Find me running the NW Restoration group page on Facebook - a communal effort to share information about permaculture, ecological restoration and sustainability in the great Northwest!
Do not go gentle into that good night,
rage, rage against the dying of the light
Paul Cereghino- Ecosystem Guild
Maritime Temperate Coniferous Rainforest - Mild Wet Winter, Dry Summer
Find me running the NW Restoration group page on Facebook - a communal effort to share information about permaculture, ecological restoration and sustainability in the great Northwest!
Find me running the NW Restoration group page on Facebook - a communal effort to share information about permaculture, ecological restoration and sustainability in the great Northwest!
tentamus wrote:
I'm wondering now if mulch could work fine, provided you properly plan and plant to attract the predators who will feed on the critters hiding in the mulch. Possibly a combination of providing habitat for wild predators (snakes) and having domesticated predators that you let rummage through the mulch (chickens, ducks, geese) would offset the attraction factor that mulch has for slugs.
Thoughts?
My Blog, Natural History and Forest Gardening
www.dzonoquaswhistle.blogspot.com
"Listen everybody, to what I gotta say, there's hope for tomorrow, if we wake up today!" Ted Nugent
"Suck Marrow" Henry D Thoreau
My Blog, Natural History and Forest Gardening
www.dzonoquaswhistle.blogspot.com
"Listen everybody, to what I gotta say, there's hope for tomorrow, if we wake up today!" Ted Nugent
"Suck Marrow" Henry D Thoreau
Check out Redhawk's soil series: https://permies.com/wiki/redhawk-soil
My Blog, Natural History and Forest Gardening
www.dzonoquaswhistle.blogspot.com
"Listen everybody, to what I gotta say, there's hope for tomorrow, if we wake up today!" Ted Nugent
"Suck Marrow" Henry D Thoreau
Rosie wrote:
Is anyone out there market gardening without intensive rows/beds?
find religion! church
kiva! hyvä! iloinen! pikkumaatila
get stung! beehives
be hospitable! host-a-hive
be antisocial! facespace
Rosie wrote:
I'm going to be redesigning my zone 1 beds for next year, and I'm torn between these different models. I love John S. ' description of the perennial beds; I can certainly envision large beds with perennial veg, herbs, and self seeders left to volunteer, and then with rotating annuals tucked into pockets throughout.
But Solomon and Coleman make compelling cases for more traditional rows, and I can see from my experiences this year that more intensive beds might yield more, be easy to weed (although I'm not doing much of that ), and maybe most usefully, easy to keep watered with a drip system and harvest systematically. Part of my dilemma is possible market gardening income--I wonder (and would love to hear) if it's possible to market garden effectively/efficiently in the mixed perennial beds?
Paul Cereghino, I'd love to hear more about how you blend Solomon, Coleman, and Jeavons. All defintely have compelling visions, but some aspects are contradictory. Would you mind describing your beds and techniques a little more?
Is anyone out there market gardening without intensive rows/beds?
My Blog, Natural History and Forest Gardening
www.dzonoquaswhistle.blogspot.com
"Listen everybody, to what I gotta say, there's hope for tomorrow, if we wake up today!" Ted Nugent
"Suck Marrow" Henry D Thoreau
Check out Redhawk's soil series: https://permies.com/wiki/redhawk-soil
My Blog, Natural History and Forest Gardening
www.dzonoquaswhistle.blogspot.com
"Listen everybody, to what I gotta say, there's hope for tomorrow, if we wake up today!" Ted Nugent
"Suck Marrow" Henry D Thoreau
My Blog, Natural History and Forest Gardening
www.dzonoquaswhistle.blogspot.com
"Listen everybody, to what I gotta say, there's hope for tomorrow, if we wake up today!" Ted Nugent
"Suck Marrow" Henry D Thoreau
www.thehappypermaculturalist.wordpress.com
Check out Redhawk's soil series: https://permies.com/wiki/redhawk-soil
Joshua McNichols
Author, The Urban Farm Handbook
http://urbanfarmhandbook.com/
Dinner will be steamed monkey heads with a side of tiny ads.
Heat your home with the twigs that naturally fall of the trees in your yard
http://woodheat.net
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