Showing posts with label Tunnels. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tunnels. Show all posts

Sunday, December 25, 2011

Nancy Holt's Sun Tunnels : 24 April 2010 : Video by Andi & Lance Olsen

Sun Tunnels is located in the Great Basin Desert outside of the town of Lucin, Utah. The work is a product of Holt's interest in the great variation of intensity of the sun in the desert compared to the sun in the city. Holt searched for and found a site which was remote and empty: "It is a very desolate area, but it is totally accessible, and it can be easily visited, making Sun Tunnels more accessible really than art in museums . . . A work like Sun Tunnels is always accessible . . . Eventually, as many people will see Sun Tunnels as would see many works in a city-in a museum anyway." The work consists of four massive concrete tunnels (18 feet long and nine feet in diameter), which are arranged in an "X" configuration to total a length of 86 feet. Each tunnel reacts differently to the sun, aligned with the sunrise, sunset, or the summer or winter solstice. Someone visiting the site would see the tunnels immediately with their contrast to the fairly undifferentiated desert landscape. Approaching the work, which can be seen one to one-and-a-half miles away, the viewer's perception of space is questioned as the tunnels change views as a product of their landscape. The tunnels not only provide a much-needed shelter from the sweltering desert sun, but once inside the dazzling effect of the play of light within the tunnels can be seen. The top of each tunnel has small holes, forming on each, the constellations of Draco, Perseus, Columba, and Capricorn, respectively. The ...

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Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Growing Tomatoes in Greenhouses and Tunnels

!±8± Growing Tomatoes in Greenhouses and Tunnels

Greenhouses and less sophisticated tunnels provide excellent growing conditions for tomatoes, even when temperatures are not closely controlled. They provide protection from wind, rain, hail and of course from the sun and from excessively cold conditions.

When tomatoes are protected from the elements, they can withstand lower temperatures than they normally would when grown out in the open - even though they do need to be heated if there is going to be protection for the plants and fruit from frost.

Many commercial tomato farmers grow their crops in greenhouses which have a scientifically controlled micro-climate. But even a sheltered environment like a plastic-covered tunnel frame gives some natural "control" of both light and moisture.

Choose a Protected Environment for your Tomatoes

Original greenhouse designs originating during the Victorian era were expensive structures that were made with steel and glass. Over time a growing number of companies have manufactured less expensive structures, some of which are available in kit form. Many of these utilise polycarbonate materials instead of glass. Some are made with aluminum (or aluminum - depending where you live!) and either glass or polycarbonate sheeting.

Greenhouses are permanent structures and can be very attractive features in the garden. The glass (or polycarbonate) transmits light during the day and can be capable of trapping quite a lot of heat at night. They are usually the same kind of height as a regular shed and so are tall enough to grow high-growing tomato plants. Large plants can grow up to 3 m or 10 ft!

Windows are often incorporated in traditional greenhouse structures, aiding ventilation. However you will still need to water the plants, and may want to install an automatic irrigation system.

In some countries, greenhouses are more commonly used when weather conditions are less than perfect, or to raise seedlings that are going to be planted out.

Walk-in tunnels are a much more modern invention, but strangely not necessarily cheaper than a small greenhouse. The thing is that tunnels are usually quite large, having been developed for commercial use. But if you have the space for one, it could be a simple alternative to a greenhouse, and could enable you to grow some superb juicy tomatoes at home!

Generally tunnels are made by stretching transparent polythene over a series of metal hoops that form the structure of the tunnel. There isn't therefore the opportunity to make openings, except at the two ends. While tunnels are not quite as sophisticated as traditional greenhouses, they do a really good job. Another "advantage" some give is that, because they are not "permanent" you can move them if the soil becomes "diseased". This is largely a fallacy since tunnels are BIG, and if you move them you will damage the plastic, which will then need to be replaced. At the end of the day a tunnel and a commercial greenhouse generally do the same thing.

Pests and Diseases in Greenhouses and Tunnels

Shelter in greenhouse and tunnel structures unfortunately doesn't translate to protection from pests and diseases.

One of the stock warnings professionals give when it comes to growing tomatoes in soil beneath a growing structure is that it needs to be sterilized or regularly replaced. Greenhouses, however, are more frequently built with a solid concrete floor and then the plants are propagated in growing bags. Tunnels are usually constructed on bare earth.

Regular watering within a greenhouse or tunnel not only keeps the temperature regular and creates a nice humid environment, it also helps to curtail invasion by certain pests including the red spider mite.

Funnily enough the damaging little whitefly is more of a pest in greenhouses that it is when tomatoes are grown out in the open.

So why not do a bit more homework before you decide which way to grow tomatoes at home? It may not be worth spending money on structures; rather spend time and effort ensuring the soil in your veggie garden is good.


Growing Tomatoes in Greenhouses and Tunnels

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