Introducing my experimental
project called "The Red Baron Project"
For my project I am using these 10 principles:
Principle 1: No till and/or minimal till with mulches used for weed control
Principle 2: Minimal external inputs
Principle 3: Living mulches between rows to maintain biodiversity
Principle 4: Companion planting
Principle 6: The ability to integrate carefully controlled modern animal husbandry (optional)
Principle 5: Capability to be mechanized for large scale or low labor for smaller scale
Principle 7: As organic as possible, while maintaining flexibility to allow non-organic growers to use the methods
Principle 8: Portable and flexible
enough to be used on a wide variety of crops in many areas of the world
Principle 9:
Sustainable ie. beneficial to the ecology and wildlife
Principle 10: Profitable
The project is only 2 years old so far, but basically is an amalgamation of a lifetime of
experience and research.
The basic idea I had is to develop an organic model using
Permaculture principles that are scale-able to any size garden or Farm, without killing the biodiversity present, or in most cases improving it. Early results show a beneficial effect of the minimal disturbance. This could be anything from a backyard of mowed grass
yard, to a full on
native rangeland "wilderness area", to a formerly plowed and farmed out cornfield, to a cow pasture, to an abandoned weed choked urban lot and everything in between.
I am using a science based approach that builds on the research of many giants in organic agriculture. I borrowed the paper and mulch technique from
Ruth Stout's No Work Garden. I borrowed The living Mulch technique from
Helen Atthowe. I borrowed the integration of animals from
Joel Salatin,
Allan Savory, and
Bill Mollison. I borrowed the Pasture cropping idea from
Col Seis. I borrowed the
compost ideas of
Sir Albert Howard and Dr. Elaine Ingham. I borrowed the best from Commercial Ag too, like no-till, mechanised
hay baling and what
Ray Archuletta and Gabe Brown are doing with multi-species cover crops. I took all these and many more influences, formed a synthesis of commonality and a hypothesis on how they could all be integrated into one system. For a partial list of influences visit my youtube page here and search the playlists.
Red Baron Farm I also wrote a wikipedia page as part of my research on the optional animal husbandry, so others could find many references easier.
Holistic management
Basically, in simplified terms. All you do is mow, roll out paper or
cardboard and roll out hay right over that to make your beds. Later you part the mulch and dig a small hole for your seedlings and fill the hole with inoculated compost and soil. You leave a strip of pasture or other perennials between rows to be either mowed or grazed. That's it, couldn't be more simple. But yet it has the ability by changing mulch material or paper barrier to be scalable to any size operation. The grasses and forbs between the rows can be mowed with a lawn mower, or even a
chicken tractor or portable rabbit hutches, or even sectioned off with electric portable feathernet fencing for grazing. Or any combination of the above. The possibilities are endless.
I am asking humbly that anyone else interested in helping to try it out themselves, even in a small test plot, and welcome them to post their results good and bad here. Questions about details are welcomed.