Doris Ledet

+ Follow
since Jun 30, 2016
Merit badge: bb list bbv list
Biography
new to permaculture; want to eventually be self-sustained on our small 1.3 acres
For More
Apples and Likes
Apples
Total received
In last 30 days
0
Forums and Threads

Recent posts by Doris Ledet

After seeing all the beautiful gardens, I'm embarrassed to post our little plot.  We had a surprise guest in our garden this year: upshoots from chicken feed left over. I guess I need to cut back on the sunflower seeds in my fermented grains 😉
8 years ago

Bryant RedHawk wrote:Sounds like you just need to keep doing what you know now works.

If flooding is an issue then you might need to think about raised beds.

We use organic straw bales for our tomato garden spaces.
I lay out two bales wide by 5 bales long gardens then I use 2x10's to enclose the bales so they stay where I want them.
After the first year of growing they are broken down to half their bulk, at the end of two years I just set new bales on top of the now compost previous bales.
This gives us a very nice garden bed for other plantings and the biology of the soil is very improved along with the friability of the soil under the composted straw bales.

When you ask about going organic, do you plan to raise items for sale at farmer's markets?
If you aren't going to do that, then just follow the No pesticides, No herbicides, No commercial, artificial fertilizer and you will be better than "organic".

The USDA Organic certification was designed for large farms and so allows some items to be used that I would never use on my "All Natural Grown" farm.

We don't buy any fertilizers, don't use any "Cides" don't use antibiotics, don't use any feeds that might be GMO or contain GMO products.
We try to keep everything from any "outside" influences so mostly if we can't make it on the farm, we don't use it.
Our end goal on Buzzard's Roost is to be a closed farm operation. Meaning nothing from anywhere else for growing vegetables, fruits, hogs, chickens or goats. It is a lofty goal but I am hopeful to get there.

Redhawk



What do you mean by "closed farm operation"?  
8 years ago

Justyn Mavis wrote:Sounds like you need some berry bushes, ducks, trees and a few swales. This will help redirect the water.

It sounds like you are Beyond Organic.


-Justyn



We do have ducks as well.  I've thought about swales and adding a pond to our place.  Still a work in progress.
Not 100% organic, but working towards it.  We've added comfrey to for feed so we can get our flock completely off of any commercially produced feed.
Thank you for your suggestions.
8 years ago
My husband and i have a very small area for our annual garden, and it gets flooded as we are located on wetlands.  We tried hay bale planting in 2016, however they fell apart before harvest.  So, after harvesting we just broke them down the rest of the way and allowed our flocks to forage in it the rest of  the year.  This helped to build up the soil a bit and we used cardboard in our walking areas to prevent weeds, and a combo of rabbit poop and composted chicken poop.  Our garden grew so much more this year.  So much that we had to give away a lot.  The flooding was still an issue, however.

What can i do to "build up" the soil even more in our off season?  If i spread hay over the area and let it compost into the soil, would that help?  Or is there a cover crop that grows well in the fall/winter that can be used?

Thanks for your help.

PS, what are the steps to becoming organic?  We use no chemicals in our yard due to our poultry.
8 years ago
Hello, I am new to using forums.  I have been registered for a while under my farm name.  In the "naming policy", does that mean my user's name?  Or is that only considered when you make a post?  thank you for your help.
8 years ago