Website created
and maintained
by Debbie Roos,
Ag Extension Agent.
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©2007
North Carolina
Cooperative Extension
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Sunny Slope Greenhouses
Photos and text by Debbie
Roos, Agricultural Extension Agent.

| Rich prunes off empty fruit trusses
in preparation for lowering plants. Removing the leaves and trusses
helps reduce disease problems like Botrytis. |

Dave does all the tomato harvesting. Tomatoes
are picked at this stage of ripeness. All their years of experience
have shown them that at this stage all the flavor has been captured,
and you can't tell the difference between fruit picked at this
stage and fruit allowed to ripen fully on the vine. The advantage
to picking fruit at this stage is the longer shelf-life. Tomatoes
allowed to ripen fully on the vine bruise and damage very easily
during picking and handling. Jim and Dave guarantee shelf-life
for a minimum of two weeks.
Harvest begins the first week of March and goes
til mid-July, depending on the weather conditions. Dave picks
three times a week. These tomatoes are about three days away from
being ripe enough to eat.
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While Dave is picking, Jim is grading and packing.
Each box contains 20 pounds of tomatoes. The tomatoes are stored
in the greenhouse for three days in the same environment they
were grown. It takes 40 hours a week to pick and pack tomatoes.
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| This is the finished product.
Jim and Dave have been in the business so long that each tomato
they pick already has a market. |

Jim with Walt, the official ambassador of Sunny
Slope! Walt thinks that the only reason they grow tomatoes is to
attract people to the farm to pet him. Walt loves people, especially
children, and he is the only creature on the farm that doesn't like
tomatoes! |

| Jim sells at the Pittsboro Farmers'
Market. Jim is one of the founding members of the market and serves
as the chairman of the steering committee. They have many customers
who have been buying from them for over 25 years, including many
second generation customers! |

| Customers take their tomatoes
home in special Sunny Slope bags, which Jim and Dave had made to
help preserve the quality of the tomatoes once they leave the farm.
They also serve to remind customers where they got their tasty tomatoes.
Dave and Jim offer a product with brand-name recognition - people
know to ask for Sunny Slope tomatoes! |

Typical offerings at the farmers' market -
they like them at their ripest! |

| Dave with one of their shorter
lines at the Saturday Carrboro Farmers' Market, where they have
been selling since 1980. Note the volume of tomatoes that this market
consumes! People have been known to stand in line 20-30 deep at
this market. |

Dave at the Tuesday afternoon Fearrington Farmers'
Market. They were also instrumental in helping to start this market.
They do six different farmers' market a week:
Sanford, Pittsboro, Carrboro, Fearrington, Durham, and Southern
Village. About 95% of their crop is sold directly to customers.
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At the end of the season, when the crop is finished,
it is time to solarize the soil. They remove all plants and plant
material and equipment, moisten the soil, cover it with clear
plastic, close all the vents, turn off the fans, and let the sun
bake the greenhouses for a minimum of six weeks. During this time
soil temperatures will exceed 150° F to a depth of 5 inches.
This sterilizes the soil and kills off any disease organisms,
weed seeds, and insect pests.
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This page last updated January
16, 2006.
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URL:
http://chatham.ces.ncsu.edu/growingsmallfarms
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Carolina Cooperative Extension is an educational partnership helping people
put research-based
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