Acres Australia

Adam Jones uses a vortex for pest control

- ☐ - Tim Marshall

ADAM Jones has been slowly developing his small horticultu­re farm at Theebine, Queensland, over the five years since he purchased the property. Always a passionate gardener, he previously worked with alternativ­e energy, especially in high-rise and resorts.

Adam says that seasonal growing is important. In summer, sweet potato and eggplant are major crops, as well as Asian greens in autumn.

In autumn, a much wider range of vegetables can be started to grow through the winter months, including cucumber, black and curly kale, silverbeet, cherry tomatoes, three varieties of lettuce and broccolini. Spring onions grow all year round.

Theebine experience­s only a few frosts a year, around mid-August, so Adam must avoid sensitive crops at that time. However, he did not suffer any frost last year, and he wonders if climate change will make this permanent.

Treating major pests

Adam says the end of the extended travel visa benefit for Woofers was a significan­t blow. (Willing Workers On Organic Farms is an exchange system where farmers get labour in return for food and accommodat­ion). He will extend some small perennial plantings of passionfru­it, mango and dragon fruit because they involve less heavy labour than the annual crops.

Adam says he finds it better to bunch up the smaller broccolini heads for market than to grow a large broccoli head. Heliothis and cabbage moth caterpilla­rs are a major pest for brassicas such as broccoli. Adam previously sprayed regularly with an organicall­y-permitted biological

insecticid­e called Dipel. Recently, however, he has had improved results using less Dipel, covering the growing plants with frost cloth and using a light trap called a Vortex, which attracts the flying moths at night.

Diatomaceo­us earth (an abrasive mineral) is mixed with the Dipel to control small caterpilla­r and soft-bodied pests. Eco Oil is occasional­ly used to control squash or pumpkin beetles that also love eggplant and capsicum. Adam also encourages ladybirds. Adam makes his own compost, mainly from crop wastes and the cardboard boxes he uses for harvest and transport to market. Adam harvests weeds and volunteer plants from the parts of the property that are not cultivated, with a neat hand-pushed collection truck, like a miniature fodder harvester. He says these non-farmed areas are a standing fertility reserve for the rest of the property. He also uses some certified organic inputs, including his own mineral fertiliser blend consisting of a bag of rock dust, a bag of lime (calcium) and a bag of certified chicken pellets. Adam says that when combined with the cost of seed trays, he aims to keeps expenses for establishi­ng a 50-metre row under $40.

Foliar fertiliser, which he says he must use at moderate temperatur­es when plant stomata are open, ideally around 21 degrees, is applied three or four times over the life of the plant from seedling stage to the start of flowering.

Adam sows cover crops of dun pea in winter and lablab in summer. He says he must chop up the root system of the lablab to stop it coming back, but if he used clover (which does not need to be tilled in), he would have to irrigate. The lablab grows on natural rainfall. The cover crops are inoculated to ensure they produce growth and nitrogen to benefit the soil.

Organic certificat­ion

A small amount of a permitted organic herbicide (made from plant essential oils) is used around the header pipes to keep the irrigation accessible. Adam sells through the Kawana and Noosa Farmers’ Markets. He was involved with a local chemical-free group but has since decided that organic certificat­ion is a better goal. He says the farmers’ market is important for his viability, that his customers want organic, and that he believes an authentic certificat­ion according to a reputable standard is important. Adam identified AS 6000 as the most reliable because it is produced by a reputable organisati­on (Standards Australia) and has legal standing.

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 ??  ?? Adam Jones sells his produce through the Kawana and Noosa Farmers’ Markets, on Queensland’s Sunshine Coast.
Adam Jones sells his produce through the Kawana and Noosa Farmers’ Markets, on Queensland’s Sunshine Coast.
 ??  ?? Adam uses a light trap called a Vortex, which attracts the flying moths at night.
Adam uses a light trap called a Vortex, which attracts the flying moths at night.

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