1.5 year Syntropic Food Forest Survives Frost - Design Ideas + Lessons

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  • Опубликовано: 10 сен 2024
  • This Bay of Plenty Syntropic Food Forest has done well at managing the frosty winter temperatures, and has bounced back for it's second growing season!
    As the microclimate + evergreen canopy develops (eucalyptus, tree lucerne & acacia) the frost damage should be less + less each year.
    Enjoy some of the insights from Brett & his epic food forest! We began the design process for this space about 2 years ago.

Комментарии • 37

  • @Roozbeh134
    @Roozbeh134 Год назад +1

    It is indeed amazing when you see others lives your dream! 😅 a very joyful and instructive video. Thanks for sharing

  • @humanbeingnotahumandoing1
    @humanbeingnotahumandoing1 Год назад +1

    Great video! Thank for the insights ❤️

    • @byron.in.new.zealand
      @byron.in.new.zealand  Год назад +1

      Glad you got value from it!

    • @humanbeingnotahumandoing1
      @humanbeingnotahumandoing1 Год назад

      @@byron.in.new.zealand definitely, I really dig the way u are explaining things, giving also clients the possibility to share their experiences :)

  • @palmo.a.palmo.sintropia
    @palmo.a.palmo.sintropia Год назад +1

    yessss, salutes and much love

  • @jockmugford1457
    @jockmugford1457 Год назад +3

    Curious to what area of New Zealand you are from? avocado and banana normally wouldn’t grow where frosts are

  • @PermacultureLife
    @PermacultureLife 11 месяцев назад

    Awesome. Good job. Mine has been working well so far

  • @leonsaquaponicsandhomegard6793
    @leonsaquaponicsandhomegard6793 5 месяцев назад

    Looks fantastic 😊😊😊

  • @SCOTTBULGRIN
    @SCOTTBULGRIN 8 месяцев назад

    Great information.

  • @dukereg
    @dukereg Год назад +2

    Were particular varieties of bananas chosen for cold tolerance? Which ones?

  • @Tarzantravelsbyriver
    @Tarzantravelsbyriver Месяц назад

    Peruvian ground apple is delicious

  • @jockmugford1457
    @jockmugford1457 Год назад

    Genuinely interested as I want to start my own version of this, I live in Canterbury and dam I want some bananas and some tropical fruits growing

  • @cosmicbeer
    @cosmicbeer 7 месяцев назад

    At this stage, is it possible to harvest anything commercially to help support the development? If not, on average, after how many years does a setup like this become economically viable?

  • @shannonsexton8921
    @shannonsexton8921 Год назад +3

    I suggest tree Lucerne is actually dying as it's loosing it's successional niche. That's a good thing. To rich, wet, fungally dominant soil.

  • @chuzzism
    @chuzzism Год назад +1

    Where in NZ is this property?

  • @clairestokes4119
    @clairestokes4119 Год назад

    Is the purpose of this system to grow produce to sell, or at this scale more for personal use?

  • @vvdv3444
    @vvdv3444 Год назад

    What are the economics of this? How much is spent and what is the expected return and man hours involved?

  • @warrenrose9448
    @warrenrose9448 Год назад

    How did the bananas stay protected beyond the undergrowth

  • @nickbennetto9133
    @nickbennetto9133 Год назад +1

    I am considering what herbaceous biomass species could be used in areas more prone to frost/cold (Canterbury). Have you any experience/thoughts on using poroporo?

    • @byron.in.new.zealand
      @byron.in.new.zealand  Год назад +2

      Herbaceous biomass is definitely more limited in those colder climates, but seasonal ones like comfrey, Cana Lillies, yacon, sun chokes can be amazing. Haven't seen or heard of anyone using poroporo - Could be a good one to look into!

    • @franc859li
      @franc859li 19 дней назад

      You can use topinambur

  • @FloridamanFoodForest
    @FloridamanFoodForest Год назад +1

    Is there a rule that's common practice when dictating row orientation?

    • @byron.in.new.zealand
      @byron.in.new.zealand  Год назад +2

      If it's on flat land, N/S is ideal. If there's a slope, contour (or nearly on contour if trying to move water) is ideal

    • @FloridamanFoodForest
      @FloridamanFoodForest Год назад

      @@byron.in.new.zealand Thanks Byron!

  • @Cherimoyafarm
    @Cherimoyafarm Год назад +1

    That looks awesome, love the scale of it! Where were most of the plants sourced from? Own nursery?

    • @byron.in.new.zealand
      @byron.in.new.zealand  Год назад +1

      Glad you like it! Plants were sourced from at least 6+ nurseries. No one place has everything you need for an install like this haha

  • @jchandler3336
    @jchandler3336 Год назад

    How do you irritate?

  • @zanecrofts7085
    @zanecrofts7085 Год назад +3

    Wow if you can survive minus 5 degrees I can gtiw bananas in wainoni Christchurch as we close to Beach and hardly ever get more than minus 5 degrees.

    • @byron.in.new.zealand
      @byron.in.new.zealand  Год назад +2

      Definitely worth giving it a good effort! Especially if you’ve got a microclimate you can use under a more established tree, or growing your own support trees

    • @zanecrofts7085
      @zanecrofts7085 Год назад

      ​@@byron.in.new.zealand
      Will you do follow up video to see what the winter canopy looks like

    • @byron.in.new.zealand
      @byron.in.new.zealand  Год назад +1

      @@zanecrofts7085 Absolutely

    • @loganheather
      @loganheather 11 месяцев назад

      Love this. We got told not to bother planting bananas ( south of Cambridge). I didn't listen. Pretty sure we've had 5 frosts this year alone. The trees get knocked but seem to come back stronger in defiance. Our 1 yr old bananas even survived the -5 degrees we got last October. I'm holding hope out they will fruit one day! This video has inspired me to try a few more syntropic plantings. thank you for sharing.