Appearing in Kildare Nationalist this week.
All down
the canal from our house, neighbours are planting potatoes, onions and carrots,
and there’s nothing wrong with that. A few gardeners here and there might use
facilities like Irish Seed Savers to experiment with the hundreds of varieties
we never see – blue potatoes, purple carrots – some more suited for their clay
hill, cold bog or some other microclimate. A few might plant still more
adventurous crops that might do well in this climate but remain little-known;
yacon, daikon, oca, and others.
Creative
or lazy gardeners with a bit of extra land might decide to leave it, deciding
they get more mileage from the nettles and dandelions than they would from
lettuces. If you want to build a garden
that truly looks to the future, though, you could plant a forest.
It might
seem like that growing a forest contradicts the idea of growing a garden, that
one means low, edible and annual plants in rows, while the other means a
landscape of tall trees and few edible plants. When you plant a
permaculture-style forest garden, though, you are combining the best of both
worlds – perennial crops, vines, shrubs and trees that produce food every year
but do not need to be re-sown every spring.
A forest
garden also has a vertical dimension that many kitchen gardens do not; low
trees and shrubs that bear fruit, berries and nuts; vines that bear similar
fruit and berries, and ground-cover plants that can be harvested anew each
year. With many varieties of plants close together, moreover, you can harvest
throughout the year, gathering leaves or buds in spring, summer crops, fruit
and nuts in autumn.
The
various plants help each other, as different plants require different nutrients
from the soil and so do not starve each other. They also help keep different
pests away, as the smell of one plant not only repels insects from it, but from
the plants around it. In this way, plants in the wild help each other, and by
planting them alongside each other we let Nature do some of our heavy lifting.
To make a
forest garden, you should first look at your landscape and see what could grow
there –in the case of our land, a relatively dry patch of earth surrounded by
bog. Then, according to permaculture theory, you plan a system that will yield
the seven Fs: food, fuel, fibre, fodder, fertiliser, “farmaceuticals” and fun.
You might
put the highest plants on the north, to cut down on the colder winds, and the
lowest in the south to catch the maximum sun. You also want to pay attention to
the rising and sloping of the property, to make sure you know what plants are
getting the most sunshine and water runoff.
Plan a
forest garden in vertical layers, starting with the pieces that reach the
highest and around which the rest of the garden will turn: the trees. Make sure
you allow a circle of sufficient breadth for each tree to grow; until it grows
out, and find out ahead of time how large they tend to grow. If you plan a
certain circle of space for them, and they grow slightly beyond it, you can
prune them, but you should let them have a certain minimum of space.
You could
plant fruit and berry trees like apples, plums and cherries; nut trees like
walnut, hazel and oak also would prove valuable over time. Such trees aren’t
going to yield vast quantities of food right away, of course, but in the
meantime you can plant food-producing vines to climb up the trees –
blackberries and kiwifruit, for example – as well as shrubs under them, like
blueberries and lingonberries. Further down still – for a forest garden has
food at every level – you can plant edible weeds like Good King Henry and Fat
Hen, as well as herbs that return every year.
It is
true that a forest garden requires some patience, and if you buy small trees
from the nursery rather than growing apple trees from seed, it could be several
times more expensive than a conventional garden. With the right species,
however, you only have to plant them once; you are investing in infrastructure
like a house or fence, only a forest garden could last for centuries longer.
2 comments:
I've been planting fruit trees even though I doubt I'll be at this site more than a few more years. But I hope that somewhere else someone else is planting trees for me to make use of. (That perspective - seems so odd and out of step in our current hyper-individuated culture - that what we do is not just about us or even just about the people we know personally - but about contributing to - and relying on - the world we all live in together.) I'm also planting blueberries, elderberry and grapes of various kinds (and encouraging the wild concord grapes (fox grapes the locals call them). And I'm looking askance at a big vigorous and utterly useless Norway maple. If I brought that down, I could replace it with a walnut tree . . . .
Andy,
Most people with that perspective are never thanked, so thank you! We too rarely appreciate the people who planted the trees we enjoy, just as we rarely think about the people who picked up the litter on the street before we got there, or cleaned up the graffiti, but someone did. My mother-in-law did that on our property 30 years ago, and we've enjoying the literal fruits ever since. Now I'm building the garden in stone for decades hence.
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