View allAll Photos Tagged permaculture
Strawberrys are great - just cut some runners off a friend's patch (thanks dad!), and away they go. We're now growing more than we eat. The strawberry plants are in one of the perennial plant sections of our no-lawn garden.
Our five chooks are firing out six eggs per day now, in their 4-paddock rotating chicken run. Again, we can't eat that many eggs!
And meanwhile, lots of other edible plants are busy growing, in both the rotating & wicking veggie garden, the other perennial beds, or the young fruit trees that share space with our chickens.
Shambala Permaculture Farm
395 E North Camano Dr.
Camano Island, WA 98282
on the
Harvest Jubilee Farm Tour
Shambala Permaculture Farm
395 E North Camano Dr.
Camano Island, WA 98282
on the
Harvest Jubilee Farm Tour
En bordure de dunes, un petit espace de permaculture a été aménagé afin d'inviter les gens à la pratiquer...c'est un joli petit coin cultivé..malheureusement le temps très capricieux l'a beaucoup abimé.
first layer = cardboard of course
and then we made a big purchase of 20 yards of organic soil to make life a little easier this year - so most of the bed is that with some mulch mixed in
the sides are black locust bark from last year when we took down 11 60 ft tall trees, the bark just peeled off the dead logs - you can see the giant pile of bark to the left in the back
when we get a woodchipper the paths will be filled in with wood chips