Hello folks, here I am with yet another slope question:
OK, so I have this slope that varies from rolling hill to precipice (well, almost). Some parts you can walk/climb down, some parts not so much. My plan, one that I have slowly started implementing, is to make most of this slope (except for the currently dangerously steep part) into a food forest. I've cleared large chunks of it, so that I can actually walk there (it was an impenetrable jungle) and sown erosion control plants. I've also realised, from planting a few
apple trees, that it is
very rocky. I initially feared that I was landslide-exposed bedrock, but there's soil in there, it's just rocks of varying sizes sometimes lying very tightly packed. Digging with a spade is impossible, but it's light work with a terracing pick.
So, that's what I'm working with. Now, I have a long shopping list of trees and shrubs (to start with).
Is there anything I shouldn't plant on a slope like this? I've stayed away from dwarf trees, and for practical reasons I think I'll plant the nuts and chestnuts on the northern border where the
land is flat and I don't need elaborate netting to keep my harvest from rolling into the river. But, is there anything that will
root poorly in a slope and be an erosion risk?
Here's the plan right now for the curious. The gradient part is the slope, and dark grey parts are just planned... all the circles with numbers in them are the major trees that are currently in the ground and will stay there. 1 = Holly ; 2 =
Ash ; 3 = Oak ; 4 = Hawthorn ; 5 = Crabapple ; 6 =
Apple (Ontario, Ingrid Marie, Calville Étoilée); 7 = Cherry (Lapins). The brown part is a
tractor road and the blue part is the river, obviously.
ETA: The top part of the I-section is the part you can't walk down. The rest is OK, although it can occasionally be difficult i