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Hyve Indoor Farming Systems Looking To Hire Indoor Farming Technology Sales And Support Position

By urbanagnews

September 4, 2020

Indoor Farming Technology Sales & Support Position

For The Territory

of North and South America

This is an outstanding opportunity for a person who is willing to learn the
Controlled Environment Agriculture business from the ground up. There is
significant advancement potential for the right person in this rapidly growing cutting-edge company.

For Interest in applying, please send your resume and cover letter to Ron Acorn at racorn@dascom.com

Job Objective:

  • Develop HYVE Indoor Farming Systems business by Sales and

  • Support of customers

  • Responsibilities:

  • Support HYVE System sales

  • Take customer calls and inquires

  • Update and maintain data in CRM system

  • Proactive phone calls for follow up/appointments/GrowLab tours

  • Collaboratively develop Quotes and Proposals

  • Pricing/Availability

  • Program/Project support for system Implementations

  • Work with In House Grower to assist in Grow Lab testing and maintenance

  • Technical Support for customers on growing process

  • Technical Support for customers on grow system issues

  • Customer visits as needed to review locations and support projects

Relationships and Roles:

Internal / External Cooperation

  • Demonstrate the ability to interact and cooperate with all company employees.

  • Build trust, value others, communicate effectively, drive execution, foster innovation, focus on the customer, collaborate with others, solve problems creatively, and demonstrate high integrity.

  • Maintain professional internal and external relationships that meet company core values.

  • Proactively establish and maintain effective working team relationships.

Job Specifications and Requirements:

  • College degree in Horticulture or related experience

  • Desire to work in a business environment and culture with customer first attitude

  • Desire to be part of the future of controlled environment agriculture and a willingness to grow with the company

  • Demonstrate a “Can Do” attitude in a dynamic environment

  • Honest, ethical, good sense of humor

  • Self-starter with excellent communication skills

  • PC-literate

  • Logical, business-oriented thinker able to represent the company in a sales capacity as it relates to the quotation of technical equipment in a variety of applications

  • Willing to assist with hands-on growing and experimentation in a vertical farming environment

  • Organized and able to handle multiple tasks in a rapidly changing environment

  • Ability to travel as needed to customer sites, for trade shows, or to represent the company at organizational meetings

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USA - COLORADO - Geodesic Growing Dome Nears Completion On CMC Campus, Benefits Multiple Programs

When it’s done, the dome will be full of trees, flowers and edible plants, offering a hands-on and in-person experience for students enrolled in the college’s sustainability studies, permaculture and culinary programs

August 27, 2020

Shelby Reardon  

sreardon@steamboatpilot.com

STEAMBOAT SPRINGS — A geodesic growing dome has been erected at Bear Park on the Colorado Mountain College Steamboat Springs campus off of Crawford Avenue. The structure will serve, in part, as a greenhouse, extending the growing season and benefiting the sustainability studies program as well as others.

The dome is one part of an expansion project that was approved two years ago, allowing the college to construct the dome, a teaching pavilion, and a restroom. While the outside of the dome is complete, plumbing and electric are still being installed. The inside will take time to fill as well. Tina Evans, CMC professor of sustainability studies, expects the entire project to be completed sometime next summer. 

When it’s done, the dome will be full of trees, flowers, and edible plants, offering a hands-on and in-person experience for students enrolled in the college’s sustainability studies, permaculture, and culinary programs.“

Clearly, its benefit is as an educational space, a demonstration space for growing in our region,” Evans said. “It’s really an awesome venue for learning about growing food year-round in the challenging environment in a mountain community.”

Evans said the Steamboat Springs growing season is 59 days and occurs in the summer when few students are on campus. The dome will allow year-round growing.

The design of the inside and outside gardens at Bear Park, where the dome is located, was created using permaculture, which creates beneficial relationships between all the elements of the garden. Some plants provide shade, and others offer ground cover. Some will draw in pollinators, and others repel pests. The strength of one plant benefits all of them. 

“We’re trying to create systems that take care of themselves a little bit more than our food systems do in monoculture agriculture,” Evans said. “We’ll have nitrogen-fixing plants in with other plants. We’ll grow plants that provide really good mulch that pull nutrients up from the soil.”

The dome, which was funded by the Yampa Valley Electric Association’s Roundup program, the Craig-Scheckman Family Foundation, and an anonymous donor, was purchased from a Colorado company called Growing Spaces. The structure is 42 feet in diameter or nearly 1,400 square feet. The triangle panels, made of polycarbonate, are not only structurally strong but hold in heat and disperse light better than other materials like glass.  

The interior of the dome will also be home to an aquaculture project of large water tanks filled with fish, although Evans isn’t sure what type of fish yet.

The water-filled with fish excrement will serve as fertilizer. The water tanks, as well as the cement, stones and the soil, are all thermal masses, or materials that absorb and release heat slowly. Having many thermal mass materials inside the dome will help the structure retain heat longer. 

To help maintain an ideal temperature, a climate battery will be installed below the dome. When the dome gets too hot, the battery will pull air into the cool ground. When temperatures in the dome drop, stored hot air in the battery tubes will be released back into the structure. 

“We hope to maintain a Mediterranean-like climate where it doesn’t freeze in there or freeze often,” Evans said. “We will have heaters in there for some of those days where it’s 30 below … but we expect to avoid running them.”

Evans and her colleagues won’t truly know what the climate in the dome will be like until it’s completed and they start planting.

Lead photo: A new geodesic dome on the Colorado Mountain College's Steamboat Springs campus is nearing completion.

John F. Russell

To reach Shelby Reardon, call 970-871-4253, email sreardon@SteamboatPilot.com or follow her on Twitter @ByShelbyReardon.

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