PETE'S GREENS: Vermont farmer Pete Johnson (above) pulled greenhouses on skids over a lettuce crop last fall so he could harvest in winter (Orah Moore).

Photos (1 of 1)

Where imagination meets farming

Local-food pioneer Pete Johnson's movable greenhouses have yielded a lettuce harvest in the dead of a Vermont winter.

By Nancy Humphrey Case | Contributor / February 4, 2009 edition

Nancy Humphrey Case

ON THE SKIDS: Pete Johnson used a tractor to pull the greenhouses last winter.


Craftsbury, VT.

When Pete Johnson, a leader among New England’s organic farmers, set out one day last fall to pull an 18,000-pound greenhouse, in fits and starts, over a field-grown plot of lettuce, he inched forward an idea that could help make fresh local produce available year-round, even in Vermont.It was late October. For most of his fellow farmers, harvest time was over until spring. But Mr. Johnson was just revving up his tractor – and his dream.

He wants to extend the growing season into winter, and to start spring crops in late winter, in ground protected temporarily by movable greenhouses. Johnson had seen this done experimentally elsewhere. But he was trying it on a commercial scale, with greenhouses 200 feet long – twice the length of a basketball court and two-thirds as wide.

He had been warned the project could be risky with such big structures. But Johnson – a young, well-educated trendsetter – was willing to take that risk.

“It could blow over – or not move at all,” he said with a laugh as he climbed aboard his tractor. “But I’ve engineered it, and I think it will work.”

Johnson’s tractor was connected by steel cables to one of the front corners of one of his greenhouses. His facilities manager, Steve Perkins, sat at the wheel of a second tractor connected to the other front corner of the greenhouse. A chilly autumn wind rippled the lightweight fabric covering rows of salad greens. But even unheated, the greenhouse might protect plants enough to keep them producing through the winter: That was the idea.

The two men looked more like boys at play than men at work as they revved their engines. The buckets of the 3,500-pound tractors were tilted into the ground, braced against 9 tons of greenhouse steel plus friction.

“Really slow,” Mr. Perkins shouted above the rumble of the engines. The greenhouse frame groaned as the cable tightened. One side inched forward, the other side caught on a slight incline. Johnson jumped down, pried the frame up with a crowbar, and slid a two-by-four underneath. Each man stepped on the gas again, and both skids crept forward.

They coaxed the giant structure down the field for an hour – Johnson romping back and forth, checking the greenhouse alignment and propping more blocks under it. A drizzle turned to pelting rain. Neither man seemed to notice.

“I think if we just put something like ski tips on the front edges of the skids, that would do it,” Johnson said.

It was hands-on innovation in progress.

As fall gave way to winter, Johnson saw his vision vindicated. Through weeks of snow and some single-digit temperatures, Johnson supplied his community-supported agriculture (CSA) customers with fresh lettuce and other greens grown inside the unheated greenhouse. (In CSA consumers buy food directly from local farmers.)

Those plants stopped growing during Vermont’s deep January freeze (minus 30 degrees one week), but Johnson expects to start harvesting new growth in mid-February. “And that’s pretty cool to get fresh greens from unheated greenhouses all but one month of the winter,” he says.

• • •

Johnson built his first greenhouse 10 years ago, for a senior project at Middlebury College. Soon after, he put up a greenhouse on his parents’ property in Greensboro, Vt. He supplied salad greens to restaurants in Boston and New York, and he planned even then to move the greenhouse to extend his growing season.

But the pipe-and-plastic structure proved too flimsy. One morning Johnson looked out to see it flattened under a heavy snow. “It was a huge drag,” he says. “But then, in a couple days, I started seeing the possibilities.”

His inventive juices flowing, he designed a new structure to shed snow. He hauled a chain saw into the woods and cut trees for rafters and posts. During a January thaw, he finished the greenhouse in time to supply his accounts with early-season greens.
“It was the most creative thing I’ve ever done,” he says. “The design was all seat-of-the-pants, but it really worked.” The steep roof and high walls shed snow, letting in more warmth from the sun. When he could afford his own 230-acre farm – Pete’s Greens – in nearby Craftsbury, Johnson built another greenhouse just like the first. The sturdy logs, though, made the structure immovable.

Last spring the movable concept sprouted again in his imagination. Now with over 250 CSA customers, he bought four 35-x-200-foot greenhouses and erected them on steel skids. The plan was an attempt at something most people would have thought impossible in a northern climate until recently – harvesting virtually year-round.

“There’s a movement all around the country to extend the season,” says Lynn Byczynski, editor of Growing for Market based in Kansas. “It’s probably the biggest trend in small-scale farming in 50 years.”

Low-cost, low-tech “high tunnels” or “hoop houses” are popular in places as diverse as China and Europe, and among Amish farmers in the US. But Johnson is one of the first to grow salad greens year-round, Ms. Byczynski says. “It makes growers think, ‘If Pete can do it in northern Vermont, I can probably do it here.’ ”

• • •

Johnson is one of “a critical mass of new, innovative farmers” at the heart of “a massive wave of change,” says Dave Rogers, national policy director of the Northeast Organic Farmers Association. “Nationally, local food is mushrooming, and winter CSAs are developing all over the country.” He adds that even the US Department of Agriculture is getting the message: Last year’s farm bill designated $100 million for organic agriculture.

Johnson partners with other local producers to give them exposure and to diversify his own weekly offerings. Along with greens and vegetables, customers might get a bag of apples, sunflower oil, artisanal cheeses or breads, local wheat flour, eggs, or humanely raised meats.

The multifarm CSA is part of the local eating trend, an alternative to supermarkets. But isn’t local organic food expensive?
“Compared to what?” Johnson asks. “Compared to the absolute junkiest food you can buy in a supermarket? It’s too bad we think we can’t afford the most important thing in the world, when we’re so wealthy.”

For people who can’t afford local, organic food Johnson suggests home gardening as a way to save a lot of money and eat good food.

“It can be done in not a lot of time, and there’s plenty of land left in suburbia. You could have a neighborhood CSA,” he says. “Each person could grow five crops, and on Saturday everyone could bring their produce to someone’s garage – and talk to their neighbors, too.”

Pie in the sky? Maybe no more so than pulling a 200-foot greenhouse like a sled.

“What makes Pete unique is that he’s succeeding economically as well as practically,” observes Eliot Coleman, an organic farming expert in Maine whose small-scale experiments with movable greenhouses inspired Johnson’s. “He’s got the energy, brains, and imagination to try things nobody else is doing.”

Especially, maybe, the imagination.

( More backstory articles )

1. Sue Tannehill | 03.25.09

I think that more research would leade you to Eliot Coleman’s wonderfully written book Four Season Harvest. First published in 1992, Eliot traveled and learned and then built moveable greenhouses in Maine, supplying many greens and root vegetables to customers.
Eliot lives on part of the land originally owned by Helen and Scott Nearing — authors of Living the Good Life.
He even figured out how to make duck coops on wheels, so ducks could be led to areas of bug infestation.
It’s a great read and perhaps the inspiration, if not the ancestor of Pete’s admirable work. I think Coleman deserves some credit. ISBN:1-890132 27 6

and no, I’ve never met him nor do I expect benefit from this plug. It’s just the idea is older than Pete’s and I think that adds credibility to the idea.
Cheers,
Sue

2. Zev Paiss | 03.25.09

This excellent article prompts me to let you know about a national campaign to help stimulate the move towards growing more of our food closer to home. As you know, as the economic challenges continue to grow, more and more Americans are considering getting involved in their own local food production.

As a way to help to accelerate this trend, I have started a campaign called “One Million Gardens” who’s goal is:

To identify, encourage, and document the creation of at least 1,000,000 food gardens throughout the U.S. in 2009.It is located at http://onemilliongardens.ning.com.

Take a look at the site, add your garden to the list, and let others know about this campaign. It is also our hope that we can show the Obama administration the growing numbers of people involved in this work and help shift national policies to help encourage the production of more food closer to home.

Thank you for your work and I hope you will encourage others to add their gardens to this growing list.

3. Joseph Szerlag | 03.26.09

Great ideas!!!! I certainly hope the one million gardens catches on!!

Good Luck and God Bless!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Joe.

4. Will K | 03.27.09

I was building structrues like this more than 20 years ago. They are notable for their high resistance to wind. Interesting article, as far as it goes, but the article speaks of a greenhouse; a structrure designed to change the environment in a particular location. This location can be cold. And the article speaks of making the growing economical. My interest is disappointed because more information is not provided to support the economics. Is this greenhouse only heated by the sun with sufficient thermal mass for cloudy days or is additional heating provided? What is the orientation? E-W or N-S down the long axis? What are mid winter temperature ranges? Are they using composing to provide additional C02 and heat or are there some other clever techniques used? Thanks for an otherwise interesting article.

5. sandra | 03.27.09

i couldn’t get to onemilliongardens.
is it spelled correctly in zev’s response? is it still up?

6. Sandy Olson | 03.29.09

This is not only not new and is a little bit like reinventing the wheel. Eliot Coleman has been doing it successfully in Maine for some time.See his book: Four Season Harvest. The French grew in winter in cold frames around Paris in the 1800s. I am very glad that more and more are doing it successfully. hooray for us all to eat better!!

7. Jill frandsen | 04.14.09

Hi - you can reach one million gardens
at http://www.onemilliongardens.com

There are still a few free heirloom seed packages left also.
Log in today! Thanks for all the support!

8. Robert Schreib Jr. | 05.12.09

Dear People, I send a recommendation to the ‘Feeding America’ outfit, saying that what if they asked everyone in America to save their used teabags (with the staples and string cut off) and coffee grinds in those plastic Maxwell House coffee containers we could obtain by the millions from the recycling centers, and they could dump that, the paper component is extra biomass, in special bins in all shopping malls, so the local organic farmers could take it and use it to grow food crops that they then donate a portion of to “Feeding America’ and the local soup kitchens, etc? Remember, everyone WANTS to feed the hungry, IF it does not cost them anything. These particuliar trash items are pre-sterilized composts that can grow anything!

9. abdo a soliman | 07.01.09

Elliot Coleman is a pioneer in introducing many old and new gardening techniques to transform the traditional vegetable production, which was organic before minting such word. In his book the new organic grower 1995 ed, (pp 226)Coleman mention visiting a dutch farmer in 1979, who has 40×120 metal and glass green house mounted mounted on metal wheels and run on railroads. Glass green houses were used by European farmers to extend the vegetable growing season and used the french intensive gardening to maximize their use of space. Elliot Coleman started adapting intensive gardening methods combined with cold frames to explore the possibility of growing vegetable on his small farm in Main.

Trackbacks/Pingbacks

4. re:place Magazine | 02.08.09

Leave a Comment

  By clicking "Submit Comment", you agree to our Terms of Service.

We do not publish all comments, and we do not publish comments immediately. The comments feature is a forum to discuss the ideas in our stories. Constructive debate - even pointed disagreement - is welcome, but personal attacks on other commenters are not, and will not be published.

Tip: Do not write a novel. Keep it short. We will not publish lengthy comments. Come up with your own statements. This is not a place to cut and paste an email you received. If we recognize it as such, we won't post it.

Please do not post any comments that are commercial in nature or that violate copyrights.

Finally, we will not publish any comments that we regard as obscene, defamatory, or intended to incite violence.