Permaculture Design Course Handbook

Tag: Treeyo

  • TreeYo Project Update: Tiny Steps to Something Big

    TreeYo Project Update: Tiny Steps to Something Big

    When you manage so many different systems and ventures, it’s the tiny steps that indeed count most. After all, giant leaps can only happen after a thousand little steps.  So I walk these 60 acres (24 HA) of Treasure Lake with tiny steps because it’s how one works with nature, not against it.  My forest garden extends 45 acres (18 HA) through my active forest enhancement program and is dynamic in its seasonal management.  It’s non-stop on all fronts and the summer gives a great time for reflection while weeding. And it’s a lot of weeding, mostly shrub layer nonnatives, with chop and drop, but turning that problem into the solution is the backbone of my work here.  No direct income from these tasks. The true profit is that the long-term health of the forest and the wealth that will come in tiny ways along the journey of growth.

    Education

    Teaching remains one of my passions and every chance I get I try to maximize it fully since my schedule isn’t what it once was.  I do love to inspire and transmit info. Thus besides building out further the TreeYo EDU platform, I have had the honor of teaching once again in the format of a partnership with the living legend Abby Artemisia and her Wander School.  We long have been collaborating and she is indeed a solid teaching partner.  As foraging and botany are her main jams, we gel well together as teacher partners.  Blending her strengths with my deep love and thorough knowledge of the land of Treasure Lake, we find unique ways to offer Permaculture knowledge to many in the tristate area.  Our last offering of Planting Abundance once again featured Abby leading the plant walks with me supporting and feeding the participants through local foods.  In the afternoon it was my time to shine and Abby supporting while we did our short plant walks and then plantings.  In the space I call zone 3, it has gone through many iterations and went through a big push with all these helping hands of the beautiful group that joined us.  Since it is an outer zone, well-developed guilds were not the motif, rather building off of native ecology and previous plantings.  We added a riparian hedgerow of elderberry and hazelnut after the demonstration planting of russian hawthorn.  Already in that zone over the years we have planted chestnut, grafted paw paw, jujube, serviceberry and black capped raspberry cultivar Jewel.  We have also added terraces and applied the pioneering program of active forest enhancement that really is my life work besides this online platform to increase natural stands of paw paw.  Anyhow, the students that attend this class continue to form a tight knit community and I am delighted to be apart of it as well as furthering my connection with Abby.  Now I study Abby’s book, The Herbal Handbook for Homesteaders, to learn more from her and prepare further for our next class in late August.  Since I have been so hard at work with the paw paws over the years, I will offer my next lessons of paw paw propagation.  Click below for more info on our next course.

    Paw Paw Paradise Propagation and Advanced Foraging Adventure Class

    I will also be at Whippoorwill Festival in Kentucky speaking on both active forest enhancement and the unique tips for tree planting fair share program I have been facilitating here at the lake/bar.  In short, tips from our bar go to tree planting in my local community. They could simply go in my pocket but it stimulates community sharing and rural development.

    Whippoorwill Fest link

    Nursery

    Speaking of paw paws, the nursery work I have done for my own personal nursery beyond the Cincinnati Permaculture Insititute’s Growing Value Nursery that I work for, has been a huge success.  While not my top priority, it is a growing element within the design and management of Treasure Lake and my more rooted lifestyle.  From saving the seeds 10 months ago, to cold stratification for months, to sprouting them inside, to sowing them outside, to waiting for them to pop up their first leaves, well that moment of seeing them finally photosynthesizing is a proud papa moment.  They are mostly from my trees at my parents house which are seedlings of grafted varieties and are fantastic producers, weight, and flavour. I also have sown seeds from selected ones from the wilds at Treasure Lake that are big and bountiful. I look forward to saving more seeds this year and scaling my personal nursery up. I intend to teach more of this including to the upcoming class and in the TreeYo EDU platform.  I also am still selling plants here at the lake through the CPI nursery so get your designs in order for fall planting and come see me.

     

    Observations

    Observation is such a key to Permaculture and through my readings on the psychology of long term success, I have come to identify that our deliberate daily practivce that forms grit, is indeed observation.  It is here patterns illuminate through the protracted and thoughtful observation that frames permaculture design process and its systems management.  So as summer has begun, the rains have been intense, and now the heat builds.  Growth is remarkable and to notice the little changes necessary to keep the system going is vital.  I notice when moles or deer do crop damage, when disease or pests invade, I see when growth rates are dizzying, when fruits are born from flowers and ripen into food.  I see when insects provide services of pollination, I see an ever evolving mosaic of plants responding to my active forest enhancement treatment. with a caring eye, I watch carefully over the trees and vines that have been planted this year and beyond.  I watch rain both create and destroy. I observe as the newly created clay pool seals.  I notice the beehive evolve and respond.  And then there is the observation of community and self growth with all of its ups and downs, turns and twists.

    Tiny Steps

    Oh and by the way, I moved into a tiny house this last month as well.  I have been looking at getting a tiny house for the last six months as my living situation at Treasure Lake has been less than ideal but also great in some ways.  Me and rent don’t get along so it’s been good in that way.  But after looking at tiny houses on tinyhouselistings.com for six months, I always came back to the the petite cabin built by the Collins family in Northeastern, Indiana, about 3.5 hours from Treasure Lake (Collins Custom Tiny Homes).  Online I loved the smaller size, good craftsmanship, unique touches, and homely feel, and the price.  I am not a builder of much to be honest, a skill I intend to learn more of in this lifetime.  And upon going and seeing the cabin after dealing with bouts of fear, well it was an easy choice to buy this as all that was online was even better in person and the builders top notch folks.  Built with chemical sensitivity in mind, sturdiness, functionality, and beauty, I am very happy with the choice as I slowly move in and make the necessary steps to live in a tiny house.  It already has generated a buzz of others wanting to build out the community here at Treasure Lake with similar dwellings.  I am very thankful to the builders and to my folks who are supporting since I steward a major asset in the family, 60 acres, 15 minutes from the airport and 30 minutes to downtown Cincinnati/ Covington.

    Design Work

    I also continue to do work on the design front with the infusion of Permaculture in a park at the old Lesourdsville site in Monroe, Ohio.  A blend of treasure Lake and an amusement park is what it was and a dynamic new public park to be.  Below are some fo the powerpoint design drawings that are still being built out.  But with the scope being focused and our objectives determined after meetings and protracted and thoughtful observation, I am enjoying designing this memorial garden with several stakeholders. And honestly its a lot easier to do this kinda work within the tiny house.

     

    Furthermore, I have a few more clients waiting in the wings as we move forward with design/ consulting services in the initial phase.  I go forward with managing all the unique specific spaces and managing the 60 acres here.  It’s evolving at Treasure Lake and so am I.  The community around continues to be dynamic and supportive and I see some travels in the future.  The TreeYo platform is being built out with long time TreeYo collaborator and past student Matt Gillespie.  Along the way we debate many philosophical underpinnings of society that can create sustained succession of consciousness and I have the feeling you will love his stuff and we intend to share it widely.  So happy summer growing!

    Matt G, enjoying the clay of the cold pool spa at Treasure Lake
  • Treeyo Project Update:  Evolving through Rooting

    It was an itinerant permaculture teaching and project installation company, a brand identified with being on the move.  I made the conscious choice to not go on with this lifestyle for many reasons. Rather rooting into community and long term intensive site development is the goal.  This holistic vision has kept me put in Northern Kentucky since 2017 September other than a working holiday this past fall/ winter to my familiar Iberian roots.

    Teaching

    What once was my staple, teaching, has now dwindled down consciously and due to lack of interest in my local market for current offerings.  I tried to run a weekend PDC this again winter but that didn’t work here in the Cincinnati tristate region.  I did get to teach here at the lake on the topics of food forest and forestry in the Year Long PDC run by Braden Truth and the Cincinnati Permaculture Institute.  It really is a

    Treasure Lake Zone 3 Planting
    Treasure Lake Zone 3 Planting with Year Long PDC group

    passion of mine to teach and always nice to show off the work you have been doing for nearly two decades in the forest (more on that below). It was a great group and we did get some work done in a zone 3 area I have been developing including last falls earthworks.  The space has been evolving since 2014 and will take its next evolution in the upcoming day class with Abby Artemisia in our event called Planting Abundance on May 18th.  Unique offerings like this is what I will try as I work my way into other avenues of teaching, rather than the globetrotting PDC circuit.

    https://treeyopermaculture.com/permaculture-design-courses-pdc/herbal-walk-and-permaculture-planting-with-abby-and-doug/

    Abby did interview me for a podcast as well and I got to talk about my passion of Paw Paw’s.

    https://soundcloud.com/wander-forage-wildcraft/wfw-ep-4-meet-doug-crouch

    I will also be offering workshops at the Whippoorwill Festival in July in Kentucky and rumor is I might be starting to teach at University of Cincinnati’s horticulture department for Permaculture.

    Treasure Lake

    The fall last year, 2018, was brutal with the continued heat and non stop event planning and all the work and maintenance that comes with that.  I then left for Europe as soon as we closed for the season and finally took a breath to work on another passion; writing.  After spending three months in Iberia I cracked on with my beloved winter forestry work that I among calling Active Forest Management and launching a new movement around that.  The cutting of non natives and natives to make way for the understory paw paw and spicebush, the continuing to plug up streams with rock dams and woody debris, small and large diameter, and felling trees for mushroom innoculation.  This year I worked with one of my closest neighbors who has a shining example of 1/2 acre permaculture, Daniel Biedenbender, on the mushroom inoculation.  We removed quite a few box elders in the aforementioned zone 3 space that we are developing. The logs this time are at his fathers house down the road by a few miles as resources are starting to not be so boundary centric in the building of community here in Petersburg, KY. This winter work is great prep for getting the physical body back in shape for the looming busyness of spring. Much of that spring time has been devoted to nursery work again with the Cincinnati Permaculture Insititues Growing Value Nursery having a spillover/ secondary location here at the lake.  It’s fun work, but tough on the body indeed and honestly I am glad it has just a few more hours of work to be done to resettled for the season. Alongside of that I have been sprouting hundreds of Paw Paw seed from selected fruits from last years harvest.  Fun stuff as I put together elements of my own nursery as well.

    Speaking of mushrooms, our King Stropharia beds that were inoculated in May and June of 2018 came thumping along with honestly more mushrooms than we could handle (and now a second flush is happening).  Emphatically by the bag full we have been harvesting them! I had never grown them before and will be better prepared for selling next flush.  For now we have all been eating lots of mushrooms around here since again the morel season hasn’t been great and these mushrooms keep us satisfied.  Part of those beds are also part of a western hedgerow on the edge of Annie Woods Dark Wood Farm market garden.  All the plants are super thriving which is a great sign to know that these mushrooms can be cultivated along with perennials like fruit trees, berrybushes, and perennial veg.  I definitely did have to pull the wood chips and fall leaves away from the trunks of the plants as the wine cap mycelium is indeed very aggressive. I have planted in more currants, Jostaberry, and gooseberry to finish filling out the space.

    The other hedgerow, on the north end of the market garden, originally planted in fall 2017, continues to expand.  Everything is looking great, even the pear I had to whack back just above the graft after the deer rub got it as there was a miscommunicationabotu fencing when I left to Europe in the fall.  oops.  These nuclei are great to see displaying the small scale intensive principle for sure. And being full on growth during this warm and wet spring it is chop and drop time of course as well. Furthermore, I am now dropping in a few more layers of the food forests hedgerow as I developed the anchors and guild herbaceous plants and now adding more fruiting bushes like currants, Aronia, and more.  I have also expanded both east and west with more fruit tree nuclei, Japanese plum and Asian Pear, which meets up against a back stop that my grandfather had built for his dreams of having a softball diamond here.  It had become junk pile over the years but some hard work has it ready for vines, I do believe hardy kiwi it is. Maybe Akebia, decision has to be made today, ha. Oh and some hoops too!

    The businesses of Treasure Lake have also been a backdrop ongoing conversation and evolution with the owners, my father and my two aunties.  So we decided to shut the pay fishing lake, campground, and the bar other than our Tuesday Night Ping Pong and Friday night Open Jam (now turning into Sunday afternoon instead of Friday), which are quite communal events.  The culture of camping and the pay lake and the event production of music shows honestly had become toxic with people simply over doing it and not respecting the land (not everyone but a few rotten apples do spoil the bunch).  Unfortunately people live in excess, I once was there and am no saint, although quite sober these days.  Anyway this allows me to have more time and space to dedicate to projects here on the land and elsewhere and build community further.

    Pong jam
    Pong jam

    Community

    The biggest journey of living in this economically depressed rural area during tough times in the states other than for the wealthy is indeed building community. There is a small group of us, but it is expanding as the roots are put down further.  Running a bar at the lake does generate tips and rather than take it all for myself, i simply use it as a tree planting fund.  So both the local Biedenbender homesteads, Daniel and Colleen and Josh and Maddy, have received big donations of plants to make their homesteads more robust and our community more resilient.  Our network extends beyond this but these are the folks I work with the most in my local area. I also am working with my longtime event production co manager, Bryan Schaffer and we will soon get his pear trees in the ground that were also donated through the tips for tree planting program. Furthermore, I of course work with Annie Woods and her Dark Wood Farm market garden that is still on the land as well.  There are still next steps and people are constantly asking about moving to this area since it is only 30 minutes from downtown Cincinnati, Covington, and Newport, our tri-cities on the river. Also I continue to make my trips two hours south to continue building community with the Berea crews it is my respite.

    Lesourdsville

    Another exciting opportunity I am working on is turning a normal park design into a permaculture landscape.  More on that one in the next blog as we are moving from vision and assessment phase into the conceptual design in this moment.

    Lesourdsville, becoming anew park
    Lesourdsville in Monroe, Ohio, becoming anew park

    There is a lot going on in life these days and big next steps are occurring in rooting, even if they are tiny.  Hint that was foreshadowing.

  • New Article: Cut and Carry: Animals Chapter

    New Article: Cut and Carry: Animals Chapter

    As the debate rages on whether we should be eating meat or not, I publish my latest article within the animals chapter to present another key facet to holistic animal management; Cut and Carry. Its a traditional technique that has been adapted by Permaculturists to ensure healthier animals and pastures. Read about it here and the nuances of it all. meanwhile enjoy the wonderful new header art from my dear friend and fellow permit, Joana Amorim. https://treeyopermacultureedu.com/animal-systems/cut-and-carry/