time stood
still. We slept, read, walked, ate, sang, drummed, got dirty feet and
laughed till we cried.” Linda from Winnipeg – summer 2002.
Heave a satisfying sigh as you settle into the comfort of our Straw
Bale guesthouse – surrounded by a grove of Turtle Mountain oaks. Renew
your connection to the earth exploring trails on this 160 acres of rolling
woodland. Refresh your playful spirit in our spring-fed pond. Sharpen
your eyes and still your feet as you watch ducks, terns and beaver work
the wild wetlands. Allow our horses, dogs and cats to touch you with their
friendship. And lend a hand (if you wish) in our circle garden, apple
and berry orchard or certified organic greenhouse.
Other features of this land and our lifestyle visitors may be interested
in:
- Aboriginal petroforms (deliberate rock formations) that remind us
of the cultural-historical strata we live in.
- A conservation pond that we asked the local authorities to put in
to help offset the massive draining of wetlands the prairie has experienced
over the past few decades.
- The solar power we experiment with. For the first six years the only
electricity we had was from our solar panels and wind generator. We’re
connected to the grid now, but still experiment with home power and
look forward to getting back to a time when we are self-sufficient –
or – when we can contribute to and use a local grid.
- Our homemade composting toilet – not usually the first stop on our
tour. We appreciate it when visitors contribute.
- Making maple sugar from our Manitoba maples. We boiled up six liters
of this wonderful sweetener this past spring and hope to make it a regular
part of our ‘coming out of winter’ ritual.
Our Home
Simply
stated, we are trying to live as harmoniously as we can as a family on
a portion of this good earth. We started our family in Africa (where we
worked for eight years in the ‘80s). Magdalene and I feel a need to be
consistent with the life we lived there: emphasis on time as a family,
low consumerism and finding joy in being with whoever comes our way. A
few years ago we decided to go out and encounter the wider world in a
more deliberate way. We packed into an old ¾ ton truck and camper and
traveled as a family for 11 months. We drove around the North American
continent, through Mexico and as far south as El Salvador. Our home on
that trip was small, intimate and simple. And our family flourished in
a wonderful way. We love the land we are on and we love to travel. During
the times we need to be at home, we enjoy making space in our little world
for travelers and peace seekers.
Blessings and Enjoy
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