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Clean-up
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Tomato
strings and stakes must be removed, and, after the last crops are mowed, the
plastic mulch has to be picked up. Tractor-pulled
“lifters” loosen the edges of the mulch, making it easier to pick up.
However, we don’t have to pick up all our plastic because
we’re using a lot of degradable mulches, which can be left in the field until
they break down to carbon dioxide and water. (The only trouble is, they don’t
make a degradable silver mulch.) Then we run the “bedsplitter”, which does
just what it says: splits the beds open, allowing easier access to the drip
tape, which must also be picked up. Both
the mulch and tape are rolled up and put into dumpsters.
The
soil is disced to mix in the
leftover crops and weeds to allow them to be broken down by soil microorganisms.
Unlike many other parts of the
country, growers here rarely use a plow such a moldboard. Our sands are loose
and usually turn easily, so we really just need to cut up the plant material and
turn it over several times.
Then
we plant a cover crop. The most common one used here is a sterile (non seed
producing) sorghum/ sudangrass hybrid. This crop grows quickly in the summer
heat and adds a lot of organic matter to the soil when it is tilled in. Another
reason we use it is that it can take up fertilizers that are left in the soil
and store them so they are not washed into the water table in the summer rains.
That protects the environment and saves some fertilizers for us. We are
constantly trying to find tropical legumes that will work as cover crops for us.
Sunn hemp grows the best, so far.

The cane windbreaks are mowed, and sometimes burned, if time and weather
allow. Then the cane is fertilized.