I think you're doing good work. Many people try to replicate systems from syntropic agriculture in the tropics in moderate climates. Same with permaculture they implement swales in areas that have plenty of water or on slopes causing oversaturation and causing landslides. Every place is different and we need to adapt to the region. We need to copy the principles not the exact techniques, plants or set up. It's about tuning into nature.
I think you do great work experimenting with the principles of permaculture. in temperate climates. And you are right that there is not so much need to generate shadow. But what I am missing are flowers to attract the right insects to combat pests.
Awesome very excellent insights. You’re in a humble mode of learning. We are doing similar to you in western US near the coast in a temperate climate. Thanks for sharing as we learned many things and will apply your learnings to our area.
Some nispero, granado, membrillo, madroño, endrino, avellano will be very more productive in that shade, all prunus want a lot of sun, grapes too, maybe with prunus you do : prunus 2 meters biomass just with a small canopy in the top. Because nashi in really productive in the shade you can see, pear is emergent he hates shade.
I'm just waiting get patch council land for community project. Currently I'm propagating plsnts in nursery ready to plant when given comes Planning do the 1 biomass 1 fruit tree spacing and on left side of a row I going grow berriers raspberry, blackberry, boysenberry etc. And right some biomass ground covers rubarb, mint, canvas and comfrey.
In a temperate climate what is/are the main advantage of a biomass tree? With the chopping making the soil more fungal dominant? Or they force the root growth of the fruit trees deeper? Or by cutting the biomass tree its sends general growth signal through the micorrizhae to the fruit trees? Thanks for this video, superb infos!
I can see quite a breeze coming through your system at some points in the video. Stratas and plants require stagnating air to optimize inner watercycles and optimize photosynthesis.
I think you're doing good work. Many people try to replicate systems from syntropic agriculture in the tropics in moderate climates. Same with permaculture they implement swales in areas that have plenty of water or on slopes causing oversaturation and causing landslides. Every place is different and we need to adapt to the region. We need to copy the principles not the exact techniques, plants or set up. It's about tuning into nature.
I think you do great work experimenting with the principles of permaculture. in temperate climates. And you are right that there is not so much need to generate shadow. But what I am missing are flowers to attract the right insects to combat pests.
Awesome very excellent insights. You’re in a humble mode of learning. We are doing similar to you in western US near the coast in a temperate climate. Thanks for sharing as we learned many things and will apply your learnings to our area.
Thank you for your videos. I have a project like yours in Vendée, on the atlantic coast of France, and your videos are very inspiring for me. 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
Thank you for making this!! This is super helpful and a great example of agroforestry in Europe
you are very wise
Thank you for making this video. I am also in meditteranean climate and implemented some of the things from your video.
Some nispero, granado, membrillo, madroño, endrino, avellano will be very more productive in that shade, all prunus want a lot of sun, grapes too, maybe with prunus you do : prunus 2 meters biomass just with a small canopy in the top. Because nashi in really productive in the shade you can see, pear is emergent he hates shade.
Fantastic job 😊😊😊
I'm just waiting get patch council land for community project.
Currently I'm propagating plsnts in nursery ready to plant when given comes
Planning do the 1 biomass 1 fruit tree spacing and on left side of a row I going grow berriers raspberry, blackberry, boysenberry etc. And right some biomass ground covers rubarb, mint, canvas and comfrey.
In a temperate climate what is/are the main advantage of a biomass tree? With the chopping making the soil more fungal dominant? Or they force the root growth of the fruit trees deeper? Or by cutting the biomass tree its sends general growth signal through the micorrizhae to the fruit trees?
Thanks for this video, superb infos!
Do you ever use nitrogen fixation tree? Like Stefan Sobkowiak - The Permaculture Orchard. He does 2 fruit tree then 1 nitrogen fixing tree linearly.
I can see quite a breeze coming through your system at some points in the video. Stratas and plants require stagnating air to optimize inner watercycles and optimize photosynthesis.
Do you ever terminate the biomass trees?
How are you sourcing your seeds?
What do you do with the fruit?
We eat them :)
@@Terragenera you will have too much to eat soon! But that's a good problem to have.
Eheh yes here you can see the fruits ruclips.net/video/oGn7Xav1seM/видео.htmlsi=cmL90Fxl5UZeDOH9
Poplar are great biomass you can't kill them lol they will always grow bavk from root system.
Unless poison the stump.