Wednesday, August 14, 2024

A Visit from University Researchers and 

Flax Harvest at Gale Woods Farm!

Three people standing along flax plot in field

A couple of weeks ago, three researchers from the University of Minnesota Department of Horticulture Science visited the Gale Woods Farm flax crop. The U of M has been testing perennial seed flax (not linen flax) to develop the most suitable seed flax for the Upper Midwest region. I first met one of their researchers, Matt, after I gave a presentation and demonstration about linen flax in April at the Weaver’s Guild of Minnesota. He became intrigued by the Gale Woods Farm linen flax project I mentioned at my talk and has been following its progress. On July 29, Matt and his colleagues from the U of M traveled to Gale Woods Farm for a literal field trip to learn more about linen flax and see it growing in real life. We had such an enlightening visit sharing and comparing the different varieties of the flax species! 

 

Perennial flax stalks lying on the ground


Matt gave me a few bundles of their perennial seed flax stalks, which he had retted and dried. Note that these bundles have been cut and not pulled. (The cut end is on the left in the photo.) The crown and roots of the perennial varieties need to remain in the soil for next year’s spring growth, so they are cut. (Linen flax is an annual plant and is pulled.) I have promised to mechanically process these cut stalks with my flax processing tools to see what sort of fiber might emerge. Seed flax has many flower branches and is shorter than linen flax (these bundles are 3 feet in length, and an optimal linen flax stalk will be another foot longer), so I don’t expect to recover fiber that will be that useful for spinning unless it is blended with other fibers. But we shall see! I LOVE such real-life experimentation! 


Gale Woods Farm Harvest Day Has Happened—
Friday, August 9th!

Long view of flax plot in field


This is what the plot looked like on August 9. It was ready to harvest!

We (the Gale Woods garden staff, a farm volunteer, and I) harvested the flax last Friday, August 9th. The harvest date snuck up on us. Most of the stalks had quickly become yellow about one-third of the way up the stalk, perhaps because of the warmer turn in the weather from the past week. Since August 9 was 94 days since the sowing on May 8 and within the 90–100 days from sowing, which is the expected growing window for linen flax, it was ready, even if some flowers were blooming on a few of the slower-growing stalks. Our harvest day just happened to be on a beautiful, cool day with a brisk wind, so it was another reason to take advantage of the perfect weather for harvesting!

 

People in field pulling flax stalks

A team member pulling flax stalks

Team member pulling flax


View of plot after the harvest with stalks remaining at the end of the row


In four hours, we pulled about three-fourths of the 150-lineal-foot plot and left the tallest last quarter of stalks to stand in the field, where they will fully mature to a brown color, and their seeds will also complete their maturation. Those stalks will then be pulled, and their seeds will be used to plant next year’s crop in hopes that they will also result in a tall crop for next year. (See them at the far end of the image above. The green plants in the pulled plot are mainly weeds left behind after the harvest! It was a weedy plot, even though you couldn't see all the weeds through the dense, tall stalks. Better preparation of a plot area in the fall will make next year's plot much cleaner. We didn't have that opportunity for this year's crop.)



Another sign that the crop is ready to harvest is the sound of the seeds bouncing inside the seed ovules (capsules). Turn up your sound to hear the gentle rattling of these ovule “maracas”!


Fence line with flax stalks hanging from the fence


The harvested plot yielded 157 flax bundles (“beets”), which we hung on the adjacent fence to dry with the seed end down. Hanging flax is the best way to dry the stalks since it allows the stalk and seeds to mature further, as all moisture remaining in the stalk will move to the stalk tip and the seeds during the drying process. The other method is to set them upright in “chapels” in the field (chapels are beets set upright in groups that support each other like a teepee). But because our summer has been so wet and space for the chapels to sit was challenging, hanging them was the best option. They will dry very quickly when hung and make a lovely visual along the fence line!

Close image of flax bundles hanging from fence


I drove past the fence yesterday, and in just four days, the harvested stalks have already started to dry and turn brown! 

Long view of flax bundles drying on a fence

When they are fully dry, maybe in a few more days to a week (there is no urgent timeline for the next steps), we will ripple (pull off) the seed capsules, and the stalks will be ready for retting. The farm has vats that we can use to ret the stalks in the field. Vat retting is the fastest retting method. But, since we cannot artificially heat the vat, we will need to let the ambient temperature and sun participate in the ret, which takes about a week longer than a controlled heated vat. (The other retting method is dew retting them by laying the stalks in thin layers on the ground. That usually takes at least two weeks or more and can result in an uneven ret. Besides, since ground space is also limited, that was another reason to vat ret!)

 

The stalks should be ready for rippling off the seeds sometime during the next week. Stay tuned!

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