Vegetable Growing
Vegetable farming is the growing of vegetables for human
consumption.
Traditionally it was done in the soil in small rows or blocks,
often primarily for consumption on the farm, with the excess sold
in nearby towns. Later, farms on the edge of large communities
could specialize in vegetable production, with the short distance
allowing the farmer to get his produce to market while still
fresh.
The three sisters method used by Native Americans (specifically
the Haudenosaunee/Iroquois) grew squash, beans and corn together
so that the plants enhanced each other's growth. Planting in long
rows allows machinery to cultivate the fields, increasing
efficiency and output; however, the diversity of vegetables crops
require a number of techniques to be used to optimize the growth
of each type of plant. Some farms, therefore, specialize in one
vegetable; but, others grow a large variety. Due to the needs to
market vegetables while fresh, vegetable gardening has high labor
demands.
Some farms avoid this by running u-pick operations where the
customers pick their own produce. The development of ripening
technologies and refrigeration has reduced the problems with
getting produce to market in good condition.
Over the past 100 years a new technique has emerged--raised bed
gardening, which has increased yields from small plots of soil
without the need for commercial, energy intensive fertilizers.
Modern hydroponic farming produces very high yields in greenhouses
without using any soil, but expends much more energy.
Several economic models exist for vegetable farms: farms may
grow large quantities of a few vegetables and sell them in bulk to
major markets or middlemen, which requires large growing
operations; farms may produce for local customers, which requires
a larger distribution effort; farms may produce a variety of
vegetables for sale through on-farm stalls, local farmer's
markets, u-pick operations.
This is quite different from commodity farm products like wheat
and maize which do not have the ripeness problems and are sold off
in bulk to the local granary. Large cities often have a central
produce market which handles vegetables in a commodity-like
manner, and manages distribution to most supermarkets and
restaurants.
In America, vegetable farms are in some regions known as
truck farms; "truck" is a noun for which its more
common meaning overshadows its historically separate use as a term
for "vegetables grown for market". Such farms are
sometimes called muck farms, after the dark black soil in
which vegetables grow well.
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