Q&A: leaves on gardens, plant competition, soil microbiology, natural roof and a new view

  Рет қаралды 20,186

Canadian Permaculture Legacy

Canadian Permaculture Legacy

4 жыл бұрын

Answering a great question from a viewer about my cold hardy Canadian Permaculture Food Forest garden.
I mention a reddit comment in this video, this is the comment:
www.reddit.com/r/boottoobig/c...
The question to me was posted on the previous video as a comment, and I though it would make a great video.
Here are the sections in this video:
Answering question (#2) on leaves in the garden: 2:25 to 8:30. Leaves are great quick turnaround soil builders for a garden. A great mulch, and compost. But you NEED to do this one thing before you use them!
Aside - dealing with slugs and snails: 3:50. These little pests can do a number on your plants, and this trick can help deal with them.
Aerobic vs Anaerobic soil microbiology (the concern with leaves): 10:50 to 11:58. The line in the sand of Good guy vs Bad guy.
Aside - Update on the grape trellis project: 11:58 to 17:54. Useful information on building structures, the importance of bracing, etc. Good engineering tips that I like to throw in now and then (my formal degree).
Answering question (#1) on plant competition, chop and drop, releasing light, guilds, maximizing energy in, so much good stuff here. Question at 8:25, answer at 19:30 to 35:20. I did two asides while walking over to answer that question. It's all great stuff, so watch it all! Very useful information.
Answering question (#3) on natural/living roof: 35:55. My concerns here aren't with biology but with physics.
Maybe my new favorite angle of the new and improved food forest: 40:18. Lovin' that new swale.
For reference, here is the comment that spawned this massive walkaround and all these amazing tips.
....................................
From Stevekeiretsu:
hello my learned friend, you encouraged us on reddit to get involved and ask questions so I thought it might be fun to make a video response.
• Lockdown gardening ep#...
In the understandable event that you don't care to watch 10 minutes of me failing to get to the point, I'll summarise:
1. When you say it's a nonsense to think of plants 'competing for resources' and use that as a basis for removing 'weeds', which are actually doing a job, I take the point when it is trees vs daffs or clover, occupying different roles which naturally co-exist, or even co-depend. But if you are dealing with more 'like for like' cases (e.g. one ground cover species vs another), aren't there are some situations where competing for finite resources is a real thing, and removing some of a less-desired plant might be a valid strategy to encourage the more-desired one?
2. On the topic of covering soil with wood chip / mulch etc, one of my beds gets a thick natural carpet of dead leaves every autumn. I've attempted to respond to this firstly by choosing plants which naturally grow in woodland floor environments like tiarellas and snowdrops, and secondly, indecisively, by gathering some leaves to compost while leaving others to decompose/mulch, but I'm not convinced my approach is any good. Any thoughts on what - if anything - is best to do with this leaf fall?
3. Any thoughts on establishing completely new soil systems on green roofs and the like?
Obviously I am not expecting personalised responses or anything, just chucking out some stuff you may consider worth expanding on in future, or maybe you have past videos already covering similar territory. Cheers!
/end Steve's comment
.............................................
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Music credits:
Closer by Jay Someday | / jaysomeday
Music promoted by www.free-stock-music.com
Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License
creativecommons.org/licenses/...

Пікірлер: 127
@bidybo
@bidybo 3 жыл бұрын
Since I discovered you about 3 days ago, I've legit watched over 5 hours straight of your videos. Not skipping through or anything. You are such an inspiration to me!
@acebilbo
@acebilbo 3 жыл бұрын
Hmm. My chicken ate a slug which clogged her crop, and she was so sick I had to kill her. Long time ago. I know ducks can eat slugs, but not geese. Ok, I need to do more research.
@kimsousa6420
@kimsousa6420 14 күн бұрын
"A forest grows on a fallen forest."
@kimsousa6420
@kimsousa6420 14 күн бұрын
Where I live in Woodacre CA, due to water issues, the county has left a 157 acre golf course to die. It has been about 3 years now. It is so ugly. Most of the cedars and pine trees have died. The ponds still remain alive with bullfrogs. Evasive weeds surround the landscape. I feel if there was some sort of organization, that could come in a restore land to a natural habitat for wildlife would be amazing. I just don't know why when things like this happen across our states, we don't have some sort of organization (private or public) to come in and fix this mess, and restore it to something the wildlife can benefit from, and the public can enjoy viewing as a natural sanctuary, instead of an eye sore. I guess we need a military budget to make this happen...........................It seems like you could be an amazing consultant to properties such as this - to help counties help restore land that has been damaged from "us" and help nature take it back through proper plantings and seeding.
@poacher7805
@poacher7805 Жыл бұрын
Disregard my previous question you answered it about a minute and a half later. This is a good example of why you should listen to the whole video before making a comment LOL
@Spark_Iskra_z_Polski
@Spark_Iskra_z_Polski 4 жыл бұрын
I call it lazy gardening :) My fave type,... which is why I have no compost box. I put layers of mulch, leaves, twigs, branches, weeds as I get them. In time I am able to get a little hill that makes my flat area more interesting. I also collect the cuttings or weeds in buckets filled with water. The green stuff turns into watery manure (my Indian Runners' fave drink and insect collector). In time I turn the buckets upside down and this way add food to the hill in which some select plants already grow The bucket is left for some hours in this position to avoid the smell distribution. On taking the bucket off I cover the content with a bit of soil and it spreads its goodness whenever it gets wet again. Lazy gardening at its best :)
@stevekeiretsu
@stevekeiretsu 4 жыл бұрын
my actual exclamation upon realising you've only gone and made a 40 minute video response would not be suitable for a family audience! but i'm blown away - watching now!
@paulsimpson5057
@paulsimpson5057
Informative, concise just out walking the dog! Tells you then demonstrates within the garden of which looks like paradise. Very cool videos. guy is like the Spock of gardening, but more useful
@bearclaw5742
@bearclaw5742 4 жыл бұрын
Hiya! Late Q for your Q&A, here goes: is there any literature you can recommend for anyone, ranging from starters to more advanced plant aficionados? If not books, any other materials or sources you would vouch for would help greatly. Thank you for your work and for sharing your knowledge!
@kimmaclaurin
@kimmaclaurin 2 жыл бұрын
“I actually have one here, this is hilarious!” I appreciate you so much! Please keep doing what you’re doing. Fingers crossed we never go back to losing so much of our precious time to commuting.
@nyurr2196
@nyurr2196
"Bird Sacrifice Altar" sounds like ana amazing garden addition.
@floydgraves3997
@floydgraves3997
Awesome arbor. I love it! Thank you for the grapevine growing tip of leaving the vine hight to the overhead arbor.
@mamaweh
@mamaweh Жыл бұрын
Appreciate the video and the explanations throughout. Love that you explain the thinking and rationale for doing things. Super effective teaching. Thanks bro!
@marshhen
@marshhen 3 жыл бұрын
I love your passion for teaching and the great sense of humour you have about yourself. Such a wonderful way to learn. I had no idea about the leaves blocking oxygen to the soil if unmowed. I learn so much each time I watch. Thank you!
@lynsmith2698
@lynsmith2698 Жыл бұрын
Great video. Love the arbor.🇨🇦🌷
@richardjanssen3183
@richardjanssen3183 2 жыл бұрын
U have the perfect setting with the artesian well !
@tomostojanovic1172
@tomostojanovic1172
great tip for slugs!
@incanada83
@incanada83 2 жыл бұрын
This the best explanation about soil process, tips and insights. You have a beautiful piece of paradise. Thank you and wish you all the best.
@barbarahenn-pander5872
@barbarahenn-pander5872 Жыл бұрын
I’m a new subscriber. I appreciate so much about these videos: limited editing gimmicks so I can focus on the content; there is detail but with constant touch points with the core principles of permaculture; and the “braking for ---- life” (soil, insect, mycorrhizae etc.) I also enjoy the quality of the comments. You are attracting such cool people. Thank you for your work, the morning voice, the humour, the intelligence. Total quality.
@Kadamir
@Kadamir 4 жыл бұрын
Great channel. Really inspiring. I would love to be able to buy some land and to something similar.
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