So! Let's say you have a rather large chunk of
land, and there's a chunk of it that's unsuitable for traditional methods of
polyculture & food forests.
Y'know, the whole 'fuit/nut Tree guild and 7 layers of useful plants'
Maybe you have a river that floods frequently, or a low-laying area that becomes a waterlogged floodplain after it rains.
Maybe you have some really dry, rocky areas that are too far away to comfortably irrigate by hand, and the rocks make it hard to earthscape.
Whatever the issue is, I just want to pop in with a reminder:
"Useful for Permaculture" is not limited to "compost, human-food, and livestock food."
Don't forget about non-edible habitats!
Depending on how much land you're aiming for and WHY it's not working with you - consider creating a native ecosystem that
isn't tree-focused.
You could decide to cart in a bunch of soil amendments, or cover the whole place with woodchips.....
Those are great techniques for a specific endgoal, but they're not the only option.
By picking an ecosystem of plants that thrives in the soil type you already have, you don't have to start with soil amendments or earthshaping.
Instead, you skip right to pulling out invasive species & seeding with desirable plants.
Riparian, Flood-Prone, Boggy-after-rainfall areas
The
Arundinaria Rivercane (the only native USA bamboo) once had
miles and miles of riverside bamboo forests (called canebrakes) in the southeast USA, and it was an important habitat for hundreds of insects, birds, and small mammals. Several species of butterflies and moth can ONLY grow on rivercane, and there's a species of critically endangered pitcher plant that only grows in rivercane ecosystems... and it's only known to grow in TWO COUNTIES in alabama.
Not only are rivercane culms extremely useful as building material (native americans of the southeast used them frequently in weaving, basketry, and toolmaking of all sorts), they can be made into charcoal for
biochar, or just fuel, the sprouts can be eaten, and the leaves are a fantastic source of compostable greens. The Canebrakes are a wonderful sheltered habitat for all sorts of game animals like pheasants and
rabbits, the canes themselves are a nutritious fodder for ruminant livestock, and you get to help restore a part of America's nearly-lost ecosystems.
Their
roots prevent erosion better than a tree's, and a proper grove can filter out 99% of all nitrate pollution from the surrounding groundwater. It is an INCREDIBLE water-cleaning plant.
When colonialists arrived on our shores, there's descriptions of rivercanes 'as thick around as a man's thigh' and well over 30 feet tall - but many stands these days are so young that they barely top 10 feet.
You'd also be restoring habitat for migrating native songbirds and insects -
About 97-98% of USA rivercane ecosystems have been lost entirely, due to the spread of farming and agriculture. Restoring even a few square miles of rivercane, using rhizomes from different genetic strains would make a relatively big difference, compared to how few are left.
Uses for
permaculture: Biodiversity. Conservation of species. Restoration of ecosystems. Cleaner groundwater. Reduces erosion. Composting, toolmaking, weaving (furniture and baskets!), edible for both humans and farm animals.
If you have a riverside, or flood-prone area, rivercane is a GREAT
permaculture option for the southeast united states.
--
Dry, Rocky, Sandy, too-far-away-to-irrigate
Biodiverse grasslands and brushlands, are also a wonderful addition to your property!
Grasslands which form unslightly mats in the winter, or put out massive blooms of scraggly, dusty flowers may not be the centerpiece for a traditional 'cottage aesthetic' garden, but
Grasslands once covered about 40% of the United States. Only 5% of the original habitat remains. They were a huge source of food in the form of seeds & grains, insects, and foragable plants.
There are quite literally hundreds of native wildflowers, grasses, and forbs in the USA which are threatened, or endangered because of habitat loss.
There are many species of ground-nesting birds and pollinating insects whose grassland habitats were disturbed by
cattle grazing, agriculture, and mowing. Creating another haven for them in their migration routes - or even a permanent place to live - means you're increasing
local biodiversity -
and therefore health - of your property's ecosystem.
Plant wildflowers! Plant seed-bearing grasses and forbs! Many herbal foragables thrive in sunny grasslands.
A few keystone plains plants include prarie crabapple, american plum, oak, deerberry, plains sunflower, broom snakeweed, black-eyed susan.... along with pollinator or host plants like milkvetch, ironweed, evening primrose, heliopsis, wingstem, aster, goldenrod and more. Many grasslands had a few drought-hardy
trees scattered throughout - just
enough to cast a bit of shade here and there.
Any land you can set aside and intentionally seed with keystone
native plant species - removing invasive species which would choke them out - you're doing yourself a huge benefit. Any time you can build up biodiversity; any crops you grow near that area will benefit.
Not only because you have more pollinating insects, but you'll also have the habitat for insect-eating songbirds, along with falcons, owls, foxes, and snakes which will happily feast on any rodents or squirrels trying to nibble your harvest.
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Conservation & Nationwide Biodiversity
You could even FOCUS on the conservation & genetic diversity to breed endangered plant species, and find some species that suit your 'difficult' piece of land.
The U.S. Endangered Species Act (ESA) allows for people to collect cuttings and seeds from endangered plants on private property, to propagate, raise, and sell.
The ESA does have one requirement: sellers must apply for a $100 permit from the Fish & Wildlife Service if plants are sold across state lines.
This means that, if you can find a couple people selling endangered plants - you can create a thicket with different genetic strains & improve genetic diversity of a nearly-extinct species. Each new generation of cross-pollinated seeds with new genetic stock growing to adulthood means a stronger species hardiness, and a better ability for them to naturally seed out and spread when planted.
"Some 75 percent of endangered and threatened plant species occur to some extent on private lands, and so their conservation can be significantly affected by activities in those habitats. Private landowners and other citizens can have a positive impact on rare plant conservation, and we encourage them to contact their local Fish and Wildlife Service office, and their State Natural Heritage Program to learn more about what they can do to help." - Gavin Shire, Fish and Wildlife Service
To me at least,
Permaculture is more than just food production for you & yours.
It's about managing the land in such a way that your use of it is
sustainable long-term... and even restorative.
=)
Do you have any 'Difficult' land that you don't know what to do with?
Let's brainstorm!