Thread #2984178
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With the world going the way it is, I'd like to grow as much food on my own yard as possible and could use some advice and suggestions on what to do with it.
Here's a map of the yard with everything currently growing on it. My current plans are to plant a third row of currants in the eastmost yard, possibly a hedge of chokeberries along the road, and I'm thinking of planting one apple tree in the triangular batch of grass behind the shed. Beside those, the large front yard next to the road is currently entirely unused, so how would you optimize it's usage? Any other tips I should take into consideration?
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>>2984178
Here's a version without texts, in case you feel like drawing your plans on the map.
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>>2984178
"As much as possible" involves turning almost everything into vegetable garden and actively working it. It is a lot of work and monetarily not worth it at all unless you are unemployed AND unemployable. If you want mostly passive growing edible things, then that's a different matter.
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>>2984178
Get a fence. You'll soon find out your suburban home is closer to nature than you thought. Deer will show up and eat everything. Or at least sample everything while leaving pieces just to let you know they were there.
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>>2984241
I am indeed thinking of converting the whole yard (aside the pool) into a vegetable garden. Work needed isn't that big of a deal actually, because it gives some reason to get out of the house and enjoy the summer while it lasts. I dug up ground and planted 100+ peas last summer, but a lot of them got eaten by snails which is why I'm going to get planter boxes for any non-perennial plants like that from now on. But having the plants grow passively is a bonus, especially if it means the crops that aren't dependent on being able to buy supplies from a store.
>>2984265
I actually have chain link fences around the yard already, and after last summer's experiments I'm upgrading the lower half of them to a finer mesh to keep rabbits away too.
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>>2984179
Orchards produce more food per square foot than any other plant. The caveat is that it takes 5-8 years for the trees to start actually producing any fruit, so it might be too late for that already.
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Not OP, but my parents have a small garden with a fence around it like pic rel made from these green posts and wire. The problem is they want me to fix their gate and I have no idea how.
The gate they made was a simple wood frame with wires embedded in the center. The issue is they had nothing to secure it to except one of these green posts, but turns out these things can't handle much weight. Fine for light wires but not a heavy door since they bend and wobble every time you open/close it. So now the gate is sagged and tilting and starting to damage the rest of the fence.
I'm gonna have to take the gate apart and secure it, but how? Is there a simple way that doesn't involve like pouring cement into the ground?
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>>2984178
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>>2984178
I'm doing something similar. I plan to install 4 fruit trees and I'm not sure how to place them if you guys have any advice
I was thinking two on the north edge at the east corner, one on the east end somewhere, and one along the south edge on the east side
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Apparently aronia is more recommended for hedges in Finland, so I got everything in order to plant aronia bushes all along the outside fence of the yard. That should provide dozens of kilos of edible berries each year with little maintenance needed.
I'm also leaning towards another plot of strawberries on the southwest side of the house, because the northern plot alone has been providing surprisingly bountiful harvests during summers already. Also, as peas collect nitrogen from the air and strawberries consume it, planting peas in the same plot with the strawberries seems like such a no-brainer I'd like to know why everyone isn't doing it yet. Is there a reason not to mix the crops, especially when it would make them seemingly self-fertilizing?