They wanted to see if incorporating cover crops in high tunnels produced the same results. So far, the answer is yes.
“In fact, the effects of cover crops in a high tunnel are much better than what we even found in the field,” said Gilmore. “Cover crops hold moisture a lot longer in the soil and weed management is a lot better with cover crops used as compost in high tunnels.”
The second high tunnel was dominated by iron clay pea last season – planted to build soil organic matter and resist root-knot nematode. The soil was now being prepared to plant yellow mustard, a cover crop known to build soil organic matter, as well as control soil borne pathogens – a sustainable ag practice known as biofumigation. In addition, yellow mustard will serve as a short-rotation cash crop.
“That’s the fine line farmers walk when it comes to using cover crops. We don’t want to sacrifice soil with cover crops if we can’t make cash off it,” said Gilmore. But the couple does see the benefits of using cover crops on their farm beyond the dollars and cents. Cover crops provide a solution to weed, pest and soil management challenges inherent to an organic farm.
Cover crops have now become an integral part of Lola’s Organic Farm crop production: subterranean clover covers the ground around muscadine vines; a barley/hairy vetch/subterranean clover mix is being planted ahead of organic peanuts; and pigeon pea is planned for new land currently being cleared for production. All fix nitrogen, choke out weeds and improve soil health.
The couple’s interest in cover crops may have not been realized save for a little on-farm problem called bermudagrass. “It just kept choking the life out of our plants,” said Gilmore.
Results showed that vigorous weeds can be suppressed by using integrated, intensive cover crop management strategies.
“The cover crop strategy seemed to build healthy soil while suppressing weeds and increasing cash crop yields,” said Taylor.
Taylor and Gilmore were convinced. Today, no cash crop is produced on Lola’s Organic Farm without some type of cover crop incorporated into the soil first.
Source: Southern SARE (Candace Pollock-Moore)