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Subject: Green House in Hot Arizona
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kharlessUser is Offline

Posts:86

07/04/2008 9:49 AM Alert 

With the price of food getting crazy I was thinking about how you might be able to grow your own food, enough for a small family.  With our extreme weather, gardening year round doesn't seem like an option, this coming from someone who has never gardened.  So I thought, could you create a green house building that wasn't too hot in the summer and not too cold in the winter?  A few googles kindof lead me to believe it wouldn't work in our summers, unless you covered it, internally lit it, and had some sort of cooling system.

Anyone have any ideas?


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Serpthia...User is Offline

Posts:175

07/04/2008 10:13 AM Alert 
Hello,

I've been in some pretty elaborate greenhouses where the temperature inside isn't at the mercy of the elements. They've systems that keep the interior temperature constant. I don't know how expensive they would be, but it's definitely doable. Would it be economical on such a small scale is the question. I'd been interested in reading what you find out.

Serp.
jeffrey jamesUser is Offline

Posts:0

07/04/2008 10:40 PM Alert 
Maybe a swamp cooler at one end of greenhouse and exausting fans at the other end to extract the heated temps.
garden glowUser is Offline

Posts:705


07/06/2008 10:19 AM Alert 

Serptia made a good point about it being economical..

Why not start with some raised beds..a few vegetables that your family enjoys and see what works for you.

If gardening is something you enjoy you might be interested in taking the gardeners short course offered by UofA Cooperative Extension program..the course is available right here in Maricopa..I believe a new one starts in September.


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CruzinUser is Offline

Posts:145


07/07/2008 1:13 PM Alert 
Where can I find out more info about this class, some of my friends and I would like to look into and we are all first time gardeners this year. TIA
Cactus RobUser is Offline

Posts:1155


07/07/2008 5:21 PM Alert 
Wouldn't an ordinary greenhouse work okay if you planted your veggies and tomatoes in January and tried to have everything harvested by Mid-May? I might give that a try if I it would work and I could come up with money to build it.
impalasharkUser is Offline

Posts:31

07/11/2008 2:47 AM Alert 

I believe a green house isn't required unless you want to raise a typically summer veggie in winter!! I don't claim to speak from experience, but IMHO, planning what veggie to plant, where (sun/shade), and in which season/month, should be sufficient to raise enough veggies to serve you year round.

Btw, you can read the UofA's gardener manual online, specifically ch 10, veggies. They also recommend raised beds/boxes. I dont think they recommend greenhouses.

http://ag.arizona.edu/pubs/garden/mg/index.html

 

 

 

 

jeffrey jamesUser is Offline

Posts:0

07/11/2008 6:47 AM Alert 
What you need to check into is hydroponics.
garden glowUser is Offline

Posts:705


07/11/2008 7:27 AM Alert 
Posted By Cruzin on 07/07/2008 1:13 PM
Where can I find out more info about this class, some of my friends and I would like to look into and we are all first time gardeners this year. TIA


You can call Gail Hughes @ 520-836-5221 to ask when the next class begins..

"Garden and Landscape Short Course" held @ UofA farm in Maricopa


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kmt85238User is Offline

Posts:15


07/12/2008 10:25 PM Alert 

Rather than going to the expense of a full-blown greenhouse, why not plant your desired vegetables in raised beds with an irrigation system for automatic watering?  To protect the plants from the intensity of the sun, cover the area with shade cloth/nursery cloth (available locally) during the hotter summer months.

I was successful doing so several years ago.  Unless you're trying to grow things year 'round  or during the colder winter months, a greenhouse really isn't necessary.  Consider the agriculture grown in the fields of Arizona sans a greenhouse.

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