Starting A New Food Forest
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 6 мар 2024
- #temperatefoodforest #permaculture #ncgardening #zone7b
Just a quick introduction to what will be our new food forest in North Carolina. We will keep you updated with any new progress. Хобби
In zone 7b in Southern Virginia. I used your videos to help me with setting up my own food forest. I'm sure your family appreciates the sacrifice of moving, and your legacy of the first food forest will keep going with the next owner. I hope that your second one is even better and look forward to the updates!
Very cool! Thank you for sharing in my excitement. We keep up the great work!
Also zone 7b in Memphis, or some say 8a now. Loved your former videos and was at similar growth and related to your experiences. Thanks for sharing again.
Fresh start. 💕
I'm super exceed!
I have having about 1,5 acres
Cleared next week and want to get started on a food forest. I live in Georgia right on the 7b/8a line. Can’t
wait to see your updates.
Awesome! Keep me updated with yours!
We're in NC 7b on the edge of the foothills/piedmont area, so far I have an ever expanding garden and have added a couple of apple trees and getting into some berry bushes. Looking forward to following you develop this new space to give me more ideas to incorporate in my space as well!
Welcome back. Looking forward to seeing the development of your new food forest. I started my food forest in 2021 in NC zone 7b. Trees are young and some are starting to produce a small crop. I was wondering if you moved any of your plants to the new property.
I will be taking a few. That will be a good video idea to post.
Dude! I know the feeling! I had an awesome food forest in Phoenix… then I sold my house and moved to eastern Tennessee. Im subbed and I’d love to come visit and do a video for my channel with how you are planning your new food forest! I’m planting right now! Stoked to build again! Can’t wait to see how your new forest develops!
It's a bummer to leave, but it is SO cool getting to start from scratch. I bet your tree choices changed with a little different climate in Tennessee.
well yes there are some trees I’d love to plant out here but they are more teoprical like mangos and avocados and moringa… but I’m digging into the trees that do well out here like peaches and cherries and persimmons and plums. I couldn’t fruit cherry trees in Phx bc they need some freezes to set fruit so I’m stoked on cherry’s!!!
That will be awesome. I get cool but not super cold where I'm at so I have to make sure everything is low chill hour requirements.
Just getting started on a design for our new house and 2 acre garden and fruit tree/bush orchard in the Piedmont region of NC.
You are probably not too far from me. Best of luck!
Dude I just re-checked your channel after a year. A few hours later you post an update!
It was meant to be. Going to get back at it. Been busy growing a garden and a completely separate business!
@@justinthewildoutdoors well done! Hope the hard work paid off!
Yay spend more money!
Haha always worth it tho growing plants
Oh we're spending money. I pretty much save every dollar I make from my from my day job to save up for stuff life this.
Awesome, I'm happy for you :) Looking forward to follow along your journey and learn about your experience and learnings. Looks like you got some good soil building material and probably soil already there. Will you incorporate the syntropic agroforestry approach?
I'm actively looking for a piece of land for purchase (3000 to 5000 sqm) in my area. I'm in the middle of Germany. Want to do my part in pushing the boundaries of what's considered a temperate food forest.
More videos to come. This orchard will follow a variety of principles from permaculture, syntropic agroforestry and traditional orchard growing. I am prioritizing growing 30 to 40 fruit trees at a pretty high density, but everything else will revolve around soil building with annual crops, then eventually filling in spots with perrenial food producing plants.
@@justinthewildoutdoors Awesome! Really looking forward
Are you going to bring any of your trees with you?
Native strawberries work well as ground cover, and you might be able to get trees to pull them up into their high branches if you start both around the same time. ruclips.net/video/AlECmk0RwbM/видео.htmlsi=mPu3y02zaqpB_9mN
That's definitely an option I am considering! Thank you.
@@justinthewildoutdoors yw, bunch more ideas too if you want any