Matt Tebbit wrote: Practically the whole piece of land is barren right now barring the trees who just happen to occupy the spot where water accumulates (a ditch, obviously it's the best spot).
I was going to suggest swales too. Obviously the land is water starved and you could go a long way harvesting water via infiltration swales. Putting a drought tolarant species below a swale means that it will probably do well.
Matt Tebbit wrote: The area I want to plant is maybe 2 meters wide by 10 meters long, how many trees could feasibly be planted on an area that size?
Mass select down to what you feel is right. If you were to put 200 saplings, that's only one plant every meter. That's really tight, but you could go even tighter. Then you let nature work out who wins. I get a large amount of cheap trees and try not to plant two of the same kind next to each other, but that's about it. I'll shape what is growing with a pair of pruning shears when I actually have something to work with. On the sheep, yeah, definitely want to keep them out.
Matt Tebbit wrote:Oh yeah, one final note. I'm not sure what makes Eucalyptus such nasty pieces of work, I think that they just take a lot of the water and nutrients from the soil, in and around the plantations (that are everywhere here) nothing else grows, they completely dominate the eco-system. Unfortunately (fortunately) they're loved by everyone here, they grow on degraded ground, need no attention, have the growth in 10 years that an Andean tree would require 100, can be cut down and they grow right back. The local forests in the highlands have all but disappeared.
Sounds like
Black Locust here. Everybody hates it and wants it eradicated, but on the other hand they lust after it for
firewood. Most people only want black locust in their fireplace, but for some reason they don't like to see it growing anywhere.
Yeah, the raised beds would dry out, your're right. You probably need sunken beds. Make a hole and throw biomass into it. Look into banana circles, as the concept is the same.
You should do some research on N-fixing trees. The point about choosing a tree in any case is it's ability to be multi-functional. How many yields are you getting off of a Tara tree? If there are better trees (
coffee trees are leguminous, and there are surely n-fixing fruit trees where you are)
For example. this seems like a great tree to plant: It has tons of functions.
http://www.ingafoundation.org/the-inga-tree/
Book: Lost Crops of the Incas: Little-known Plants of the Andes
Might be something you'd be interested in.
Oh, and n-fixation is more related to dynamic nutrient accumulation rather than a function of 'nursing'. The plants are n-fixing to give the next wave of plants the nitrogen they need.
Permaculture mimics that and tries to speed it up via overplanting n-fixers and chop and drop.
William