Scott, your emphasis on the importance of intuition as our "North star ", was perfection for me crystallized this evening, a month in the making as I realized my guidance and observation to move a whole garden bed from one side of the yard placed by previous tenant, to another place and how and what I used to do it, was a good amount of syntropic methodology I had never heard out loud until tonight. Elder/Wisdom necessarily includes observation and listening, in all its forms. Many blessings to you all out there as we humans repatriate ourselves into Nature...
I saw Scott announcing it on Instagram, while I was at work. I am so very grateful for being able to listen to you guys, because you uploaded it. thank you for inspiring me❤️ Much love🙏
Thank you! Really straightforward and synthetic information. There is an Italian called Gennaro Cardone who has started syntropic farming in Portugal without water and has reached real abundance. He is experimenting with a system of olive trees and artichokes in Sicily with success where there is severe drought
maybe because I'm Australian, where rainwater tanks were once common and ubiquitous in such a vast, sparsely populated rural area, but I'm always surprised that rain/roof catchment is such a novel concept elsewhere in the world. Just for the record, a 1 1/2 year old syntropic planting (30m2 area) (created as part of a workshop) has never been watered, apart from an initial deep soak before and during the planting weekend. We have a fairly high natural rainfall (sub-tropical Northern NSW Australia) but this was planted during our dry season (winter-Spring). Also, near the top of a very steep hill, with mature Eucalypts above. The syntropic system is booming without irrigation! Normally, I only ever plant in the wet season (a lesson learned through long experience on the same property and many failed tree plantings)
An interesting thing, I saw while looking up Mirawaki forest planting ...deer and pigs hate asparagus, and thistles ... Supposedly pigs will not dig/root where asparagus is planted.That might work for you guys
Are there any resources regarding response to pruning you are aware of? Especially interested in tropics and subtropics (maybe from your experience in Costa rica) ... I assume most of the woody climax species do not grow back after being pruned...
Check out bruce bugbee! He isn’t doing the say kind of growing as you, but he has an amazing theory of light and its relationship with plants. You are on something there.
Practical information is more valuable than the words ❤
Scott, your emphasis on the importance of intuition as our "North star ", was perfection for me crystallized this evening, a month in the making as I realized my guidance and observation to move a whole garden bed from one side of the yard placed by previous tenant, to another place and how and what I used to do it, was a good amount of syntropic methodology I had never heard out loud until tonight. Elder/Wisdom necessarily includes observation and listening, in all its forms. Many blessings to you all out there as we humans repatriate ourselves into Nature...
I saw Scott announcing it on Instagram, while I was at work. I am so very grateful for being able to listen to you guys, because you uploaded it. thank you for inspiring me❤️
Much love🙏
Thank you! Really straightforward and synthetic information. There is an Italian called Gennaro Cardone who has started syntropic farming in Portugal without water and has reached real abundance. He is experimenting with a system of olive trees and artichokes in Sicily with success where there is severe drought
maybe because I'm Australian, where rainwater tanks were once common and ubiquitous in such a vast, sparsely populated rural area, but I'm always surprised that rain/roof catchment is such a novel concept elsewhere in the world. Just for the record, a 1 1/2 year old syntropic planting (30m2 area) (created as part of a workshop) has never been watered, apart from an initial deep soak before and during the planting weekend. We have a fairly high natural rainfall (sub-tropical Northern NSW Australia) but this was planted during our dry season (winter-Spring). Also, near the top of a very steep hill, with mature Eucalypts above. The syntropic system is booming without irrigation! Normally, I only ever plant in the wet season (a lesson learned through long experience on the same property and many failed tree plantings)
Fantastic content. Well done 😊😊😊
An interesting thing, I saw while looking up Mirawaki forest planting ...deer and pigs hate asparagus, and thistles ... Supposedly pigs will not dig/root where asparagus is planted.That might work for you guys
Are there any resources regarding response to pruning you are aware of? Especially interested in tropics and subtropics (maybe from your experience in Costa rica) ... I assume most of the woody climax species do not grow back after being pruned...
Super
Check out bruce bugbee! He isn’t doing the say kind of growing as you, but he has an amazing theory of light and its relationship with plants. You are on something there.
Switzerland not Sweden