SPEND 80% LESS TIME maintaining your Permaculture Orchard IF you get THIS RIGHT!

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  • Опубліковано 26 вер 2024
  • FREE excerpt from the NEW Master Class: Stefan explains the importance of edges in your Permaculture Orchard. Eliminate up to 80% of your orchard maintenance time by properly implementing THIS strategy!
    Continue The Maintenance Course : permaculture.s...
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    ** NEW ** Stefan's Master Class: permaculture.s... (START FOR FREE)
    Want to VISIT the Permaculture Orchard? Start your VIRTUAL TOUR of the Permaculture Orchard for FREE at: miracle.farm/vt1/
    Want to LEARN how to setup your own Permaculture Orchard or Planting? Watch the FILM 'The Permaculture Orchard: Beyond Organic’ www.permacultu...
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    === MUST WATCH VIDEOS ===
    Origin story of MY Permaculture Orchard: • I HATED Tent Caterpill...
    How to Plant YOUR Orchard (TRIOS): • TREE TRIOS THE KEY TO ...
    My Favourite Playlist (Indicators Of…): • Indicator of... Series
    My BIGGEST Mistakes made in the Orchard (Playlist) THIS WILL SAVE YOU crazy TIME and MONEY!!!: • MISTAKES Series
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 26

  • @robinz2000
    @robinz2000 7 місяців тому +7

    What you're trying to do is to get us to think outside of what we were comfortable with. You gave us a bunch of different ideas which i greatly appreciate. From living plans to stone pavers. You did mention plastic but we don't have to use that. We don't want to. Thanks for stretching our brains.

  • @user-wl6ge9gu9v
    @user-wl6ge9gu9v 7 місяців тому +4

    String trimmer is also contributing to micro plastic. I hope to replace the string with a blade

  • @julie-annepineau4022
    @julie-annepineau4022 7 місяців тому +2

    I look forward to my perennials growing enough to reduce my maintenance. I am a fan of wooden slabs to allow for mowing instead of trimming. I also got a good supply of wood chips to reduce the need for edge work and watering. We will see how it works for this growing season.

  • @mrdeanvincent
    @mrdeanvincent 7 місяців тому +3

    1:20 Here we call a string trimmer a 'whipper snipper' 😂

  • @petekooshian5595
    @petekooshian5595 7 місяців тому +1

    Thank you Stefan! I'm young and inexperienced but I look forward to designing my own system someday and your videos help so much!

  • @Warrior-In-the-Garden
    @Warrior-In-the-Garden 7 місяців тому +2

    Great stuff.

  • @midwestribeye7820
    @midwestribeye7820 7 місяців тому +1

    Great ideas! I plan on using mulch.

  • @windhorse123
    @windhorse123 7 місяців тому +1

    Hi Stephan!
    We’re learning so much from watching your videos. Thank you 😊.
    We’re wondering how do you keep deer, woodchucks and other garden destroyers out of your orchard?
    Thanks in advance!

  • @Dutlerveili
    @Dutlerveili 7 місяців тому +3

    Edges are definitely difficult to manage but plastic mulch? Doesn't sound to sustainable to me. Won't this produce a lot of microplastic?

    • @StefanSobkowiak
      @StefanSobkowiak  7 місяців тому +1

      I don’t recommend it, most people can use plants and mulch as alternatives.

  • @barbarasimoes9463
    @barbarasimoes9463 7 місяців тому

    We started with only a few hosta here, and probably thirty years ago, I dug one up and with a hacksaw, cut that one clump into eight plants. It's best to do it when the unfurled leaves come up as spikes. You're not impeded by big, floppy leaves, and the plants don't suffer and get limp like they do if they're divided after the leaves have grown out. Today, I probably have several thousand, as I use them to line most beds.
    If I need more, and it seems that I always do, I just go to a bunch that haven't been divided in a while. I usually end up cutting off most of the flowers once they start to tilt and go wonky. Out back, I don't care so much, and I know the bees love to curl up in them for the night, so I do leave them where I can.
    It is the most effective barrier that I can use because the root becomes a solid mass and the leaves shade the soil so well that the earth is bare beneath. I have them in full sun as well as shade and everything in between. Sure, they're not as vibrant a green when in the sun, but they are not struggling to survive either.
    I know myself and I know that I'm not going to keep up with trenching a ditch; I like that look, but this is there forever and it looks tidy. In spring, one swipe of a rake will remove all of the leaf debris...or, you can just leave it and the spikes will come through.
    The unfurled hosta is edible, too. I watched a video where someone sauteed some and claimed it tasted like asparagus. It's uncanny how much it smells the same...the taste is rather bland but peppery. I'm glad I'm also growing asparagus! As I'm writing this, I'm wondering if the leaves are edible or tasty when they've grown out. My gosh, the salads I could have...I'm going to look into that!

    • @StefanSobkowiak
      @StefanSobkowiak  7 місяців тому

      Haha salad, but a simple and versatile plant, absolutely. There are hundreds of different cultivars of hosta.

  • @jackholman5008
    @jackholman5008 7 місяців тому +1

    Good day sir; do have any good resources for the most potent nitrogen fixation trees especially in a tropical environment

    • @StefanSobkowiak
      @StefanSobkowiak  7 місяців тому

      Lookup nitrogen fixing trees for tropics

  • @stijnt2377
    @stijnt2377 7 місяців тому

    Potato potahto, I string trim but don't own a mower so it basically substitutes that. In reality I almost always end up using the blade because the plastic wire is kind of a pain

  • @midwestribeye7820
    @midwestribeye7820 7 місяців тому +1

    Does anyone know if deer eat young Pawpaw trees? We have lots of deer pressure, but were told they won't touch Pawpaws because of something in the bark. Does anyone know if that's true?

    • @luminousnutria3555
      @luminousnutria3555 4 місяці тому

      Pawpaws are deer resistant. Deer will eat anything in the winter, if they're hungry enough.

  • @CriticalThinker27
    @CriticalThinker27 7 місяців тому

    Struggling to see how you still recommend plastic integration into food production when we know the trees transport the leached microplastics into the fruit. Maybe a natural fabric would be a possible alternative?

    • @StefanSobkowiak
      @StefanSobkowiak  7 місяців тому +1

      I don’t recommend it, most people can use plants and mulch as alternatives.

    • @prismatica8416
      @prismatica8416 7 місяців тому +1

      Plastic is the poor mans choice, and poor people dont care about microplastics so much. That is unless you have arborists nearby who can do a free woodchip drop, but thats also an extreme amount of work to set up after its dropped. God i wish i could do that, but i live in the desert and plastic holds the water in very well so 🤷‍♀️

  • @honestlee4532
    @honestlee4532 7 місяців тому

    I don't own a weed whacker and I don't want one. Don't want a leaf blower or a lawn mower either.