Jenny Wright wrote:
Ben Zumeta wrote:I would try to leave some larger canopy trees if I could to hold soil, reduce wind, and provide dappled shade for establishing your young trees. Especially in hot climates, most young trees are evolved to do best in dappled shade, as most tree seeds fall in forests. The trick is then felling them without harming the young trees, but I bet you could find benefit from leaving some oaks on the north side of the property.
Pawpaws are one of those trees that do best in the canopy as young trees.
I'd go about removing and replacing trees very slowly, especially in South Carolina. If you try to remove a bunch of trees at once, the first good thunderstorm that comes along afterwards wIll wash away all your topsoil and then the sun will bake what's left into a hard shell.
Ben Zumeta wrote:I would try to leave some larger canopy trees if I could to hold soil, reduce wind, and provide dappled shade for establishing your young trees. Especially in hot climates, most young trees are evolved to do best in dappled shade, as most tree seeds fall in forests. The trick is then felling them without harming the young trees, but I bet you could find benefit from leaving some oaks on the north side of the property.
Jenny Wright wrote:If you do go ahead with removing the oaks and pines, depending on the size and shape of the tree, you can get some money for the oaks- I would look into that before using them in a hugelkultur mound for example. The pines are worth a little less- when we had some pines removed, the price of removal was a little less because the company got some money for the wood but not a ton.
Pines can be extremely useful for pine straw for mulching the garden. You can even sell bundles of it- there is a market for it for crafts as well as mulch. The oak leaves provide awesome mulch and compost too. And there are some threads on here about harvesting and baking with the acorns that you might want to look at.
Ben Zumeta wrote:I’d also leave trees providing shade to the west side of a structure/house, nursery or garden.
Heather Staas wrote:Are you on FB by chance? There is a "South Carolina Permaculture" group on FB if you search for it. Not a big group, about 150 members. But it might lead to some in person help or local resources for you! Good luck.
Joshua LeDuc wrote:Hi Maureen, I started my food forest 3 years ago by planting some pecan and apple trees, and since then I have been adding as much diversity around the initial plantings as money and time will allow. I have also been guilty of paralysis by analysis more than a handful of times while trying to figure all of this out. Yes, observation of your land is crucial as well as learning from your mistakes. I found the book Gaia's Garden: A Guide to Home-scale Permaculture by Toby Hemingway a great resource for creating a food forest on the homesteading level. Good luck!
Jenny Wright wrote:https://permies.com/t/174517/garden-plan-Garden-Master
You can look at my post here to see some of the ways I make my plans, along with some nifty things I've recently learned.
Elizabeth Stan wrote:Hi there!
Fellow newbie here, we've just moved to the south western area of Virginia and are attempting to do something similar to you!
I don't have a lot of advice but I thought maybe you'd like to know you're not the only one in the newbie boat.
We've just been observing and learning what we have around us for the last six months so far, and I've started a small hugelkulture herb spiral, as well as a small no till/no dig kitchen garden (I've yet to plant anything in it yet because I'm scared that there will still be another frost here soon). We've planted a few fruit trees to start my tree guilds and are slowly but surely planning out exactly where we want to build our various farm structures and what not.
I wish you the best of luck in your endeavors! Maybe we'll be able to learn from each other along the way, too!