As president of the Mayo Clinic Platform, I lead a portfolio of new digital platform businesses focused on transforming health by leveraging artificial intelligence, the internet of things, and an ecosystem of partners for Mayo Clinic. This is made possible by an extraordinary team of people at Mayo and collaborators worldwide. This blog will document their story.
Thursday, March 7, 2013
Building Unity Farm - Planting the Orchard
As Spring approaches, Kathy and I are diligently planning the fruits and vegetables of Unity farm. Our first year on the farm was about creating infrastructure and building the animal herds. Our second year will be about expanding the scope to include an extensive orchard, raised beds, a greenhouse, a hoop house/high tunnel, and mushroom farm.
We're working with the town of Sherborn on an overall land management plan, respecting all wetland borders, setbacks, and regulations. They town already approved the cutting of poplars for the mushroom farm.
We've resurveyed the entire property and marked all wetland borders/buffer zones. Our next step will be to clear brush and trees outside the borders and prepare the soil for planting the orchard, which is pictured above.
Under the trees, we're planting wildflowers for pollinators and orchard grass for erosion control.
We've avoided slope bottoms/valleys with cold sinks to minimize frost risk. We've created a border of blueberries and raspberries between the orchard and the forest.
The entire orchard will be surrounded by an 8 foot deer fence. Deer pressure in Sherborn is very high and our neighboring orchard has just fenced 55 acres which means we'll have even more deer foraging on Unity Farm.
The tree clearing begins in the third week of March, to be followed by fencing and planting in April. By Memorial Day the orchard should be finished.
Also before Memorial Day, I'll have completed the mushroom farm (72 towers of poplar for Oyster mushrooms and 220 oak logs for Shitake). More details on that design next week.
This Summer we'll add a retaining wall and compost on the north border of our pasture to support the hoop house and greenhouse where we'll grow lettuces, spinach, kale, and root vegetables most of the year.
Last Summer we were still moving in. The nights and weekends of this Summer will be a great opportunity to create the growing areas we'll be able to harvest for many years to come.
I have to admit that I enjoy your postings about Unity Farm as much as your Informatics-related discussions. Modern farming is extremely scientific, evidence-based and pragmatic. Outcomes seem to be more obvious (good year/bad year. I can only hope that HIT discussions can mirror that
ReplyDelete+1 to Bob Hoyt's comment
ReplyDeleteI like the Unity Farm posts very much too, and I have been a fan of this blog for a while. I took an organic farming course one summer on a new age community in the Berkshires and went back many summers to meditation retreats to see how the farm, the flowers, and the herb gardens were doing. Love that neck of the woods.
ReplyDeleteMichael J. Wilson
http://earthspiritendless.blogspot.ca/