God bless
"You may never know what results come of your action, but if you do nothing there will be no result”
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Brenda
Bloom where you are planted.
http://restfultrailsfoodforestgarden.blogspot.com/
William Toles wrote:Is this a feasible idea, or not- it may be too harsh up here in central Maine.
Our projects:
in Portugal, sheltered terraces facing eastwards, high water table, uphill original forest of pines, oaks and chestnuts. 2000m2
in Iceland: converted flat lawn, compacted poor soil, cold, windy, humid climate, cold, short summer. 50m2
My project thread: http://www.permies.com/t/20399/projects/Maine-Master-Plan
"You may never know what results come of your action, but if you do nothing there will be no result”
How Permies.com Works
Be Nice
William Toles wrote:Is this a feasible idea, or not- it may be too harsh up here in central Maine.
Craig Dobbelyu wrote:The Black Fly can be a real bother but with proper dress and a tolerance to the annoyance they can be dealt with. My chickens seem to like to eat them and they often follow me around knowing that I'll attract a swarm of the little buggers. So I guess that's just a little more feed that we don't have to buy early in the season.
God bless
Paulo Bessa wrote:Yes you can do it.
I live in Iceland, we have cold summers, colder than most Alaska and even Siberia...
I am currently working to add more perennials. So far I have perennial onions, skirret, lovage and rhubarb. I want to introduce mulberries, asparagus, chinese yams, siberian pea and arrowhead. We also can't grow any fruit trees (only by the coast, where spring frosts are mild), but breeding is currently under work. Hope this helps you!
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