Permaculture Banana Circles 101 - Tips and Tricks

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  • Опубликовано: 18 янв 2025

Комментарии • 41

  • @africanhomestead
    @africanhomestead  2 года назад

    If you enjoyed this episode, the "like" it and check out this video! ruclips.net/video/EC4f-OE8RNw/видео.html

  • @shaagarey469
    @shaagarey469 Год назад +3

    Great tutorial: tight, concise, informative, and not a lot of blah blah. I got some great ideas, with you giving me the whys and wherefores of things. Good job🙏

    • @africanhomestead
      @africanhomestead  Год назад

      Thank you for the encouragement! I’m glad is was helpful. I try not to pad my videos with unnecessary stories or unrelated information. Please feel free to provide feedback anytime!

  • @johnrohlfs1745
    @johnrohlfs1745 10 месяцев назад +1

    Excellent video! Great info. Going to make one in North Georgia! USA

  • @JohannSchmidt-xw4bd
    @JohannSchmidt-xw4bd 4 месяца назад +1

    I have dug a hole - 2m diameter by 800mm deep. Unfortunately it is heavy clay with extremely poor drainage. It is on the top of a fairly teep hill. I'm wondering whether I need to put ag pipe in the bottom of the hole to slowly drain out to the hill so I don't end up with a pond with rotten organic matter, rather than OM breaking down to compost with some air available to the process

  • @jesusiscoming8237
    @jesusiscoming8237 Год назад

    Thank you for this video. This is very interesting. I'm going to try it.

  • @MrSnnjay
    @MrSnnjay Год назад

    Brilliant tutorial

  • @marycampbell4160
    @marycampbell4160 2 года назад

    Awesome information thanks for sharing

    • @africanhomestead
      @africanhomestead  2 года назад

      Thank you for watching and commenting, Mary! 👍🏼

  • @a3skiba
    @a3skiba Год назад

    very nice. good info

  • @meghamalhaarfarms
    @meghamalhaarfarms 7 месяцев назад

    Good information

  • @GrandmomZoo
    @GrandmomZoo 11 месяцев назад

    Thank you

  • @mashonabuma9692
    @mashonabuma9692 6 месяцев назад

    Thankyou

  • @sdp4549
    @sdp4549 2 года назад

    valuable to me here in MD, usa

  • @charleswaters455
    @charleswaters455 2 года назад +1

    I am on very flat, very low land and I sense that this could be a good growing technique for me. Could you use higher berms with less deep holes? I hit ground water at 18 inches.

    • @africanhomestead
      @africanhomestead  2 года назад +2

      Yes, you could definitely use higher berms and shallow holes. The idea is to provide nutrient-rich soil full of microbiology in the banana root zone.

  • @trudyeagan4336
    @trudyeagan4336 2 года назад

    We can easily do that here in Florida. North where there are freezing temperatures I’m sure it would work well, too, but likely it would take much more time. Anyway it’s great information. Thanks

    • @africanhomestead
      @africanhomestead  2 года назад

      Yes, it would work great in Florida. I would think it might be especially helpful in sandy soil, where the center of the circle would become an oasis of nutrients!

  • @maniksidhabhambure6676
    @maniksidhabhambure6676 9 месяцев назад

    Thanks for your information, can you help me to make a water source as l will be starting farming afresh....

  • @msmissy1744
    @msmissy1744 9 месяцев назад

    Do you have to support the trees from wind? If so, how do you do that when it's in a circle like this?

  • @futurecaredesign
    @futurecaredesign Год назад

    Do you filter the kitchen water at all before sending it off to the banana circle? We are in Greece and use lots of oils in our cooking. I would be concerned that the oils would inhibit decomposition.

    • @africanhomestead
      @africanhomestead  Год назад +1

      That’s a great question! We do not filter our grey water coming from the kitchen sink and washing machine. However, the only oil we put down the kitchen drain is residual oil on our pots and pans that we remove with soap and water. If we need to dispose of larger amounts of oil, like for frying chicken, then we dispose of that elsewhere.
      On a related note, we also limit the amount of bleach we use, since that kills soil microbial life in the banana circle.
      Are you planning a circle garden? What will you plant?

    • @futurecaredesign
      @futurecaredesign Год назад

      @@africanhomestead Yes, we are more or less the same in our habits then. Still, I am thinking I am not going to risk it due to the smells associated with kitchen greywater. Our banana circle will sit right on the edge between Zone 1 and 2, close to the house and my partner has a sensitive nose.

  • @cozyrosemary
    @cozyrosemary 2 года назад

    Gorgeous 💓😍

  • @oliknowles7645
    @oliknowles7645 9 месяцев назад

    Smart move to funnel waste water from the kitchen and outdoor shower. 😊

  • @vichufoodvlogs
    @vichufoodvlogs 7 месяцев назад

    மக்குகள் இன்றி விவசாயமில்ல,வளர்பு சருகு,மரங்களே மக்கிற்கு ஆதாரம்.
    நிலபரப்பில்25அடிக்கு ஒரு கால்வாய் அமைத்து கழிவுகளை கொட்டினால் தேங்கும் நீர் மக்காக்கி நிலம் முழுவதும் பாக்டிரியா சத்துக்கள் பரவி தகுதியான அதிக சத்தான நிலபரப்பை தரும்.🎉❤🎉.

  • @bradleyblack9255
    @bradleyblack9255 9 месяцев назад

    Europe don't have poppi circles or somthing?

  • @juliusmercado9291
    @juliusmercado9291 2 года назад

    Is soap bad for plants? You said kitchen sink, toilet and washing machine, just worried about the impact of soap

    • @africanhomestead
      @africanhomestead  2 года назад +1

      Great question! Soap can be bad for some plants, but banana and plantain do a great job of processing grey water with soap in it. One place to be careful, though, it is important to minimize the use of bleach and harsh cleaning chemicals in your sink and washing machine. Their presence will damage and kill beneficial bacterial and fungal life in your soil.
      Just to clarify, I did not mention using waste water from toilets in your banana circle (or anywhere else). This falls in the black water category and is never good to use in gardens and on plants. It will be full of harmful bacteria and pathogens. Black water from toilets only belong in your septic system.

    • @nateross14
      @nateross14 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@africanhomesteadBlackwater can easily be composted and turned aerobic in a Banana circle as long as its added in small amounts so as to not turn the Banana circle anaerobic. Blackwater is excellent fertilizer. The natural decomposition process taking place in the ground with bacteria, worms, and fungus easily mitigates any pathogens that only thrive in Anaerobic conditions. In fact, you can directly bury Human waste inside the Banana circle and the Bananas will love it and thrive. As long as its buried theres no smell and it quickly breaks down. The only thing that makes Human waste harmful are drugs. If you have a clean diet free of drugs, your poop is no different than any other animals manure. Most people are grossed out at the idea of pooping in their Banana circle which is understandable, and theres actually a more efficient use of human waste which is to first use it to produce Methane gas for cooking and heat, and then use the residual product as fertilizer. One thing I would highly suggest in Banana circle construction is to have a vertical PVC pipe with a cap that goes down to the bottom of the Banana circle so that you can monitor the water level at the very bottom and could also put limited amounts of Blackwater down this pipe so it adds fertilizer at the bottom that can be wicked upward. As long as the cap is on the pipe there will be no smell. Also if there is ever severe flooding, the PVC pipe would be an access point to pump out excess water. Banana plants don't like the roots to be water logged in the main root zone.

  • @fabianomallmann2997
    @fabianomallmann2997 2 года назад

    I have a better way of planting bananas, would you like do know?

    • @africanhomestead
      @africanhomestead  2 года назад +3

      Yes, please share!
      The main point of this video is not to claim it is the best way to plant bananas, but to demonstrate a way of planting bananas that also creates an environment that is beneficial for companion plants that produce a diverse and plentiful perennial harvest in in a small area, while at the same time recycling grey water that would otherwise go into a septic tank or a municipal waste water system.
      Thanks for watching and commenting (and I’m serious about better way to plant bananas)! 😁

    • @pampotgieter7611
      @pampotgieter7611 Год назад

      Yes please I would also like to know your "I have a better way of planting Bananas" So please share with us all. Thank you, looking forward to hearing from you soon. 💚💚💚

    • @africanhomestead
      @africanhomestead  Год назад

      🤷🏻‍♂️

    • @fabianomallmann2997
      @fabianomallmann2997 Год назад

      ​@@pampotgieter7611 @African Homestead I Apologize for the delay. Minute 2:35, we can see the planting method. Usually here in our culture we cut off the "trunk part" because new growth might emerge from the top and it kinda wastes energy in doing so. The tissutis already damaged and can be a open entrance to a worm which eats the "root system"(where new sprouts comes from).
      As a alternative, you guys can cut of the trunk right on the base, where the sprouts emerge and also remove any damaged tissue if you find some. It is counter intuitive, but what makes it best attached to the ground while growing, is planting it upside down. If the growth would start upside, you put it the other way around, as it facing the ground. In doing so, the shooting would have to do a loop in order to find light and emerge from de soil, this strategy increases its contact with soil, improving Root attached to the ground.

    • @fabianomallmann2997
      @fabianomallmann2997 Год назад

      My English is not that good anymore. But I hope you can understand what I'm trying to explain

  • @gaddebayalu
    @gaddebayalu 9 месяцев назад

    But Washing Machine / Bathroom / Sink Waste water contains the chemicsls (Shampoo, Soap, Detergent) Wondering wat type of Organic Farming you've done 🤔🤔🤔