Pages

Saturday, 1 September 2018

Regenerative Landscape Design - 5 ha Polyculture Farm Design - Suhi Dol Revisited

In the summer of 2018  Dylan and I set off on a road trip to discover the flora and fauna of the North East of Bulgaria. Our first stop was to Catherine Zanev 's  Permaculture Farm Venets in Todorovo, North Bulgaria. As those of you familiar with our project may recall, this was a farm I designed in 2013. I had not visited the place for some time and was very excited to see how the plans had emerged into reality.    


Catherine's goals for the plot were to create a polyculture farm with focus on producing fruit for juicing, to include vegetable production for a CSA (Community Supported Agriculture) scheme and to experiment with dye plants. The design was complete by 2015 and implementation began that year.    

The 5 ha polyculture plot Suhi Dol on the right, locally practiced intensive monoculture farming on the left  

The design concept for Suhi Dol was to create an agroforestry system of "Belts" that are comprised of mixed species fruit trees, soft fruits and nitrogen fixing shrubs planted in "Rows" under-storied with support plants, herbs and perennial vegetables. Between the rows are the "Alleys". The Alleys have potential to be used for growing hay, cereals, vegetables, herbs or rearing pasture raised poultry such as chickens or turkeys. Integrated throughout the belts and around the perimeter are various beneficial habitats to enhance biodiversity. The designed system is an elaboration of Alley Cropping and is based on tried and tested models of our small scale forest garden systems scaled up. 


Here is an illustration of the belt layout 




This is the overall site design from 2013 



Here are Catherine and her husband Adjmal in the middle of a belt sown with corn in the alleys, shrub rows of aronia and currants, and mixed fruit trees apple, plum, cherry and quince in the tree rows either side of them.  



Want to learn more about Regenerative Landscape Design? Join The Bloom Room!

The Bloom Room is designed to create a space for more in-depth learning, for sharing projects and ideas, for seeking advice and discovering opportunities.

Ultimately, it aims to build a more intimate, interactive, and actionable relationship between members, a way for the Bloom Room community to support each other’s projects and learning journeys, and to encourage and facilitate the design, build, and management of more regenerative landscapes across our planet.

What you can expect as a member of the Bloom Room

As a member of the Bloom Room you can expect;

  • Access to an interactive forum where you can ask questions,  direct what type of content you would like to see as well as share your own content and projects.

  • Monthly live session featuring general Q&A and tutorials on design software for creating and presenting polycultures.

  • Live session every month for members to showcase your projects, plans, designs, and gardens, with guest speakers from the community.

  • Full Access to all of the content on Substack

  • Future opportunities to join our Global Regenerative Landscape Design and Consultancy Service, with potential roles for those with the will and skill to join our design team.

  • An opportunity to take part in the group ownership of a Regenerative Landscape. You will find more details on that here.

Become a paid subscriber to our Substack to join. The annual subscription is currently $70 and the monthly subscription is $7 (monthly subscription excludes discounts for products and services) . You can join herewe look forward to meeting you!


The Plants 


The site is developing very well, the trees and shrubs are starting to produce fruits and a diversity of  vegetation has established in and around the alleys. 


This is a patch of dye plants (not sure of the species) that Catherine has been experimenting with in one of the alleys.


Welcome to our Online Store where you can find Forest Garden/ Permaculture plants, seeds, bulbs and Polyculture multi-packs along with digital goods and services such as Online Courses, Webinars, eBooks, and Online Consultancy.  We hope you enjoy the store and find something you like :) It's your purchases that keep our Project going. Yuu can also find our full list of trees. shrubs and herbs for forest gardens on our website here 

 


Catherine has also included Maize - Zea mays along with dye plant experiments in the alleys. Here you can see strips of Sulphur Cosmos - Cosmos sulphureus and annual that produces an orange-yellow dye, used in pre-Columbian America and later in southern Africa to dye wool, alongside Zea mays - Corn 


The fodder corn is growing well.


The Sulphur Cosmos - Cosmos sulphureus strip was full of Honey Bees - Apis mellifera


The  Aronia melanocarpa - Black Chokeberry and Chaenomeles speciosa - Jap. Quince in the shrubs row settled in very well and are producing good quantities of fruits.


Here you can see the polyculture tree rows with local native support plants in between. Catherine is growing more support plants for the inter row sections in a nursery garden in the village. 


The support species for the inter rows include 



A beneficial habitat feature such as a tyre pond, rock pile or early pollenizer polyculture is located in each belt. Here you can see a rock pile. Amphibians and reptiles such as toads, frogs, lizards, slow worms and snakes will benefit from rock piles providing shelter and basking areas. Dylan a keen "herper" who was with me during the visit mentioned that dark rocks would be preferred by the reptiles when basking as they provide better camouflage from predators such as eagles flying above.     


Apples are looking great 


Quince doing marvellously  



Irrigation and Ponds 


The middle pond was installed in the spring of 2017. The pond was located in an area to maximize the rainwater runoff collection and filled well this year. This summer the water has been pumped out to irrigate the establishing trees and shrubs via a drip irrigation system. This is a temporary measure until the upper reservoir and barn water catchment is complete. The plan is to integrate a range of aquatic plants into this pond and use it as back up for irrigation when needed.   You can find out more about this pond installation in our previous post - Small Pond Installations for Irrigation and Wildlife - Part 1


The Farm Building 


Catherine included a polycarbonate section of the farm barn roof, the plan being to cover the sides of this section with greenhouse plastic for use as a greenhouse which is an excellent idea. The farm barn roof will also serve as a rainwater catchment and should harvest approx. 121 m3 = 121000 L of rainwater each year that will drain into the upper reservoir to the east of the building.



The Nursery Garden 


Their house garden in the village is serving as a nursery for the dye plants and support plants for the farm as well as vegetable production and a processing hub. 


Catherine has been using Grease Wool (Wool as it is shorn from the sheep, before any processing) to mulch the nursery plants and vegetables in the garden. It's working very well and forms a dense weed suppressing mat permeable to both water and air and adds to the soil fertility over time as it decomposes.


Bunias orientalis - Turkish Rocket growing in the nursery garden.


It is such a great pleasure to see all of those thoughts during the design phase come to life on the ground and to witness the pioneering spirit of Catherine working through all of the obstacles to make it happen. You can follow what's going on at the farm from their website and facebook 

I continue to work with Catherine on her other sites in the region and I'm looking forward to returning to Bostan Bair this week where we are looking to expand on the implementation of an 80 ha concept design myself and Georgi Pavlov worked on in 2015

Regenerative Landscape Design - Bostan Bair - Illustration by Georgi Pavlov

Support Our Project 

If you appreciate the work we are doing you can show your support in several ways.

  • Become a member of the Bloom RoomA $70 annual or $7 per month subscription to our Substack provides you with access to live sessions, design tutorials, a members forum and more, see details here.

  • Make a purchase of plants or seeds from our Nursery or Online Store 

  • Joining us for one of our Practical Courses or Online Courses

  • Comment, like, and share our content on social media.


---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

We offer a diversity of plants and seeds for permaculture, forest gardens and regenerative landscapes including a range of fruit and nut cultivars. We Deliver all over Europe from Nov - March. - Give a happy plant a happy home :)


Our Bio-Nursery - Permaculture/Polyculture/ Regenerative Landscape Plants 





No comments:

Post a Comment