Andrew Parker wrote:If a 1/4 acre of lawn can justify buying a riding mower (five in my neighborhood), 6 acres justifies at least a nice two-wheel tractor, a small 4 wheel tractor, or a four-wheeler rigged to pull farm implements (or even a truck, SUV or passenger car). You can make swales with a variety of plows and cultivators.
Permaculture: The Edge is the New Center
Taos, New Mexico / Carson, New Mexico / 7000ft / zones 5,6 / Soil: Servilleta-Hernandez / Avg. 13" precip per annum
Andrew Parker wrote:The Nabateans in the Negev were working with 4 inches or less per year so it is definitely doable over the long term. If you divide your property into catchment area and arable area, you can figure out the ratio based on water you can reliably expect per year and the water demands of the trees, shrubs or plants you will be planting. If you can add the common driveway as catchment for your property, you can have more arable land. Once you have determined your catchment and arable areas, you need to minimize water retention (and plants) in the catchment areas and maximize it in the arable areas.
Permaculture: The Edge is the New Center
Taos, New Mexico / Carson, New Mexico / 7000ft / zones 5,6 / Soil: Servilleta-Hernandez / Avg. 13" precip per annum
Devon Olsen wrote:i would suggest collecting stones and making stoen stacks as well - even if that means pulling to the side of the road on the way home a lot
Permaculture: The Edge is the New Center
Taos, New Mexico / Carson, New Mexico / 7000ft / zones 5,6 / Soil: Servilleta-Hernandez / Avg. 13" precip per annum
yvonne worgan wrote:hi, i have been reading about this Vetiver grass
Permaculture: The Edge is the New Center
Taos, New Mexico / Carson, New Mexico / 7000ft / zones 5,6 / Soil: Servilleta-Hernandez / Avg. 13" precip per annum
yvonne worgan wrote:hi, i have been reading about this Vetiver grass
Permaculture: The Edge is the New Center
Taos, New Mexico / Carson, New Mexico / 7000ft / zones 5,6 / Soil: Servilleta-Hernandez / Avg. 13" precip per annum
Iterations are fine, we don't have to be perfect
My 2nd Location:Florida HardinessZone:10 AHS:10 GDD:8500 Rainfall:2in/mth winter, 8in/mth summer, Soil:Sand pH8 Flat
S Bengi wrote:I think that you should give it a chance.
Permaculture: The Edge is the New Center
Taos, New Mexico / Carson, New Mexico / 7000ft / zones 5,6 / Soil: Servilleta-Hernandez / Avg. 13" precip per annum
Iterations are fine, we don't have to be perfect
My 2nd Location:Florida HardinessZone:10 AHS:10 GDD:8500 Rainfall:2in/mth winter, 8in/mth summer, Soil:Sand pH8 Flat
yvonne worgan wrote:, sorry i did not understand the climate. because i am looking at land in the mountains of Spain, just 23mm of rain. so trying to work out the best things to do, to bring water back to the land. before i get it. , how do you know how to work out how much water you need? is there a book on this? thanks.
Iterations are fine, we don't have to be perfect
My 2nd Location:Florida HardinessZone:10 AHS:10 GDD:8500 Rainfall:2in/mth winter, 8in/mth summer, Soil:Sand pH8 Flat
Cool temperate food forest, vegetables, herbs, chickens and bees all Down Under
Devon Olsen wrote:i was wondering if indian ricegrass was any good, couldnt find nothing on the web, apparently its native to wyoming someplace so i may just give that a try up here as well
Permaculture: The Edge is the New Center
Taos, New Mexico / Carson, New Mexico / 7000ft / zones 5,6 / Soil: Servilleta-Hernandez / Avg. 13" precip per annum
Devon Olsen wrote:do you have the scientific name for that, i forgot what it was and dont want to go through the time to dig it up or mistake it with something else as google's so good at
also the kusa seed society (or something like that) has old landrace varieties of grain and such and i plan to purchase some wheat this year that grows up to 8 ft tall, not quite vetiver but i think it might act the same way if planted on contour, also edible of course and 8ft of straw is quite useful for a number of things
i would certainly consider kudzu in an environment such as yours, any thing to add biomass and shade the soil
and also, picking up rocks is almost one of my favorite activities too lol, i was tilling and clearing rocks for a lawn in one of those white picket neighborhoods this summer and when i started collecting all the stones larger than my fist and taking them home the guy i worked for just had to ask :rolleyes:lol
btw, strawberries growing between stones are apparantly better than strawberries growing without stones... condensate watering daily? minerals leaching off in miniscule amounts? i dont know but if someone on permies says it and i hear it in pauls podcasts, ill take their word up until my strawberries finally give me something to eat!
Permaculture: The Edge is the New Center
Taos, New Mexico / Carson, New Mexico / 7000ft / zones 5,6 / Soil: Servilleta-Hernandez / Avg. 13" precip per annum
Devon Olsen wrote:best of luck though, i believe there is hope, where i am, under constant protection from the windbreak, the soil between the trees and the bushes is moist enough that i have found moss growing there before, i wonder if a stream will result after the pond is put in place?
may be a great thing to have a stream but may also be a huge liability lol
i have this idea to take a tomato cage, some chicken wire and a bunch of gravel... stick the tom cage in the ground, warp the chiken wire around the interior and fill with gravel to achieve a sort of pillar, it would be tall and thick making for a lot of surface area thats permanantly cooler being exposed to the warmer, dry winds, also making vertical trellising space, which would eventually improve condensation ability as the plants covered even the outer rocks a majority of the time, it would also make for a larger heat store than a stack of stones thats only 3ft high at most
im thinking about a 5-7ft pillar of stones and though i cant guarantee anything, i would love to see so much condensation that water collects at the base some of the time... particularly days that snow melts so fast you see snow... and then steam, which i understand as an indication that the snow is not getting the time to seep into the soil and is instead moving straight from frozen state to vapor state
Permaculture: The Edge is the New Center
Taos, New Mexico / Carson, New Mexico / 7000ft / zones 5,6 / Soil: Servilleta-Hernandez / Avg. 13" precip per annum
yvonne worgan wrote:, sorry i did not understand the climate. because i am looking at land in the mountains of Spain, just 23mm of rain. so trying to work out the best things to do, to bring water back to the land. before i get it. , how do you know how to work out how much water you need? is there a book on this? thanks.
Permaculture: The Edge is the New Center
Taos, New Mexico / Carson, New Mexico / 7000ft / zones 5,6 / Soil: Servilleta-Hernandez / Avg. 13" precip per annum
Andrew Parker wrote:Paul,
Nice video. I am having trouble connecting to the link to Ben-Gurion University of the Negev. I would like to see how far things have advanced since the text I read 33 years ago.
It is better to intercept the water before the volume becomes uncontrollable (Utah has many ghost towns next to desert rivers. It was usually not a lack of water that ran the settlers off. It was more often the flash floods.). Dikes or dams across wadis/arroyos are eventually washed away by a flood they were not engineered for. I noticed they are not damming the entire wadi, but are creating small impoundment areas. I suppose that should reduce the likelihood of structural failure. Subsurface dams are an interesting option but the geology does not always allow for them. You do not need a lot of slope to practice runoff agriculture, just enough slope to move water from point A to point B.
I think you have a good plan.
Have you considered Yucca baccata (banana yucca)? I saw it growing all over Mesa Verde when I was there a couple of years ago. It looked like it produced a lot of fruit in a relatively small area. I would like to taste the fruit and seeds sometime.
If you want quick shade, plant your trees and shrubs on high berms.
Permaculture: The Edge is the New Center
Taos, New Mexico / Carson, New Mexico / 7000ft / zones 5,6 / Soil: Servilleta-Hernandez / Avg. 13" precip per annum
Chris McLeod wrote:Hey Paul,
You can have a look at the mulching I do here in a recent post on the Permaculture Research Institute of Australia website:
http://permaculturenews.org/2013/01/14/food-forests-part-7-watering-and-soil-food/
The video was in early summer so doesn't quite show the place as it is, right now. The mulching has gotten much bigger since that video because of the heat and drought Down Under.
You know those rocks make awesome raised garden beds. In your climate it may keep the plants warmer so they start earlier and end later in the growing season. Dunno, may be worth a try? I use them here for herbs and long lived berries, although it's also getting closer here to "Peak Rocks" as I've run out of all the easy to get rocks! hehe! javascript:emoticon('');
I'd also try using the rocks somehow to slow the water movement across the landscape in conjunction with your hugelkultur beds. Dunno, but they should improve snow melt too (although I don't have experience with this).
Given you only get 14" of rain a year, I'd plant any fruit trees in the ground near the hugelkultur beds (on the high side of it) rather than into the hugelkultur beds themselves. They should be able to run their root systems under and into this hugelkultur bed. You may find that it is too dry for the hugelkultur beds because as they are raised above ground, they are exposed to the drying effects of the sun and the wind. I found the ones here are too small and should have contained 10x the plant material that they actually do. The blackberries and raspberries have now died, but there's always next season.
Chris
Permaculture: The Edge is the New Center
Taos, New Mexico / Carson, New Mexico / 7000ft / zones 5,6 / Soil: Servilleta-Hernandez / Avg. 13" precip per annum
Andrew Parker wrote:I was surprised to see yucca at Mesa Verde but if it thrives there it ought to do alright where you are. You just need to find the right variety. Here are instructions on how to prepare and eat banana yucca fruit: http://books.google.com/books?id=0tDiMBUJdboC&pg=PA32&lpg=PA32&dq=preparing+banana+yucca+fruit&source=bl&ots=zBPqKX9lMj&sig=9ogpaE14au-MOy9Y4UjHb_6BGJY&hl=en&sa=X&ei=-kH2UOaAD6O8igLw_IGwCg&ved=0CDAQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=preparing%20banana%20yucca%20fruit&f=false
Permaculture: The Edge is the New Center
Taos, New Mexico / Carson, New Mexico / 7000ft / zones 5,6 / Soil: Servilleta-Hernandez / Avg. 13" precip per annum
Paul Gutches wrote:I have some serious tree envy at the moment.
Paul Gutches wrote:What is the high nitrogen mulch you're using?
Paul Gutches wrote:Can you remind me of your annual precipitation there?
Paul Gutches wrote:I imagine it's not too bad given all those tall trees around you.
Paul Gutches wrote:I'm intrigued by the dark rock waste you had around one tree. What is that exactly? What mineral ?
Paul Gutches wrote:For the fruit trees, I was thinking of putting them at the base of the low side of the hugels
Paul Gutches wrote:Incidentally, the beds also get some stones
Paul Gutches wrote:You definitely have the heat for blackberries. Was it just too dry for them that one summer?
Cool temperate food forest, vegetables, herbs, chickens and bees all Down Under
Chris McLeod wrote:
It can be between 400mm (15 inches) and 1,400mm (55 inches) per annum. You never quite know what you're going to get here as the climate is weird.
Chris McLeod wrote:
Paul Gutches wrote:I imagine it's not too bad given all those tall trees around you.
Yeah, they're both good and bad. They release moisture at night so it is usually cool here at night, but they are a massive fire hazard too, so I have to manage the forest and hope for the best.
Chris McLeod wrote:
It is granite and they call it blue metal here because it has a dark blue hue. The SE corner of Australia has the third largest volcanic plains on the planet. There are literally a lot of extinct (the most recent went off about 8,000 years ago) volcanoes about the landscape sticking up out of plains. The rock dust comes from quarries and is a waste product, it is chock full of minerals and gets absorbed down into the top soil. The trees tend to grow faster with just a little bit of this stuff.
Chris McLeod wrote:
This is a good example of a local volcano: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mount_Elephant
Chris McLeod wrote:
Really good idea and they would look great. Can you post a photo?
Chris McLeod wrote:
Paul Gutches wrote:You definitely have the heat for blackberries. Was it just too dry for them that one summer?
No, I stuffed up by transplanting them too late into Spring, so it was purely my fault. The idea of the fence is good as they seem to love a structure to climb on and getting the micro-climate setup sounds quite valuable. Blackberries also seem to build up soil under them after a few years in one spot too.
Chris McLeod wrote:
I just got another article up with an update which shows things as they are a couple of days ago:
http://permaculturenews.org/2013/01/15/fernglade-farm-mid-summer-january-2013-update/
Chris
Permaculture: The Edge is the New Center
Taos, New Mexico / Carson, New Mexico / 7000ft / zones 5,6 / Soil: Servilleta-Hernandez / Avg. 13" precip per annum
Devon Olsen wrote:on clarifaication of my rock pillar idea
this is the best photo i could find online though i wasnt thinking to plant things in it (not a terrible idea though) and i personally think these rocks would be too big as they wouldnt provide enough interior rocks (which would never be exposed to the sun and warmed as a result of the outer rocks surrounding them) to cause much condensation
Permaculture: The Edge is the New Center
Taos, New Mexico / Carson, New Mexico / 7000ft / zones 5,6 / Soil: Servilleta-Hernandez / Avg. 13" precip per annum
Devon Olsen wrote:all for the bananna yucca, sounds pretty tasty, we have yucca here but its definately not bananna yucca, normally quite small, still great fiber material though, though i have yet to try eating the fruits...
Permaculture: The Edge is the New Center
Taos, New Mexico / Carson, New Mexico / 7000ft / zones 5,6 / Soil: Servilleta-Hernandez / Avg. 13" precip per annum
S Bengi wrote:This is what I have in mind http://www.permaculturenews.org/2012/09/19/imprinting-soils-creating-instant-edge-for-large-scale-revegetation-of-barren-lands/
The stone would be place 1/2 down the slope to condense dew at night and hopefully the dew would run down to the center and then soak in.
Tell me what you think of the link above.
Low and slow solutions
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