viernes, 28 de junio de 2013
jueves, 6 de junio de 2013
Hugelkultur
Parametros de una nueva civilizaciòn
NATURAL PERMACULTURE GARDENING
by Jonathan Parker
April 10, 2013
from NaturalBlaze Website
Jonathan Parker is an EMT-Paramedic and Preparedness Instructor with a love for emergency medicine, self-sufficiency and homesteading. His goal is to empower people towards a natural and sustainable lifestyle. - See more at:
http://www.naturalblaze.com/2013/04/hugelkultur-natural-permaculture.html
The video below is a brief introduction to hugelkultur by sustainability genius Jack Spirko:
Beautiful
gardens are cropping up all over the country, and not just your basic flower
garden. Many major universities have spent years and millions of dollars
studying and even building amazing edible forest gardens that will produce
larger and larger quantities of food as they grow.
One of my favorite
agriculture experiences so far has been learning about hugelkulture. The name translates
from German to mean "hill culture", and it's an amazingly simple
concept.
You see, the concept of permaculture is to create self maintaining agriculture layouts that are modeled from ecosystems occurring naturally. Mother Nature knows best, after all. Massive rows of engineered plants may produce a bumper crop... once, but requires constant work, pesticides and watering, and must be rebuilt every growing season.
Hugelkultur is almost the complete opposite. It uses nature's own
production to continually hydrate and feed your plants. And it's so simple.
Raised beds over rotting wood.
In nature, when trees are uprooted and
collapse, within a few years, or even months, they become a completely different
block of the ecosystem. As the fallen logs rot and decay, they become porous and
soft, retaining moisture and an abundance of nutrients that aid in new plant
growth. The dead logs are also havens for all sorts of wonderful critters, and
store heat energy and nitrogen, creating a warm, nurturing haven for young
plants.
Hugelkultur takes all of these benefits and puts them to work for
your home garden. You can implement a raised bed system in your garden, maybe
with some of those greedy plants that need lots of water to flourish, and see
the benefits for yourself.
The best
part? If done correctly, your hugelkultur plot will not only maintain healthy
soil, but as the logs decay and aerate (introduce air) the humus, they will
actually become more productive over the years!
A simple
concept
Hugelkultur is a very basic
concept. Raised beds of soil, over rotting logs.
And there
are many benefits to a plot like this.
You
can garden with little irrigation and no fertilization. As the logs decay, they
become spongy and absorbent. (This is why it's important, but not necessary, to
use older logs).
One
big rain and the water will seep into the logs and slowly dissipate into the
surrounding soil.
Believe it or not, many people water only once or even
not at all with their hugelkultur beds. This may not be the case for everyone.
When you first place the logs, if they are fresh cut, they will still absorb
some water, but you may have to irrigate for the first year.
The gift that keeps giving
Permaculture is
wonderful thing. Building a sustainable, edible ecosystem is an investment in
your future and your health.
We all
love fresh fruits and vegetables, but many find it difficult to find time to
work outdoors. With a hugelkultur plot, your initial hard work will pay off more
as the years go by. The decaying logs will expand and collapse, forming small
air pockets that aerate the soil and helps avoid breaking up hard, packed soil
every year.
With the
exception of the first year or so, the logs become spongy and
absorbent.
And, last but not
least, it benefits the environment
Imagine you are walking in the woods after a nice summer rain.
Droplets
fall around you and you take a deep breath. That amazing earthy smell? Humic
acid. With the word "acid" you may think it's a bad thing, but it is actually
one of the signs of healthy soil and is created through the decomposition of
vegetative materials by microbes, this leads to the creation of the humus
layer.
Humus is organic material that has broken down as far as it can.
It allows soil organisms to feed and reproduce. Humic acid is also key in
creating a fungal soil. The fungi in the soil bonds with plant roots and allow
them to absorb more nutrients from the soil.
Due to
its dark color, it also helps absorb heat from the sun, and soils rich in humus
will maintain higher temperatures that surrounding earth.
Your
hugelkultur bed becomes a factory under your garden, mass producing these
amazing resources right under your garden! The warm soil and composting logs
also create a vacation spot for earthworms and other insects, which will further
add to the nutrient content of your soil.
Well, we know there are many methods of permaculture, and this is only one. But it's a good one. If you have a section of your yard or garden that you haven't quite figured out what to do with, maybe a hugelkultur bed would be the perfect fit. Permaculture provides a future from which we can reap many benefits for years to come.
The video
below is a brief introduction to hugelkultur by sustainability genius Jack
Spirko:
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LA NOTICIA "INCOMODA"
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