Yes I am going to move
Yes I am going to move
Posted in Permaculture
Tagged best place in the world, Coast, Permaculture, place, self, world
I am trying to manage a permaculture garden. The flat area with nice soil is doing a good job, however grass has invaded and is competing strongly with my crops. At this point my Carrots, Greens and Radishes have battled for niche space against grass and I’m keeping attentive to how this drama unfolds.
I’m assuming to deal with this area next year I should put down a layer of straw to dissuade grass seeds from coming up. I figure I’ll start my plants outside of the bed and then transfer them after they have grown taller than the straw.
However, as one of the permaculture principles is to learn from how nature wants to act, I wonder if anyone here can tell me what the wild grass doing so well in the garden can tell me. In other areas the only plants that are doing well are milkweed, legumes and squash (which from what I understand means that the soil needs Nitrogen). I’ll be cover cropping those areas with a slurry of red-clover seed to fix nitrogen this winter.
In the end my question is… does the grass growing well in the flat garden area indicate that the soil is healthy with good nutrient balance or does wild grass fill a niche which tells me of specific soil challenges?
Posted in Permaculture
Tagged area, carrots, crops, garden, good job, grass, greens, job, niche space, Permaculture, permaculture garden, point, Radishes, soil, Wild, wild grass
I am trying to manage a permaculture garden. The flat area with nice soil is doing a good job, however grass has invaded and is competing strongly with my crops. At this point my Carrots, Greens and Radishes have battled for niche space against grass and I’m keeping attentive to how this drama unfolds.
I’m assuming to deal with this area next year I should put down a layer of straw to dissuade grass seeds from coming up. I figure I’ll start my plants outside of the bed and then transfer them after they have grown taller than the straw.
However, as one of the permaculture principles is to learn from how nature wants to act, I wonder if anyone here can tell me what the wild grass doing so well in the garden can tell me. In other areas the only plants that are doing well are milkweed, legumes and squash (which from what I understand means that the soil needs Nitrogen). I’ll be cover cropping those areas with a slurry of red-clover seed to fix nitrogen this winter.
In the end my question is… does the grass growing well in the flat garden area indicate that the soil is healthy with good nutrient balance or does wild grass fill a niche which tells me of specific soil challenges?
Posted in Permaculture
Tagged area, carrots, crops, garden, good job, grass, greens, job, niche space, Permaculture, permaculture garden, point, Radishes, soil, Wild, wild grass
I am trying to manage a permaculture garden. The flat area with nice soil is doing a good job, however grass has invaded and is competing strongly with my crops. At this point my Carrots, Greens and Radishes have battled for niche space against grass and I’m keeping attentive to how this drama unfolds.
I’m assuming to deal with this area next year I should put down a layer of straw to dissuade grass seeds from coming up. I figure I’ll start my plants outside of the bed and then transfer them after they have grown taller than the straw.
However, as one of the permaculture principles is to learn from how nature wants to act, I wonder if anyone here can tell me what the wild grass doing so well in the garden can tell me. In other areas the only plants that are doing well are milkweed, legumes and squash (which from what I understand means that the soil needs Nitrogen). I’ll be cover cropping those areas with a slurry of red-clover seed to fix nitrogen this winter.
In the end my question is… does the grass growing well in the flat garden area indicate that the soil is healthy with good nutrient balance or does wild grass fill a niche which tells me of specific soil challenges?
Posted in Permaculture
Tagged area, carrots, crops, garden, good job, grass, greens, job, niche space, Permaculture, permaculture garden, point, Radishes, soil, Wild, wild grass
I am trying to manage a permaculture garden. The flat area with nice soil is doing a good job, however grass has invaded and is competing strongly with my crops. At this point my Carrots, Greens and Radishes have battled for niche space against grass and I’m keeping attentive to how this drama unfolds.
I’m assuming to deal with this area next year I should put down a layer of straw to dissuade grass seeds from coming up. I figure I’ll start my plants outside of the bed and then transfer them after they have grown taller than the straw.
However, as one of the permaculture principles is to learn from how nature wants to act, I wonder if anyone here can tell me what the wild grass doing so well in the garden can tell me. In other areas the only plants that are doing well are milkweed, legumes and squash (which from what I understand means that the soil needs Nitrogen). I’ll be cover cropping those areas with a slurry of red-clover seed to fix nitrogen this winter.
In the end my question is… does the grass growing well in the flat garden area indicate that the soil is healthy with good nutrient balance or does wild grass fill a niche which tells me of specific soil challenges?
Posted in Permaculture
Tagged area, carrots, crops, garden, good job, grass, greens, job, niche space, Permaculture, permaculture garden, point, Radishes, soil, Wild, wild grass
i am trying to figure out a way to grow food and livestock without hurting the environment and the idea is to clear 10 but no more than 30 acres on a 2,125 forested acre lot. i also herd of permaculture and how would someone go about this while not hurting the wildlife habitat? is there a such thing as shade water Mellon? protecting the land is the final goal as well.
Posted in Permaculture
Tagged acre, clearing, ENVIRONMENT, farming, food, forests, herd, idea, livestock, lot, Permaculture, water mellon, way, wildlife habitat
is there any permaculture expert who wants to take up a project in India
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Permaculture
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Permaculture
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Permaculture