I just sustain back from a week - long visit to South Florida … and that means it ’s time for another update on the Great South Florida Food Forest Project !
The Great South Florida Food Forest Project is looking great !
It ’s awful how much can go on in a month . The manioc is at least a metrical unit or two tall … the wing yams have emerged and are latch on about … and the sand is turn into a rich , black grime burst with earthworms . Dad has been piling on constitutive matter and the deviation in dirt inside the nutrient timber plot is astounding . seem at this :

Soil in South Florida never looks like the handful on the right wing . Success !
The guts on the left was taken from a path just out of doors where he ’s been stacking biomass … the soil on the right is assume from just inside the logarithm boundary at the edge of the food woods . I knewdeep mulchingwas the key to creating fertile earth in the tropical zone but I still observe this transformation amazing . It ’s taken months , not years , to change sluttish gray backbone into soil . Sure , the grim area is only about an inch deeply properly now – but that in of grunge would ’ve taken age for a wood to establish .
While in Ithiel Town , I added some new paths and expanded the woods boundaries by another eight feet on one side . Check out the new stepping Stone :

The Great South Florida Food Forest Project is looking great!
Related posts:
Frost Protection for Moringa, Citrus and Other Tropicals
Open a Jackfruit the Easy Way: an Illustrated…
Creating Paths in a Food Forest
A front yard food forest tour!
Find the Core of Gardening Success in Florida…
The Good Gardening Alley Food Forest System is…
Want a FAST food forest? Try a crazy…
The Govec Food Forest Project in Slovenia
A South Florida Food Forest Video
Florida Fall Garden the Easy Way!

The Great South Florida Food Forest Project is looking great!

The Great South Florida Food Forest Project is looking great!

The Great South Florida Food Forest Project is looking great!


Soil in South Florida never looks like the handful on the right. Success!

Soil in South Florida never looks like the handful on the right. Success!







