Edible Forest Gardens by Dave Jacke with Eric Toensmeier, in 2 volumes, 970 pages. Chelsea Green publisher, 2005
If you're a peak oil convert planning a saner way of living this book is absolutely essential. I've never seen a book crammed with more useful information--I wish I had this book 30 years ago. It would have saved decades of fumbling in the dark. This is a treatise on "biomimicry", that is; creating a permanent, self-sustaining woodland environment of mostly edible perennial plants, shrubs, and trees. The focus is on North American temperate zones. You get a step-by-step course on designing and creating a miniature ecosystem that includes medicinal herbs, fungi, microbes, insects, birds, etc. Biological principles, soil identification, climate analysis, and more are clearly and enthusiastically explained.
Polyculture results in "additive yielding" giving total crop yields equal to or superior to monocropping techniques--with considerably less labor--and soil that doesn't deplete, but actually becomes MORE fertile as time passes.
This practice is still in it's infancy--for Westerners-the native tribes practiced similar woodland horticulture for thousands of years (Read Charles Mann's "1491" for a heartbreaking insight into the catastrophic loss of plant knowledge due to the human dieoff caused by the introduction of Euro-asian diseases).
The appendices have already become my new best-plant reference. I was gratified to find that I have 38 of "The Best 100 Plants" in my own forest garden (which I really didn't know I was creating). "The Plant Species Matrix" contains specifics on over 600 desirable perennials-and how these plants interact to create a self-sustaining ecosystem. Climate zone, soil type, sunlight requirements, habitat function, edibility and medicinal uses, nitrogen-fixing ability, dynamic nutrient accumulators, flowering seasons of plants beneficial to bees and other pollinating insects--as well as spiders, invertibrates, amphibians, etc are all listed and cross referenced, as well as poisonous and invasive plants.
I could go on and on. Just let me say if you're serious about gardening, survival, environment, etc you must have this book. I consider it one of the best investments I've ever made. Note: I got the set from an outfit on Amazon that sells soiled or lightly damaged books. I got my set for $78 including shipping.
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I suppose this probably belongs in "planning for the future" but I felt I had to review something positive to make up for "Culture of Make Believe".





