Friday, January 23, 2015

The Founding of a Fedge (and other stories from Your Garden)

Before and after our work days
Photos by Eliza Lord
If you haven't heard the latest about the Upstate's first public, volunteer permaculture garden, get ready for the good news. Your Garden has begun. Like the recent warm, sunshiny break from winter (which made for a fantastic foray into the first plantings this past week end!), we hope this project will be a catalyst for useful permaculture plant growing and sharing. Photosynthesis everywhere, baby! Since our first work day last October, members of the South Carolina Upstate Permaculture Society have pulled ivy, cut down shrubs, dug stumps, built swale terraces, moved a monstrous mound of mulch and lovingly placed the first plants into the welcoming earth. And that is just the beginning.
Marking swales at Summit Drive Elementary. Photo by Nathaniel Lord
 Back in August, SCUPS met to brainstorm a possible project and location, somewhere that would be clearly visible to the public and also have the ability to be replicated. Since Eliza had been given permission to plant along an overgrown strip at Summit Drive Elementary, we zoomed in on that as the most viable sounding plan. (You will have to ask Eliza how she got permission to plant there, but it might have something to do with some privets getting a new hairdo.)

diagram by Graham Burnett
Since then, Eliza has designed the site to include a fedge (food + hedge), utilizing both the existing ecosystem's structure and the generosity of SCUPS members for fruit trees, shrubs, wildflowers and herbs. Black locust trees, with their edible flowers and dense wood grain, are already part of the canopy, fixing nitrogen in the soil, feeding bees with their nectar and providing a trellis for future fruiting vines. Other useful species already in place are hickory, mulberry and trifoliate orange.
Soil dwelling scarab larvae
Photo by Nathaniel Lord

The goal for this garden is manifold in function! For SCUPS members, it will eventually provide plants and seeds, as we thin, divide and propagate on upcoming work days. For the school and community at large, it will be an educational walk, with signs added to identify plants and their functions in the ecosystem and within their guilds, as well as an opportunity for the school to incorporate permaculture related activities into their curricula.
Monarch Butterfly
Photo by Eliza Lord

And it goes without saying that the site will be a haven and habitat for many creatures besides humans. 
In particular, we plan to plant lots of milkweed to aid the struggling monarch butterfly population. Birds, amphibians, lizards, snakes and other native pollinators are also most welcome.



October saw our first work day at the site, and it was a complete success. Members came from all over the Upstate and beyond to participate. 
Shaping swale terraces
Photo by Eliza Lord

The major tasks we tackled included clearing a large area that was overgrown with shrubs and English ivy, and putting in some small earthworks to help the soil retain water on the steep slope.

Crushed hickory nuts
Photo by Tina Huba
Participants brought their own bagged lunches, but were regaled with tastes of local gourmet, not least of which were Eliza's mom Joan's homemade pomegranate jelly, made from the fruit from the family heirloom tree. We also had fresh, ripe fruit from the aforementioned tree, white currant tomatoes, pawpaw fruit, and maple syrup sweetened hickory nut milk from nuts patiently pounded by the teens in the group.

 A shrubbery!
Photo by Eliza Lord
Young loquat
Notice the green oats
Photo by Eliza Lord
Last Sunday, on January 18, we met for work again, albeit in fewer numbers, and were finally able to finish spreading the wood chip mulch and put in the first plants. We checked the swale terraces, which had been sown with oats around their outer edge, and they had held up well through many winter rains. Though it hadn't rained in several days, the wood chips inside were moist and full of earthworms and new mycelia. Some of the oats had winter killed, which we expected, but some were still surprisingly green after having temperatures drop to single digits earlier this month. These green oat terraces were identified as warm microclimates, and the new home for several young loquats. Other plants to join them were pawpaw seedlings, yarrow, mints and their herbal near of kin.

Many thanks to everyone who planned, worked, donated plants or participated in this project in any way. We hope to plant and cultivate not only a garden food forest, but a culture rooted in ecological principles, earth care and people care, each living member mutually supporting, and being supported by, each of the others.

You can get involved!
We have regular work days planned, and if you cannot make it to any one of these, here is a list of plants you can donate. 

Upcoming work days:
Location: 424 Summit Drive, Greenville
Tuesday, January 27, from 10am - 12pm
Every Tuesday after that from 10am - 12 pm unless otherwise announced
Saturday, February 21, from 10am - 1pm
Saturday, April 4 from 10am - 3pm
Sunday, May 10, from 10am - 3pm

Check our Facebook page for more SCUPS events and educational opportunities.

Not a member of SCUPS yet? Go here to join.



1 comment:

  1. Yay! Thanks for writing such a great summary of our labors thus far.

    ReplyDelete