Filling in the field
February 17, 2007 - 12:30 PM
Last weekend I picked up 650 Austin blueberry plants from our good friend, Michael Knight, in Buckatunna, Mississippi. They all made it back in one piece and are in the process of being put in the ground.
We were finally able to obtain a new H2A visa for our long time employee, Javier (if you want the horrific details of that process
email Sid). He arrived from Mexico last Friday. In the Mexican tradition, he was married two weeks before his arrival here. Hopefully his wife will be able to join him in the next month or so. Javier's first big project is planting the blueberries. Maybe that'll keep his mind off his woman.
After the planting we will work on replacing the current irrigation hose. We need something that provides more coverage. The current hose only has emitters every five feet, which in an ideal world would work perfectly since the plants are five feet apart. But
hosey don't plant that. Instead it shifts and curls with the varying temperature and the emitters end up a foot or more away from some plants. This resulted in a rather high plant death rate last year.
We are looking at a completely different kind of hose from an Israeli company called
Queen Gil. The emitters are every four inches. It is a much lighter weight hose and thus much less expensive than what we currently have. We would like to elevate it along the row like they do in grape vineyards. This would both allow us to visually ensure that water is being applied and prevent damage from
rodents and weed eaters.