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
Brenda
Bloom where you are planted.
http://restfultrailsfoodforestgarden.blogspot.com/
Idle dreamer
Xisca - pics! Dry subtropical Mediterranean - My project
However loud I tell it, this is never a truth, only my experience...
Diversified Food forest maker . Fill every niche and you'll have less weeds (the weeds are the crop too). Fruit, greens, wild harvest, and nuts as staple. Food processing and preservation are key to self self-sufficiency. Never eat a plant without posetive identification and/or consulting an expert.
Xisca - pics! Dry subtropical Mediterranean - My project
However loud I tell it, this is never a truth, only my experience...
1. my projects
Idle dreamer
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
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
James Driscoll wrote:Hi paulo, I'm struggling to see how you can manage this in such a small area but maybe I'm just jealous of your zone . Have you had any thoughts on what you would need in your zone 5 location ? Apart from a very large polytunnel... Does anyone have any data on expected yields for different USDA zones?
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
Xisca - pics! Dry subtropical Mediterranean - My project
However loud I tell it, this is never a truth, only my experience...
Artemesia Bloom wrote:I strongly recommend you consider hazelburt nut.
It is a hybrid with the best qualities of both hazelnut and filbert.
Walnut will also grow in zone 9.
Rice is the easiest of all grains to digest, so I strongly recommend it.
Zone 9 is right on the edge where you can still grow asparagus.
There are a few apples that will grow in zone 9: Ein Shemer, Fuji, etc.
They have as low a glycemic index as grains and if dried will store for years.
I would treat them like staples.
Even some of the other temperate fruits if you get the right varieties.
I am not a big fan of intercropping.
I use animals to control weeds and insects and drop manure.
Some animals would be devastating to my perennials, orchard, and vineyard.
In my annual paddock in the late fall, I allow goats and then hogs to root.
Then in winter I feed hay to cows, sheep, and goats for manure drop.
In my vineyard I use sheep only in early spring before veraison and again after harvest.
In my orchard I use piglets and chickens in the summer and fall.
In my perrenial beds I use chickens only in the fall and winter.
If I mixed everything it would be too hard to control.
The biggest problem with a self sufficient diet is getting adequate calcium / magnesium.
The white beans are very rich.
Also consider collards, turnips, kale, okra, nettle, dandelion, and chicory.
The soft bones of small animals is the best source.
Small animals with a high FCR are chicken, rabbit, guinea pig, and turkey.
Your best source of omega 3 (DHA) is brains and eggs, not nuts or seeds.
Rose hip will also grow in zone 9.
Sesame is grown mostly for cosmetics because it's oil does not go rancid easily.
But it is so high in oxalates that it is slightly toxic.
Amaranth is so high in oxalates that it is also mildly toxic.
Oxalates bind calcium.
Jerusalem Artichokes are ok for hogs, but it is hard for humans to digest.
Corn is low in protein even if you use lime.
Quinoa is so rich in saponins that it is also slightly toxic even after washing.
Soy is so high in enzyme inhibitors, I would only grow it for chickens and hogs
unless you want to make tempeh.
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
Xisca - pics! Dry subtropical Mediterranean - My project
However loud I tell it, this is never a truth, only my experience...
Paulo, you seem to have enough water for your project in Portugal!
Very right that diets are really individual options! Personal taste and opinion, health, availability, and general design of the land we have access to.
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
Yes, I'm that David The Good. My books are here: http://amzn.to/2kYcCKp. My daily site is here http://www.thesurvivalgardener.com and my awesome videos are here https://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=davidthegood
Paulo Bessa wrote:Xisca, you can experiment with millet, sorghum, quinoa, amaranth or teff. They are quite drought resistant. And many pulses do as well. Sesame is also very dry resistant.
Xisca - pics! Dry subtropical Mediterranean - My project
However loud I tell it, this is never a truth, only my experience...
Yes, I'm that David The Good. My books are here: http://amzn.to/2kYcCKp. My daily site is here http://www.thesurvivalgardener.com and my awesome videos are here https://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=davidthegood
Xisca - pics! Dry subtropical Mediterranean - My project
However loud I tell it, this is never a truth, only my experience...
Yes, I'm that David The Good. My books are here: http://amzn.to/2kYcCKp. My daily site is here http://www.thesurvivalgardener.com and my awesome videos are here https://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=davidthegood
Xisca - pics! Dry subtropical Mediterranean - My project
However loud I tell it, this is never a truth, only my experience...
Xisca - pics! Dry subtropical Mediterranean - My project
However loud I tell it, this is never a truth, only my experience...
Yes, I'm that David The Good. My books are here: http://amzn.to/2kYcCKp. My daily site is here http://www.thesurvivalgardener.com and my awesome videos are here https://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=davidthegood
Xisca - pics! Dry subtropical Mediterranean - My project
However loud I tell it, this is never a truth, only my experience...
Jeffrey Hodgins wrote:You can extend the range of a lot of the species that were just mentioned and many others. If the frosts are only light than all you need to grow some tropicals is a wall or lots of tall trees planted very close together. When I first went to Mexico (very similar too mediterranean). I started cutting trees out because they were too thick That winter I realized how wrong I was and how everything I thought I knew about fruit trees bid not apply. Due to the ability of trees to block the frost and if you can block frost indefinatly than it's worth planting so close that you shade the area heavily. For example I have been growing banana passion fruit for 3 or 4 years now but the first too years I planted it in shaded but open areas and they all died. Last year I planted about 15 plants in the deepest darkest spots on my property and this year they have fruit! I also dug up some lemons a few years ago so I could plant them at a more sensible spacing or so I thought. They all died. Now my lemon trees are doing well in the shade of mature hardy trees.
Xisca Nicolas wrote:I would love to get this air potato, it just seem very difficult to get ot when it is not yet found in the place where you live!
Never heard about it in europe...
I agree with getting tubers...
Yes, I'm that David The Good. My books are here: http://amzn.to/2kYcCKp. My daily site is here http://www.thesurvivalgardener.com and my awesome videos are here https://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=davidthegood
The holy trinity of wholesomeness: Fred Rogers - be kind to others; Steve Irwin - be kind to animals; Bob Ross - be kind to yourself
Paulo Bessa wrote:
Soy is so high in enzyme inhibitors, I would only grow it for chickens and hogs unless you want to make tempeh.
Anyone who believes exponential growth can go on forever in a finite world is either a madman or an economist.
Anyone who believes exponential growth can go on forever in a finite world is either a madman or an economist.
Vidad MaGoodn wrote:
Xisca Nicolas wrote:I would love to get this air potato, it just seem very difficult to get ot when it is not yet found in the place where you live!
Never heard about it in europe...
I agree with getting tubers...
Try your local Oriental/African markets, if you have them. Various tropical yam species can be acquired that way. I just saw a gal's garden here and she had tropical yams covering her fence, all acquired from an ethnic market locally.
Xisca - pics! Dry subtropical Mediterranean - My project
However loud I tell it, this is never a truth, only my experience...
Until you dig a hole, plant a tree, water it and make it survive, you haven't done a thing - Wangari Maathai
A rocket mass heater heats your home with one tenth the wood of a conventional wood stove
http://woodheat.net
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