Keith Apliguisi

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since Jan 09, 2023
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Recent posts by Keith Apliguisi

Mike Haasl wrote:This is a badge bit (BB) that is part of the PEP curriculum.  Completing this BB is part of getting the sand badge in Gardening.

Jump into the full power of permaculture gardening.  Create a garden that will pump out food for decades with no further effort.  

Hugelkultur is laid out very well in this Richsoil Article.

To complete this BB, the minimum requirements are:
  - 7 feet tall, 7 feet wide, 6 feet long
  - mulch it with at least 4 different kinds of mulch
  - seed/plant at least a dozen different species
  - seeds are mostly nitrogen fixers (>75% by volume)
  - at least three comfrey plants
  - at least three sunchokes
  - at least a dozen sepp holzer grains (currently available as a prize for anyone who reaches BB20)

To document your completion of the BB, provide the following:
  - Two pics of the site before the work is started with the intended location marked out.
         - Probably marked with wood laid on the ground that will soon be buried!
  - Three pics of three different stages of construction - showing the contents of the hugelkultur
  - One pic when the hugelkultur is completely built but not planted or mulched proving it is 7 feet tall and 6 feet long
  - Pics of all the stuff about to be planted
  - A paragraph or two of what wood was used and where it came from, what was planted, what mulches were applied and anything else interesting
  - Two pics of the site after the work is complete from the same two locations as the beginning pictures.

Clarifications:
  - You may use an excavator or other heavy equipment if desired.  (opportunity for a two-fer with the earthworks badge)
  - If you dig 3 foot deep trenches on either side of the hugelkultur spot, you can use that soil, mixed with wood, to make a hugelkultur bed that is 4 feet above grade but 7 feet tall relative to the bottom of the trench. That is one way to satisfy this BB.  
  - if you are building on a slope, measure the height from both sides and the average needs to be 7' or higher



I'm going to do this within the next couple weekends.  I'm new to this forum, but I want to get involved.
2 years ago
pep
I'm just beginning my permaculture journey.  I guess I'm really just beginning to garden, but I'm learning and working towards some permaculture/sustainability goals.  I've just learned about mulch and how it helps, but I wondered what to use for mulch.  Reading through this thread helped me understand it a little more.  I'll continue to keep an eye on this thread.  Thanks for posting it.  It seems like anything could be mulch, maybe with a few caveats.  

Edit: I did some research about mulch and asked my neighbors if they use herbicides or pesticides in their field, bc I get all my hay from their hay fields, and they said no only fertilizer.  So I should be okay to use hay as a mulch.  I'm just now learning that I need to keep mulch on my vegetable bed.  I thought it was just for when nothing was planted in there to prevent leaching.  But I can see the benefits of keeping the soil covered while everything's growing.  I'm really very new to all gardening and I hope I don't sound ridiculous, lol.
2 years ago

paul wheaton wrote:Got the following in my e-mail and he said I could post it here:

Paul,
Hugelkultur works great. I've been doing it for about 15 years.
On your page you say:

"Hugelkultur is nothing more than making raised beds filled with rotten
wood."

I might say 'rotting' rather than 'rotten' since even fresh green wood
can be used. Also it is not absolutely essential that the material be
covered with dirt. I have created wood "terraces" with any carbonaceous
material I could get my hands on...logs, brush, etc.....and raked the
annual deposition of leaves over the material. Here in NC, where we have
high precip and humidity, the material breaks down much quicker than it
would in, say, California. I grew fabulous pumpkins, for example,  in Ca
in the 8 month dry period (no rain at all) without irrigating. I used
everything organic I could accumulate, from logs to leaves, and laid it
out about 2 feet deep and planted into soil pockets.

Its amazing how the rotting wood becomes like a sponge. I can pull out
pieces that I buried two years ago and squeeze them to yield copious
amounts of water. Now when I look at wood, green or even dry, I think
"Water".

I tell my students that every unit of carbon incorporated into soils can
hold 4 units of water.

Penny Livingston, of Pc Inst of N Ca, had a few brush piles littering
her site but she didn't feel like moving or burning them, so she piled
on straw and a light scattering of soil, planted potatoes into it, and
harvested a couple bushels of spuds in addition to dissolving the "problem".

Here at Earthaven we have prohibited the burning of brush so the slower
biological 'burn' is our preferred way of managing it.

You will be greatly rewarded by using this approach. Thanks for the pix.
Keith



Hi I'm new here.  This was very helpful.  I recently learned about hugelkulter and have been thinking of sources of wood to build one with.  I never considered my 2 brush piles as sources though.  I've got a stray chicken living in one of them right now, but I'm going to build a coop this spring and actually get some chickens.  We just finally became homeowners and I'm finally able to start farming and working towards some goals.  I honestly wish I would've known of this site years ago, I would be much more prepared than I am now.  Scrambling to learn everything I can as fast as I can.  I'm not a young man anymore.  I love the badge thing and I'm going to look more into it to see exactly what I need to do to participate.  This forum was one of those things that I needed but didn't know I needed.  

I live in the south east United States and I was wondering if it was okay to use pine wood for a hugelkulter?  Like if I used all pine?
2 years ago