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| OK Greenhousers...have any of you had your plants fried or frozen due to a power outage? Has it happened when you were too far from home to do anything about it?
Sometimes I read things here about how to fix problems that suggests that everyone just sits on a bench outside their GH all day, and that you don't ever work, sleep, or vacation. I just worry that for me, if I have a greenhouse, I just *KNOW* that I'll be sitting on the beach in Maui, and a 3-day power outage (like the big one that hit the East Coast in August of '03) will hit and either freeze or fry (depending on time of year) my plants! What contingencies do you have in place for such things? |
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| Once we added our greenhouse, that sealed the deal that we need a house sitter for vacations. Taking care of the greenhouse is a judgement call, so a certain amount of automation is helpful, but a real person is essential. Full disclosure: I am one of those people who you describe. My husband and I both work from home, so we are able to take of things in the GH very easily through the day. |
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| Great question! That is something that really concerns me. I want a greenhouse that is resilient to many challenges and so we are building strategies into the design. Among the many years I have been researching this, here are many of the following design strategies I have come across and am seriously considering: Passive Solar Design http://www.baldmtnhomes.com/McCelo.html Pit Greenhouses http://www.solarinnovations.com/marketing/media/Solar Innovations,%2 0Inc. Unveils Pit Greenhouses.pdf Attached Greenhouses Subterranean Heating and Cooling System (aka "Climate Battery or "Seasonal Store") http://barrettstudio.wordpress.com/2011/12/22/the-practically-zero-ene
rgy-year-round-greenhouse/ Geothermal http://www.citrusinthesnow.com/ Phase Change Materials http://greenhousefashions.blogspot.com/ Thermal Solar in Radiant Heated Beds What I plan to do . . . I am concerned about Peak Oil (and Peak Everything!), Climate Change and economic uncertainty and it may seem that building a greenhouse might be extravagant with such concerns but I think greenhouses will become a handy feature of a house in the future. The key is to design one that is not a resource hog! http://www.greenbuildingadvisor.com/blogs/dept/energy-solutions/green- building-priority-9-create-resilient-houses For awhile, I had concluded a passive solar attached pit greenhouse (with the glazing tall enough to grow fruit trees) would be the ideal design. Then I learned about SHCS and thought that I could integrate that into the design as well. However, when we finally found a property that had enough southern exposure, we find now that the high water table is probably too high and may interfere with the SHCS tubing. So, we probably won't do the pit design and I am hoping that the heat storage below will provide the freeze protection that a pit design would give us in a power outage. I am also concerned that being in Massachusetts I might not get enough solar exposure to heat the greenhouse year round. We are looking into another heat source -any suggestions? So now we are considering geothermal. We have natural gas for our house and I am concerned that although the price of natural gas is not so bad now that in the future it will be. I also rather not use a fuel that is sometimes retrieved by fracking. Geothermal is so expensive in upfront costs that we may not be able to afford it, however, our state does offer some loans and there are federal tax incentives. Geothermal would allow us to both heat our house and greenhouse, however, we would not get the benefit of the dehumidifying that the SHCS would provide us. I'd like to do a hybrid system but we are not sure if we can afford both. In addition, we are designing a rain catchment system with an underground cistern and a root cellar. With the typical rainfall we get in New England, we could provide all the water we need for our greenhouse, household and gardens if we have a cistern big enough to store the water during rainy periods. As for what to do when we go away. We have a number of neighbors who are just wonderful! This spring we created a garden on our property for three households to use. We built it all together and when one of us goes away, we have each other to look after the garden plots. -I used to have to hire someone to water my garden! We plan on doing something like that for our greenhouse where we invite friends and neighbors to enjoy it on some level whether is by sharing the harvest or spending time in it on a cold wintery day to lift their spirits. Little by little, we will show them how it works so that when we go away, we'll have knowledgeable people we can count on. |
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