Work is Calling...I Have to Answer

With all the presentations I have to prepare for I thought it would be fitting to finally talk about agronomy. That way I can accomplish two tasks at once. Please do not let my husband know I am capable of performing multiple tasks at once. He will inevitably place expectations on me I really don't want to maintain. 

The definition of agronomy is a science that deals with methods used by farmers to raise crops and care for the soil, taken from Merriam-Websters Dictionary. When you google the word agronomy you get the following....noun: agronomy - the science of soil management and crop production. If I had known it was that I'm not sure I would have gotten into this line of work! Just kidding, I get the best of both worlds, playing in the dirt and growing stuff.

Let's be serious now. What has always interested me is the relationship the plants and soil form and reactions taking place throughout the life of that plant. It can be short lived as in the case of a radish or lettuce that can be harvested with 25-30 days, or that of celeriac, which can take as long as 120 days to mature. The whole time the plant is in the ground it is forming a partnership with the soil to ultimately become food for someone or something. This brings me to the first presentation I have to give which is on soil health.

So, now I have to define soil health.......wait a minute! I should define soil first, I think I'm putting the cart before the horse and I don't want to upset all the pony lovers in the world. According to Wikipedia it is the mixture of minerals, organic matter, gases, liquids, and the countless organisms that together support life on earth. I have often thought I might run out of stuff to write, then I re-read the last sentence only to realize entire books have been written on each of the components that make up soil. And you thought you would get rid of me in a few weeks. Soil can be further defined by it composition, which is the varying amounts of  sand, silt, and clay giving it structure. An ideal soil has balanced amounts of sand, silt, and clay and is called loam. Organic matter is another important component. It's essentially dead stuff and waste like bugs, animals, manures, and decayed plant material. Bugs are animals and that was really redundant. I didn't delete it so I could use the word redundant. I'm done now. Microorganisms in the soil convert the organic matter into nitrogen, enzymes, and other nutrients for the plant to use. It is also important for things like improving the soils drought tolerance.

This all brings me to what my presentation is about....soil health. The NRCS defines soil health as the continued capacity of soil to function as a vital living ecosystem that sustains plants, animals, and humans. Wow, it's like one big family and everyone has to do their part to maintain it. I believe soil health is dependent on and in direct response to how people manage it. It can be managed through tillage, crops, amendments, and fertilizer. Tillage is how you are preparing the soil to be planted, such as turning, stirring, plowing, or possibly planting a tillage radish to do the work for you. There are several ways to use crops as a management tool, two of them being cover cropping and crop rotation. Amendments and fertilizers are not the same. Amendments are just that, they are used to improve or enhance the soils physical properties. They are not necessarily supplying nutrients in the same way a fertilizer is. Fertilizers are made up of components or ingredients that supply nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium to the soil or plant and have assigned values to each nutrient, hence N-P-K.

I have to be honest....now the laundry is calling. Over the course of the next several weeks I'll break down in further detail soil health and how we can manage or even improve it. What this really means is I have to finish my power point presentation this week and you all will get to hear about it.

Bee Keeper IV

Have you ever meant someone and wanted to know them better because they are so interesting? Part of being an agronomist is getting to work with some really interesting and amazing people.

On what I thought would be a straight forward farm visit, you know the kind where I talk manure, cover crops, and fertilizer, I was introduced to a really special person. This time I have permission to talk about him however, I have to keep his true identity secret to protect his possible lively hood, but I'll explain all of that later.

His name, at least for the purpose of this post is Bee Keeper IV, for short IV. His mom explained to me she refers to him as Roman numeral IV because he is the 4th generation with the initials REK. I added the Bee Keeper part because that is what makes him so incredibly interesting. I'm sure he has several other special qualities, however for the sake of my time I can only cover one right now. 

At the age of 12, IV is currently practicing the discipline or art of apiculture. That's fancy for bee keeping. Wikipedia refers to it as the maintenance of honey bee colonies. Whatever you want to call it he is twelve and willing to work around an insect I have seen grown adults run from.  To be specific it was a grown male adult, not to call him out because in all honesty I have a great deal of respect for him. It just makes me laugh he will man-handle snakes and run like a girl from bees.

IV became interested in bee keeping through his grandfather, who got started when his wife suggested she needed more bees for her garden. I love how most things come back to a list of projects women want help with. IV's grandfather had a colony that he was maintaining and got IV a bee suit so they could work together. The grandfathers colony swarmed and passed it on to IV. Not only is he sharing his bees with IV but the experience and knowledge he has gained doing it for the past two to three years. 

IV is now building and maintaining his own hives at his house.

Top Bar Hive built by IV

Top Bar Hive built by IV

As parents we are all looking for ways our kids can learn and have meaningful activities to teach them. How cool is it to say my son is a bee keeper?! He's learning about bees and a whole slew of other lessons like responsibility, disease and insect management, ecology, and the list goes on.

When talking to IV about his bee keeping gig I asked him what some of the most important things he does for his hives are. His first response was feeding and monitoring. He has to regularly check the hives for disease, damage, etc. His number one source of information as side from his grandfather is a book titled Top-Bar Beekeeping by Les Crowder & Heather Harrell. I think he liked it because it had a video with it.....12 year old boys and reading doesn't always mix. At least, that was the case when my son was twelve. He also recommended Storey's Guide to Keeping Honey Bees, even though he hasn't read it yet. I'm not sure if there is an accompanying video or not with this one.

As for IV's future, well he plans to make some modifications to his hives to improve mite control. He is also looking to market his products in the distant future. This brought us to the agronomy part.....species of vegetation he could grow to benefit his hives and add some special value to his products. We talked about using lavender and berries to give the honey a unique flavor. He is starting with buckwheat as a cover crop in his mom's garden. Bees love Buckwheat and it makes a very good honey.

This brought us to another topic of discussion and one of the other reasons I can't name him. His hives are not registered. We talked about how someone of his stature just getting started could be dissuaded by the registration process. However, we did both agree that some regulation is important for the purpose of monitoring and helping control disease outbreaks.

So, here's to all the bee keepers young, old, and in between.  Here are some resources to look at if interested in kids and bees. You need to check with the state you live in as to what their laws are.

http://www.pastatebeekeepers.org/inspection.htm
http://www.abfnet.org/?page=16

Even an Agronomist Can Get Sick...

I have to admit, I have had some kind of cold/flu for over two weeks now. I'm not complaining, however; it does make it increasingly more difficult to keep up with my responsibilities at home and at work. While at the office this past Thursday I laid down in the middle of my co-workers floor and mooned for 5 minutes.  Definitely not adult like or professional and probably why I am only in the office two days a week, if that.

So, I am posting an article I wrote for my companies newsletter that is sent to our dealers and customers. It was originally published with edits made to that I did not get a chance to see before it went to print. Frankly, it's one of the reasons I started blogging. I was extremely upset someone took my words, changed them, and  then printed it without my permission under my name. The difference between this time and the one printed in the newsletter, I made the changes not someone else. In this version, I took names out to protect the innocent. Not really, it's because I did not ask them first if I could include them and I want to be as respectful as I can to the people I work with.

So here it goes........enjoy! By the way, I will eventually talk about agronomy. I know all two readers, my husband and I, have been waiting. Maybe I've starting talking about it and I don't even know it.

 It’s Not about Fertilizer

I wrote an article several months ago saying I was on a mission to get to know all of you, maybe not in person, however; through phone calls, emails and maybe visits. My co-worker has often said to me I should be careful what I wish for. At this point in time I have found myself doing more traveling in a short amount of time, then in the past 16 years of my current/former career as a stay at home mom. Maybe that’s why we’re called stay at home moms! That being said, I am definitely not complaining. I am extremely grateful to meet you, be invited to your homes and on your farms, and spend time together.

As I travel from place to place and meet a lot of great people either selling or using the #1 organic fertilizer in the country –remember I told you I had to change the names to protect the innocent- I have been asking them one question. Really, I ask a lot of questions. Sometimes I don’t know who is learning from whom. The question I have been asking in order to write my article is, “Why do you use the #1 organic fertilizer in the country?” There are all kinds of fertilizer companies, even easier and cheaper ways to get products.  “So why #1? What do we have that they don’t? What is it about #1 that you choose to use it in the first place and continue?”

When you ask a question you have to be prepared for the answer! I thought I would get answers like my dad used it so I use it. Aunt Bessy said to and if Aunt Bessy says to you do. Or, it was the only fertilizer on the shelf….ha! We all know that’s not true. I expected to be talking about the fact our fertilizers feed the biology, the very life of the soil, and discuss the principles behind that. I was prepared to talk about the chemistry involved with each ingredient that makes up our blends and the reactions that take place between them and the components of the soil.

Here are the answers I did get. I have had the pleasure of working with the best backyard gardener, from Elizabethtown, Pennsylvania. He plants up to 500 garlic bulbs a year. He believes it works. He likes the fact it feeds the soil in order to feed the plant. He likes the fact he can call the office and get answers to his questions.

I had the privilege of traveling with my BOSS –in the office and to his face I am to consider him my teammate/co-worker. He hired me, and to me that makes him at least one of my boss’s- to Florida. Once again, I think I heard…..be careful what you wish for! We spent several days meeting with dealers. While visiting a dealer from the Bradenton area, she said “If you get people to use it right you will have a customer for life because it works and they see the results.” She takes the time to explain how to use it and follows through with education about the products.

Since working at the #1 organic fertilizer company I’ve had the best time talking and working with people on the phone. I recently took time while traveling to a convention in New York to visit farmers and dealers I have had several phone conversations with. My first stop was in Millerton, Pennsylvania. I meant the sweetest couple who have been farming for several years. I spent some time answering questions she had about her greenhouses and once again I turned the tables and started asking them the question…”Why #1?”  Without any hesitation the answer was they chose #1 because of the knowledge their dealer is willing to share with them and the support they get from their dealer and staff from the main office.

From there I went to Livonia New York and had the honor of meeting a farmer that has been working with one of my colleagues for several years. I spent some time talking with her about some projects she is working on and did it again…started to ask her the same questions I have of everyone else.  We sat on a bench overlooking Lake Conesus and she told me it was the way he treated her like she was just as important as a large scale farmer. He always answered her questions no matter how much they seemed out of place; bring her to a better level of understanding improving her knowledge so she could ask better questions making her a better farmer. When she was working with him he said one thing to her that will stay with me. His statement was, “We want you to have your best year. “ Then laid out a plan for her to follow and succeed with. Her success was important to him giving her the confidence she needed.

Over the next several stops I kept asking and listening. There was a common thread throughout the entire trip……the service, the knowledge, the support and the results. It all starts with people. Not once did I hear anything about the fancy packaging, or marketing materials, or the great pens and trinkets. It was all about the people. The one’s who answer the phone, answer the questions, share their knowledge, make the fertilizer, bag the fertilizer, and sell the fertilizer. See, it’s more than fertilizer. It’s like minded people coming together working at their part for a common goal of caring for the earth. I feel we are given the privilege to be stewards of the earth, no matter if you live in the city, the suburbs, or the country. If you have a corporate job, a blue collar job or a farmer, even back yard gardeners count too. People ask me if my husband hunts. I think it’s because we live in Pennsylvania, I’m not really sure though. However, I explain he does but it is for car parts in junk yards. Even he has a part in taking care of the earth!  Cleaning up one junk yard at a time and organizing it in our garage, neatly at least.

#1 is about fertilizer, hence the name-not the fake name #1. The real name I'm not using to protect the innocent.  However, it goes beyond that, it’s the people.