I brought in 3 loads of compost/manure to work into the hills to plant my mt hood rhizomes in but after that storm i will be lucky if i dont loose 2 1/2 of those loads down the ohio river. At least i didnt have the roots in the hills.
If you want to get a feel for what your bottom price will be, check out Lupulin Exchange. Its basically a open market where you can buy or sell hops in whatever quantities you want (or can find). You can sort based on variety and price. Assuming you don't find any local buyers, this is the place to go.
Before you ask, yes there should be a premium for your hops because they are local but only if they are at least the same quality as the hops they can get from a large merchant and in a form that is useful (i.e. pellets for most).
Thanks for this! I have been looking around for this as I am contemplating starting a hops growing operation in Central Ohio to diversify my current farming operations and was having a little difficulty determining actual market values.
What are you gonna treat your poles with, what angle are you gonna tilt ypur poles and how far from the pole do you place your anchor?
Any updated pics of the yard? We love to see new yards take shape! Also, how has your take rate been with rhizome stock? We've heard very mixed results with rhizome planting in commercial yards.
Not much to see yet. When I get the poles in the ground I'll do some picture updates. I haven't seen many good deals with rhizomes just yet. I have seen where some people put two rhizomes in each hill, that seems pricey to me. We'll see if I need to buy extra rhizomes to cover some that don't come up.
Large yards rarely use rhizomes for a few reasons. As you mentioned they recommend planting 2, 3, sometimes 4 per hill to help guarantee the best possible take rate for a consistent looking yard. The cost does add up. This is why companies like ours offer plant material. One live plant per hill that prices out the same as 2-3 rhizomes per hill. 99% take rate for a perfectly uniform field.
Where the rhizomes are sourced from is also huge. A local hop yard would be best so you know the age and quality of the plants they are sourced from. Varieties like Cascade have roughly an 8 or so year life in a commercial field before yields decrease due to age and virus load naturally acquired by the plants. If your unfortunate enough to be obtaining your rhizomes unknowingly from an old field out west that's being plowed under you're starting with heavy disease loaded poor producing material. Rhizomes are not new and fresh simply because you are growing them for the first time, they are a piece of the plant directly out of the older field and carry with them disease and virus.
The healthiest planting material you can obtain will be propagated from Virus indexed stock with VF numbers obtained from the national clean plant network. The material is not much more expensive than rhizomes and offers far superior growing, yield, vigor, uniformity, etc.
This would be the best option always.
2nd best is locally obtained rhizomes from a relatively new yard. <--- Provided this yard was just planted with clean plant material.
:rockin:![]()
Large yards rarely use rhizomes for a few reasons. As you mentioned they recommend planting 2, 3, sometimes 4 per hill to help guarantee the best possible take rate for a consistent looking yard. The cost does add up. This is why companies like ours offer plant material. One live plant per hill that prices out the same as 2-3 rhizomes per hill. 99% take rate for a perfectly uniform field.
Where the rhizomes are sourced from is also huge. A local hop yard would be best so you know the age and quality of the plants they are sourced from. Varieties like Cascade have roughly an 8 or so year life in a commercial field before yields decrease due to age and virus load naturally acquired by the plants. If your unfortunate enough to be obtaining your rhizomes unknowingly from an old field out west that's being plowed under you're starting with heavy disease loaded poor producing material. Rhizomes are not new and fresh simply because you are growing them for the first time, they are a piece of the plant directly out of the older field and carry with them disease and virus.
The healthiest planting material you can obtain will be propagated from Virus indexed stock with VF numbers obtained from the national clean plant network. The material is not much more expensive than rhizomes and offers far superior growing, yield, vigor, uniformity, etc.
This would be the best option always.
2nd best is locally obtained rhizomes from a relatively new yard. <--- Provided this yard was just planted with clean plant material.
:rockin:![]()
Greatlakeshops I Just ordered hops from you this spring. Didn't know you were on homebrew talk. I am glad to see I ordered from a supporter of the sight.
Mireille and Charles are considered experts?