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Well....I am officially a hop farmer

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NTOLERANCE

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Took the plunge this week, and agreed to rent land for a hop yard.

Almost 3 acres of land, certified organic.
I work for the land owner parttime repairing equipment for their landscape/nursery company. This keeps me there a bit anyway. I am able to use the company equipment:Skid Loaders, tractors, post hole diggers, tillers and the like. WE also have an organic composting system which will provide me with plenty of nutrients for my hops.

Here is an aerial pic of the land, I put a rectangle around the section I rented.

Field-1.jpg


Hopefully by spring I will have a large number of used telephone poles dropped off for use in a trellis. I have a contact at the local power company.

Have to work out a few things yet.... I dont have water close by, so I will have to use a large water tank to water my hops. I also want to put up a cold frame to start the rhizomes in before planting in the ground.

I have a number of sources lined up for rhizomes, including the nursery where I work. I can buy from them at cost, but selection is limited.

Anyways, I will be posting pics as I go. I also plan on having a "Hop Yard Fall Party" at the end of each season.
 
Right on. The newest issue of BYO has an article about small scale hop farming. It takes a bit to get established but apparently they are successful.
 
You can not use the telephone poles if you want to be organic certified.

Creosote treated lumber is out, as is cromated copper arsenate treated (pressure treated) lumber.
 
Took the plunge this week, and agreed to rent land for a hop yard.

Almost 3 acres of land, certified organic.
I work for the land owner parttime repairing equipment for their landscape/nursery company. This keeps me there a bit anyway. I am able to use the company equipment:Skid Loaders, tractors, post hole diggers, tillers and the like. WE also have an organic composting system which will provide me with plenty of nutrients for my hops.

Here is an aerial pic of the land, I put a rectangle around the section I rented.

Field-1.jpg


Hopefully by spring I will have a large number of used telephone poles dropped off for use in a trellis. I have a contact at the local power company.

Have to work out a few things yet.... I dont have water close by, so I will have to use a large water tank to water my hops. I also want to put up a cold frame to start the rhizomes in before planting in the ground.

I have a number of sources lined up for rhizomes, including the nursery where I work. I can buy from them at cost, but selection is limited.

Anyways, I will be posting pics as I go. I also plan on having a "Hop Yard Fall Party" at the end of each season.
I wish you all the luck in the world, bro. keep the faith....
 
Those hops are going to be garbage! Send them all to me for disposal.
 
You can not use the telephone poles if you want to be organic certified.

Creosote treated lumber is out, as is cromated copper arsenate treated (pressure treated) lumber.

The organic grower at work said treated lumber can be used, provided it is burned/charred to a certain amount ( I think it was 1" depth ).

I have a back up plan though. My day job provides me acess to damaged industrial racking. These are steel beams and cross braces 20' and longer. They are also much easier to handle than telephone poles.
 
Call the USDA.

Burning does not denature tar-creosote, and charring the ends would be a hazard to your health in all likelihood.

Im surprised you aren't buying the land. Its going to suck when your landlord decides that he wants his nd back, and you have 30,000 dollars in infrastructure on it that you really dont have any way to move.

I am planting a hop farm in the spring, only 160 plants, but I already own the land, and am using plain pine trees for the posts. For treatment, I am painting the ends with a wax-linseed oil mixture.

I expect them to last about 3-4 years before needing replacement.

On the compost front, where are you getting your compostables? You will find that getting anything by the pickup-truck load is not going to be sufficient. Plan on buying a dump truck load of manure every couple of months.

I hope you have the money to last out the income-less time before the hops start producing.

Best of luck to you.
 
Those hops are going to be garbage! Send them all to me for disposal.

Haha, yes; I concur. I think they should be shipped up here to Canada in the middle of nowhere for disposal.

Nicely done! Keep us posted.
I was happy to have 3 12' bines this year as a first year grower. Got a small ziploc bag full of Cascade my first season! Yee Haw!
:fro:
 
Call the USDA.

What he said. It's non-trivial to get and keep organic certification, and if the land is already certified, you certainly don't want to do something to negate that!

BTW, what are all those depressions in the land to the north of your plot?
 
What he said. It's non-trivial to get and keep organic certification, and if the land is already certified, you certainly don't want to do something to negate that!

BTW, what are all those depressions in the land to the north of your plot?

They arent depressions, they are apple trees....:)
 
Call the USDA.

Burning does not denature tar-creosote, and charring the ends would be a hazard to your health in all likelihood.

Im surprised you aren't buying the land. Its going to suck when your landlord decides that he wants his nd back, and you have 30,000 dollars in infrastructure on it that you really dont have any way to move.

I am planting a hop farm in the spring, only 160 plants, but I already own the land, and am using plain pine trees for the posts. For treatment, I am painting the ends with a wax-linseed oil mixture.

I expect them to last about 3-4 years before needing replacement.

On the compost front, where are you getting your compostables? You will find that getting anything by the pickup-truck load is not going to be sufficient. Plan on buying a dump truck load of manure every couple of months.

I hope you have the money to last out the income-less time before the hops start producing.

Best of luck to you.


Land near me is big $$$$$$....so at this time, renting is my best option. Our agreement is for a number of years out.....so my hope(and our agreement) is that I dont get kicked out anytime soon. She (land owner) understands that this is a long term prospect. She also owns about 30 acres of additional land, should she need it or if I wanted to expand. She has about 20 of those 30 acres rented out already, but she immediatly said, If I wanted more land, she would rather rent to me than anyone else. There seems to be a surplus of land (organic) around me for rent. This parcel I am renting has been unused for a number of years.....about 10 she tells me.

I will definetly check into the USDA on the poles. I would rather use the steel beams as its alot easier to move around....plus they are free. Assuming the paint lasts, I can see the beams lasting alot longer than wood anyway.

WE get our compost from the local lakes of all places. EVery spring/summer they dredge (?) the local chain of lakes of its unwanted seaweed. They drop this stuff of by the dumptruck load. WE compost it, used worms to help break it down, and mix it with other organic compost and end up with a super rich organic fertilizer. We have gotten this stuff for a number of years and have more than we need. Currently, we mix it with soil for perrenial flower beds, but this doesnt use up enough of it. We use a rotation of the piles of this stuff, constantly mixing it and turning it over...all 30' long by 3' high piles. Last I looked ( and this is the end of the season) there were still about 8 of those piles left.

I've got alot to learn about this stuff, in spite of reading everything I can find on the subject. Still, I am excited as all get out.
 
Congrats again on making the leap. Hope it works out for ya. You contact local breweries or microbrew places yet about buying your organic hops to gauge interest?
 
Wow, great thread...GOOD FOR YOU! Me = jealous!

I wish you well with all the work and keep us posted!

Curious question...how will you harvest (manual labor to pick my 12 ounces a year is a PITA) - read overhead!!!!!?????

I'd sans the treated poles...losts of contaminants (creosote is NASTY) and charing will only create more chemicals (polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons).

OK, I work for an environmental company...PAHs = ash. Not healthy and regulated in some states. BUT...same s#!t on your burned burger...that's why I like my cows raw!

:drunk:
 
You seem to be getting the growing under control. What are your plans for harvesting and pelletizing/packaging? I just grow a few bines at home and seen the large scale mechanized harvesting, picking and sorting up in the NorthWet. I am curious how harvesting is handled on a smaller commercial scale. It seems too small for expensive mechanization but very labor intensive to do all by hand.
 
To answer questions about harvesting......

My current plan is to harvest by hand.....my main cable running down the rows will be one that I am able to lower to drop the bines/hops to chest level. I have plenty of helpers... (read children). This past year, both my youngest kids helped my harvest the hops from my 4 plants at home. I had to bribe them a bit.

I am not sure how I want to sell my hops. MY first thought was home brewers, and a LHBS. I have also thought about the local breweries, as more are making fresh/wet hop ales, with local hops. Central Waters Brewery even makes an all Wisconsin (grains/water/hops) Wet hop ale. In a few years, I may be able to sell enough to a brewery to make a limited batch....but breweries dont pay alot for hops compared to home brewers. So, we shall see. In my experience, the more I talk to people, the more likely I am to come up with a viable selling option.

I thought about having a Hop Harvest Fest. Opening the hop yard to home brewers, with a pick your own type of set up. This option sounds like fun, having a harvest party, letting people pick the hops, and making friendships that will last and spread the business.

It also lets more people know where my hop yard is. Right now, its secluded, and no one knows the location or how to get to it.

So....lots to consider....
 
To answer questions about harvesting......

My current plan is to harvest by hand.....my main cable running down the rows will be one that I am able to lower to drop the bines/hops to chest level. I have plenty of helpers... (read children). This past year, both my youngest kids helped my harvest the hops from my 4 plants at home. I had to bribe them a bit.

I am not sure how I want to sell my hops. MY first thought was home brewers, and a LHBS. I have also thought about the local breweries, as more are making fresh/wet hop ales, with local hops. Central Waters Brewery even makes an all Wisconsin (grains/water/hops) Wet hop ale. In a few years, I may be able to sell enough to a brewery to make a limited batch....but breweries dont pay alot for hops compared to home brewers. So, we shall see. In my experience, the more I talk to people, the more likely I am to come up with a viable selling option.

I thought about having a Hop Harvest Fest. Opening the hop yard to home brewers, with a pick your own type of set up. This option sounds like fun, having a harvest party, letting people pick the hops, and making friendships that will last and spread the business.

It also lets more people know where my hop yard is. Right now, its secluded, and no one knows the location or how to get to it.

So....lots to consider....

I dont know how to take that...

You can get more money from them because they regularly get hosed by the LHBS, so youd rather keep that price gouging up and sell to them, than sell at farm direct prices that are more like $.50 per ounce? (Hops Direct) Or half that if they are wet.

I hope I read that wrong, because it kinda miffs me to think youd rather sell to HBers because it is easier to gouge them, when breweries will only pay fair market value.

All of that aside... I see harvesting and drying as probably the most laborious portions of this venture. If you can get the harvesting, drying and packaging down, should work out just fine. Pelletizing would be a bonus too.
 
Buying anything in small quantities is more expensive Pol.

To the OP. I am planting 1/10th of an acre, I am planting on a slightly compressed plan (my rows are a bit narrower). I am planting 160 plants.

If you plan on planting a significant portion of that field, you better have some more labor than your children lined up. You are looking at 1000+ plants, and the harvest will likely be in the beginning of the school year.
 
If you get a pound from each bine (not a large amount) where do you dry 1,000 pounds of hops?
 
I dont know how to take that...

You can get more money from them because they regularly get hosed by the LHBS, so youd rather keep that price gouging up and sell to them, than sell at farm direct prices that are more like $.50 per ounce? (Hops Direct)

I hope I read that wrong, because it kinda miffs me to think youd rather sell to HBers because it is easier to gouge them, when breweries will only pay fair market value.

My internet reasearch has shown me that Micro breweries pay around $2-$3 a POUND for hops.

Will you sell your hops for that? If I sell them to a brewery, am I helping Home brewers at all?

You mentioned gouging and hosing not me.

I'd be happy selling hops at prices below LHBS prices. I'd rather sell local, and have repeat customers. I'd rather give home brewers good value for their money. Additionally, I dont think I can harvest them all at once, and selling them in the amounts that home brewers use, allows me to harvest at an acceptable pace. Being involved in a local home brew club will allow me to help out the members there as well.

For the record, I figured $1.00 for 1/4 lb. or so.
 
You make a dryer.

Should only cost about 500-600 bucks.

I mean. A space heater, 8 sheets of plywood, 8 sheets of foam insulation a fan, a digital temp controller, and some wire-mesh bottomed shelves... voila.
 
Dont you have to harvest when the hops are ready, and not based on demand? I mean, when they ripen, dont they need to be picked? Regardless of what quantities HBers use?

You plan to sell them for $4 a pound dry? WOW
 
I hope I read that wrong, because it kinda miffs me to think youd rather sell to HBers because it is easier to gouge them, when breweries will only pay fair market value.

1) he's in it as a business, not a charity. The market is what it is.
2) LHBS = more labor and materials for packaging, labels, testing, etc.

Jeeez. Why are you being hard on the guy for trying to run a business? Some prespective?
 
I dont know how to take that...

You can get more money from them because they regularly get hosed by the LHBS, so youd rather keep that price gouging up and sell to them, than sell at farm direct prices that are more like $.50 per ounce? (Hops Direct) Or half that if they are wet.

I hope I read that wrong, because it kinda miffs me to think youd rather sell to HBers because it is easier to gouge them, when breweries will only pay fair market value.

It's like malt- I can buy it a # at a time for $2/#, or I can buy it 2000# at a time for $.60/#. There's probably an economics term for that, but I don't see it as a ripoff.


To the OP-
Check out http://www.coloradoorganichops.com/- they're a small place- 9 acres of organic hops- and they have some kind of machine they invented to pick hops on a small scale. I don't know where you're at, but they were renting it out to hops growers in the area.
 
To the OP-
Check out http://www.coloradoorganichops.com/- they're a small place- 9 acres of organic hops- and they have some kind of machine they invented to pick hops on a small scale. I don't know where you're at, but they were renting it out to hops growers in the area.

Yepp, thats Happy Hoppin Glens site. I have contacted him and will likely buy some rhizomes from him in the next month or so. He also offered to tutor me a bit.
 
economies of scale, buying in bulk, etc...

I just bought a pound of Summit pellets for $15.99 from NB when they were $2.99/oz... you do the math. I don't begrudge them for that mark-up. It's the cost of additional advertising/marketing, warehousing/storing, packaging, etc that goes into it, and while I wasn't "in need" of a pound of Summit, I will find something to use it for without too much worry!
 
Dont you have to harvest when the hops are ready, and not based on demand? I mean, when they ripen, dont they need to be picked? Regardless of what quantities HBers use?

You plan to sell them for $4 a pound dry? WOW

Yes, there is a limited time that hops should be harvested....but......

Its been my experience growing them at home, that not all hops ripen at the same time. Think corn....ever seen a farmer harvest only the corn on the south side of the fields, leaving the rest? That corn gets more sun, and ripens faster. MY hops acted the same way. Also, some varieties ripen sooner that others. I have 4 different types in my yard. Cascades came first, then Saaz, Nugget, finally sunbeam.

So....I have a window to work with.....small, but a window.

This is one additional reason selling to home brewers is beneficial....if they know the harvest is coming, They can plan to buy some at harvest time....especially if its a good deal.
 
Being honest......

My $4.00 a lb pricing was for Cascades...other hops may be more....not much, but hops like Centennial would be more. Just like they are at LHBS. (well at least near me they are)

Of course, this is just my ramblings at an early stage. Honestly, I dont plan to sell many (any?) the first two years. Any hops the first year will be tested (home tested) for bitterness. Second year, I'd probably send some to a lab for testing. Any hops I get in the first two years, I'd probably use myself, or give out a samples to local brewers. (get the word out)

Its great to have the advise and questions from this forum. The more I read the more I plan.

Thanks.
 
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