Medicinal herbs, kitchen herbs, perennial edibles and berries: https://mountainherbs.net/ grown in the Blue Mountains, Australia
Invasive plants are Earth's way of insisting we notice her medicines. Stephen Herrod Buhner
Everyone learns what works by learning what doesn't work. Stephen Herrod Buhner
Anne Miller wrote:Today I have seen several posts with M2, what is that?
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What is a Mother Tree ?
Anne Miller wrote:Today I have seen several posts with M2, what is that?
I like his way of thinking in the video. Makes good point for his own desires.
If a person lives in the desert growing grain is good.
So according to the video growing grain where you live would be good, (zone 10a).
Medicinal herbs, kitchen herbs, perennial edibles and berries: https://mountainherbs.net/ grown in the Blue Mountains, Australia
Grains easily fit in places like the deserts and cold climates where there is dormancy and time to process everything. Outside of these climates, grain is inefficient. There are a lot of easier foods to grow in terms of nutrition for the labor required. (zip) However, usually, the amount of work necessary for the food gained just isn’t worth it.
How Permies works: https://permies.com/wiki/34193/permies-works-links-threads
My projects on Skye: The tree field, Growing and landracing, perennial polycultures, "Don't dream it - be it! "
And I urge you to please notice when you are happy, and exclaim or murmur or think at some point, 'If this isn't nice, I don't know what is.'
-Kurt Vonnegut
Cristobal Cristo wrote:Nicola,
Ruminants do not need any grain to produce milk. Poultry does not need it either - only if someone wants to produce unnatural roasting chicken (extremely overweight very young bird, very tasty) - in the older times people were eating pullets.
I would say that the same rule applies to grains as to other food products - if it grows for you without extreme effort, pursue it.
I have tried twice: rye and wheat which were taken over by wet season weeds (which is 95% of natives/weeds/invasives that grow here). Then I learned that I have to prepare the soil better, by several shallow cultivations to destroy germinating natives within some timeframe and that I have to use much higher seeding ratios. Also in case of hand sowing, the distribution pattern is not uniform and it allows weed development in more open spots.
Mechanical seeder would be helpful, but it's rather too expensive for my 2000 m2 plot.
I was using recommended 200 kg/ha, so 20 kg per experimental 1000 m2. It was definitely not enough. It's probably right if helped with herbicides and fertilizers. I would opt for two times more to surpress weeds naturally. I may try again in the future.
William Bronson wrote: I think grain has the advantage when it comes to storage duration.
How many roots can be stored for years and still be edible?
This allows surplus to be built up, year over year.
This kind of surplus can equate to food security, but also translate into wealth, with all that comes with that.
Medicinal herbs, kitchen herbs, perennial edibles and berries: https://mountainherbs.net/ grown in the Blue Mountains, Australia
Medicinal herbs, kitchen herbs, perennial edibles and berries: https://mountainherbs.net/ grown in the Blue Mountains, Australia
One can never be too kind to oneself or others.
Nicola Bludau wrote:
William Bronson wrote: I think grain has the advantage when it comes to storage duration.
How many roots can be stored for years and still be edible?
This allows surplus to be built up, year over year.
This kind of surplus can equate to food security, but also translate into wealth, with all that comes with that.
OK you don't need that if you live in zone 10 and up.
Creating edible biodiversity and embracing everlasting abundance.
Leaftide.com — track your fruit trees, veg & everything in between
Hugo Morvan wrote:It's a community of retired agricultural folk who've been working at mechanics. They've a solar powered day for processing it all. They're making flour corn into flour too. But he says most times it's more difficult to get people to do outdoor gardening chores than it is to get people to fix a broken machine.
How Permies works: https://permies.com/wiki/34193/permies-works-links-threads
My projects on Skye: The tree field, Growing and landracing, perennial polycultures, "Don't dream it - be it! "
Medicinal herbs, kitchen herbs, perennial edibles and berries: https://mountainherbs.net/ grown in the Blue Mountains, Australia
Nothing ruins a neighborhood like paved roads and water lines.
I learn from the mistakes of others who take my advice.
Permaculture...picking the lock back to Eden since 1978.
Pics of my Forest Garden
I learn from the mistakes of others who take my advice.
Zone 6, 45 inches precipitation, hard clay soil
John F Dean wrote:I am just now seriously getting into grain. This is mostly because of the calories per acre it has the potential to produce both as people food and livestock food. My region produces about 170 bushels of corn per acre using convention farming methods. Prime land in Illinois produces 220 bushels per acre. Even if I only produce 1/4 of that 170 bushels on an acre, it would still be a huge win.
M Ljin wrote:I don’t think it is worthwhile for me to grow. They usually get eaten by wildlife, or they don’t flourish. The only one I’ve had moderate success with is sorghum, surprisingly enough, with corn and millet being okay but still being gobbled by birds, going moldy in the cob, or other issues. Not only that but last year I fell ill, and would feel strange and weak and numb other nasty things after eating grains, so I don’t eat them anymore (except in very small quantities). Oddly, I ate the neighbor’s field corn raw, gleaned from the field after harvest, and it didn’t bother me.
There are plenty of other things to eat that trying to grow something that gets chomped and sometimes makes me sick, seems like I needn’t much bother. However, sorghum keeps coming up in conversation and random places, so I might try again this year.
Live, love life holistically
Nicola Bludau wrote:I simply started, and hope that these horrible feral deer don't get in! It is autumn so I sowed one bed barley out of the chicken food, another one sunflower (not really a grain) and some fancy ancient wheat they had in the health food section of the supermarket.
I also realised that I can't grow sweet potatoes in the same spot year after year - i have a patch in the front yard that I want to sow with some grains it would certainly look lovely (and the birds probably like it too).
I like my bread and i would like to grow my own chook food.
Live, love life holistically
Thom Bri wrote:I am getting 50-60 bushel/acre using open-pollinated seed with no added fertilizer. Northern Illinois. Conventional ag can produce 200 bushel/acre of corn here.
How Permies works: https://permies.com/wiki/34193/permies-works-links-threads
My projects on Skye: The tree field, Growing and landracing, perennial polycultures, "Don't dream it - be it! "
One can never be too kind to oneself or others.
If you want to try homesteading/permaculture/whatever-you-wanna-call-it, and the only thing stopping you is the price tag on land, PM me. I have more space than I need and I'm willing to share 
M Ljin wrote:Ulla, I haven’t noticed that about sorghum. I’ve grown one tight-hulled kind and also have some loose-hulled sorts that separate easily. Maybe it would help to try a different variety? Are you growing one that’s specifically noted as grain sorghum?
Live, love life holistically
John F Dean wrote:Corn has a reputation for being empty calories. I have never researched that concept for its accuracy.
If you want to try homesteading/permaculture/whatever-you-wanna-call-it, and the only thing stopping you is the price tag on land, PM me. I have more space than I need and I'm willing to share 
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