Showing posts with label permaculture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label permaculture. Show all posts

Thursday, November 10, 2016

Chickens earn their keep

This summer I built a chicken tractor. You can read more about that here. 

I built the dimension to be the same width and half the length of our backyard 5'x16' raised garden beds. The 5'x8' tractor fits neatly on top of the sides of the beds.

This allows me to put the lightweight tractor over a bed, and then after stuffing the birds in there (they haven't figured out how to get up into the beds and the tractor on their own) they scratch, poop and generally make a mess of the garden. This is EXACTLY what I want. They till the soil, eat bugs and leftover seeds and plant material.






Friday, March 28, 2014

Thursday, May 2, 2013

Defining permaculture

I've been throwing the term "permaculture" around for a couple of blog posts, and I decided it's time to actually define it.

Permaculture (permanent + agriculture) is about working with nature not against her, resulting in a more beautiful, abundant and forgiving garden. It's about observing what we see, determining what we have, and deciding what we will do with what we've got. After an intense period of developing  a permaculture garden, it's also a lot less work than a traditional garden because the system is feeding itself (fewer inputs), watering itself (less time with hose), and is designed to get a little wild and that's just ok.

What particularly draws me to permaculture is that one doesn't have to have a 100-acre, 10-acre or even one-acre plot of land to create an ecosystem of assembled plants, insects and in some cases animals. Permaculture is about building and maintaining soil fertility, catching and conserving water, providing habitat for beneficial insects birds and animals, and growing in edible "forest" that yields seasonal fruits and other foods.

This does not mean that I'm not going to grow my beloved eggplant, tomatoes, peppers and other annual plants. It does mean I'm going to augment many of these annuals with perennial plants, and create a symbiotic system that works together, and with nature, not against it.


Permaculture is taught in an intensive 80 to 100 hour course, resulting in a Permaculture Design Certificate. Sometimes PDCs are residential courses that take place over 10 to 14 days in a row, where students live, study and work together on projects. The course I am enrolled in involves the same amount of hours spread out over 10 months. I'm grateful for the extended time because it not only gives me more time to accomplish the reading material, but also more time to reflect on what I'm learning and use it in my garden over time.

I'm reading the following book for my permaculture course, I particularly like the "home-scale" part of the subtitle.  I will certainly be talking more about what I learn and how I'm using it in our garden.



Sunday, April 28, 2013

Fruit forest installation a success!

On Saturday, April 27, 21 volunteers, Jay and I planted five fruit trees. You may wonder why it took 23 people to dig five holes. Actually  it took just one friendly neighbor to dig the holes (thanks Dave!)

But to make a wonderful home for this fruit forest, plus gather and store as much water as possible in the soil, we also created a water catchment and storage system. 

To the best of my calculations, we moved five tons of compost, plus 30# hay bales, buckets of wet coffee grounds and cardboard from countless boxes and dug three 30' swales across the yard.

Here are a few photos, and a time-lapse video of the installation day.

Before

Trees down

Roughly finished product

What a gang! Sorry Jay isn't in the picture, he was in the house preparing lunch.

Saturday, April 27, 2013

Sheet mulching - not 900-count, 900 square feet

Sheet mulching, otherwise known as lasagna gardening, is an organic practice of putting down layers of alternating carbon-rich in nitrogen-rich materials to accomplish a number of goals.

The first is to kill the grass. I know, lots of people worked their entire lives to get the perfect lawn, but the last thing I want to do with my life is mow it -- I'd rather kill the grass and plant something productive in that open space.

The second thing sheet mulching does is brings in a lot of organic matter to enrich the soil. Organic matter can be anything, leaves, manure, hay or straw, wood chips, compost, even on garden debris from last year. The trick to a successful sheet mulch is getting the carbon and nitrogen ratios right so you don't have an imbalance. Too much carbon and there isn't any organic activity; too much nitrogen and it gets smelly.

There are books describing the perfect sheet mulch project, so I'm not going to go into it here. (I'm reading Gaia's Garden right now, great book!) The sheet mulch layers we're going to use to smother the grass and create lovely soil for our orchard will look like the following. From the surface down:
  • Woodchip paths or a 2" layer of compost seeded with a low-growing white clover
  • 6 to 8 inches of marsh hay (doesn't contain weed seeds)
  • 1 inch compost
  • solid layer of cardboard
  • 1 inch compost
  • coffee grounds
  • dead grass (leftover from the lawn)
  • original soil
Many people who sheet mulch their yards spend a lot of time collecting compost, old hay, leaves, cardboard, wood chips etc. But since we didn't have much time before we wanted to plant our orchard, we're purchasing most of the woodchips, compost and hay; and we scrounged cardboard from the neighborhood and collected coffee grounds from local cafés.

I will take lots of pictures during the sheet mulch process and show you how it turned out in a future post.
Two juniper trees were removed this week. Props to Garret of Gere Tree Care for the short-notice job.

Garret left a load of wood chips (some from the branches of our tree, some from earlier jobs). The tarp is less to keep them dry and more to say "Not free for the taking."


Monday, April 22, 2013

Building a front-yard orchard

Jay and I moved into our new home on Feb. 16, and a week and a half later I had surgery, after-which I was largely home bound for four and a half weeks.

Needless to say, I had a lot of time to think about what to do with our new front yard. When put together with my desire to cultivate community on our block and the little I had already learned in the first class of the permaculture course, building an orchard in the front yard seemed like a perfectly outrageous thing for us to do. So naturally I began planning.


Building community around me, in the place where I live, has always been a deeply held value of mine. I attribute this to the wonderful community of people that my parents built around my brothers and I as we grew up on a small family farm in rural western Wisconsin. The idea of community where I live was also fostered by memories of the wonderful community I built around me when I first lived on Madison's East side in my house on Upham Street.

I'm calling this front-yard idea "An orchard for birds and bees, you's and me's." The idea is that as the fruit trees mature, we want people to come to our yard, pick some fruit, visit with us and other neighbors and get to know one another. It's part of watching out for one another, growing food to share, and sharing ideas to grow. 


Little Free Library
And our orchard will get along perfectly with the "Little Free Library" that our neighbor across the street will be installing later this spring. I have a fantasy of putting a sign near her library that says "Grab a book, cross the street, pick an apple and sit for a spell."  Admittedly the apple trees won't be producing for several years, but maybe next year someone can pick a gooseberry, jostaberry, honeyberry or contorted quince.

Cement bench finds a permanent home
Those who visited my house on Upham Street, Jay's house on Rae Lane, or helped me move from Upham or Rae Lane know that I have been carrying around a 400 pound cement bench for the last six years. You'll be happy to know that it's final resting place will be somewhere in this orchard.


Orchard installation details
The Orchard will be installed on Saturday, April 27 in the morning. Partly because I am still restricted to what I'm able to do following hip surgery, and partly because planting even a small orchard with just five trees and a dozen small shrubs is a large task, we are enlisting all kinds of help for what's commonly known as a "garden wheel." Think of it as a barn raising or a quilting bee for green thumbs.


The reason this is a larger task than simply digging five holes, is because we're going to be doing much more than planting trees. We're going to smother the grass by burying it in coffee grounds and cardboard and compost and hay, build earthen berms to divert water and dig swales to capture it before it runs into the street and storm sewers. And only after all that is done, we'll tackle the easy job of planting the trees and fruiting shrubs.

If you're at all interested in learning about permaculture and this orchard installation, or if you'd like to dig in and help, you are invited to join us. And if you happen to be a member of Dane County TimeBank, you can earn hours for participating in this garden wheel.

April 27, 8 AM to noon, and then a vegetarian chili and sloppy Joe lunch!

1933 E. Mifflin St., Madison, WI.




Thursday, April 18, 2013

New year, new hip, new home, new education!

Happy New Year. Much has happened since I last discovered chipmunks had stolen my late beet crop; in a few paragraphs I'll explain what's been going on, and tell you about why I'm so excited about the summer to come.

Almost as soon as last year's growing season ended, I turn my attention to my health. Late in the year, I made the decision to move forward with a total hip replacement. It's something that I've always known would occur, and had been putting off for years. But last summer when I found I could not ride my bike for even a short distance without a great deal of pain, I realized the time had come. In short, on February 27 I got a total hip replacement and just a few days ago I was given the green light for much more activity. Like tying my own shoes! And swimming. And bending over so I can work and plant in our garden!

Another major change also occurred in February, just a few weeks before surgery. Jay and I have been looking for a permanent place to call home for several years, and we found just the place in January. We moved into our new home on Madison's east side on February 16, with snow on the ground and little knowledge of what might lie underneath.

Now that the snow is gone, we have found that our front and back yards are empty canvases on which to paint our dream yard and garden.


Finally, sometime late last year I discovered a new term, "permaculture," and a nearly year-long course about sustainable food production, community building, water catchment, and good garden design. Without knowing much about the course, I signed up. It just felt like the right thing to do. With just two classes out of 10 under my belt, I love it! I'll certainly write more about what I learn this year.

I hope you will join me for the growing season as The Urbane Farmer gets his hands dirty.

Meet my new hip, a titanium, stainless steel and plastic arrangement installed on Feb. 27.

Sunday, October 21, 2012

Free permaculture class

Sorry this is so late, but if you're free Monday night Oct 29. and are interested in learning more about permaculture practices, this is for you.


*Introduction to Permaculture*

This *free* class will provide an overview of Permaculture. Learn about
ways to design sustainable systems. The three core tenants of Permaculture
are care of the earth, care of people, and sharing of the surplus.
Permaculture principles, plant guilds, and layers of a food forest will be
discussed. The class will have an empasis on designing for shady yards,
but the information will be applicable to other settings as well.

This class is free and open to the public. *Madison Area Community Land
Trust* <http://affordablehome.org/> is a sponosor of this class. This
class is held on Monday, October 29, 6:30 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. at Warner Park
Community Rec Center, 1625 Northport Dr Madison, WI 53704.

Mary Eberle
First Step Renew, LLC
http://www.first-step-renew.com/introduction-to-permaculture.html