Friday, November 11, 2022

Grow a permaculture food forest (garden)

PFAF; Weedy Garden, 11/12/21; Kelly Ani, Ananda (DBM), Dhr. Seven (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly

The Food Forest: How to plan, plant, and protect a food forest
(The Weedy Garden) This episode of The Weedy Garden shows how to establish a Food Forest. Eat whatever, whenever just like a happy jungle dweller.

To study permaculture with Geoff Lawton, enroll in a Permaculture Design Certificate course at discoverpermaculture.com. Write 2022WEEDYBEARD at checkout to save USD $100, courtesy of Weedy, who refers to the following episodes:
Filmed, edited, and created by theweedygarden.com. Most of Weedy's trees were purchased from daleysfruit.com.au. If living in Australia and planning a food forest, Daley's sells online and delivers everywhere in Australia. Music from artlist.io/David-1092967. Wheelbarrow art by instagram.com/juliedelore... or facebook.com/juliedelorenzo

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Don't look at my bosom. It's Commodore's
There's an important book from PFAF (Plants for a Future): Plants for Your Food Forest: 500 Plants for Temperate Food Forests and Permaculture Gardens. It focuses on the attributes of plants suitable for "food forests," what each of us can contribute to a food forest ecosystem, including carbon sequestration, and the kinds of nourishing plant-based foods they yield.

The book suggests that community and small-scale food forests can provide a real alternative to intensive industrialized agriculture (harmful monoculture) and help combat many other inter-related environmental crises that threaten the future of life on Earth. More: pfaf.org
What's a "food forest"?
Plants for Your Food Forest (PFAF)
A "food forest" is a form of regenerative farming, a designed ecosystem modelled on nature, with the aim of growing food and sequestering carbon at the same time.

As a forest it will consist of plants that occupy different layers, typically a:
  • canopy layer
  • shrub layer
  • herb layer
  • and climbers.
All plants will be perennials in order for the soil to be wild, undisturbed, and regenerating. All plants will be food producing, will sequester carbon in their woody parts or in the soil itself, and will have useful functions in the forest ecosystem.

Workshops and courses (@arroyopermaculture)
The choice of what to grow in a food forest is challenging. It is not simply a matter of deciding what would be good to eat and planting the corresponding food plants in beds alongside rows or patches of woodland.

Most books about food forests, woodland gardening, or carbon farming concentrate on the design principles involved. The focus of this book is the plants, their characteristics and personalities, what they have to offer a food forest ecosystem, as well as what kinds of foods they yield.

PFAF has selected over 500 plants that provide a mix of different growing conditions, plant size and structure, type of food, and contribution to a food forest ecosystem.

There is also a quick-reference table of the key characteristics. The featured plants are arranged in sections corresponding to Forest Layer:
  • Shrubs
  • Groundcover Shrubs
  • Trees
  • Herbaceous Plants
  • Herbaceous Groundcover Plants
  • Running Bamboos
  • Bulbs
  • Climbers.
Further details of all the plants described are available from the PFAF Plants Database, which can be accessed FREE of charge at pfaf.orgMore

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