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    The Farmer Diaries

    North Texas farmer combats drought with wicking garden beds

    Marshall Hinsley
    May 12, 2013 | 6:00 am

    Winter crashed my garden party last week and started talkin' smack. Tomato plants withered. Borage leaves got bruised. Sweet potato transplants were pummeled into clumps of reddish brown leaves. These all resulted from a cold spell when the weather should have been moist and warm.

    It was the latest twist in what has been a weird spring. March started off so warm that I felt safe planting; I ended up regretting that. April warmed up, then hit us with two nights of freezing temperatures in the 20s.

    As May approached, I thought we were in the clear. But we got another cold snap on May 2. Okra and squash, who both love the heat, have been reluctant to sprout; so far, they're a no-show.

    A wicking bed has a built-in reservoir of water under the soil. The plants have a contained source of water that won't evaporate or dissipate into the ground nearby.

    Now drought has shown up to the party, driving wide cracks into the parched fields of onions and beans. The rain we got this week was a relief, but too little too late. Garden crops need a head start of growth before summer arrives and blows a bunch of hot air around.

    I've mentioned my amazing rainwater harvesting system, but my water supply is already down by a quarter, a month before I should be thinking about opening the spigots. At this rate, and with gloomy predictions of rainfall, the water I collected over the winter will be used up by July.

    New ways to fight drought
    If climate change is the culprit, then anyone who wants to opt out of industrialized agriculture and declare food independence must respond with a multi-pronged approach. I've been investigating ideas this week on how to sustain a portion of my crops. I don't want a replay of the summer of 2011, when the worst drought on record left me and many others with a garden full of dead plants.

    One option is vertical farming, which uses high-tech methods to grow crops in high-rise buildings with controlled environments using a fraction of the resources of land, water and fertilizer required by field agriculture. The idea looks promising as a social shift toward sustainability. But the million-dollar price tag is out of reach. However, the concepts that make vertical farming work are within reach.

    One of vertical farming's major concepts is hydroponics, the art of growing plants in water without using soil. Advocates say the method uses 90 percent less water to produce the same amount of food. Anyone with two five-gallon buckets and an aquarium pump is halfway to his first crop of hydroponically grown carrots. You can buy supplies at local hydroponics stores such as Texas Hydroponics, Lone Star and Coolhouse.

    But then an acquaintance told me about the Food Is Free Project, an Austin-based nonprofit co-founded by John VanDeusen Edwards that is dedicated to helping people collaborate in growing healthy food and building their community.

    "So much of the status quo in society seems to be centered on survival, a sort of 'this is mine' mentality," Edwards says. "When we focus on building up the people around us, we also make things better for ourselves. We turn from survival to thrival."

    The organization's key project is the wicking garden bed, a raised bed with a built-in reservoir of water under the soil. The plants have a contained source of water that won't evaporate or dissipate into the ground nearby. You add water through a vertical pipe poking up from the ground that is connected to the reservoir; an overflow drain four inches from the bottom prevents overfilling.

    Edwards adapted the idea from methods used to grow crops in arid regions. He claims that the bed needs only a few gallons of water every two to four weeks. That beats my average of two gallons per day for each comparably sized raised bed.

    Using recycled pallets and reclaimed materials, each bed can cost as little as $18. My bed cost $26 – close. It was an easier project than the hydroponic carrot bucket because I had most of the materials, including pallets, nails and compost.

    For my first wicking bed, I planted Texas Wild tomatoes, carrot seeds, cilantro and a chamomile transplant, just to see how it works for a variety of plants. My first try isn't too pretty, but I'll improve the style later; this first bed was for substance.

    I can't see wicking beds replacing acres of onions, beans, wheat and corn. But if the concept proves effective, it represents another alternative to my field crops and raised beds. If my garden party ends early because summer gets too mean, I may still reap a stash of veggies that'll keep me from having to grab a bite at the shindig hosted by industrialized agriculture.

    Despite recent rainfall, cracks in North Texas soil reveal the persistent drought affecting the state.

      
    Photo by Marshall Hinsley
    Despite recent rainfall, cracks in North Texas soil reveal the persistent drought affecting the state.
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    Sushi News

    Fun conveyor-belt sushi restaurant debuts at McKinney mixed-use

    Raven Jordan
    Apr 25, 2025 | 2:32 pm
    Kura Sushi
    Photo by Jakob Layman for Kura Sushi
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    A Japanese-inspired restaurant that brings you sushi on a conveyor belt is now open in McKinney: Called Kura Revolving Sushi, it’s located at 8585 W. University Dr. #150 in the West Grove mixed-use development, where it debuts on April 25, with an opening party taking place all weekend from April 25-27.

    "We are thrilled to open our sixth DFW location in McKinney, which is one of the fastest growing cities in the country with a population that's increasingly diverse and open to new culinary experiences," says Chief Development Officer Robert Kluger in a statement. "We believe the West Grove shopping center is the perfect place to share our authentic Japanese dining experience with this growing community."

    Kura Sushi USA was established in 2008 and has grown to be the largest revolving sushi chain: Small plates of sushi and sides are placed on a conveyor belt that snakes around the restaurant, allowing customers to grab items as they pass by.

    They have more than 100 menu items, including sushi, ramen, and popular Asian starters like edamame and wontons. Each item is charged separately starting at $3.45 a plate.

    There are two conveyors as follows:

    • Revolving Sushi Bar. The primary belt that snakes through the dining area, with plates of sushi that are protected by the chain's Mr. Fresh ventilated sushi lid. They say it limits airborne exposure and has plate-tracking technology that monitors how long the item has been circulating, ensuring food remains fresh.
    • Express Belt. Referred to as the "sushi highway," the express belt is positioned above the primary belt and is used to deliver special orders.

    Bikkura Pon Prizes
    An integral part of Kura Sushi USA’s tech interactive dining experience, Bikkura Pon is a machine that dispenses prizes after customers dispose of their plates properly. A touch panel registers the number of sushi plates dispensed into the plate disposal slot. After five plates, a short animation plays; after every fifteen plates, a prize such as a keychain or phone mount pops out.

    Kura has more than 550 locations in Japan, U.S., and Taiwan. There are 70 locations in 20 states and Washington D.C. McKinney is the sixth location to open in DFW; other locations include Carrollton, Euless, Plano, Frisco, and Fort Worth.

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