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1-Day Introductory Permaculture Farming Tour
Varney 5-acre & Shepard 100-acre Permaculture Farms   --  July 20th, 2008
                                                        Sorry -The morning tour is now full.
      You may still register for the afternoon tour of Mark Shepard's farm beginning after lunch at 12:30.


Key Features of this Introductory Tour

Mark Shepard Lecturing

  • The ‘what’s and whys’ of permaculture
  • The essential principles and components of a good permaculture design
  • Natural water harvesting
  • Soil building techniques
  • Simple plant guilds
  • Marketing ideas
  • Income possibilities
Mark Shepard

Imagine a farming system where the yields increase almost yearly for three decades,
                                                   and then level off at peak production for three generations or more.

In permaculture farming, there is almost no annual plowing, tilling or planting, minimal weeding and watering, and no artificial fertilizers, herbicides or pesticides are used. Healthy soil is built up year after year. This is permaculture farming at its best and Mark & Jen Shepard, and Dave & Erin Varney, are attempting to prove its economic and environmental viability on their respective farms just 25-minutes down the road from each other.


Day Begins at 9:30am with Introductory Talk and Tour at One Sun Farm
Dave & Erin Varney's 5-Acre Permaculture Farm ( S4374 Haugrud Hollow, La Farge, WI 54639)

Dave & Erin Varney
Varyne's One Sun Farm

Pictures
To get a good look at the
Shepard and Varney Farms,
View the June 2007 Permaculture Course Picture Summary
.
(Might take a minute to load.)

Dave studied permaculture with Mark, helping on Mark's farm in the earlier days, and then launched off on his own, with Erin. What the Varney's are doing is a great permaculture-farming experiment on just 5-acres.

They will share much about their successes and challenges as they have built this farm up from almost nothing over the last 7 years. Be sure to view the picture summary at right for some great pictures and more details about their permaculture approach.

Come and learn about their multifaceted approach to this holistic approach to farming. Specific to their operation is their organic vegetable production that supplies fresh veggies for sale and for their 'homemade frozen pizza' business, their fabulous garlic crop and their successional permaculture crops of hazelnuts, chestnuts, raspberries and more.

The Morning Schedule - At Varney's Farm
                     9:00a.m.              Registration opens
(Bring your own coffee and morning snack)
                     9:30                     Introductory talk on Permaculture Farming Fundamentals
                   10:00
                    Meet Dave and Erin Varney - Tour begins
                   11:30                     Erin serves lunch with their own farm food
(included with tour)
                   12:30                     End
- Head over to Mark & Jen Shepard's farm for afternoon tour

The Afternoon Schedule - At Shepard's Farm
                   12:00p.m.              Registration opens
(Bring your own afternoon snack)
                   12:30                     Introductory talk on Permaculture Farming Fundamentals
                                                    
(same basic overview as in a.m. but for 'afternoon only' registrants)
                     1:00
                    Meet Mark Shepard - Tour begins
                     4:30                     End


 

Afternoon Tour - New Forest Farm
Mark & Jen Shepard's 100-Acre Permaculture Farm (15662 County Hwy. I,  Viola, WI  54664)

Mark Shepard is one of the first (and still the few) to take the principles and concepts of permaculture and apply them on a farming scale in the U.S.

Chinese Chestnut
Some of Mark's Chestnuts

Mark asked the insightful question when he took his permaculture training 14 years ago, "where are we going to get all of the carbohydrates and proteins that this nation consumes if the modern model of raising soybeans and corn is ever to be replaced by more ecologically sound farming practices?"

Upon further study, Mark realized that much of north america was once covered by the mighty oak-savana successional brushlands, one of the most biologically diverse and productive bio-regions on the planet.Two of the dominant species, the hazelnut and the chestnut, grew in great abundance. What is fascinating is that these two nuts have a remarkably similar protein and carbohydrate profile to corn and soybean and they also produce a tremendous amount of oil -- a perfect replacement crop for corn and soy.

Mark Shepard's Hazelnuts
...and Hazelnuts

Just about every food stuff manufactured with corn and soy can be replaced with hazelnut and chestnut. The biggest advantage however to converting corn and soybean fields into nut crops is the fact that the hazelnut and chestnut plants are perennials. Once planted, they can live for hundreds of years and the soil beneath them will never need plowing or tilling again. The farmer never has to plant a crop again thus never exposing the soil to water and wind erosion -- significant due to the fact that we have lost half of the topsoil on the North American continent. There is strong evidence that most of the Middle East and Northern Africa were once very fertile areas before annual agriculture opened the fields.

Mark's farm now consists of thousands of hazelnut bushes and chestnuts trees along with 2 dozen other kinds of perennials including hawthorn, mulberry, apple, pear, cherry, raspberry and asparagus.

See article summary about Mark's work and his permaculture farm at bottom of this page.
(by writer Edson Freeman
)

Erik Shepard
Mark Shepard with his pigs

Erik Shepard enjoying the harvest

Mark with three of his best workers

Registration & Details

Tour Fee - $95 (At door and 4-days before)
Pre-Register for an early-registration-discounted fee of $75
     
Only Available for a half day?
         Morning Tour at Varney's             $40    (Full - Afternoon Still Open)
         
Afternoon Tour at Shepard's        $55    (No early registration discount for half day tours.)

Registration
Click Here to Register On-line

You may register for the afternoon only. The morning tour is full.

You may also call Becky at 815-256-2215 for questions, a request for group or family discounts, and/or for registering over the phone. ( MasterCard, Visa, Discover -- or mail in a personal check)

50% Discount for Design Course Students: If you are a graduate of one of our courses, or have registered for any of our future design courses and have paid your full tuition, you may participate in this or any of our future day tours at Mark's farm at half price. We encourage all our past and future students to attend this tour if at all possible.

What to Bring
This is a living farm with critters -- domestic and wild. Come with a hat, long pants and sleeves (for sun, chiggers, ticks), your own water bottle (well water is available for refills), morning and/or afternoon snacks and a light-weight folding chair (if you don't like to be on your feet all day). There is no rain date, so please be dressed for the weather. If it is wet, there will be some mud.

Come early. We will start on time.

 

Chestnuts of (permaculture) Wisdom

by Edson Freeman
(A review of Mark Shepard's OEFFA workshop presentation - March 2007)

Growing up in New England, Mark Shepard's influences included his father, who planted a wide variety of fruit trees and berry bushes in the back yard, and "some grouchy old guy" down the road - who turned out to be none other than Scott Nearing (The Good Life).

Now, after a lifetime of studying and growing plants, some permaculture training, authoring a book or two, helping to establish Midwest Permaculture, and living the life he believes in, some fortunate series of events led him to the Ohio Ecological Food and Farm Association (OEFFA) conference which I attended last weekend (March 2007). [I've written about my thoughts on the conference in general over here.]

Mark has probably told these stories and given these speeches hundreds of times before, but he brings so much energy and humor and brightness to the material that makes it downright infectious. He went through so many ideas that made me say, "wow," that I haven't come close to remembering everything, nor have I had time to look up the things I do remember so I can see how it all works. I hope I'm getting the details right, or at least close.

One of his main themes was what he calls the savanna model. The natural habitat in much of North America was once oak savanna - a mix of grassland and woodland. He said because the savanna takes advantage of three dimensions, vegetation high, low, and everywhere in between, you can get sixty vertical feet of photosynthesis, pull water and nutrients up from much deeper in the soil, and over time, build up some of the richest soil on earth. The savanna model can support more total biomass than almost any other system - seven times more biomass than a cornfield. In addition to large amounts of vegetation, African savannas can support very large fauna, just

Mastadon

as the North American savanna used to. He quizzed us on what large animals used to roam these parts, and we all replied "bison." No, he said, bison were merely the medium to small fauna. The large fauna were things like the mastodons and woolly mammoths.

So that was the kind of potential for biomass this part of the country could support, if we adopted the savanna model. How? By using the concept of stacking to grow more plants and animals in less space, even while improving the ecosystem. The savanna model can be imitated in a highly productive way by growing more woody plants and trees that bear useful products, interspersed with grazing animals on pasture or more perennial food crops like asparagus. The beauty of this approach is that it reduces to almost zero the amount of tilling, seed starting, planting, and cultivating. And once established, labor decreases and output increases over time.

He discussed the fact that every civilization that took the majority of its carbohydrates, fats, and calories from annual crops eventually failed. Soil erosion, soil depletion, and energy costs for annual crops do not scale up well. At least not unless you have a cheap, abundant energy source, like fossil fuels, to prop the system up with.

At that point, he asked for a show of hands of how many people were familiar with the concept of Peak Oil. Even among that eco-savvy crowd, only handful out of several hundred raised their hands. He showed a couple graphs that would probably be familiar to anybody who has looked into Peak Oil, but didn't delve into it much further.

Turning back to the topic at hand, he said that the most useful oak-savanna crops fall into the following families:

  • Fagacae: Oaks, chestnuts, beeches

    Cherries
  • Malus: Apples

  • Prunus: Plums, cherries, peaches, apricots, and other stone fruits

  • Corylus: Hazelnuts

  • Vitis: Grapes

  • Rubus: Blackberries & raspberries

  • Ribes: Currants & gooseberries

All grow well together, so they can be planted in various combinations, as needed. For example, imagine a chestnut tree, with a grapevine climbing up it, flanked by an apple tree on one side and a peach tree on the other, with a bramble of blackberries and gooseberries underneath. This could be done on a suburban lot. It could even be surrounded by daffodils to deter mice from chewing the bark, and to make it look pretty.

Now imagine the same arrangement, expanded into rows running north-south, with animals rotationally grazed on the pasture between the rows. (This kind of arrangement is sometimes called "alley cropping.") Think of the food potential and diversity for just a single acre!

The way he pays for these large plantings of trees is to buy twice or even three times as many trees as he needs at wholesale prices, and then he sells the extras at retail prices, which amounts to free trees for him.

Chestnut

He went into more detail on a couple of trees that caught my attention. The first was the chestnut tree. [Because of chestnut blight, only Chinese chestnuts can be grown in most of the U.S. at this time.] Chestnuts are nutritionally similar to corn, but take no plowing or chemicals or fertilizers or pesticides to produce. The crop almost literally falls from the sky, where it can be easily harvested for human consumption, or fed to livestock. And at the end of the chestnut tree's life, it provides straight-grained, rot-resistant lumber.

The second tree of interest was the hazelnut. Hazelnuts are nutritionally similar to soy, but with three times the oil content. Their hulls burn with the properties of anthracite coal. And every ten years, the trees can be coppiced - cut down to the ground and used for lumber - after which the stump re-sprouts to grow a whole new tree.

Even the lowly apple tree, he pointed out, could produce 25% more ethanol per acre than a cornfield, without nearly as much processing, or for that matter, farming. Another interesting comment he made was that if you mix hard cider and hazelnut oil, and wait a while, you get biodiesel. No fancy chemistry needed.

One of the core ideas of permaculture is that waste product from one system should ideally become the input of another system. Another key concept is to minimize work by keeping the things that need the most attention closest to the living space. He gave an elaborately detailed example from his morning routine.

He takes his kitchen scraps from the night before out toward his chicken coop. There, the meat scraps are separated from the vegetative material by a fully automated no-maintenance system - a system so advanced, it also deters mice, rats, foxes, coyotes, and raccoons. The system consists of the family dogs and cats racing each other to the kitchen scrap pail, with first prize being the meat scraps. While the meat sorting system is functioning, he has time to use the facilities - a composting toilet, of course. Once the animal products have been removed from the kitchen scraps, they get dumped on

Chicken Coop

the downhill slope behind the chicken coop. Off the back of the coop, above ground, is a bat box. The bats help minimize insect problems. Also on the back of the chicken coop, above ground, is a rabbit hutch, with an open mesh floor. The rabbit droppings fall onto the same slope as the table scraps. Rainwater collected from the roof of the coop is used to provide drinking water for both the rabbits and the chickens. After he feeds the chickens and lets them out of the coop, they dig through the table scraps for tasty morsels, and scratch the remaining scraps and the rabbit manure and any bat guano. Downhill from the chicken coop is a compost pit, dug into the ground. Chicken scratching plus gravity helps the scraps and manure gradually move downhill until they end up in the pit. The chickens will literally burrow through the compost looking for worms, while at the same time aerating the pile to keep the composting process moving along. After feeding the chickens and rabbits, and collecting eggs from the coop, he feeds his cattle and hogs, who have access to feed troughs attached to the coop. The animals funnel in from adjacent teardrop-shaped pastures. From there, he picks veggies from the garden, and mushrooms from a nearby shiitake log. By the time he steps back in the house, he's fed his dogs, cats, chickens, rabbits, cattle, and hogs, he's harvested the garden, and he's got the makings of a nice breakfast omelet, as he says, "all because I had to poop."

The Circle of Life, it seems, is more of an elaborate, three-dimensional, interwoven tapestry - and a beautiful tapestry at that - even if it does involve a surprising diversity of poop.

Reprinted with permission from Edson Freeman

 


 

 

 

 
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