I have an area that drops about 15' in elevation. Some areas are more gradual, doing this over 50'-60' and others are much steeper. This slope is south facing and runs about 600'. My question is how frequently would you cut in swales? Every 2' in elevation drop? Every 4'? And at what point does it become too steep? I want to plant this hill side into fruit & nut trees
Starting on developing a 10 acre permaculture homestead in a sub-urban area. see http://www.my10acres.info
- how much rainfall do you get
- how large are you planning to make the swales, (width & depth)
- is this an open field, or are you working around any existing trees
Jordan Lowery wrote:Careful about changing the ground level near the trees. Too much added on top or taken away can damage or kill the trees.
If you take away, you damage roots.
If you bury part of the trunk, some trees (most?) will hate it.
But why should they die of having more earth to expand, if this does not affect the trunk?
Do you have a direct experience or a sure source about this?
Xisca - pics! Dry subtropical Mediterranean - My project However loud I tell it, this is never a truth, only my experience...
There is a ratio between
the amount of rainfall you need to harvest (not only yearly total, but single storm or rainy week average). This is the amount you get
the size of the swale, both height and width. This is the amount you can store per swale.
so then you adjust the distance between the swales so they fill in a nice rain but don't get washed out in a big one.
You also have to figure on how fast your soil percolates as to how fast the swales will drain and soak in.
And what you want to grow on these swales--if they are larger than your swale-to-swale distance you could create a full canopy and that probably isn't your goal.
"You must be the change you want to see in the world." "First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win." --Mahatma Gandhi
"Preach the Gospel always, and if necessary, use words." --Francis of Assisi.
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I have a topo map someplace and I'm trying to find it. The slope is steep enough that it would be very dangerous to try and drive a tractor side-wise and in many places I don't think you could. I'm guessing but I would say the drop in elevation is something like 10-15 feet over 50', maybe in the 30 deg range with some small areas about 45 degrees. This area runs for 600' or so and is south facing.
Matt Saager wrote:Jerry,
I am still not clear how steep of a slope you have.
Can you describe:
- slope, elevation change per foot
- length and width of the slope
Starting on developing a 10 acre permaculture homestead in a sub-urban area. see http://www.my10acres.info
You would be surprised what kind of slopes you can drive a tractor on if you can pucker tight enough. But if you can't drive a tractor sideways, that is a pretty good indicator you are really should be terracing instead of swaling. Even if you build them as swales they will be spaced like terraces.
"You must be the change you want to see in the world." "First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win." --Mahatma Gandhi
"Preach the Gospel always, and if necessary, use words." --Francis of Assisi.
"Family farms work when the whole family works the farm." -- Adam Klaus
Xisca Nicolas wrote:I think only photos cn be clear enouogh!
Jordan Lowery wrote:Careful about changing the ground level near the trees. Too much added on top or taken away can damage or kill the trees.
If you take away, you damage roots.
If you bury part of the trunk, some trees (most?) will hate it.
But why should they die of having more earth to expand, if this does not affect the trunk?
Do you have a direct experience or a sure source about this?
Adding soil on top of a tree's root system results in extra weight and soil compaction, leading to root damage, leading to tree decline and possible tree death. I don't have a specific source, but as a landscape architect with years of experience dealing with arborists this is a well-known fact. You have to stay out of what is known as the tree protection zone.
I'd also add to the starter of this thread - you may already know this - that black walnut releases "toxins" into the soil that many other plants cannot tolerate. It's a competition mechanism. Just be sure the plants you want to add are either Juglans tolerant or far enough away from their roots to not be bothered by it.
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