I've been looking at different cropping options for fields that will be managed for human food and when harvested, could be grazed immediately by animals.
I want something where a group of plants work together, producing saleable items and residues that could form a fairly complete diet, for goats and pigs.
I keep coming back to the three sisters of corn, beans and squash.
It could be sugarcane beans and squash, or amaranth beans and squash, and I have no problem with adding a fourth thing, if something else is found to do well in the group.
Sometimes the cropping system would fill the space between banana circles. It's part of my theft prevention scheme.
I'm looking at doing this in small fields that are hemmed-in on 2 sides by nitrogen producing forage
trees. An alley crop silviculture system.
Any of these mixtures will become a tangled mess by harvest-time. It would all be harvested by hand, with workers gathering each item to its appropriate basket.
Following immediately behind harvesters, would be a mobile pen containing the animals. All plants would be completely harvested. Vines, stalks and leaves would be tossed to the animals who are never more than 8 feet from the face being harvested. The pen is moved ahead as work progresses. After the pen is moved, the pigs will uproot everything while the goats scavenge what they can.
Chickens would be allowed to trail behind and gather what they can.
There's a market for all of the food items mentioned. If it's timed to produce sweet corn, we would have to base harvest dates on that, since it's pretty critical to get that right. If the corn is just being used as fodder, then we might try to base harvest on the best date for the squash. There's a market for beans in pretty much every stage of development and immature squash have some value.
Because it's a tropical setting, with moisture available all year, this can be a continuous system, although I might want to break it up with buckwheat or some other cover crop occasionally, to prevent problems with disease. Buckwheat can be used for a short rotation, or sweet potatoes for a long rotation.
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Food supplementation and fertilization for the next crop... The goats will constantly have a supply of leaves from the fodder trees that grow alongside each field. Pigs may chew a little bit of this, but I don't think they will want
course roughage. Pigs will be given wilted duckweed and azolla, which averages about 25% protein. I expect pigs to hog the leftover beans and squash and to let goats eat mostly leaves and stems.
Pigs are aggressive feeders and I'm sure the goats will give way. We may place a higher manger on the edge of the enclosure, so goats can have something that is out of reach for the pigs.
Depending on variety, things could be harvested in as little as 80 days or more than 100 days. So it could be planted, a bit each day and then a new patch harvested each day.
If we went with
cattle corn, soy beans and a long season squash, it would be longer between harvest.
75 day sweet corn could be mixed with mung beans and a shorter season squash.
Chickens will scratch along behind the larger animals, but they will also be given as much duckweed and azolla as is available.
With all the foot traffic and digging and pooping, the field will be partially prepared for the next planting.
The field could be worked up the same day or the next day. No need to wait. It will be done with a carabao, which is a descendant of the Chinese swamp buffalo. The buffalo will also be fed tree forage along with duckweed, azolla and possibly silage.
The pigs will have already done some tilling. The carabao will pull a tooth harrow over the ground a few times.
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I expect to grow corn in circles containing 8 or 10 stalks with a whole bunch of nutrient rich
compost in that area. Climbing beans will sit adjacent to the corn, so that they can climb up. A tall bush variety of beans, could be planted up the centre between the corn circles. Then squash would be allowed to roam everywhere and create a living mulch.
I don't expect much weed competition, and we wouldn't do anything about weeds, except maybe in the very beginning, before the ground becomes covered in vine stems. If amaranth and buckwheat are used in the rotation, it's likely that they will be the most common weed, and therefore not a problem.
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This represents quite a bit of labor if it were a fodder only system. Labour costs about $6 a day, plus a few perks, like meals, and use of laundry facilities.
The value of food, as compared to the price of labor, is very high in the Philippines. Typically, people spend more than half of their income on food. A system like this will produce plenty of immature items that aren't as saleable. They will be sorted and each worker sent home with their allotment. So, first grade stuff will go to market second grade will be given to workers and the reminder will be fed to the animals.
Harvest like this will look like it's being done by a human combine. It
should progress very quickly, since there's not a lot of examining individual plants in a tangled mess. They will use a sickle, to lop off an appropriate quantity of material and then quickly get things into the baskets and dump the residue to the animals.
It's important to start at dawn, because it gets hot. Everything will be sorted later, in a covered
shelter. On sunny days, I don't think we'd ever go past 11 a.m.. That's 5 hours and
enough for workers who have other responsibilities. Those who are working a full day, can sort the material after lunch, and then watch a movie or go for a swim, by the sorting shed. After a siesta, they can start again at 4 p.m. and go utill 6. That's when it gets dark, all year.
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One of the main predators, are the Philippine cobra, which is bound to live all over the fields. They seek sun in the morning and are unlikely to be amongst the vegetables. The hedgerows that line the sides of the field, is where we will dump all rocks, and the brush left after feeding tree fodder. That's where rodents will run, when we disturb them. This is the natural place for snakes to spend time until at least noon. One worker on his own, crawling through vines to get to sweet corn, would be at some risk of being bitten. A large group that shows up with a buffalo and the goats and pigs will be heard by the snakes and they will retreat. I encountered two cobras inside of five minutes when I walked through a cornfield at 3 p.m.. It's too hot for mammals to be out in the sun at that hour. So we will work with the snakes. You have many hours with a cobra bite. We will always have a snake bite kit.
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There are literally hundreds of things that a person could grow in this environment. I'm only going to try things that are
staple crops, somewhere. Many people who move to the tropics, get carried away and become plant collectors.
Everything we grow must work into a system that uses largely unskilled labour.
There will be a good variety of tree crops and many things besides bananas, coming from the banana circles. Waste from all of these things will be fed to the animals.
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I did the math. If 5 acres were covered with this cropping system, and we come back to each spot every 100 days, we'd have to plant and harvest 2,178 square feet per day.
We will start out with about half an acre, so that we only have to do 218 square feet per day. And we'll see how it goes from there.
I am searching for a minimum of 25 acres, so there would be plenty for animal to eat, beyond what's available from the vegetable cropping areas.
We will always have some dry
feed in storage, and I expect to build a small silo.