
Since meeting Hunter, the lead permaculturist, I really wanted to check out his plot. Because we didn’t work directly with him, I had to schedule a time for him to give us an informative tour.
He lives in a tiny home he constructed near the back of the farm. His front porch is his garden. One of his main focuses is researching and implementing water saving techniques. He uses wicking beds, rain water and a technique he calls “planting water” to achieve this goal.
He uses old bathtubs for wicking bed containers since he gets them for free. A simple PVC pipe with an elbow joint and drainage holes constitutes the filling mechanism and reservoir. The pipe is buried under pebbles, followed by soil. The wicking bed saves water by watering from the ground up. This prevents water from evaporating from the soil, as it would with traditional means. Additionally, it only waters the plants when they need it. The wicking action is initiated by the lower soil drying out. As the soil dries, it pulls water from the reservoir and re-saturates the soil.
Utilizing rain catching devices also decreases his water footprint. He has several rain barrels raised on pallets spaced around the garden. They have taps on the bottom and are connected to irrigation pipes that direct the water where he needs it. He also has connected his roof gutters to a rain barrel.
Lastly, his technique of “planting water.” He saves this method for the most water hungry species in his garden, which are apple trees. When the trees were young, he excavated around the rootball and planted a mix of vermiculite and wood chips. These substrates have a lot of pore space and great water-holding capacities. When it rains, they absorb a lot of water and prevent it from penetrating, holding it available to plants for an extended period. This allows him to grow species that would not be possible otherwise.
Hunter’s last project he showed us was his vermicomposting bin. Vermicomposting is a method that utilizes the power of worms to turn food scraps and weeds into fertilizer. The worms eat the provided food sources and their castings, or poop, can be used as a natural fertilizer.
















