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1 Week Ago
#1
Noob
Bang's garden. Food, medicine, etc
If I'm not changing diapers or trying to mess with car audio, I'll be in the garden
It's the most rewarding hobby I've ever had. To see plants flourish and to taste such fresh produce is amazing.
I started with mainly veggies and herbs and am now adding berries, fruit trees, grapes, and now medicinal flowers/plants.
With the little space I have, I'm trying to grow as much as I can, to need the supermarket less and less.
I'm mostly growing in the ground and some fabric pots here and there.
Most plants are grown for consumption, but there are some plants that aren't edible to be used for biomass, fertilizer/mulching, or to attract pollinators.
I'm in zone 9a so some annuals can act like perennials here. Mediterranean climate. Dry.
Here's a picture from last year
A more recent one:
The garden is about 3 years old now.
Here's the beginning on 2021:
Last edited by James Bang; 1 Week Ago at 01:22 AM.
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1 Week Ago
#2
Noob
Re: Bang's garden. Food, medicine, etc
Here's the Mediterranean Herb section:
In the picture, there's some fenugreek, rue, rosemary, marjoram, sage, lavender (English and French I think), and some thyme. Oregano growing elsewhere.
Last edited by James Bang; 1 Week Ago at 01:23 AM.
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1 Week Ago
#3
Noob
Re: Bang's garden. Food, medicine, etc
West side of the house is where some random herbs that don't need full sun is grown:
Lemon balm, more sage, catnip, basil, perilla, parsley, some swiss chard. The far end has some black berries and a baby fig tree growing. To the right of the picture, you can see the passion fruit vine growing up a trellis so it can shade the west wall of the house to lower my cooling costs during the summer. Helped a whole lot.
Last edited by James Bang; 1 Week Ago at 11:34 AM.
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1 Week Ago
#4
Noob
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1 Week Ago
#5
Noob
Re: Bang's garden. Food, medicine, etc
To help feed the chickens, I farm black soldier fly larvae (BSFL). BSFL eat just about everything, except carbonous stuff and bones. They eat every thing else my composting worm farm doesn't. Dairy products, fats, means, even literal shit, they will devour.
Unlike composting worms which produce worm castings, which is amazing for microbes, BSFL just get big and fat and then self-harvest to be fed to the chickens who love them. Just about half fat and half protein.
They crawl upwards when they reach a certain age and size, to get out of the stanky food to hopefully hatch and get their wings.
The up ramp gets funneled into a hole, which they drop into a harvest bin where they wait to get eaten.
Life is good.
They also get the salad bar
https://i.imgur.com/UkpbsDN.mp4
A local micro-brewer also gives me his spent grain which the chickens eat.
Last edited by James Bang; 1 Week Ago at 09:16 AM.
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1 Week Ago
#6
Re: Bang's garden. Food, medicine, etc
Awesome garden and use of the space you have there. I want to get a veggie garden going, but just find I never have the time to actually tend to it and so it goes to crap.
[QUOTE = James Bang]
Such easy creatures to care for and they give eggs
[/QUOTE]
They do give eggs and taking care of them is pretty easy, but at least here, it can be insanely stressful trying to keep them alive. We have had them snatched by -
Bears - just bent the fence over and snatched a chicken.
Foxes - During the day we let them free range on the property, not uncommon to realize one is missing and eventually find a pile of feathers in the woods.
Hawks - Just snatch them.
Came across a big black snake snacking on the eggs one day, just left him alone to finish his meal.
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1 Week Ago
#7
Noob
Re: Bang's garden. Food, medicine, etc
Sucks to hear about all the predators you have eyeing your chickens. I hear about people having a few dogs to help ward of the likes of foxes. Some say having black chickens and fake crow statues somewhat ward off hawks.
As for maintaining veggies, I would highly suggest timed irrigation, so instead of the plants dying if you slack off, they'll go out of control instead, which is a better problem to have. If anything, the stuff will go to seed to save for later, can be used as chicken fodder, or biomass for the compost pile.
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1 Week Ago
#8
Noob
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6 Days Ago
#9
Noob
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6 Days Ago
#10
Noob
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