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Mother Nature rules the weather, but that doesn’t mean she can’t use a hand now and then.

 

Solar Panel

A large solar tracking system standing sentinel outside The Chef’s Garden’s in-progress, state-of-the-art research facility is doing just that.

The system’s panel looks like a giant’s enormous flat-screen television, but the unit, installed early in July, is there to harness as much solar energy as it can between sunup and sundown.

“It’s our first foray into renewable energy,” said Bob Jones Jr.

Solar Panel Tracking System: Glow Power

Plants being researched in the facility will be part of a multi-layer setup in the building’s attached greenhouses. LED lights powered by the captured solar energy will allow for nighttime lighting.

The solar tracker’s rotating action allows it to produce 50 percent more energy than a solid-mount panel (the style typically seen mounted on rooftops). To do so, the tracker rotates on a dual-axis swivel, following the sun’s arc from east to west so that its “face” remains at a constant perpendicular angle to the sun for optimal energy absorption.

Solar Panel Tracking System: Remote Control

AllEarth Solar, a Vermont company, manufactures the solar tracker. (Jones said AllEarth Solar builds its solar system components with American-made materials, which gives it a distinct edge over its competitors.)

An internet connection allows the company to remotely access the unit as needed for adjustments or troubleshooting. The connection also records daily calculations of the tracker’s kilowatt hours generated.
Solar Panel Use

A continuously updating bar graph showed that July’s numbers were consistently high, but August’s recent string of rainy, cloudy days showed a dip on the graph. As summer turns to fall, Jones said shorter daylight hours will also have a direct impact on the unit’s power generation.

Decisions, Decisions

In addition to solar energy, Jones said he is continually exploring and researching other future methods of on-farm energy production − options that dovetail with The Chef’s Garden’s pledge to sustainable farming practices. Jones said potential methods require three things to meet the farm’s sustainability criteria, “Is it environmentally friendly? Is it socially responsible? Is it economically viable?”

Been Doing it for Years

Those three touchpoints are nothing new at The Chef’s Garden. Some of the farm’s other “green” practices include a biofuel burner in one of the large greenhouses that heat water and then run through an underground network of tubes to warm the soil. Corncobs from a neighboring seed-corn farm are the burner’s primary fuel. When the corncobs run low, Jones turns to pellets made from recycled waxed cardboard − the byproduct of a large paper mill.

Corn Burner

The farm’s own discarded (unwaxed) cardboard is baled and taken to a nearby roofing manufacturer, where it is made into asphalt shingles.

“All of our packaging materials are either biodegradable or recyclable,” Jones said. “Composting and cover crops increase soil biology and reduce fertilizer use. We heat our maintenance shop with used motor oil.”

Jones explained that whenever the farm mechanics change the oil on a truck or tractor, the used oil becomes fuel to power the shop’s forced air furnace.  “We can either use it or pay someone to take it away,” he said.

A Way of Life

Solar power is just the latest example of The Chef’s Gardens’ efforts to minimize waste, conserve energy, and be responsible caretakers of our land, air, neighbors, businesses, and, most importantly, our chefs.

“Farmers have been sustainable their entire lives – been good stewards of the earth,” Jones said. “Solar is just the next and the newest.”

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