Bea de Munnik wrote:Hi all,
I ordered the book food forest plants for mediterranean conditions by trevor Pemberton, and wondered of anyone has read it and is willing to give their take?
As I'm in a Mediterranean climate and have dreamed of a food forest, this will hopefully bring me one step closer, although I am having to adapt to a roof terrace container garden situation.
Any words are greatly appreciated!
Sophie Sacca wrote:How does one balance growing food and keeping wild areas safe from unhelpful nonnative plants?
Some plants mentioned in this thread can act invasively and crowd out much-needed native plants. It might not be a problem in our vegetable patches but if birds and wildlife spread seeds to other areas it can contribute to loss of habitat elsewhere.
So how do we balance our human needs with the needs of other organisms and ecosystems?
And if we limit ourselves to only food that is native to our locale, could we still survive?
Tereza Okava wrote:Ulla, you've got so many good points, especially about taking turns planting things. I grow loofahs every few years (it takes me a while to use them!) and we are still working on pumpkins from last year!
Neighbor and community trade is also super important. I swap with my neighbors because we have different fruit trees, and everyone is happy.
Lastly, many people who don't have a garden feel left out by canning and preserving, but you can also can things you didn't grow!! This year when tomatoes were dirt cheap I bought a huge quantity to make passata and can it for when tomatoes are expensive. I did enough for a year, and it has been marvelous. I did the same making compote and jam when I got a super deal on very ripe peaches and plums, and with the mulberries I foraged. Some of the mulberry jam got swapped for honey, which was a great deal as far as I'm concerned!!
Rebekah Harmon wrote:More amazing eggsthis week! My ducks are so good to me. I'm going to try freeze drying them next. The eggs, not the ducks 😆
My daughter and I have been exploring ways to eat our wonderful, sourdough, whole wheat waffles without syrup. Blood sugar balance, you know. She and I both like almond/hazelnut butter with un-frozen raspberries on top!
Rebekah Harmon wrote: what a gorgeous stockpile of fermented foods! 😍 I LOVE your caskets! Where do you get such lovely barrels?
I really grateful for your pickled food ideas, because my hisband was recently diagnosed with a fructose malabsorbtion, and now he wants to avoid cabbage and tomatoes (all my sauerkraut and pasta sauces!) Its been hard on him. So I would really like to try pickled beets and lemons! What recipes do you use?