Anne Halpin wrote:Hi Alan, welcome! I am excited to check out your book! Living in the Pacific NW, sometimes it feels like my neighborhood is a food forest, especially this time of year, as apples, pears, quince, and plums line the streets and their fruit falls like manna! It is magical. My morning walks become a smorgasbord with ‘free’ boxes abound. In my very small yard, I’m making the shift from annual vegetable garden to edible perennials, mostly in the form of dwarf fruit trees, berries, herbs, etc. It’s such a small space though, I don’t think it could ever be considered a forest, unless perhaps if one was a gnome
Lorinne Anderson wrote:I would be concerned that the straw enclosed in chicken wire around the trunk might provide a "perfect" home for rodents - with your tree as breakfast, lunch and dinner.
This is my "gut" talking - no experience with this way of insulating a tree; but I do know a lot about mice/rats/voles...and I fear they would LOVE this set up.
Brian Guetzlaff wrote:Welcome! Out of curiosity, does the book address what to do with smaller spaces? We're on a lot that's about 1/6 acre (so not a lot of room). Many thanks!