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The Rural Voice, 2001-09, Page 1840 years of rutabagas The Hubbard family has been growing the hardy root crop (no they're not turnips) for four decades Story and Photos by Keith Roulston The harvest is on (above left) as a Hubbard -designed harvester scoops the rutabagas out of the ground and puts them in a truck. In the plant, the cleaned and trimmed vegetables are bagged for shipment (above right). Below, a worker inspects the rutabagas as they go down the line to be bagged. For most of us, our acquaintance with the humble rutabaga is limited to having it cooked and mashed on the side of the plate for Thanksgiving or Christmas dinner (though we're likely to mistakenly call it turnip) but for the Hubbard family, growing, harvesting, storing and processing the crop is a year- round business. The family operation, now called G.L. Hubbard Limited, has come a long r ,} since George Hubbard started growing rutabagas in the Bright area of Oxford County in 1960. Today up to 13 people work in the fields or in the ever-expanding processing plant in Blyth, including family members, long-time local employees and off -shore seasonal workers. It takes a lot of people to handle the rutabagas produced on the 275 acres the Hubbards plant in the root crop each year. That works out to 200,000 bushels of the bulky vegetable. The season starts as early as the ground can be worked and with washing, waxing, bagging and shipping, extends until the next spring. Because rutabagas are cold -hardy, they are the first crop planted, even before the Hubbards plant their barley. Two weeks later they'll put in another planting. 14 THE RURAL VOICE They use a special seeder designed and manufactured in England for planting small -seed root crops like rutabagas, radishes and carrots. On a good day it will plant 50 acres. Of course the next day there could be trouble and you might plant 10, George says ruefully. Both the first two plantings will be for early harvest beginning in July, for shipping to market fresh. just enough are harvested each day to fill immediate orders. In early June planting takes place for the storage roots, the main crop that will be held in the massive cold storage rooms at the plant in town for processing throughout the winter. This main crop will be harvested in October and November, using a massive harvester that George Hubbard designed and built himself, and has altered three times. "I still haven't got it so it will drive itself," he jokes. The harvester digs the roots, clips off the tops and shakes off as much of the dirt as possible. It deposits the roots into one of five field trucks, holding from 400 to 800 bushels. Wet fall conditions can make harvesting difficult when you've got a truck that weights 20 tons fully loaded. It means long