Joined:
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20/08/2011 |
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Last Updated:
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11/10/2011 |
Location:
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Waasmont, Belgium |
Climate Zone:
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Cool Temperate |
Gender:
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Male |
Web site:
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www.villavanzelf.wordpress.com |
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Back to Marc Van Hummelen's profile
Posted by Marc Van Hummelen about 13 years ago
In permaculture we often revert to old techniques to be able to avoid the use of machinery or user- and environment unfriendly materials. One technique that I've learned this year is hedgelaying. This is a useful technique to restore old or neglected hedges, it keeps hedges compact and makes really good barriers out of them for animals, or in my case dogs and people! (I live right next to the forest entrance and many people come here to walk their dog)
I hadn't pruned this hedge of mine for years, it was difficult to keep it in good shape because the previous inhabitant had placed a wire fence very close to it. All the posts of the fence were beginning to rot, so I had to do something. This hedge laying technique is still commonly practiced in England, and you can even find old examples of it here in Belgium, but here it was completely forgotten. Luckily I have a friend who has specialised in ecological gardening and has learned the technique in England. I invited him to help me on my way this year in March. I've made an photo album in Picasa to show you the work and the result, of which I am very proud ;-)
Should I explain here how it is done? Just in a few words then: with a knighton billhook (that's a billhook without the hook) you cut through 90% of the trunk of each bush of the hedge, so that you can lay the bush down low without it breaking off of the root system. You lay down every bush in the same direction and you fix them with hazelnut rods stuck horizontally in the ground through them. The rods are connected at the top by willow rods woven around them. The bushes of the hedge will heal themselves at the base in a few years, and will make new shoots everywhere within months, at the base and all over the practically horizontal trunk, thus creating a new very dense hedge where nothing gets through. And it's pretty too. The pictures will make everything clearer. Here's the link. Feel free to comment.
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Full residential PDC course |
Type: Permaculture Design Certificate (PDC) course |
Teacher: Aranya Austin |
Location: Turku, Finland |
Date: Aug 2011 |
Compost mentor |
Type: Soil Biology/Compost |
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Permaculture Educator's Course |
Type: Teacher Training |
Verifying teacher: Andy Goldring |
Other Teachers: Cat Dolleris |
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Date: Oct 2014 |