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All those lovely herbaceous plants!

 
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Hey all!

 I'm a permaculture hobbyist from the central coast of California.  I've just been getting more seriously into permaculture in the last 5-6 years.  I went to the reunion of my Dad's permaculture design class in about 2007, and that was what first got me interested in permaculture (don't think I even knew what it was before that .  

 But it took a dream message from him after his death to get me really 'in-the-dirt', so to speak.  (In the dream, he encouraged me to 'take care of the land')

The last few weeks, I've been lasered-in on studying herbaceous plants, and observing them in the large infiltration trench on the side of my condo.  So, I was so happy with the abundant rainfall this morning, so I could observe some of the principles I'd been studying in action (isn't the best part of a system seeing it in action?).  Here are some images I captured this morning (~this is my living lab, I go out here every morning~).

Some of the things I pondered while I watched (been going over these principles in my head for several weeks):

- The herbaceous plants bending to accommodate the water, slowing it without hindering its flow.
- How the dense roots, and soil beneath, receive the water abundantly; so it can infiltrate deeply and widely; soak, hold, and drain as needed.
- Root respiration; and how the microchannels in the roots allow oxygen to get in - even in areas of saturation
- The roots spreading the water laterally and vertically, preventing localized saturation

As a relative permaculture newbie, might I ask: what fascinates you about these hardy herbaceous plants?  What have you noticed about their qualities, and uses, to improve the stability and infiltration in swales?

Inquiring minds want to know
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Hi Cameron,

Welcome to Permies.
 
Cameron DeVries
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John F Dean wrote:Hi Cameron,

Welcome to Permies.



Thanks John, good to be here~

-Cameron
 
I agree. Here's the link: http://stoves2.com
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