Take a farming tip from Nick: don’t plant the whole farm at once!

Quick farming tip from Nick Marasco: Don’t fill the whole system up all at once.

If you grow the entire farm full of crops that were started all at the same time, you get production waves instead of continuous production. Continuous production is what farmers need to satisfy weekly or even bi-weekly demand. This way you always have mature crops in the farm. 

harvest-comparison planting schedule

As a new farmer, Nick seeded and planted thousands of plants all at once and filled up the entire ZipFarm as soon as it was functional! He quickly realized his mistake—the result was a huge amount of produce harvested all at once. He ended up having to donate much of the produce.

 


Now Nick keeps a planting and harvesting schedule that accounts for the life cycles of each crop.

Here’s how the schedule works in good growing conditions:

Say you’re selling lettuce to a restaurant, Torento’s Deli. They’ve asked for 15 lbs of lettuce per week. You harvest your lettuce at 5 weeks and conservatively estimate that each head will be 0.5 lbs. You’re growing 8 heads per ZipGrow Tower (4 lbs/tower), so you know it will take 4 Towers each week. This ends up being 16 lbs, giving you some wiggle room if a head or two is lost.

torentos-deli planting schedule

Since your lettuce is on a five-week turn, however, and you’re doing weekly deliveries, you actually need to have 4 Towers for every week of that turn. This means that you’ll have 20 Towers of lettuce growing at any given time, and you’ll harvest 4 and plant 4 every week.

planting schedule-every-week

This way, you can continually harvest lettuce for Torento’s Deli.

You also know now that Torento’s account will require 20 Towers worth of space in your greenhouse, and you can plan accordingly. When you plan out planting and harvesting schedules, don’t over promise produce that you can’t provide!

So how do you build a planting schedule?

1) Using what you know about your production estimates, demand volume, and growing time, calculate how much you need to be harvesting and planting each week. If demand is recurring like Torrento’s, these two numbers will be the same!

2) Multiply weekly demand by the weeks in the crop’s “turn” to determine how much space you will need for that account. Don’t exceed your space!

3) There are tons of apps and programs you can use to create reminders and to-do lists, from spreadsheets like Excel or Google Sheets, to task organizers like Trello or Basecamp. You could even use Reminders on an Apple device to schedule tasks.

Have questions? Leave them in the comments!

 

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