This is all just my opinion based on a flawed memory
O. Donnelly wrote:
Perhaps a temporary fix is to create a controlled breach in all of your swales, so that if you have another major flooding episode the deluge will not destroy other parts of your garden. Or build some kind of "flood gate" that you could open at will. [...]
Then you need to get rid of the voles. Then seal their tunnels. Perhaps something like a bentonite slurry would work? Bentonite, aka montmarilonite, is a "shrink swell clay". when saturated it will swell to many times its original volume. Well drillers use it to seal off well casing. it also works at the bottom of new ponds.
Ben Zumeta wrote:Levente, you are right about the predator-prey population dynamics, and of course you know your place better than I do. I know nothing about Romania other than what my Romanian coworker friend Paul from summer camp told me when I was 19! But I would encourage you to look at Sepp Holzer's approach to colder-temperate climate animal control, in particular regarding voles. Also, if these animals exist despite what are likely to be your native animal's, neighbor's and predecessor's best efforts to exterminate them, they are probably pretty tough and pervasive. They will always come back, and the greater the vacuum the greater their eventual explosion. That or something just as bad, or worse. This is because the natural predators will die off before their prey is exterminated as you said, and this is when everything they ate goes nuts with exponential growth and then a crash.
To be honest, I can imagine this is a bitch of a situation and I can't think of a good solution, though I wish I could. A Makah friend of mine spreads cat fur around the corners and entry's to his house to deter mice, and I wonder if that would do something around the vole burrows. That and research what your local small predators like for habitat and give it to them, especially owls which seem to be harmless to your crops. In addition, this would seem to make things lean towards the advantages of hugelkuture slightly off contour as Mr. Holzer does.
Tyler Ludens wrote:This may be a completely ignorant question - but how does temperate food forest herbaceous layer differ from subtropical herbaceous layer? I see above in the thread people continually battling the herbaceous layer, whereas Geoff Lawton in his subtropical food forest, seems to welcome a particular kind of herbaceous layer which he terms "control through rampancy." Is there not a way to replace the plastic layer with a desirable herbaceous layer? Is the difference that the above examples are of a "permaculture orchard" and not a food forest, so there is no interest (or no need) for the different layers?
Idle dreamer
Tyler Ludens wrote:This may be a completely ignorant question - but how does temperate food forest herbaceous layer differ from subtropical herbaceous layer? I see above in the thread people continually battling the herbaceous layer, whereas Geoff Lawton in his subtropical food forest, seems to welcome a particular kind of herbaceous layer which he terms "control through rampancy." Is there not a way to replace the plastic layer with a desirable herbaceous layer? Is the difference that the above examples are of a "permaculture orchard" and not a food forest, so there is no interest (or no need) for the different layers?
My project thread
Agriculture collects solar energy two-dimensionally; but silviculture collects it three dimensionally.
List of Bryant RedHawk's Epic Soil Series Threads We love visitors, that's why we live in a secluded cabin deep in the woods. "Buzzard's Roost (Asnikiye Heca) Farm." Promoting permaculture to save our planet.
This is all just my opinion based on a flawed memory
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