Bat Guano- Our Cash Crap

***warning-don’t read before dinner***

Today we spent 5 hours on the farm doing a very thorough home inspection. We asked our inspector to give a once over to the barn. We know its old and wanted to be sure it wasn’t about to tip over. Turns out the barn was very well constructed.

Our inspector pointed out one interesting characteristic of the barn. Looks like quite a few bats have made their home on the center wooden beam. You can see their remnants in the picture below:

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But this picture doesn’t do the pile justice. There is bat poo (guano) everywhere! At first I was disgusted and scared of the thought of so many bats. I’m not scared of bees or spiders, but I am scared of bats. Then we joked that this would make great fertilizer. When I got home and looked it up this is what I found:

“Bat guano is recognized worldwide as a superior fertilizer with fungicidal and nematocidal properties. Guano’s basic composition is 10 percent nitrogen, 3 percent phosphorus, and 1 percent potassium. The high nitrogen content makes it an ideal fertilizer for house plants, vegetables, fruit trees, flowers, ornamentals, and lawns. In addition, bat guano contains large amounts of microbes that are highly beneficial to soil.

The preferred method for applying guano is to combine two or three tablespoonfuls with each gallon of water. This solution can be sprayed directly on plants for absorption or as a natural fungicide. The second most common method is to apply the guano directly to the soil at a rate of five pounds (three quarts) per 100 square feet of vegetable or flower pots.” From Mother Earth News.

Guano is also sold for $35 dollars a bag. So looks like we have our first cash crap!

Seeds

This is the list for the 2009 growing season, the very first growing season at Sweetlocal Farm. Just reading the list below is making my heart flutter with a combination of thrill and anxiety. I hope I do the seeds justice and give them everything they need to grow productively. I’ll get mint, chives, and rhubarb from my mom’s garden. Who knows what is already growing on the farm. I bet there will be some perennial herbs so I didn’t order any herb seeds yet. Without further ado:

High Mowing Seeds

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Chioggia Beet
Lacinato Dinosaur Kale
King of the North Bell Pepper
New England Pie Pumpkin
Samish F1 Hybrid Spinach
Table Queen Acorn Squash
Spaghetti Squash
Tango Celery
Cortland F1 Hybrid Onion
Sugar Ann Snap Pea
Red Wing F1 Hybrid Onion
All Blue Potato
Little Leaf Cucumber
Honey Nut Butternut Squash
Musque de Provence Pumpkin
Black Hungarian Pepper
Red Gold Potato

Botanical Interests

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Corn Sweet Luscious Bicolor Organic Seed
Carrot Scarlet Nantes Organic Seed
Carrot Carnival Blend Organic Seed
Broccoli Di Cicco Organic Seed
Bean Bush Pencil Pod Yellow Organic Seed
Bean Pole Blue Lake Organic Seed
Arugula Mediterranean Organic Seed
Tomato Pole Black Krim Organic Seed
Tomato Cherry Sugar Sweetie Organic Seed
Tomato Bush Italian Roma Organic Seed
Squash Summer Straightneck Organic Seed
Squash Summer Blk Organic Zucchini Seed
Radish French Breakfast Organic Seed
Pumpkin Howden Organic Seed
Pepper Chile Jalapeno Organic Seed
Muskmelon Hale’s Best Jumbo Organic Seed
Lettuce Romaine Parris Island Organic Seed
Lettuce Mesclun Gourmet Baby Greens Organic Seed
Eggplant Rosa Bianca Organic Seed
Eggplant Black Beauty Organic Seed
Cucumber Marketmore Organic Seed
Corn Sweet Painted Mountain Organic Seed