"What is worth knowing, is difficult to learn"
Idle dreamer
Tyler Ludens wrote:Geoff's annual vegetable gardens are intensively planted and irrigated,
"What is worth knowing, is difficult to learn"
Idle dreamer
Tyler Ludens wrote:Geoff's farm needs to grow vegetables enough to provide thousands of meals for students and staff, so yes I think it is the volume and consistency and the desire to grow "normal" vegetables even through droughts.
"What is worth knowing, is difficult to learn"
John Polk wrote:Holzer's method relies on having a surplus of logs.
Peter Kalokerinos wrote:
Tyler Ludens wrote:Geoff's farm needs to grow vegetables enough to provide thousands of meals for students and staff, so yes I think it is the volume and consistency and the desire to grow "normal" vegetables even through droughts.
That's the only conclusion I can come to as well. It's hardly a ringing endorsement of the Holzer method though. Although, Geoff has a heap of willing helpers/interns on site, so I guess they can afford the labour for all the weeding, tilling, composting etc......not exactly "sustainable" though, which makes me questions to "sustainability" of the Holzer method for larger scale production....unfair?
Idle dreamer
Tyler Ludens wrote:
I think they have different goals. Geoff uses his farm to actively train a lot of people per year, Holzer's farm is, as far as I know, mostly a demonstration site which produces a variety of things for sale, including vegetables and fruit which visitors harvest themselves. I'm not sure how either method isn't "sustainable."
Fast hugelkultur, fences, moss, natural pool conversion, something witty
Idle dreamer
Tyler Ludens wrote:Also, I think the primary product on Sepp's farm is pork, not vegetables.
"What is worth knowing, is difficult to learn"
Idle dreamer
Idle dreamer
they don't even mention the produce on their website, only the tours.
Idle dreamer
"What is worth knowing, is difficult to learn"
Idle dreamer
Idle dreamer
Tyler Ludens wrote:Kyrt, are you saying that because of the rainforest conditions the hugel would rot down too fast? That makes a lot of sense!
Kyrt Ryder wrote:
Tyler Ludens wrote:Kyrt, are you saying that because of the rainforest conditions the hugel would rot down too fast? That makes a lot of sense!
His rainforest conditions (the heat and moisture combined) devours. Carbon waaaay too fast for hugels to be practical.
The rainforest up here in northwestern Washington, on the other hand, would probably benefit greatly from a hugel.
"What is worth knowing, is difficult to learn"
Idle dreamer
Not sure what the benefits of less polyculture/diversity would be though.
If it was me, I'd try both.
Gilbert Fritz wrote:
It is much less work harvesting when everything is not a big tangle; hunting down enough lettuce scattered through the garden is difficult.
Now imagine if there were 20 different types of vegetables all mixed, and various weeds and things . . .
Gilbert Fritz wrote: weeds
"What is worth knowing, is difficult to learn"
http://www.popcliq.com (web development), GoPermaculture Food Forest http://www.permies.com/t/57687/forest-garden/Permaculture-Food-Forest-suburban-permaculture, Sea Buckthorn (Seaberry) grower (hobbiest) https://www.facebook.com/michelle.bisson.37, zone 3b/4b (borderline) Quebec Canada
What are these "weeds" you speak of?
Hans Albert Quistorff, LMT projects on permies Hans Massage Qberry Farm magnet therapy gmail hquistorff
Jared Woodcock wrote:
A 100 foot row of a single crop in a market garden is not a monocrop. Monocrops are when you have acres of a single crop, not really a concern for a home gardener.
Jared Woodcock wrote: You dont have to irrigate, if consistent high yields dont matter just water as needed and after a season or two your soils will hold most of the water you need.
Idle dreamer
This is all just my opinion based on a flawed memory
Idle dreamer
Tyler Ludens wrote:
Not my experience in my climate. I've not yet found a no-irrigation food growing technique here.
Tyler Ludens wrote:
Jared Woodcock wrote: You dont have to irrigate, if consistent high yields dont matter just water as needed and after a season or two your soils will hold most of the water you need.
Not my experience in my climate. I've not yet found a no-irrigation food growing technique here.
Rogers John wrote:My hugel littered homestead on the east coast of central Florida gets most of its rain in the warm subtropical summers. For several years I have been burying wood of all sizes and shapes--from long dead and rotting to fresh cut and full of sap. Most of my mounds are about one meter high, but some approach two meters, and took many truck loads (18 cubic yards ea.) of wood and fill dirt to complete. If you have the material and energy, go for it. I have not seen a down side to this technique. Or, devote some of your acreage to hugelkulture and some without. All of my property is covered in wood chip mulch, so I don't know hot much of that is encouraging the mushroom activity or how much results from the hugel magic. Fungi are your friends.
Rogers John wrote:
Aristotle, I have been doing hugelkulture for about six years. For me it started as a way to value the dead trees that were already on my property and to add time release fertility capsules to the young forest garden. Lately I have been using these mounds as safe growing space for species that cannot tolerate soggy soil, like papaya, avocado, olive, jackfruit and moringa. Hugelkulture works in the humid tropics (monsoon tropics too) at least because it offers well drained growing beds.
"What is worth knowing, is difficult to learn"
Water! People swim in water! Even tiny ads swim in water:
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