M Ljin wrote:Not going to suggest crops so much as strategy…
As far as I understand no one has been able to have no inputs without fallowing, or food foresting.
The figure I have heard (maybe Will Bonsall said it?) is that cultivating more than one fourth (give or take) of the land at a time necessitates inputs—the rest being perennial something that goes into a composting (or animals). As a goat farmer the latter option seems wise! It’s also possible and possibly beneficial to rotate the cultivated area and leave the rest fallow.
So the goat manure and bedding go to making compost for your beds, which take up only 1/4 or less of the entire land (about a quarter acre per person— 9/4=2.5 acres). Turnips, say, could be good crops, and other roots—greens and vegetables could be gathered from the forests and fallows.
I also would include the forests and non-arable land into the food calorie equation because they can be excellent sources of all sorts of food—mushrooms, greens, some kinds of shade tolerant berries, etc. Especially if there are nut trees. And since they cannot be cultivated they need little input.
I would always emphasise foraging because it is so reliable and doesn’t require us to take up space in our own land.
I wonder if John Seymour's approach for 5 acres would work well, but scaled up a bit.
On 5 acres, he ploughs up half an acre every year and sows it to a crop rotation, and then it stays in crops for 4 years before being returned to pasture for 4 years, so he has at any time 2 acres pasture and 2 acres various crops such as grain, fodder roots, potatoes, beans, etc. It sounds a bit more intensive than Bonsall's one, but it has animal manure and Bonsall does not, so that could make up for it. Pigs could potentially do the ploughing, if we had enough food for them.