Category Archives: Permaculture

Permaculture is a system of agricultural and social design principles centered around simulating or directly utilizing the patterns and features observed in natural ecosystems.

Piled High and Deep

Because the soil is so poor here we have to do a lot of amending to create enough fertility to grown anything successfully.  This may seem like a losing battle, who can realistically bring in tons of compost every single season?  That is why we are using no-till and permaculture methods, once we bring the compost and other amendments in and get the soil to produce, not tilling, mulching and leaving spent plants in place at the end of the year, fertility will naturally come year after year with little addition. But for now, we have to bring in composted manure, and a lot of it, and it was quite the dilemma at first, where to get it and how to afford it.

IMG_5872We were blessed to become acquainted with and soon friends with our neighbors across the road, they have been raising horses for many years and naturally horses produce a lot of manure and they have graciously allowed us many, many loads.  Dadzoo spent a good part of Saturday morning hauling load after load to our garden.  Beautiful black fertility.

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For some strange reason the kids aren’t quite as excited as I am over a huge pile of composted manure….

We will now be spending many evenings and Saturdays sheet mulching our garden beds preparing for summer planting and building a dynamic ecosystem of fertility.

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Our Goals

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George Washington

“I know of no pursuit in which more real and important services can be rendered to any country than by improving its agriculture, its breed of useful animals, and other branches of a husbandman’s cares.” – George Washington (July 20, 1794)

 

There has been a growing trend in the US and around the world.  I think that we are all starting to adapt the philosophy of Hobbits, and have a “love for things that grow.”  There are a lot of homesteading books, blogs, and facebook pages that have surfaced over the last few years.  We are also seeing a growing number of people that are turning to self reliance, prepping, food storage, and preparing for the unexpected.

I think we have also been caught up in this at Quail Run Farm.  We are being drawn to the Earth, to the magic of making things grow, and the feeling of accomplishment that agriculture can give.  We are being drawn to teach our children how to grow, tend, and productively use the land.  In doing so, we have done a lot of research and study.  You are going to see several different terms used on this blog, and in writings from Quail Run Farm.  The goal of this post is to give you a basic understanding of some of the terms we use.  Terms like Permaculture, Hugelkultur, No Till Gardening, as well as Drop Dead Swales.  I hope that after reading this post, you will have enough of an understanding to know what each of these terms mean as you continue to follow our journey.

Our basic goals.  There are a couple of rules, or guidelines that we like to follow at Quail Run Farm.  There are several things that are crucial to agriculture and farming.  The first is Water.  You can’t grow things unless you have water, and you do what you can to conserve and use that water to the best of your ability.  The second is soil fertility.  You can have all the water you need, but if you don’t have enough fertility in the soil to encourage and sustain growth, you will not win the battle.   So, we are trying to find ways, techniques, and procedures that will help us use and find water, while we build up the fertility of the soil.  In the process we also want to be good stewards of the land, so we try to have everything we do and plant have more than a single goal or benefit.

Permaculture

Permaculture is a term that is used often when you read about homesteading and gardening these days.  Basically, permaculture is defined as agriculture that is based on the principles observed in the natural ecosystem.  It is the philosophy of working with nature, rather than against it.  It is a philosophy that includes ecological design, ecological engineering, environmental design and construction.  It is looking at integrated water resource management as well as sustainable engineering.  This is a huge topic, and I have only give you a very high overview, you can get more details from sites like permacultureprinciples.com.  Instead of removing and forcing the land, it is the philosophy of using nature and working with it instead of expecting nature to go away and be tamed.

Hugelkulture

This is a topic that I find fascinating.  Basically the principle of a Hugelkulture is to create a growing area that absorbs water, as well as increases the soil fertility.  A Hugelkulture is a bunch of woody organic material that is then covered with soil.  The woody material then absorbs water, stores it, and then slowly releases it into the soil.  In the process, the woody material breaks down and increases the fertility of the soil.  We use sunflower stocks, old Christmas tree trunks, and other material in our Huglekultures.  We also put ash from our wood burning stove, manure, and other green matter in them as we build them to help increase the soil fertility.   The majority of our Huglekultures I would consider Drop Dead Swales, I will go into more detail on that later.

Here is an example of a Hugelkulture bed.

Source: http://www.richsoil.com/hugelkultur/

Eventually, over the years, the bed will break down and increase the soil fertility and store water.

Drop Dead Swales

The majority of the huglekultures that we have built are what I would call a Drop Dead Swale.  Basically it is a trench that has been dug in the ground.  The dirt is piled on the down hill side of the trench.  The trench is then filled with woody and green matter.   Then the dirt is raked over the trench to fill it.  This accomplishes a couple of things.  First, it creates a level area on the slope of the hill that you can then use to plant things on.  That level area also slows down the water run off so that it can then collect in the swale.  Second, it creates a pocket for run off water to collect.  That water is then absorbed by the woody material.  As the soil dries the water is then released back into the soil.  Third, it increases the soil fertility as the green and woody material breaks down over time.

Here is an example of one of these Drop Dead Swales that I created for our grey water system, and a place to plant our bamboo.

IMG_5773The theory is that as the water runs off into the trench, it is absorbed by the woody material, and then is stored for the plants to use.  We have created a number of these around our property.  We are using them to control run off from our house, as well as change areas to support plants that require more water.  We have them in our orchard, as well as using them to grow Bamboo, and Asparagus.   When we put in our peach orchard, we will be using them extensively around the peach trees to keep the water we do put on the trees in place and to protect that water from evaporation and run off.

No Till Gardening

The theory behind No Till Gardening is to disturb the land as little as possible.  There are areas where we can do this, and areas where it is not possible.  But the basic principle is, you plant your plants, without tilling the ground.  Then as your plants grow, you return their green matter back to the area that they were grown in.  An example would be as you weed around your plants, you just drop the weeds back on the ground around the plants.  This is supposed to accomplish a couple of things.  First, you are not disturbing the ground and allowing more weeds to grow.  Second, you are putting the nutrients from the green matter back into the ground.  Third, the weeds create a mulch that helps retain water.  Basically, instead of digging up the ground and putting the green matter under ground, you are building up the soil on top of the old ground.  As you place mulch around your plants, you conserve water, increase soil fertility, and discourage weed growth.  There are a lot of sites on the web that explain it better.  http://www.no-dig-vegetablegarden.com/no-till-gardening.html

We may change or modify how we implement these over the course of the years.  But the basic goal we have is to preserve and use water wisely, increase the fertility of the soil as we use the land, and work with nature and have it help us meet our goals instead of fight it.

Early Spring

The weather on the farm has been really mild the last week after a very cold, very snowy winter season.  The air is moist, full of melting snow and the ground is saturated with water.  It’s an interesting time of year, an interesting feeling to the air, being in the high desert typically the air and ground is dry, except in the early spring as old man winter and jack frost make their retreat and the lady of springtime moves in. Water drips, drips, drips off the eves of the house and runs into collection barrels, or collects in swalls and hugelkulturs, making the ground soft and the mud deep.  Shallow puddles collect here and there in small depressions in the ground, a tease for soon the long dry summer season will be upon us.

On of my very favorite early spring activities is playing hide and seek with the earliest of my green ones, just making their very first ventures into the mild spring air. They taunt and dare the hard freezes to come back and the snows to cover them, knowing that while there may be an attempt, the strong army of winter has retreated and will bow to the freshness of spring.  I’m always amazed, that under blankets and drifts of hard cold snow, life quietly sleeps waiting for its moment.

 

My baby Yarrow, her blooms will grace my meadow this summer and my tea cup next winter

My baby Yarrow, her blooms will grace my meadow this summer and my tea cup next winter

 

Today I took a stroll in my orchard meadow, this little project has a special little place in my heart. It is where we have planted a variety of fruit trees creating fertility around them, not only by spreading composted material, but planting beneficial herbs, flowers and grasses at their feet.  Most of my medical herbs are there, and a huge juniper tree that I lovingly call “The Mother Tree” presides over my orchard meadow, it is a place of healing, a place growing, fertility, birth and magic. I carefully looked among the roots of my darling fruit trees searching for the first signs of life, of my little herbs that are gathering strength and stretching out of a deep sleep. I was not disappointed.  I found the soft feathery leaves of chamomile, the broad green of plantain, the tiniest leaves of yarrow that I had babied all last season, and of course the bold spears of daffodils making their first appearance.

Bold Daffodil, these are the first spears of about two hundred bulbs planted in the meadow, we will soon have to watch our step.

Bold Daffodil, these are the first spears of about two hundred bulbs planted in the meadow, we will soon have to watch our step.

 

I love the first quiet days of spring, before the heavy work of preparing bed and planting seeds starts, when the world wakes up and beckons me to come watch a while.

Chamomile, was only sleeping under its blanket of snow at the foot of an apple tree

Chamomile, was only sleeping under its blanket of snow at the foot of an apple tree

 

Synergy

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Calendula infusing in olive oil in the window

The more I study plants and herbs and flowers the more I am amazed by the bounty around us, how even the ugliest weed can hold treasures.  In this society where plants are categorized: ornamental, grass, vegetable, fruit, weed, we miss out on the diversity of each individual plant.  Most plants have several uses, if we can only look deeper than its category.  For example, Comfrey, one of my favorites, is considered a medicinal herb, which it is, however it is also a bio-accumulator, its roots break up heavy clay soils, it pulls minerals from deep down and deposits them on the surface where other plants can use them, and it is great animal forage. A common weed, plantain, is more than a nuisance, it is also very medicinal, it grows in poor soils, cleaning up contaminates and deposits its nutrient rich leaves on the soil when it dies back for the winter.  In a permaculture landscape/garden every plant is evaluated not only for its use in one category, but for many uses.  Here on Quail Run Farm, each planting, be it tree, bush, flower, herb or vegetable has many uses (4-6 at least).  In this manner we are not only producing, but we are putting back into the land, nourishing it, being a steward over it, building it up. For example an apple tree does much more than grow apples for us, it creates shade for shade loving herbs that grow among its roots, its leaves create a rich mulch where beneficial microorganisms can thrive, the branches attract birds who in turn eat nuisance insects and leave their droppings, and the prunings are fed to the rabbits or used in hugelkulturs. So many uses for a simple apple tree, it creates synergy, fertility and life working together to build and maintain healthy land.

Rings of Fertility

rings_of_fertilityIn our orchard we are using a permaculture method called “guilding”. Around each tree we plant beneficial herbs and plants, that have several uses.  Our goal is to have 5-10 uses for everything we plant here on the farm.

Around each tree we have what we jokingly call “rings of fertility” but in reality that is exactly what they are. Using a sheet mulching method we are creating fertility, in essence building our own top soil.  Each ring extends just beyond the tree’s individual drip line, that is the area where the tree absorbs the most water and nutrients, right at the drip line. imageIn each ring of fertility we plant our beneficial plants and herbs that have several functions.  Right now we have clovers, chamomile, yarrow, plantain and comfrey planted around each tree. They will pull nutrients from deep down and deposit them up top in the form of mulch.  They are also all medicinal herbs that we use.
image At the beginning and end of each season we will extend the ring, adding more plantings as we go increasing the soil fertility and variety of plants growing in the orchard. image Eventually the rings of fertility will touch each other and we will have slowly created a biodiverse, fertile orchard that provides us with food, shade, medicinal, and culinary herbs along with beauty.

Water Collection

Water it is precious and scarce.

Out here in the edge of Utah’s west desert where we get on average 10 inches of water a year, and the majority of that comes in the winter as snow, water is a big deal, and irrigation is a must.  There are two options as far as irrigation, the government grid or a private well.  With a private well you have to own water rights, which are expensive and hard to come by, as people who own them tend to hang onto them.  We don’t have any water rights, (some ding dong sold the water rights associated to the property when they hooked up to the city’s grid) which means we are on city water, for everything.  Another viable option is water collection, while it won’t supply all our irrigation needs, it will help some.

We have a lot of roof, which collects a lot of water,

that just runs off, it is  begging to be collected!

We purchased barrels from a local farm store, they had been previously used for pickling, so they smell strongly of peppers and brine, they will work for our needs and they were cheap.

Dadzoo cut a hole in the tops of the barrels and then attached screen, to keep bugs and big yucky things from getting into the water.

He then gut off the down spout and attached black flex pipe, to direct the water into the hole on top.

He then cut a hole on the top side of the barrel, and using a piece of vinyl that we found lying around he made a spout that directed more water into another barrel, so we can collect more than one barrel full at each down spout.After one day we had filled the first barrel, and the second one is slowly filling, we hope to have it filled by this weekend, as there is rain in the forecast.

While this won’t fill all our needs for irrigation, along with other techniques, we are hoping to minimize the amount of water we are pulling from the grid as much as possible.

In some states it is illegal to collect rain water, being that it is a natural resource (although I don’t see states coming and collecting their water when it floods basements…..).  Here in Utah it is legal to collect a certain amount of water in either above ground tanks or a cistern, all vessels that collect water have to be registred with the state.