Saturday, January 12, 2013

Gaia's Garden

Once or twice a year, I read an amazing book that helps clarify my life or an aspect of farming. Last Christmas, that book was The Small-Scale Poultry Flock, which Phil is currently reading and enjoying. I also loved Sepp Holzer's Permaculture.

In life, I enjoyed Louisa Williams's Radical Medicine (a textbook I haven't finished, but have enjoyed immensely).

And now I am devouring Gaia's Garden. I've read it every spare moment since Christmas, and what a treasure! I feel I have a better vision for how to connect the pieces of what we've tried. We're going the right direction, but a few additions will make the garden pop.
  • Clarity for what went wrong with my lasagna garden. I put down cardboard, and covered with mulch, but I had a complete takeover of weeds. What would have been more successful would have been to cover the cardboard with three flakes of hay, and wet it all down until spongy, then cover with a few inches of seed-free material (woods chips, for example). The weed seeds, apparently, just rot until a few inches of barrier. This makes much more sense.
  • How to plant a healthy guild. We long for fruit trees with life underneath enough to offer stable support. The book recommends a circle at the dripline of the tree: daffodils around the trunk (though we think we'll stick with peastone directly around the trunk, then daffodils), and a ring of daffodils at the dripline to prevent grass encroachment. Then some comfrey for mulch, some berry (currants?) for height stacking, some herbs for general healthy (yarrow, mint), some bee-attractants (phacelia, buckwheat). A nitrogen-fixing shrub (Siberian pea), maybe even planted in the hole with the tree, boosts nutrition (keep it trimmed below the tree, and perhaps cut it off in the fifth year or so). Fill in this circle of loveliness with a good mulch, and gradually begin to connect these circles, until the entire garden is rich with life, pollinators, insect predators and such.
Perhaps what I appreciate most about the book is that I have either attempted to source almost all the trees and plants he mentions, or I have them actively growing already, just not in a coherent order. To connect the pieces shouldn't be a big jump.

Growing season is coming, and I think I'll be ready!

1 comment:

  1. I agree, that book is incredibly inspiring. I am slowly working on turning our baby orchard over to permaculture. I used the sheet mulching technique from that book last year and have started planting comfrey. I have far to go.

    I am a SLer (lydiasmommy on the forums) and have been reading your blog for a while now. I enjoy reading about your adventures since they are similar to our own aspirations. I want to encourage you not to be so hard on yourself. You have undertaken such a large project and accomplished so much. I know you have fallen short of where you would like to be, but I watch in awe.

    I also wanted to offer you some Ancona duck hatching eggs, should you want to incubate some yourself. I know how much your boys liked the ducks and I think Anconas have lots of traits that would work very well for you. (Have you read Carol Deppe's The Resilient Gardener? They are featured in that book.) We are breeding Anconas and I would love to provide some eggs to your family for free if you are interested. It is the least I can do for all the inspiration you have given me. You can check out our farm website at gustfrontfarm.webs.com

    Emily

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