Butternut, sacrifice pastures, ruminant love for this squash, cycling energy, rich meals, storage crop, so much more in this blog about circular systems at the farm. We (me, dogs, sheep, goats, microbes, chickens) will be eating butternut squash for many months to come after letting some things just be.
As I reflect upon this last year of tree planting through the design documentation that I love to do on these days that are cold and day length is short, I remember what was and what is.Β My yearning to plant trees is still strong, mostly limited by resources like time and money.Β Nonetheless, the desire to create pockets of biodiversity here at Treasure Lake is still there, scaled to fit these resource limitations and abundance in other ways. It has become quite obvious to me the speed and scale to take to ensure the trees that get planted this year will be able to be taken care of next year as well. That compounds over time as the yearly spring and fall plantings begin to add up over a 4 year period. Moreover on the pattern level, the where and how (earthworks) to plant just pops out in my daily walks and travels around the farm.Β Here on my families land I mainly work the edges through the develop nuclei and let them merge over time pattern of small scale intensive. Furthermore, my time constraints often come from caring for animals, which their manures from their housing is being directed partly to tree crops and plantings through deep mulching.Β Areas that I want to do broad acre tree crop plantings through alley cropping are now getting animal rotations thus helping to improve the soil before we ever make that intervention.Β
Beginning the mulching of the triangle garden
picking up woodchips from the massive pile
harvestedmanure/bedding from goat house
making progress on mulching of triangle garden
Treasure Lake Food Forestry
Here on a 60 acre property, it is hard to not say that nearly all of it is actually a food forest.Β The amount of foraged foods harvested this year probably outweighs my cultivated gardens and trees. But the cultivated stuff is young, there was a late frost, and the semi cultivation of the forest for over 20 years now does make it an easier statement and easier harvests. Nonetheless each year we build off of existing edges and existing plantings while building out new spaces.Β For example the back hedgerow got a little longer and thicker and a new banks development was created thus extending that edge. So each year that we are here, we will continue to manage what is here, plant more, and envision what is next.Β I try and operate with the mantra of don’t start planting until most of the stuff you planted before is well taken care of. Sometimes you do it concurrently because of the weather and spaces. Furthermore, I have lost too much stuff in the past to not take care of stuff properly, especially when I do have a mountain of woodchips and now heaps of manures.Β
Nursery
The expansion of the Growing Value Nursery here at Treasure Lake was enough for a whole years worth of writing and work.Β Nonetheless it is just one part of the bigger story.Β This year really marked a significant growth of the size and offerings of the nursery. The size here at Treasure Lake tripled, we implemented a new urban site in Pricehill in Cincinnati, and the organization of the nursery was upgraded.Β Each year I have been back I have taken one step further into the organization and day to day operations, especially in the very busy and demanding spring. From a design perspective, with the tripling of size, it is the four very large sugar maples that really make this all possible.Β Of course the water infrastructure as well as access and the building headquarters being right there is critical as well. The design drawings show this below as well as the 7000 sq foot area taken up by plants.Β
Nursery expansion at treasure lake
Our sign and nursery in sumemr rain
2020
2018
2019
Sq footage of plants
Edible Landscaping at the Tiny House
This is one of those examples of you set up the framework in the fall (19) and then you plant out further in the spring (20). So after sheet mulching beds and planting paw paw and strawberry at 15 ft spacing, this spring was time to add in different layers with bushes in between. As you can see below we used currants, gooseberries, bush cherry, and honeyberry mainly. Beyond that, a greywater/ rain garden system was implemented and combined well together with pipes from both going to the same earthwork.Β Remember from a design perspective, both are holes in the ground with mulch and plants on the simplistic pattern level. Additionally after living in a zone 0 for a bit of time, some of those classic herb/ flower beds sprout around the house as well a veg garden.Β Being in sandy soils and knowing that it would mainly be a summer garden, we went with the sunken bed strategy that I loved in my time in the Iberian drylands (2009- 2016).
Edible landscaping tiny house ridge rim
white currants
Swale
Swale implementations are based upon seeing runoff that can be infiltrated rather than running off.Β We did exactly that with the winter weekend PDC of early 2020.Β In this area where our unique sandy soils switch to the normal heavy clays, we indeed hit pockets of each as we dug this swale.Β We did combine elements of both swale and terrace as we reinforced the backside of the swale mound with logs as you would a terrace.Β Furthermore being varying degrees of shade, we added in what we could on the low budget and plan to plant more Euro Pears in this area.Β Its another phase in this area just to the north of the paw paw orchard that is also being currently upgraded.Β Β
after
Weekend PDC hands on, swale building
Another Hedgerow/ The Chicken Yard
The same property line as the hedgerow that I have been developing for years now is being furthered extended east. I have big plans of filling in with more evergreens to compliment the existing large white pines, but for now taking advantage of a great little microclimate. About 10 years ago, when I was in full swing of my travels, I put in a handful of nut trees on this back edge.Β Only one survived that being a northern hardy pecan seedling so I planted two grafted ones on its flanks to compliment.Β The intended design for this area is to beef up the evergreen windbreak and fill in on the south with tree crops.Β This pattern will extend to the southern border of the chicken/goat yard as we need more shade in this area come summer time.Β To make it more hospitable, well I did what Uncle Bill told me to do; Plant Mulberries in your chicken yard.Β Those drawings in the Intro to Permaculture book still are burned in my head of the chicken yard.Β Β
The Back Hedgerow
This being my oldest planting of any real size and success (fall 2017 start), this section continues to fill in and grow well.Β The nuclei are ready to merge even more this year as my 6 ft diameter beds have grown to be more like 8 to 10 ft diameter as the woodchip mulch is extended outwardly and thickened each year.Β A lot of energy goes into this 250 ft long hedge each year so I decided to augment some things this fall.Β With some of the blueberries simply never performing, even after replacing a few of them, I planted other stuff right next to them.Β I figured why even bother pulling it out and lets take advantage of these circular growing spaces that have been mulched and fertilized for years.Β So five of those circles were augmented. The first was to add a Kousa dogwood right next to one that has been growing quite well since that fall 2017 inception.Β Next to that two cornelian cherry as they are in the same family.Β In front of that line, a couple of the circles got the Asian Pear Olympic variety.Β That felt good to make that switch and know these trees will instantly thrive because the soil has been building for years.Β As I did this I thought why not more Asian Pears and on my walks of checking on these new plantings over the next weeks I let two more spots for Asian Pears reveal themselves, partly from looking at the maps seen below and partly form on site observation.Β So we thickened the back hedgerow on the far west side with two more Asian Pears from the nursery that were looking very ready for a soil home.Β Kosui and Shinseiki bring our total of Asian Pears on the property up to 10 with six different cultivars.Β I look forward to collecting more cultivars.Β And with the 2021 season ahead, unless we get a late frost again like 2020, we should be starting to see some fruit production from plums and pears as the grafted trees coming into fruit age is upon us.
The New Banks Development
With a permablitz badly needed for the community and the site, we brought a good sized group of 40 or so together one mid November for some cool bee hive like motion. It actually went very smoothly as we did lots of staging work beforehand that allowed people to start finding their roles and begin implementing.Β So the hazelnuts and paw paws and elderberries were dropped in on the eastside through individual tree planting terraces.Β Also the native buttonbush shrub was added lakeside to bring back lake edge pollinator habitat in the coves of the lake.Β Above that terraces of apples and elderberry were added to further our banks development mission that we started last year.Β This year it was the apples turn to be the star of the show and this time within a valley rather than the faces of the ridges.Β The apples were a mix of tightly packed dwarves and semi dwarf trees flanking on the edges where there was more space.Β Two dolgo crabapples were added to ensure pollination and to compliment two mature redbuds already there growing.Β In this way we bring that botanical forest mission further, to utilize our already existing trees as framework for these sorts of plantings rather than simply clear cutting for a blank slate.Β I really look forward to caring for this particular planting because so many of the other plantings are slightly out of the way of the zone 1
Back hedgerow Asian Pear addition
path that extends a quarter mile from the tiny house to the big house, both zone 0’s here at Treasure Lake.Β So daily I get to observe this new planting numerous times a day and am super thankful for all who came and planted!Β
I really enjoy being able to setup these spaces and do the work of building soil rather than weeding lots.Β That means deep mulching and at the end of the day I kid with so many I teach that Permaculture is just moving organic matter from one place to another.Β And that folks is why we do design work.Β Start designing for spring plantings.Β And once more thank you for all the helping hands who contributed to tree planting, mulching, fencing, and general care for this place.Β Β
Honestly, it has been so much change and evolution that I have not even had the time to write. While a shame in some ways, it is tied to deepening roots here at Treasure Lake. It has been about executing the 2020 plan, of course altered by covid, but the intention led to action. Major highlights of the year so far include the following:
Education
Maple syruping
Community center upgrades
Nursery expansion including massive paw paw seeding operation
Gardens and edible landscaping at tiny house/ terraces
Goats
Chicken Coop and laying hens
Composting
Community development
COOP interns
Overall it has been a lot of infrastructure builds, from more edge within the once bar and now community center to chicken coops, numerous goat houses, kidding stalls, fences and the like. What once was a wasteland of lawn and the resource area/ junk pile has now turned into goatlandia. It, like any other project, has been a massive learning curve, lots of hard work, and some very rewarding times and moments. We will start at the beginning of the year and work our way through. Of course beyond the headers there has been a constant, change and always leveraging new implementations while maintaining existing systems. Thus I will try to keep it short and sweet for each one and write/ video more on these given topics as the days shorten, temps cool, winter sets in, and time evolves.
Author
Daisy in our cold pool
Education
Our year of 2020 was planned for lots of courses, tours, meetups, etc to take next steps of the Treasure Lake and Treeyo fusion of a bioregional educational center. We started off well with winter botany with Abby Artemisia and all the fun that comes from hosting Abby and co. From there we did the maple syrup making course in early February with mentor, elder, and young hearted Barry Schlime. Fun stuff there as I able to teach maple ecology and Barry taught the ins and outs of syruping. Before and after that weekend I was once again teaching at University of Cincinnati DAAP with the accelerated pdc, this time the second half. Following that the winter weekend pdc began here at Treasure Lake with the Cincinnati Permaculture Institute. Amongst these weekend courses, the whisperings of covid began globally and the writing was on the wall. Even the 4th weekend of the pdc, second to last, we wondered if we should do it or not. It was a great group, with two europeans, which made the course feel more familiar. In the end we canceled the fifth and final weekend and that began the closing of the doors for education for the year in large class gatherings. And we pivoted towards more farming adventures and ventures. I currently am teaching the university of Cincinnati pdc again, this time all online. So different and odd yet an opportunity to finish filming the PDC for online trainings. Also we are augmenting platforms for our online paw paw masterclass.
Our next offering will be a hybrid online course, prerecorded lectures and live zoom meetings for the winter weekend PDC that I teach here at Treasure Lake.Β
We may even open it up to those beyond the region and have a crew to tape the tours and hands on.
Weekend PDC hands on
Winter Botany wth Abby Artemesia
Weekend PDC hands on, swale building
after
before
Weekend PDC hands on, swale digging
Maple Syrup
One of the adventures and ventures was indeed the time old tradition of making maple syrup. Slogging through the cold, wet grounds and loving the warm and sunny days. It is a great winter activity and we are very much looking forward to next season!. Honestly we cheated a bit by doing it with electric rather than firewood. Indeed, Rome wasn’t built in a day. It did involve a descent sized investment for this cash strapped farm.Β Boiling pan, warming pan, hydrometer, finishing pot, bottles, jugs, taps, tubing and hoses.Β Most of that is one time costs and we will scale up next year as the syrup was great even though I barely eat it due to diet restrictions.Β If you are going to eat sweets, might as well be local.Β Β
evaporator pan
finishing pot getting near syrup
Warming pan on top, evaporator pan below
Hydrometer
two systems of collection
filtering pre finishing
finished syrup
syrup in a bottle
finished syrup
Tom gushing over the syrup
Community Center Upgrades
It once was a bar, but now it no longer is.Β This 3000 sq foot building is a huge asset, also sometimes called the big house, since we live in the tiny house but only cook breakfast there. It is a space that continues to evolve to keep pace with dynamic community development and on farm needs.Β With all this maple equipment invested in we had some shelves put in to hold it all.Β Behind a panel wall we found the old ship lap diamond pattern and built around that for a cool feature.Β Lighting in the building was upgraded, more shelving here and there for books and animal feed.Β Zone 0 is an important part of the design and here at Treasure Lake we have multiple of them.
Our EDU element cards posters
Maple syrup equipment storing wall storing
Nursery expansion including massive paw paw seeding operation
For the last couple of years we have been working with the Cincinnati Permaculture Institute and their Growing Value nursery of edible perennials.Β The whole range of food forest layers are carried by the nursery and this year we really scaled up the size of it.Β At the very least it tripled in size/ quantity of stock and was a huge operation this spring with multiple people involved.Β It is really fun to see all these plants and dream of planting all the different cultivars as well. One day….. The work of potting them up is indeed enormous.Β Once they are potted then there is the the arranging, the tagging, the pricing, the marketing, the sales, the watering, the mulching, the weeding, the fertilizing, the pruning, and the transfers to our other retail location in Pricehill in Cincinnati. And it is so much work that its hard to find time to even seed the paw paw seeds saved from last year.Β But we did, we seeded with heat mat trays underneath inside until they sprouted. Then we transfered those long tube pots this time. Again another descent sized investment but now that I am in the nursery game for the longterm, well it made sense to get to another scale.Β After doing a few hundred last year we were able to get to more like 700 paw paw seedlings successfully alive after several months.Β The swallow tail caterpillar has been rough on the seedlings this year but they always bounce back.
paw paw seeding after cold stratification
Nursery expansion at treasure lake
Nursery expansion at treasure lake
Nursery expansion at treasure lake
Nursery expansion at treasure lake, fruit trees
paw paw sprouted seeds in tall pots
Nursery expansion at treasure lake
Nursery expansion at pricehill location
Nursery expansion at pricehill location
Nursery expansion at pricehill location
Catepillar
Our sign and nursery in sumemr rain
Gardens and edible landscaping at tiny house/ terraces
Having established a new zone 0 last year with the tiny house at what once was campsite 1, it made sense to develop zones of growing around it.Β Last year was zone 2/3 plantings of hazelnuts, paw paws and terraces of fruit trees along the banks of the lake.Β This year it was zone 1 garden beds, slightly sunken as we have sandier soils that can dry quicker. For a first year garden we did have some nice harvest this year but a major fertility push is happening this fall/winter. Furthermore, last year we began a rim planting of the ridge that the tiny house sits on with Paw Paw and strawberries with a good sheet mulch during implementation.Β This year we augmented this edge further with currants, mainly white imperial, gooseberry, mainly amish red, bush cherry, more strawberry, honeyberry, and temperate passion fruit. Around 25 plants flanked these Paw Paws making for a nice little beginnings to a fedge. From there we turned the zone 3 terrace of peaches and nectarines below the tiny house more into zone 2 by adding in lots of perennial herbs such as rosemary, oregano, sage, tarragon and lavender.Β We had good harvests of berry fruits this year and look forward to much more next year. The hard frosts of May made it a rough year on many plants but the young fruits trees needed to grow bigger before fruiting anyway.Β
garden harvest
banks development in spring
our sunken terrace garden beds in zone 1 of tiny house
Nectarine in flower on banks
Zone 1 herb garden planter at Treasure Lake
white currants
asian pear terrace
planting the peach terrace with herbs
peach in flower on banks
Edible landscaping tiny house ridge rim
Meow enjoying the new landscaping
That was in the spring and summer and this fall we were back at banks development through a Permablitz.Β On our walk from the tiny house to goatlandia and the big house, another banks opportunity has been accomplished.Β After years of looking at this space and slowly getting the regenerating forest augmented, we made the great leap of increasing our food forest. It is caddy corner from the swale we dug with our PDC this late winter. From the banks of the lake to the edge of the road, we dug, terraced, planted, mulched, caged, and threw microbe laden vermicompost out.Β The turnout was great and I suppose with all the shut downs and this outdoor gathering, people took advantage with looming shutdowns once more in early November.Β A good group of around 40 showed up and gave back to this land as we do day in and day out.Β We are very thankful for this pulsation as we got in apples and crabapples, elderberry and paw paw, and hazelnuts and buttonbush.Β We continue to thicken the mulch through our animal bed cleanings and huge woodchip pile.Β In fact we have been doing it for all the trees mentioned above, weekly cleanings and weekly mulchings! While I may go a week without seeing the peach terrace down below the tiny house, well this banks development I see numerous times a day!
before permablitz
after permablitz, apple zone
hazelnut zone
after
heavy mulching with woodchips and animal bedding
before permablitz
raingarden earthwork capturing roadrunoff
Beyond this area we have added in more trees like two Northern Hardy Pecans to compliment the other seedling that has grown well on the northern hedgerow we are developing.Β Also in the northwest hedgerow we have replaced/ planted right next to some blueberries with other tree crops that are doing well. To compliment the two Asian Pear that have done well we added a couple more Asian Pear, this time Olympic or Korean Giant, as its a cultivar we didn’t have yet.Β I believe that puts us at six different cultivars within the two plantings of Asian Pears.Β We are getting ready to plant two more in new nuclei as our six foot diameter beds are doing well to form the hedgerow.Β Also some blueberry replacement included another Korean Dogwood to compliment another that has done very well.Β We also added two Cornelian Cherry, the English edible dogwood, adjacent to the Korean ones.Β We keep adding where it makes sense creating pockets of tree crops/ food forests.Β
Goats
Well creating goatlandia and the subsequent systems of meeting their basic needs and rotational grazing has been a grand leap forward for us. The buildup was alongside the buildup for the chickens and will need more explanation with further blogs and video. So here is a synopsis of bullet points:
Approval from my family, who owns the land, to do so and the subsequent design based on lots of obesrvation and research
Hand harvested black locust posts from the land
Hand dug post holes and posts set
Fence hung
Goats purchases and transport
Electric fence rotations
Goat care especially towards parasites
Plenty of cut and carry
Goats becoming obviously pregnant
Kidding stalls built
Kids delivered
Kids care
More goat housing and subsequent rotations with electric fence.
Goat healthiness always
Winter housing built for our very pregnant dairy goat, Zelda
Yeah the story is way too long to tell but its been a wild ride full of action due to implementation and feedback loops based on observation.Β You make choices and then there are repercussions as we still dial the system in.Β Β
While less complex, the chickens element addition has been fun, hard, and immediate beginnings of return on investment. The hardest part for sure was the building of the coop which is within our main goat area. It was a difficult as we built off the existing shed. And actually extends into the shed. The coop, built by Tom Garoutte, features the following:
8 ft x 10 ft in size
3 roost bars, hand harvested poles from the land
Poop deck under the bars to facilitate cleaning and more, now filled with PDZ and sand to be like a giant cat litter box
Retractable side window on west side to let out heat and gain heat
Pulley door that opens on backside of coop but latch is in entrance.
South facing window and dutch door.
4 nest boxes that are external yet internal as they extend into the shed. Added two internal nest boxes.
Rainwater Harvesting
And with all that and the addition of 20 something birds of mix breeds, the eggs are rolling in. We have had a couple of birds die to different ailments, yet overall its been a great development. We also raised an additional 5 pullets from store bought hatchlings and bought another 12 mature laying hens.Β We have lost some to predators, to disease or injury, tough but always a learning process. Currently we sit at about 30 birds with 18 to 24 eggs coming in a day. And yes our Rhode Island Red roosters live up to their reputation of being nasty.Β
our initial flock
eggs and colors
chickens in the AM
coop being built
internal/ external nest boxes
Dutch door
Retractable sliding door with goat exludor
chickens on roost bar
nest boxes outlet to our shed, chicken coop built against it
tom admiring his work with western vent above
Chickens feeding
Nest boxes and Goldie
eggs!
Our hatchlings in ther initial coop
Composting
The amount and quality of compost produced this year has been such a blessings with new gardens and tree plantings abounding. To be able to throw out handfuls in these spaces rater than just make extract is fantastic.Β And I mean very high quality worm casting compost.Β Worm bins and compost piles really are a perennial system and they do indeed get better and better by the year.Β I have found that taking fall leaf collections, chipped by a mower, and putting that into a compost pile makes the best brown material addition for the worm bin the next year here.Β Leaf mold compost is started elsewhere and then transfered to the bins where the worms and all the other critters, micro and macro, do an amazing humus conversion.Β Also right now we are building more windrow composts with our huge woodchip pile and animal bedding incorporated. We started with beet kvass in a trough of the woodchip piles and slowly have built this to be about three feet high and 80 feet long.Β I may use more of this in my worm bins next year but look forward to seeing the results come spring.Β The wood chips are already fairly broken done after 18 months and the addition of the manures should make it even better.Β Can’t wait to scale up again next year, slowly but surely.Β Β
composting beet kvass waste from fab ferments inside of woodchips
Health is a form of wealth. Here is 13 Health Tips for Better Immunity that I wrote 18 months ago but only now able to press publish. Its a very long road of health, its hard in fact. Do what you can eh. A lot has to do with supporting your micro biome.
The last few months have been very busy and the time to do much educational material production has been quite minimal.Β Many systems are being installed, upgraded, and managed at Treasure Lake.Β Here is an example of one of the spaces we created last year that is going through an upgrade via management.Β It has been so long that i can’t possibly blog my way out of this one, rather just show whats happening in the present and teach through that. It definitely shows the critical combination of soil, water, trees and earthworks!
The next day course April 18th will be a fun one and continue our mushroom mission and collaboration with maestro Romain Picasso.Β Learn the basics of mycology and mushroom inoculation both theoretically and out in the field.Β Learn from our trials and errors and successes at Treasure Lake in Northern Kentucky and the abundance in your lands is sure to follow.Β
Beyond food supply, one of the ways in which humans have increased their life expectancy, in my opinion, is to have hot water on demand.Β We all consume it, but have we ever thought just how much energy this consumes and how that energy is produced?Β At nearly 20% of household consumption on average in the USA, well thats a lot and there are alternatives for sure! This article details appropriate technology features for just that.Β https://treeyopermacultureedu.com/appropriate-technology/water-heating/
2020 will be a dynamic and busy year ahead, one I am very much looking forward to with lots of teaching at various places and site development at Treasure Lake. Heres my first quarter schedule of events and classes.Β And heres our mission. To teach environmental literacy so positive climate change action along with community building is strengthened into a full force wave of transition. https://treeyopermaculture.com/permaculture-design-courses-pdc/
Treasure Lake Zone 3 Planting with Year Long PDC group
Treasure Lake Permaculture drone image, credit Lucas Thompson
Lets face it, I love planting trees. Doug the Digger. And after moving back to Treasure Lake in Northern Kentucky in summer of 2017, I have been busy planting and caring for trees. However in 2019, it took a large step forward building on top of what was before and planting in new spaces framed by a new zone zero; the tiny house. And this planting extends beyond just Treasure Lake, both in Petersburg, KY as a part of community building through my tips for tree planting jar, and also urban permaculture in Cincinnati. And yes I have been planting Paw Paws, and you can to with confidence after taking this new course, Paw Paw Master Class. Below is a list of locations and descriptions along with design visuals, videos, and pictures.
What was my first planting in fall of 2017, the back hedgerow, was dialed in a bit further this spring as previously planted nuclei have progressed nicely. First, I had to replant a few blueberries, which were knocked back aggressively by rabbits and were weak plants to begin with. My tomato cages work for deer for the most part but not for rabbits for sure. Properly caging everything throughout all these plantings has been a goal of mine this year and fully achieved. From there, I expanded in both east and west directions. The Methley plums on the east side have been growing quite rapidly so I decided to add in a couple of Asian Plum (shiro) to compliment. And being in love with Nashi fruit, Asian Pear, I added two of these beautiful trees to compliment the European Pears also in the hedgerow. I definitely dialed back the guilds for these new trees and went with a stronger sheet mulch because the weeds are quite intense and overbearing if you don’t do this heavy sheet mulch from the beginning. I also added in numerous berry plants within the guilds of the older plantings including six chokeberry seedlings and two white currant imperials. (Spring planting)
Furthermore just a small distance away from the two Asian Plums on the east side is a backstop that my grandfather had built many years ago as part of his dream to have a ball field at the lake. After years of junk collecting there and then it being finally thrown away this spring, it opened up a great edge for planting on this vertical resource. It is slightly U shaped allowing for five vines with two different species used. One of them is Hardy Kiwi so one male for pollination, one Ana, and one Michigan State. The other is Akebia, or Chocolate Vine, with one variety being Shiro bana and the other being silver bells. The hardy Kiwi, like expected, grew slowly yet the Akebia grew at a ridiculous speed with over twenty feet of growth in one year, a drought year at that. (Spring planting)
Backstop with coppice sycamore in front, vines planted at base of fence
Western Hedgerow Mushroom Bed
This triangular hedgerow is composed of wine cap mushrooms beds underneath a food forest style planting. Both performed very well along with abundant harvests of mushrooms. The mycelium breaking down the wood chips not only provided buckets of delectable mushrooms, it also seemed to unlock fertility. Thus I added in a couple more jostaberries, gooseberries, currants, and chokeberries to round of this space. The main anchor species of quince are growing very rapidly and I look forward to that fruit.
Wine Cap Mushroom Harvest
Early spring
Sheet mulching for edge expansion
Permaculture guilding within food forest
Jostaberry flower
White currant fruit
Fall with fresh mulch and cages
Sheet mulching for edge expansion
Bar/ Community Center
Base Map
projected future Development Map
What we accomplished in 2019
Full Site map so you can understand overall placement
Out in front of the bar/ community center/ classroom I planted in two new trees to replace the old big box elders that once casted shade on the bar during our intense summers. They died out as my grandparents passed and I planted these two new trees with being an homage to them. The choice was Rowan or Mt. Ash, which are known in antiquity as gatekeeper trees that keep bad spirits away. And they are beautiful and do produce an edible berry with this cultivar of Rabina. I had seen these trees line the streets of Eastern European towns i once walked. I also added some more edible landscaping plants in the bar landscaping beds like Jostaberry and Pink Currant. Honestly I just want to use them for propagation in the future, a different yield than just berries. I also fully dialed in the permanent location of the nursery under two large sugar maple trees for both Cincinnati Permaculture Institutes Growing Value nursery and my own personal nursery. The big addition in my own nursery was the scaling up of paw paw production with enormous success. This allowed for planting at treasure lake and beyond and is one of the topics we cover in the Paw Paw Master Class (Spring planting)
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Before Mt ash goes in
Before Mt ash goes in
After Mt ash goes in
Mt Ash Rabina Foliage
Compost after tree planting
cardboard after tree planting
Compost on top of cardboard
green material on cardboard
Mt Ash with guild and fully mulched
Summer time of this MT Ash Guild
Amish Paste tomatoes harvested from guilds of the Mt Ash
Cincinnati Permaculture Institute Nursery at Treasure Lake, almost finished, 2019
Paw Paw seedlings
Sprouted Paw Paw Seed
Campsite 3.5
Full Site map so you can understand overall placement
Over the years I numbered the campsites 1-5 but through use of a machine and general edge development, more campsites were developed. I never renumbered them, just added .5βs to help keep the continuity of name and place going. This particular space is a place that has been being developed for quite some years now with grafted paw paw complimenting the huge paw paw patch already there (planted in winter 2016). Thus in the spring with both the year-long PDC from the Cincinnati Permaculture Institute and me and Abbyβs Spring class, we planted in lots more. With the PDC we planted terrace edges complimenting the chestnuts planted the fall before with Tom. This planting pattern was black capped raspberry and serviceberry flanking the chestnuts. Then with the other class we did a corridor planting with a mix of elderberry and hazelnut along the dry streamed. Even with the drought and no rain almost everything survived. I did a demonstration planting first with a beautiful Russian Hawthorn going in. Furthermore, in the fall we planted one more tree with Allison, a contributor to the place in so many ways. She donated back by purchasing a tree after her Into the Deep Soul event at the lake and her further connection to this place was solidified with a tree planting. On one of her volunteer days, I earlier in the day had been at Braden Trauthβs house, the director of the Cincinnati Permaculture Institute, and he had given me a Jujube of Chinese date fruit from his front yard tree. I gave it to Allison and she loved it! We decided to replace a Jujube that had died out in this area. There was still one alive in this area that was planted years ago when the grafted Paw Paws were planted. Thus we dropped a Black Sea Jujube in and hopefully the pollination is there for the two to thrive in this outer zone area.
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Rooted in Gratitude planting
Rooted in Gratitude planting
Rooted in Gratitude planting
Rooted in Gratitude planting
Allison planting in the fall her Jujube
CPI Year long PDC planting
Tinystead Development: A New Zone 0
The banks in the tiny stead area
Permaculture Base Map from Last Year, 2018
Mid Progress map
Permaculture Base Map from this year, 2019
Permaculture Base Map from this year, 2019, with cultivars
Permaculture Base Map from this year, 2019, with cultivars and other trees
Permaculture Base Map projected for 2020
Full Site map so you can understand overall placement
Having never really felt settled here from not having a true living space, when the tiny house was lined up for arrival it immediately gave me a spark to plant. In the spring before the tiny house even arrived, myself and Carolien planted hazelnuts to the west on a slope to a cove before campsite one where the tiny house is located. Five were dropped in and the plants came from neighbor Daniel and more on that later. We also planted three Catalpas in the valley behind that cove together in that fun late spring. In late summer Carolien and I planted more after the first rain we had in quite sometime thinking the rains were finally coming back. We dropped in 12 Paw Paw together after a chop and drop in a zone directly behind the tiny house along the driveway.
I planted the final three with Griffin, an intern from University of Cincinnati, who has really stepped up and is learning a lot through our hands on work and talks. Then between myself, Griffin, and Allison we took a step further once fall had kicked in with planting the rim of the ridge plateau that the tiny house sites on. We planted in more of my homegrown paw paws raised from seed earlier this year. From there we headed downward to develop what I call the Banks development, which are the mainly south facing slopes below campsite one and two. First was hazelnut on individual tree planting terraces spread amongst regenerating oaks, redbuds, and black locust. The slopes of these banks, mainly to the north are towering shummard oaks, burr oak, and sugar maple. Thus it is always a balance challenge to find what will work best with the shade and what trees need to come out overtime.
From there we moved onto the nectarines and blackberry to the west with two of the nectarines going on a terrace that further framed the pattern development for more of the banks. The blackberries were self propagated while many of these trees I am mentioning came from The Cincinnati Permaculture Institute’s Growing Value Nursery which is partially housed here at the lake. Above the nectarines down the main path path two Carolina All Spice trees were added to be entry trees. Further above the nectarines to the west deeper in shade we added witch hazel and vernal witch hazel to diversify the native palette. From there we moved eastward with other friends like Robert and Rachel helping with more individual tree planting terraces. To compliment the non native Eleagnus, we planted in the cultivar of Goumi. To compliment an already existing mulberry we put in another homegrown one as well. And we got a couple of Elderberries in the valley in between camp 1 and 2 below the 15 paw paws planted in fall of 2017 in that same valley. On the path we added a couple more russian hawthorns to the first one we planted in spring with Matt Gillespie, my paw paw class partner. From there we moved to the banks of campsite 2 and added in were 4 chestnuts procured through a trade with my friends Michael and Joanna down in Berea, KY but a Portugal connection. They got some of my paw paw, I got some their chestnuts. From there we knew we needed help and had our pattern well enough dialed in to invite others to come in and support and learn from our pattern. Thus we planned a permaculture action day of terracing and planting and over twenty people stopped through with over 150 ft of terrace dug in difficult conditions. All in all we planted 3 Jujube on elongated terraces and one on its on own in the furthest west part of the banks development. It is a rough and tumbled point showing to plant something hardy with the spiny vegetation that persists already. And west of that added was a very long asian pear terrace that four different cultivars fit on quite well. Above that I was going to do a fifth but as we were chopping and dropping scrub vegetation I found a hawthorn and decided to add in another Russian hawthorn there to compliment. That action day was great and yes a lot of work was done physically but also community formed. From there we made one big push as tree planting season was ending. The push was to get in the peach trees, an homage to my moms father who had some great peaches his suburban edible landscaping in Cincinnati. My mom wanted to plant this memorial garden and we again moved large logs for terraces, did terrace sculpting of the land, painted the landscape with four different cultivars of peaches, and interplanted with chokeberry. We sheet mulched heavily with cardboard and two loads of wood chips of my van with some friends helping to make the final push of the mulching. All along the way we added compost to the trees, home grown in my worm bins, and made cages to protect as the wildlife pressure is just two intense to not to. And as we sat on those banks with the fading sun, we realized the place had changed forever, in a very dynamic and positive way.
Matt stoked about Russian Hawthorn
Me and Caroliens hazels
Me and Caroliens catalpas
Allison and Paw Paw
Griffin and Paw Paw
Griffin digging on Nectarine terrace
Blackberry planting
The banks
Nectarine terrace
Sheet mulch and cage done right
Moving mulching with griffin and allison
Permaculture action day
Permaculture action day digging the asian pear terrace
the banks where we planted from the far side of the lake
Much of the planting was supported by the tips for tree planting jar and private donations. The other was Alan Wight’s Giving Tree Foundation. It gave us much needed extra capital for filling out our educational plantings. I am deeply appreciative of that and all who gave time and money to make this grand implementation happen.
Daniel and Colleens Half Acre Homestead: Petersburg, KY
I am blessed to have neighbors less than a half mile away that are into permaculture, community, and homestead lifestyle. I have watched their yard develop nicely and produce food abundantly as I drive in and out of the lake. This year I decided to donate and trade plants with Daniel along the way to help fill out our food forests. The donations were done by the community through our tips for tree planting jar, which generated thousands of dollars worth of donations this year. From our bar business, camping, and fishing, the money was all donations to this fund. Daniel and Colleenβs yard got lots of the berry layer of the food forest this spring, currants, gooseberry, honey berry, serviceberry,raspberry, blackberry, siberian pea shrub, and some natives like witch hazel and sweetshrub. While I didn’t do the direct planting, I helped do the layout with Daniel. It is a fun yard to watch develop with their limited input but quite amazing outputs.
Daniel, My neighbor down the road, holding a bit of his Egyptian Walking Onion Harvest dried at the lake
Backyard Permaculture elements at Daniel and Colleens, vine trellis, pathways, sweat lodge
Front yard terraces at Daniel and Colleens, to the left food forest
Recently planted honey berry
Josh and Maddyβs Homestead: Petersburg, KY
Daniels brother Josh and his partner Maddy own a larger piece of land a few miles down the road and are also into permaculture, community, and homestead lifestyle. Thus I supported them with the tips for tree planting fund and trades and also got to help on one of their tree planting days. We tried to run an action day there as well but the rain came in a way it hadn’t done so for literally months. Nonetheless the space in front of their home was changed forever with a large implementation of food forest planting extending off their already existing plantings. With chickens in the foreground and goats in the background this site has amazing potential and just took big next steps. Josh does really great fish scale tree planting earthworks for each tree because his soils are quite heavy. The uphill sunken boomerang will infiltrate water while the raised platform of the tree will give some extra root space before it hits the quite compacted and heavy clays below. The site got quite a diversity of plants with not only the berry layer, similar to Daniels list but also lots of fruit trees like asian pear, medlar, peach, nectarine, apple, and cornelian cherry.
Josh and Maddy’s personal nursery, juiced up from the tips for tree planting jar
Before planting, recently tilled
fish scale tree planting style
One of my paw paws on trade going in the ground
sheet mulching trees being planted
food forest developing
Lincoln Heights: Cincinnati, OH
I was drawn into this garden through the Cincinnati Permaculture Institute this spring to help advance this urban Permaculture initiative in Lincoln Heights. The neighborhood was started as an african american initiative and continues to be that way. Thus on this vacant lot, gardens were created and fruit trees planted in 2018. In 2019 the place was overgrown with weeds and not much happening, a common symptom of community gardens. So I came in and started taming the jungle and doing deep sheet mulching for the existing trees. This helped to setup the fall planting which focused on replacing a few dead anchor trees, adding the berry layer within the tree rows, and flanking with the shrub layer. The new anchors became plums, Methley and Shiro, and a Dolgo crabapple to be a universal pollinator for the apples since some of the trees that died out were apples. And the berries were jostaberry, currants, gooseberry, and chokeberry. On the flanks were my homegrown paw paws and also elderberries from the nursery. I donated the paw paws from my tips for tree planting fund and the rest of the funding came from Alan Wights giving tree foundation. It was tough digging, through rubble of all sorts, but man is there some good top soil. Myself and Griffin dig extra digging and breaking up the hardpan below because the heavy clay below seemed to be the culprit in the die of the other trees. We will mulch heavily when our next round of woodchips get delivered but for now they are in the ground.
when i first arrived
Before fall tree planting
sheet mulched tree
cardboard for sheet mulching
Griffin finishing a hole for tree planting
After tree planting
Permaculture Action Network Day: Berea, KY: Clear Creek Community Food Forest
In the sweltering heat of mid summer, my Berea crew, who are connected to me through Portugal invited me to facilitate a tree planting action day based off of all their handwork in the community and beyond with their work with the Permaculture Action Network (PAN). They are chapter leaders, Joanna and Michael, and fate found them land only two hours to the south of Treasure Lake way before I ever made it back here in 2017. Its such a blessing to have this refuge but on this day it was hard work but some serious action happened. We chopped, we dropped, we dug, we planted, and we learned as there was the action site and the learning site. Fabulous was it!
many hands make light work action
many hands make light work action
tree planting on my individual tree planting terraces
Chop and Drop into swales and mulching mounds with wood chips
Conclusion
So the hashtag of #letsplantsometreesyo was definitely enacted in this wonderful year of growth and further rooting. You can always plant more but what Permaculture teaches and what I have learned overtime again and again is that small scale intensive principle. This is why I write this blog, to encourage you to take next steps, have a goal of two to 10 tree crops a year and simply take care of them well. Do the extra work at the beginning to set them up for future success and less maintenance on your part. See when you deliver an action to the landscape like planting, there will be an equal and opposite reaction of maintenance. This forces us to go slowly, develop nuclei, and let them merge over time into a well developed food forest! Growing food, infiltrating water, building soil, promoting biodiversity, these are the solutions of climate change and healthy living. Do your part people and if you cant physically, well support others with your excess resources of time or money, please. Give back and the energy will cycle.
Author in his full tree planting glory on the banks goofing off
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