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Posted by Ethan Roland over 13 years ago
(Note from Ethan: This post is a final design report by the 2010 AppleSeed Permaculture Interns Brandy Hall (Ashevillage Institute & owner of Shades of Green, Inc) and Evan Schoepke (Gaia Punk Design Co-op & Punk Rock Permaculture E-Zine). The full design presentation is included as a slideshow at the end of the post (see www.appleseedpermaculture.com/blog if it doesn't show up here). AppleSeed Permaculture is currently accepting applications for our 2011 Internship program - click here to learn more.)
We set out to address the challenges of an existing five-acre orchard which had not been managed in five years...
The 1200+ trees of various highly-cultivated varieties of apples and other species in the Rosaceae family were overgrown and very vulnerable to pests and diseases. The client wanted to assume his role as steward of the land, but does not have experience in agriculture. Our job as the design team was to address both the physical and socio-economic landscape for this client.
The healthy, productive and inviting land overflows with abundance, generating a diversified income. The client is a steward of the land, and the site is a thriving economic, educational, and social center.
We addressed the design challenge by creating a five-year Orchard Renovation plan, which implements a cross-pollination cluster model. In this model, trees of different plant families are placed next to each other, but are close enough in proximity to trees of the same family to cross-pollinate, without sharing pests and diseases. The client is passionate about pesticide-free agriculture, and this model addressed his concern, while diversifying income. The new orchard included: Apple, Chestnut, Persimmon, Paw Paw, Mulberry, and Cornelian Cherry. The economic design integrated a Rare Fruits CSA, Fruit Stand, and Pick-Your-Own, with understory yields in each season. Other elements of the design included: Native and Medicinal Plant walk, Nut Grove windbreak, Reconstructed Wetland, Cut Flowers, a Mandala Kitchen Garden, and Integrated animal systems.
“I’ve spent some time reviewing the professional, thorough and comprehensive work you presented me with—it’s far more complete and helpful than I could ever have expected.”
(I emedded the design in a slideshare.net, view the complete version here.)
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M.S. Eco-Social Design |
Type: Gaia University |
Teacher: Andrew Langford |
Location: Gaia University International, TN, USA |
Date: Sep 2007 |
Teaching Permaculture Creatively |
Type: Teacher Training |
Teacher: Dave Jacke |
Location: Teaching Permaculture Creatively - NH, USA |
Date: Mar 2007 |
6 PDC Graduates (list) |
0 PRI PDC Graduates (list) |
1 Other Course Graduates (list) |
have acknowledged being taught by Ethan Roland |
2 have not yet been verified (list) |
Ethan Roland has permaculture experience in: |
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Alpine |
Cold Temperate |
Cool Temperate |
Warm Temperate |
Sub-tropical |
Wet/Dry Tropical |
Wet Tropical |
Dry Tropical |