posted 11 years ago
Hi A.J.
While I can't give a personal experience of on vs off contour hugel beds, I can say that in the book Sepp Holzer's Permaculture he specifically advises against putting hugel beds on contour. His reasoning is that the first Hugel bed you put in will get all the water, and may eventually slide downhill, while the ones below it will not get as much water as they could handle. In wet climates, or climates that get a lot of rain in a short time period, this makes sense to me, especially since the way he does hugel beds is forcing earth to pile up with a very steep angle of repose, in contrast to a swale's generally more gentle slope.
Now if I've understood Paul's philosophy right, you should have funky wacky hugels that don't follow any particular contour, because that gets you a wide variety of microclimates. The hugel beds can then be inhabited by plants that love and thrive in those specific microclimates, meaning you can get a greater overall diversity of plants in, and maybe even plants that you wouldn't be able to grow in that place under different situations.
I would personally try things several different ways to understand which was best in my place. I can't speak to other people experiences, but I'd want to find out on my own by doing some test hugels in different places, and then going from there.
Now about capturing water and rejecting cold. I believe it's possible to do, when you look at the system, but I don't know if it's possible to do in one specific location. Let me explain. If you build a hugel that is shaped like an "~" You'll have one section which catches water and cold, and another that drains it. One of the many cool things about water is that it will soak beyond the area where it is (think wetting one side of a paper towel, how quickly it reaches the other side). So if you planted in the center of section that drains water, you'll have water nearby that it can suck up, but it won't be directly in a cold pocket.
Most of this is conjecture on my part, but I think it's possible, and I wish I had the space to try it.