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By Suzanne
Labry Freelance Writer
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The
frequently steep and deeply rutted road winding its way
down off Highway 290 outside of Dripping Springs to the
main compound of buildings that make up Clark's Farm is
definitely not for those with a need for speed or a
low-slung oil pan. The road demands a slow descent, a
good eye, a sure hand, and a steady pace. In other
words, it requires patience — not at all unlike a
garden.
Harley Clark has that sort of patience.
He also has the kind of wide-ranging intelligence and
curiosity that tend to lead a person in a variety of
directions. As head cheerleader at the University of
Texas in 1955, it was Harley Clark who introduced the
"Hook 'Em Horns" hand sign to an eager student body. In
the 1960s and 70s, it was attorney Harley Clark who
developed a successful career as a trial lawyer. In
1987, it was District Judge Harley Clark who ruled that
the state's system of public school finance was
unconstitutional because it discriminated against
students in property-poor districts. For the last three
decades and fulltime for the past five years, it has
been organic gardener Harley Clark who raises
gourmet-quality vegetables on land nurtured by the Mill
Seat branch of Onion Creek.
Clark's Farm is a
small commercial vegetable operation that supplies
vegetables and herbs to various restaurants, including
Asti and Fino in Austin, the Y Bar and Grill in Oak
Hill, and Roscoe's in Dripping Springs. In late winter
the farm yields leeks, onions, and lettuce, primarily
romaine. Spring and summer crops include potatoes,
beans, cucumbers, and several varieties of squash,
tomatoes, and peppers in addition to basil, sage,
oregano and chives. Fall vegetables are usually peppers,
cucumbers and beans. Sometimes a chef will request a
certain item, such as a particular type of pepper, and
Harley will grow it specifically for the restaurant.
The Clark property consists of 40 acres altogether,
approximately two of which are in cultivation for the
garden. Referring to the University of Texas' original
acreage, Harley quips, "I figure if 40 acres is big
enough to start a university, it's big enough to start a
farm!" Three large, separate growing areas comprising
6,000 square feet each and named for their locations on
the property — the Upper Garden, the Lower Garden, and
the Dam Garden — enable Harley to rotate his crops and
allow some areas to lie fallow between plantings. The
crops are irrigated out of a tank and also with well
water when necessary. Although a rainwater collection
system provides all the Clarks' household needs, none of
it is used for the gardens. All plants are started from
seed in a greenhouse built by Harley.
The soil in
all three garden areas could easily inspire dirt envy in
the heart of many a vegetable grower. Rich and dark with
a fine tilth, the garden's soil is the basis for
Harley's success as a commercial grower. After every
growing season, Harley tills his permanent 48-inch wide
beds, making trenches 12-inches deep and 18-inches wide
down the center of each bed. At the bottom of each
trench goes bone meal (0-10-0) for phosphorous at the
rate of 2 cups to every 10 feet. He then adds a few
tablespoons of Epsom Salt to help the phosphates
dissolve. Next goes blood meal (10-0-0) for nitrogen
applied at a rate of one cup every 10 feet. Finally, the
trench is topped off with compost. This mixture is
allowed to rest for a period of time. After the crops
are planted, a heavy layer of "horse-feed-grade" Coastal
Bermuda hay is used for mulch. The results speak for
themselves: Last spring, the Lower Garden yielded more
than a thousand pounds of romaine lettuce. From 90
Celebrity plants, Harley sold 2,900 pounds of tomatoes
and he ate "about 500 pounds more."
Through trial
and error, Harley has settled on favorite varieties of
vegetables. For his winter lettuce crop, he prefers
Paris Island Cos Romaine, Bibb and Buttercrunch
Butterhead, and Black Seeded Simpson Leaf. In late
spring, he likes Jericho Romaine for its heat tolerance.
Summer squash favorites include Eight Ball and Senator
zucchini, Seneca Prolific yellow straight neck and Horn
of Plenty yellow crook neck, and Gold Rush, an
interesting hybrid of green zucchini and yellow straight
neck. Celebrity tomatoes win Harley's vote hands-down
for their dependability and he also has had good results
with the Juliet Hybrid grape tomato. Onion choices
include White Contessa and White Bermuda, Southern Belle
Red and Yellow Granex. Revolution and The Big Early are
good picks for bell peppers.
Pests don't seem to
be much of a problem at Clark's Farm. However, when bugs
do get out of hand, Harley uses Bt (Bacillus
Thuringiensis), Neem oil, insecticidal soaps, and
Pyrethrin with a light hand. Although Clark's Farm has
not applied for an Organic Certification from the Texas
Department of Agriculture, Harley strictly follows
organic practices, never using herbicides and employing
only those products and techniques that have been
approved for organic gardening. The garden areas are
fenced to deter deer, but armadillos, birds and other
critters are tolerated with a philosophical attitude and
a dash of humor. Biodiversity is key.
Harley's
wife, Patti, leaves the day-to-day gardening work to
Harley and his right-hand man, Manuel Juarez. Patti
keeps busy riding herd on the couples' three Bassett
hounds, two goats and 10 cats, as well as serving on the
boards of the Friends Foundation, the Austin Zoo, and
PAWS (The Public for Animal Welfare, Inc.). However, she
takes an active role in the operation and as the
"official head of procurement," Patti is often called
upon to help solve problems such as devising protective
coverings to keep tender lettuce plants from being
nipped by a late frost.
Harley himself appears to
have found his true calling. He cites the calming
influence of gardening, its spiritual connection, and
its being an integral part of nature. "Gardening is
satisfying to me in a way that nothing else is," he
says. "Once you give yourself over to it, you just want
to be doing it all the time. And it leads off into all
sorts of other interests, like learning about insects,
or fertilizers, or weather patterns, or how to build
sheds and so on."
And what about that "Hook 'Em
Horns" sign with which he will be forever associated?
For those who may not be familiar with it, the sign is
meant to symbolize the horns of the University of Texas
mascot, the longhorn. It is made by extending the index
and pinky fingers while holding the second and third
fingers with the thumb.
Harley tells a story
about it. More than 50 years ago, when Harley proclaimed
it as the official school hand sign, he did so without
clearing it first with then-Dean Arno Nowotny. The Dean
was furious and angrily asked the young cheerleader if
he had any idea what that hand sign meant in Italy.
Harley replied that he was only 19 and didn't know
anything. The Dean responded, "I'm just glad we aren't
the unicorns."
Rival sporting teams use a variant
of the sign by turning the gesture upside down, with the
"horns" pointing downward, in an effort to be insulting.
Far from being offended, however, Harley Clark has a
different interpretation of the down-turned horn sign.
It is the perfect tool for spacing onion sets.
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