Ed Waters wrote:Greg, was wondering if you ever offer tours of your Forest Garden.
Ed
Permaculture...picking the lock back to Eden since 1978.
Pics of my Forest Garden
"We're all just walking each other home." -Ram Dass
"Be a lamp, or a lifeboat, or a ladder."-Rumi
"It's all one song!" -Neil Young
Permaculture...picking the lock back to Eden since 1978.
Pics of my Forest Garden
I've got this plant combining this spring as well as a few others. got another hardy mulberry, a couple more honey berries and a few more red/ white currants. growing out some herbs to put out there as well. going to spread out my arctic raspberries and alpine strawberries to speed up their spread in my wood chips under my bigger plants. can't wait to see ground again!Greg Martin wrote:An update on the American Spikenard. It's such a big plant that makes sooo many berries. Each little cluster ripens all at once, but the spike of berries ripen over an extended time. They've passed now, but these are pictures from a few weeks ago when I was snacking on them.
Permaculture...picking the lock back to Eden since 1978.
Pics of my Forest Garden
Permaculture...picking the lock back to Eden since 1978.
Pics of my Forest Garden
Permaculture...picking the lock back to Eden since 1978.
Pics of my Forest Garden
steve bossie wrote:i have a wild chokecherry that has purple leaves on my property. i potted up some volunteers if your interested. new growth is green but turns purple by july.
Permaculture...picking the lock back to Eden since 1978.
Pics of my Forest Garden
never hears of it. would be nice to have it here. ever hear of rabina mountain ash?. its berries are much bigger and sweeter than reg. mountain ash. i think its from russia.Greg Martin wrote:
steve bossie wrote:i have a wild chokecherry that has purple leaves on my property. i potted up some volunteers if your interested. new growth is green but turns purple by july.
Thank you Steve, sounds very nice. I would be interested. PM sent. Have you ever run across the Robert chokecherry? It has red leaves and grape sized fruit. I think it's only in Canada, but I would very much love to get one or else seeds from one if anyone knows how I could get some. Here's a picture of Robert chokecherry.
Greg Martin wrote:
rick jacobson wrote: Hi, as a fellow Mainiac I would love to trade some fig cuttings from that German fig for something you might need/desire. Just a thought. I'm in central Maine most of the time but escape the worst of the snow in N. C.
—
Sim
A build too cool to miss:Mike's GreenhouseA great example:Joseph's Garden
All the soil info you'll ever need:
Redhawk's excellent soil-building series
I love the form of the plant, which I've never seen before in my 50 some years, but I am on the west coast. For a few more years maybe. You have grown these from collected seed! You are my hero today. I'd like more info on growing these from seed; I do know how to propagate a " regular " rose by cuttings. I've never tried from seed. How old are those pictured? And do they have what I have read to be a preference for Not being pruned like other roses?All my beach roses are from the seeds of fruit I gathered over the years from plants on the Maine coast that impressed me with their fruit.
“Peace is not absence of conflict, it is the ability to handle conflict by peaceful means.” —Ronald Reagan
Cindy Haskin wrote:
I love the form of the plant, which I've never seen before in my 50 some years, but I am on the west coast. For a few more years maybe. You have grown these from collected seed! You are my hero today. I'd like more info on growing these from seed; I do know how to propagate a " regular " rose by cuttings. I've never tried from seed. How old are those pictured? And do they have what I have read to be a preference for Not being pruned like other roses?All my beach roses are from the seeds of fruit I gathered over the years from plants on the Maine coast that impressed me with their fruit.
I love all your pix, and will be looking into sweet cicely, goumi and spikenard for the future in Western WV on hilly acreage. Who could have imagined root beer flavored berries?? That are loved by turkeys! I hope to put a call out to some of the local fauna for hunting purposes!!
Permaculture...picking the lock back to Eden since 1978.
Pics of my Forest Garden
Permaculture...picking the lock back to Eden since 1978.
Pics of my Forest Garden
steve bossie wrote:i have a wild chokecherry that has purple leaves on my property. i potted up some volunteers if your interested. new growth is green but turns purple by july.
Permaculture...picking the lock back to Eden since 1978.
Pics of my Forest Garden
Permaculture...picking the lock back to Eden since 1978.
Pics of my Forest Garden
Permaculture...picking the lock back to Eden since 1978.
Pics of my Forest Garden
Permaculture...picking the lock back to Eden since 1978.
Pics of my Forest Garden
Permaculture...picking the lock back to Eden since 1978.
Pics of my Forest Garden
Permaculture...picking the lock back to Eden since 1978.
Pics of my Forest Garden
Permaculture...picking the lock back to Eden since 1978.
Pics of my Forest Garden
Permaculture...picking the lock back to Eden since 1978.
Pics of my Forest Garden
Permaculture...picking the lock back to Eden since 1978.
Pics of my Forest Garden
“Peace is not absence of conflict, it is the ability to handle conflict by peaceful means.” —Ronald Reagan
Permaculture...picking the lock back to Eden since 1978.
Pics of my Forest Garden
Permaculture...picking the lock back to Eden since 1978.
Pics of my Forest Garden
Permaculture...picking the lock back to Eden since 1978.
Pics of my Forest Garden
"We're all just walking each other home." -Ram Dass
"Be a lamp, or a lifeboat, or a ladder."-Rumi
"It's all one song!" -Neil Young
Permaculture...picking the lock back to Eden since 1978.
Pics of my Forest Garden
Permaculture...picking the lock back to Eden since 1978.
Pics of my Forest Garden
the last couple years I've noticed the wildlife and good insects in my food forrest have exploded as well but the difference is they don't seem to care for my fruits. they may take some but its not noticeable. could be because I'm surrounded by abandoned fields full of chokecherry and high bush cranberry. think they prefer those.Greg Martin wrote:Working from home is a strange challenge for me. I don't miss the commute at all, but I miss time with my coworkers and experimental work in the lab. One perk happened yesterday morning. My home office has a window that overlooks a large section of my forest garden and there was, for a lack of a better word, a wildlife party out there. I never walk into the forest garden without seeing a decent amount of wildlife, but yesterday was bonkers. From my window I saw many species all descend into the garden at the same time and then leave together. The trees and shrubs were shaking from all the birds that were taking turns getting a nice berry meal. The beach rose shoots were getting pulled to the ground to offer up there large hips to chipmunks. I couldn't make out all the bird species, though I did notice a pair of pileated woodpeckers in the larger surrounding native forest edge overlooking the forest garden as well as a pair of blue jays. I'm not sure what either of those pairs were up to, but several other species of birds were hitting the cornelian cherries and elderberries in swooping waves. It was a sea of motion that lasted for a nice bit of the morning and then as suddenly as it started it was over and things went back to their normal rhythm.
It was a nice treat getting to watch a full blown wildlife party. Sharing my permaculture bounty with wildlife has always been part of my goal and they have been a part of the creative process, spreading my plants into new combinations I had not considered. I very much enjoyed being the host in my small way.
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