Everything grows at The Shire… well almost everything. And some things grow faster than we might want, like grass and vines around orchards and garden plantings. Cultivation is a process requiring our regular attention to help our favorite tasty food plants grow and prosper…
Orchards:
The orchards are planted as food forests, with mixed varieties of fruits and nuts… Sounds much like the rest of Puna, if you add vegetables from the garden! (It’s true, and a joke, too…) The best time to cultivate and feed plants is around the new moon. They can be fed nitrogen by urinating just outside the drip line of the plant's leaves, stimulating roots to grow out to get the nitrogen they need. The chicken tractor can also be moved periodically through the orchard areas, keeping it away from main structures so chickens don’t try to roost in them.
Because grasses grow year-round and some can grow six or even twelve feet high (most of our cane grass is already gone, thank goodness), and because maile pilau (‘stink vine’) can grow up to several inches in one day under optimal conditions, regular attention to plantings is crucial. A good goal is to develop a bed of mulch and a ground cover around each tree. Perrenial peanut and low-growing desmodium are good potential choices since they are both nitrogen fixers. Nitrogen help feed the tree, rather than competing with it for the same nitrogen as grasses would. A good mulch is grass clippings once they are brown from the sun after cutting. They are usually available close by and can be gathering by the handful in a five-gallon bucket.
Some of the orchard trees we have planted so far include:
Mulberries at The Shire
Suriname Cherries at The Shire
Bananas:
The first place to gather grass clippings from is all roadways and paths. The next place is the shoulders of the roadways as these are designed to be parkable spaces. That is why we have bananas planted 30 feet apart lining our roads. The banana roots will extend out about 15 feet from either side, utilizing the entire road area without complaint! It leaves enough room on both sides to park a car without blocking access. And whenever driving by, perpetually hungry hobbits can keep both eyes peeled for the first sign of a yellowing banana on each mature rack, a sure sign that it is ready for harvest!
After orchard trees are cultivated and mulched, any extra grass clippings to be composted can always be used to mulch around the bananas, and even the entire bed containing double rows of bananas. Bananas are grasses, like bamboo, and grasses are heavy feeders. The bananas are happy to receive just about any organic contributions you wish to make other than animal matter and oils. Woody materials are also better sent elsewhere, especially around coconut trees, and in particular, any coconut circles are ideal locations for long-term mulching of wood.
Our goal is to plant 1000 bananas, and we are only at about 200, so there is always room for a dwarf or earth hobbit to get a workout digging a nice hole for planting. The holes are ideally 2 feet in diameter and 2 feet deep, as long as the lava flow in the area will cooperate. A little convincing with an o’o bar, a pick, and a sledgehammer sometimes helps… Bananas of most varieties have no seeds, so they are propagated vegetatively, by digging up a portion of the root of an existing clump. These keikis (children) do not necessarily need to have developed stalks but do need both root ball surface area and a spot that will sprout into a stalk.
Interplanted permaculturally with the bananas, you can find:
Katuk seed pods at The Shire
Gardens:
Garden bed construction beginning at The Shire
Biointensive garden beds are being built, with four 50 foot by 4-foot beds underway and another 26 to go! Some of the plants we grow in garden areas include: