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Tunnels Mean Extended Growing Season in Tennessee


Published:
April 1, 2013
Easy to build, maintain and move, high tunnels provide an energy-efficient way to extend the growing season and provide fresh food for local communities. NRCS photo by Michelle Banks.
Easy to build, maintain and move, high tunnels provide an energy-efficient way to extend the growing season and provide fresh food for local communities. NRCS photo by Jason Hughes.

Janet Mahala runs an organic farm nestled in a small valley in the Tennessee Appalachian Mountains. Last year she started a Community Supported Agriculture membership program on her farm. Shortly thereafter she expanded production with a high tunnel which has extended her farm’s growing season by several months.

Area residents pledge to support Laurel Creek Farm by purchasing produce year-round and in return receive farm-fresh, seasonal vegetables.

“This high tunnel is instrumental in being able to do that season extension to fill those boxes up really nicely,” says Mahala.

The extended season also allows Mahala to participate in a farm-to-school program. Not only can she offer competitive prices, but also an immediate, local supply throughout the school year. Last year, Laurel Creek Farm supplied the Johnson County school system, which educates about 2,300 kids, with 900 pounds of organic potatoes that would have otherwise been purchased out of state.

Mahala may also supply the school system’s lettuce needs next year by installing a second high tunnel through the Natural Resources Conservation Service.

Seasonal high tunnels, or hoop houses, are made of plastic or metal pipe and covered with sheeting, typically made of plastic. Easy to build, maintain and move, high tunnels help farmers provide fresh food for local communities—in some places as much as year round. Unlike greenhouses, they require no energy to heat, instead relying on natural sunlight to create favorable conditions for growing vegetables and other specialty crops.

“I was able to get 90 percent funding [from NRCS] as a beginning farmer, which was incredible. I would not have the high tunnel if it had not been for that,” said Mahala.

Johnson County, Tenn. District Conservationist, Jason Hughes, talks with landowner Janet Mahala about her recently constructed high tunnel. NRCS photo by Michelle Banks.
Johnson County, Tenn. District Conservationist, Jason Hughes, talks with landowner Janet Mahala about her recently constructed high tunnel. NRCS photo by Jason Hughes.

High tunnel cost-shares range from 75–90 percent. Mahala qualified as a beginning farmer since she has been in the business less than eight years.

“The high tunnel is something new and there are not a lot of people doing it in this area,” says Jason Hughes, Johnson County district conservationist.

Because of Mahala and other producers’ experiences, NRCS now offers seasonal high tunnels nationwide under the Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP).

NRCS has year-round signups for EQIP. For information on availability and how to apply, visit your local USDA Service Center.

Follow NRCS on Twitter. Check out other conservation-related stories on the USDA blog.

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