How We Created a Thriving Permaculture Food Forest on .03 Acres

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 28 май 2024
  • I've gotten a lot of questions about the size of this property. While the entire property is 1/3 of an acre, the food forest itself is just 35 feet x 40 feet, around 0.03 acres. In this video, I share a few strategies for how we planted over 100 perennials and a whole bunch of annuals in the space. My hope is that this video inspires you to reimagine your backyard, property, or maybe community garden plot, as I think many will be surprised at just how much can be grown in a relatively small space.
    Here’s a link to my plant spreadsheet:
    docs.google.com/spreadsheets/...
    For more information on these and other permaculture topics, I recommend the following books that have been helpful here at Goldifarms:
    Introduction to Permaculture by Bill Mollison
    amzn.to/3ToRtsg
    The One-Straw Revolution: An Introduction to Natural Farming By Masanobu Fukuoka
    amzn.to/4a25KR4
    Worms Eat My Garbage by Mary Appelhof
    amzn.to/3OPwaxj
    Humanure Handbook by Joseph Jenkins
    amzn.to/441FP9w
    Restoration Agriculture by Mark Stepard
    amzn.to/422yG7k
    Permaculture Design: A Step-by-Step Guide Paperback by Aranya
    amzn.to/3T4HhUG
    Sepp Holzer's Permaculture: A Practical Guide to Small-Scale, Integrative Farming and Gardening by Sepp Holzer
    amzn.to/3Tq5kif
    Permaculture: Principles and Pathways Beyond Sustainability by David Holmgren
    amzn.to/4bXZlIN
    Natural Way of Farming: The Theory and Practice of Green Philosophy by Masanobu Fukuoka
    amzn.to/3IqUu5i
    Gaia's Garden: A Guide to Home-Scale Permaculture by Toby Hemenway
    amzn.to/49XxNBl
    (the above links are affiliate links that help Goldifarms by earning us a small commission at no additional cost to you, if you use them, thank you 🙏)
    About Goldifarms:
    We are Erin & Gilberto. We started Goldifarms in January 2020 as part of pur journey to heal ourselves and restore this land. We follow permaculture design principles to create regenerative abundance here on the Central Coast of California in zone 9a. The intention with this RUclips channel is to provide inspiration to connect with nature, grow your own food and medicine, and help create a more beautiful world together.
    Thank you for all your support, we hope these videos will inspire you to follow your heart and pursue what lights up your life ✨ 🌼💛
    Sending so much love to you on your journey. Thank you for watching 🐝💛🌻
    Want to experience the magic of Goldifarms? Visit our Etsy shop: goldifarms.etsy.com
    For a brief history of Goldifarms, check out: www.youtube.com/watch?v=_u5z7...
    For pics of the whole project, visit: / goldifarms
    To learn more and contact Goldifarms, visit our website: Goldifarms.com
    To support Goldifarms (which would mean the world to me!), you can become a Patron: / goldifarms
    If you never want to miss a Goldifarms video, subscribe by clicking here: ruclips.net/user/goldifarms?sub_co...
    Music from Epidemic Sound. If you create videos and are looking for a huge selection of music, feel free to use my epidemic referral for a free month: share.epidemicsound.com/hlg6dg
    Chapters
    00:00- Where's Goldifarms
    01:01- Keyholes for efficient planting
    01:29 - Our regenerative planting pattern
    02:58 - Examples of dense and diverse planting
    04:00 - Leaf eatin'
    04:40 - Stacking functions with your paths
    05:27 - Planting up on berms
    05:48 - Using hog panels to plant vertically
    06:21- Grafting fruit trees
    07:05 - Get that GoldiGlow

Комментарии • 78

  • @Goldifarms
    @Goldifarms  2 месяца назад +4

    Want to experience the magic of Goldifarms? Visit our Etsy shop, to get your Goldiglow and more: goldifarms.etsy.com

  • @Caitlin-os1vd
    @Caitlin-os1vd 2 месяца назад +14

    I love these videos girl! It’s really refreshing to see a California permaculture RUclips page. I’m zone 9b, and I’m taking the plunge to convert my large yard to a food forest too. Definitely incorporating some of your ideas in to mine. Thank you for sharing and creating!

    • @justinsutherlin
      @justinsutherlin 2 месяца назад +1

      Same! SoCal, zone 9b. Just finished sheet mulching about 1/4 acre with cardboard, 2 commercial dump trucks of compost, & 2 commercial dump trucks of mulch. Best of luck!

    • @Acts-1322
      @Acts-1322 Месяц назад +2

      Best advice I've heard is to not feel pressured to get it all put together all at once. Get your free arborist wood chips (or from ChipDrop), start a few fruit tree guilds and learn how to propagate those for free over time. Guilds are basically some combo of the tree, a couple bushes , ground cover, herbs/roots, etc. that is repeatable or different in "pockets" of the garden. It's been so rewarding for me, I feel really talented now that I can take a cutting of almost anything and make a new plant of it!! 😊
      Happy growing to both of you guys!

    • @justinsutherlin
      @justinsutherlin Месяц назад +1

      @@Acts-1322 thank you so much for the reply! Guilds are something I haven’t tried, but I can’t wait to start playing with them!

    • @Acts-1322
      @Acts-1322 Месяц назад +2

      @@justinsutherlin absolutely, love to hear more joining this movement!! Retaking our health.
      Don't forget, grow what grows like a weed in your area! If you force it, it's going to struggle and take lots of time & labor from you

    • @Caitlin-os1vd
      @Caitlin-os1vd Месяц назад +2

      @@justinsutherlin amazing! Best of luck!! Such an exciting adventure! Where did you source your compost?

  • @williammcpherson1193
    @williammcpherson1193 2 месяца назад +3

    It’s great to see this level of a combination of knowledge and common sense being applied to caring for the earth

  • @stevefujii9132
    @stevefujii9132 Месяц назад +3

    Hello Erin. Enjoyed this video, showing all that can be grown in a small area. Really like your keyhole approach. Thank you so much for your inspirational videos. Keep up the great videos!

  • @shannonalaminski2619
    @shannonalaminski2619 Месяц назад +1

    I planted a passion fruit vine in the ground behind my spineless prickly pear cactus, next to a pigeon pea tree in a giant pot, next my steps and porch. I added a simple trellis up and over my front door. Now I have a living wind/ sun/ privacy screen around and over my front door that I'm reaching up and picking passion fruit from. The vine grew up the cactus to the pea then up it to the trellis. Go vertical, maximize space and when possible let nature work for you.

  • @rachelirvin968
    @rachelirvin968 2 месяца назад +5

    Beautiful! Definitely a long term goal of mine to have a food forest like this!

    • @Goldifarms
      @Goldifarms  2 месяца назад +2

      And you will! 💕✨🌳

  • @chessman483
    @chessman483 Месяц назад +4

    We live in a similar climate in Australia. We have quite a few acres , so we don’t uterlise our land as well as yourself . But we follow similar principles. A great video to encourage people to produce what they can.

  • @justinsutherlin
    @justinsutherlin 2 месяца назад +4

    Absolutely love your page! Please keep posting videos as much as possible. It’s a great inspiration for someone on the same size property & in the same CA zone (9b) as you. Very, very well done 👏 👏 👏

    • @Goldifarms
      @Goldifarms  2 месяца назад

      We love hearing from someone in the same California zone! We're glad you found this video helpful and will keep making more for you ✨🌼

  • @jantellfowler5883
    @jantellfowler5883 2 дня назад

    Wish i found this channel earlier, i live in THE BAHAMAS 🇧🇸 and we have almost the same climate, only difference is we do get some rain during summer months. I wanted to plant more berries but not sure exactly what i could, now thanks to you I'm starting up my list of fruits I'd love to incorperate😊

  • @automatonfan5697
    @automatonfan5697 2 месяца назад +2

    Wow! This is the video I needed, I was wanting to make cozy garden paths but didn't know how!!!! Plus your voice is like the Holistic Habits of gardening!😊

  • @gardentours
    @gardentours Месяц назад +1

    So great to see how many trees you've been able to plant in a small place. I'm adding more and more trees to my food forest as well.

  • @Theeannmariee
    @Theeannmariee 2 месяца назад +5

    I recently found your channel and you’ve inspired me so much, I’ve watched all your videos. I got to the end of the list the other day so am so excited to see a new one posted today! Thank you so much for sharing Goldifarms with us 🌻

    • @Goldifarms
      @Goldifarms  2 месяца назад +3

      Your message warms my heart 💛🧡Thank you 🙏🏼 🥰 I will be making more 🌷💕🌷

  • @soniatriana9091
    @soniatriana9091 Месяц назад +5

    Hello, I really enjoyed watching your video. I’ve done much the same thing, 40+ years ago, except I’ve now downsized my fruit trees only 23-25(?) - bc I literally got tired of all the rodents coming into my yard!! Plus, we aren’t 4-5 people anymore - so it becomes overwhelming to keep up & harvest. My exception is that my yard doesn’t look like a forest. I also have zero grass anywhere on my property, but it looks well maintained & it’s been great for my grandkids to run around in, ride their bikes, scooters, etc & entertain/dine under a nice patio.
    Best of luck!

    • @Avoidiac
      @Avoidiac 9 дней назад

      I started planting trees, bushes, cover crops etc. around 8 years ago, mostly on about a quarter acre of fairly open space with a few tall pines. It's kind of experimental, I'm telling myself, since I'm learning by experience as I go more than anything, and I really didn't do enough research or observation of the land before I started. I lean more toward the East in general, so my approach is trying to be more like a "natural orchard" than a "forest garden". Also, there're several acres of woods on the property which I've started "editing", trying to use a minimalist touch. And the edge of those woods adjacent to the open orchard area is south-facing, so that's a useful area. I'm on a shoestring budget, so I make compost, harvest bark from the woods for mulch, use only hand tools, a hose, watering can, wheelbarrow and self-propelled mower when it's working. I'm not throwing cardboard down or anything, though I've tried that. There's a lot of grass and all kinds of herbaceous plants and suckers popping up everywhere right now, since the lawnmower's taking a break from working. And of course the vines that want to pull it all down. Some vines, they're just not that cool.
      Yeah, I could prattle on about it for much longer than that. My results have been mixed so far. The site, soil, and climate are all definitely less than ideal in my mind, but as the years go by and the painfully slow growth happens, it starts to look better. Main food so far has been a bunch of goumi berries, a bunch of blueberries, and whatever dewberries I can get before some unidentified force comes in and cleans them all out overnight or whatever. I do have a few serviceberries on my one tree of that kind this year. Never ate one before. I'm not just a berry farmer, but it seems all kinds of berry trees and bushes generally pay off before larger fruit or nuts. Time will tell.
      I'm in the U.S. in the South, about the border between zones 7 and 8. Winters get down to single digits sometimes, summers can get over 100 with somehow both drought and high humidity. Soil is sandy loam with reddish clay underneath and very acidic, hence my focus on blueberries. Apparently, nitrogen-fixing doesn't work very well when you get down towards 5.0 PH, which I only learned a couple years ago.
      I'd be interested in hearing more about your situation, your trees/plants and general location/climate, if you're interested in sharing.
      Also, do you have cats, for the fruit-raiding rodents? Or is it just too many rodents and would require too many cats?

  • @mikeb3167
    @mikeb3167 Месяц назад +2

    Wow! Your special! God bless you

  • @missannetteslittlefarminth9069
    @missannetteslittlefarminth9069 2 месяца назад +4

    It's amazing how far your food forest has come, you are an inspiration. P.S..I added some mini fruit trees this year!!

    • @Goldifarms
      @Goldifarms  2 месяца назад +1

      Thank you Miss Annette! So glad to hear you added some mini fruit trees. They are just delightful 💖

  • @MuslimahBuilder
    @MuslimahBuilder Месяц назад +1

    So much bounty and growth in 3 years! Love it

  • @user-oo3vf7zk6b
    @user-oo3vf7zk6b Месяц назад +1

    This is amazing! So excited seeing your food forest thriving. I’m at the beginning of my planning/dreaming journey in Sacramento. And wow, I am thrilled you shared your Google sheet plant list! It’s amazing and will be so helpful for me!

  • @OfftoShambala
    @OfftoShambala Месяц назад +1

    Scribed… we need more of this.

  • @laonongtrendinhdk
    @laonongtrendinhdk Месяц назад +1

    nhiều cây trái đẹp lắm bạn ơi

  • @BerrybelleGarden
    @BerrybelleGarden 2 месяца назад +1

    Your food forest looks amazing! I like the connected keyhole layout. I recently tried grafting and it was a lot harder than I expected.

  • @tedpreston4155
    @tedpreston4155 2 месяца назад +1

    Your garden is so far ahead of us! Thanks for reminding me whats coming, once winter subsides in the Rockies!

    • @Goldifarms
      @Goldifarms  2 месяца назад

      Woohoo- I’m glad I could share some sunshine with ya! ✨☀️Wishing you an abundant and joyful spring!

  • @thomaspitto5663
    @thomaspitto5663 2 месяца назад +1

    I love your multiple keyhole design! Wishing you abundance

  • @LobsterLover530
    @LobsterLover530 2 месяца назад +1

    I’ve already ordered several Goldie glows and love them! And your tea is absolutely delicious. Thank you for sharing all of this with us it takes us to another world. ❤❤

    • @Goldifarms
      @Goldifarms  2 месяца назад

      So much love and appreciation to our #1 GoldiGlow fan!! 🧡🌼🙏

  • @eduardoHMYT
    @eduardoHMYT Месяц назад +1

    Great video!

  • @anzac90vap
    @anzac90vap Месяц назад

    Just subscribed. Excellent videos, love your design strategies :) and what a lovely garden!

  • @erschaffenswert
    @erschaffenswert 2 месяца назад +1

    thats awesome! great job =) enjoy this beautiful place!

  • @natalie526
    @natalie526 2 месяца назад +2

    Hi! It's exciting to see such a diverse and happy foodscape! Do you cut back your NFTs to bring the nitrogen to the soil (ie, the trimmings eventually decompose)? My place has an acacia and am wondering how to do this. I'm hoping this would take place before they set seed since they are technically invasive here in CA

  • @junejewell
    @junejewell Месяц назад

    Yes to grafting video please!

  • @homesteaderrachel2086
    @homesteaderrachel2086 Месяц назад +1

    Hello, new subscriber here!!

    • @Goldifarms
      @Goldifarms  Месяц назад

      Welcome!! Thank you for subscribing 💛🌷✨

  • @Avoidiac
    @Avoidiac 9 дней назад

    Great vid, impressive garden and use of the space. Thanks for mentioning goumi leaves are edible. Why did I not know that? Claude AI says you can even eat the young tender leaves raw.

  • @RobbertvanHaaften
    @RobbertvanHaaften 2 месяца назад +1

    Beautiful work! Very inspirational. I'm starting a food forest in the mideterranian europe :)

    • @Goldifarms
      @Goldifarms  2 месяца назад +1

      Wonderful! We've always wanted to visit other Mediterranean zones around the world, maybe one day we'll get to see your food forest!

  • @jefjef1283
    @jefjef1283 28 дней назад

    Wow, that's even smaller than my garden

  • @angrybees8122
    @angrybees8122 2 месяца назад +1

    Wow 🤩

  • @joekunin
    @joekunin Месяц назад

    Fascinating! How large do you tend to make the keyholes, and the spacing of the trees within them? Thanks!

  • @pathofthewarlord6192
    @pathofthewarlord6192 Месяц назад

    I want to learn how the annual plants (like carrots, cabbage, corn) spread/expand and what kinds of plants are the best to plant together in a pretty cold middle european climate,

  • @tedpreston4155
    @tedpreston4155 2 месяца назад +2

    When will we see persimmon leaf tea in your etsy store? 😉

    • @Goldifarms
      @Goldifarms  2 месяца назад +1

      Hopefully soon! Just gotta get the right blend to make it taste divine 🌷🦋🌳

  • @NickGrimshawe
    @NickGrimshawe Месяц назад

    Is there a book with more info on Keyhole gardening? I love what you did here. And I am hoping to have a chance to use this design later this year.

    • @Goldifarms
      @Goldifarms  Месяц назад

      For sure! The keyhole graphics were adapted from Gias garden. I have included links in the description 🙏🏼✨

  • @ThriftingandThriving
    @ThriftingandThriving Месяц назад

    Where do you get your mulch paths? I have places to get it but I am affriad of maybe chemicals on it. Also Where would you suggest buying plants for a zone 10? Thanks!

  • @JohnFerrerAkaEric
    @JohnFerrerAkaEric 2 месяца назад +1

    How do you control your chocolate mint? Mine seems to try to take over everything.

  • @tatu77
    @tatu77 2 месяца назад

    Where would you recommend buying the zone specific plants? I live in a similar climate and it's often hard to find reliable and affordable suppliers

  • @TheRealDonLayton
    @TheRealDonLayton Месяц назад

    Hello, I see you were growing mint in your food forest. Do you have a hard time keeping it confined to certain areas, or does it try to take over everything in sight?

    • @Goldifarms
      @Goldifarms  Месяц назад

      Thank you, yes great question ✨Mint can be very invasive. Where we are, it’s very hot and very dry and we use very little water, so we aren’t concerned about it taking over. But if your garden receives more water and it’s a concern, it would likely be best to keep in containers 🪴 💚

  • @RisenUponTomorrow
    @RisenUponTomorrow 2 месяца назад +1

    More videos like this!

  • @basilsmith62
    @basilsmith62 2 месяца назад

    0.3 акра = 13000 м2, а не 130:Р))) В такой жаре у вас чудесный сад. Успехов!:)

    • @Goldifarms
      @Goldifarms  2 месяца назад +1

      The food forest is 0.03 acres 💛. Thank you, always wonderful to hear that from someone who understands what it's like to garden in such a hot dry climate 🙏

    • @TheZippyMark
      @TheZippyMark 2 месяца назад +1

      Yeah I was going to say, that doesn't sound quite right, your plot looks a lot bigger than that . 0.03 of an acre is about 121m², which is 11m x 11m.

  • @seaanimalsixseven1418
    @seaanimalsixseven1418 Месяц назад

    How about canopy layer?

    • @Goldifarms
      @Goldifarms  Месяц назад +2

      The canopy layer is growing! 🌳💚🌳💚🌳

  • @pathofthewarlord6192
    @pathofthewarlord6192 Месяц назад

    what is a nitrogen fixing tree?

  • @sampedro9316
    @sampedro9316 2 месяца назад

    If I just bury compost like that I get digging varmints.

  • @Ms95670
    @Ms95670 28 дней назад

    Great job on the garden..need to work on your math. That is not 3% of an acre .

    • @Goldifarms
      @Goldifarms  27 дней назад +2

      It is 3.21% of an acre.

  • @mbahmarijan789
    @mbahmarijan789 Месяц назад

    im Indoneisan. Please marry me 😅

  • @Avocado740
    @Avocado740 2 месяца назад +2

    I think it's 0.30 acres.

    • @CK-eq6fr
      @CK-eq6fr Месяц назад

      No it’s 0.03 acres alright. One acre is 4046m2, so 0.3 acres will be around a third of that, more than 1000m2. Do the math before trying to point out someone else’s nonexistent mistake mate.