Hugely Abundant 1-Acre Permaculture Homestead Tour – Limestone Permaculture Farm Revisit

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This is actually the video that inspired me to start learning more about permaculture!

👍︎︎ 11 👤︎︎ u/radbitch666 📅︎︎ Apr 27 2020 🗫︎ replies

This really is incredible, I love how he takes time to explain all the features. I took a permaculture design course 7 years ago and dream of applying it to this extent.

👍︎︎ 6 👤︎︎ u/mstanky 📅︎︎ Apr 27 2020 🗫︎ replies

Really cool to see the update from the first video, thought that is certainly larger than 1 acre lol.

I was looking at touring this property as I'm only a few hours away, but I was looking right before the ronies. Ah well

👍︎︎ 3 👤︎︎ u/[deleted] 📅︎︎ Apr 27 2020 🗫︎ replies
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- (Slow guitar) - [Brett] Hi Folks, it's Brett from Limestone Permaculture. It's been four years since you last visited our little farm here on the mid north coast of New South Wales. So much has changed, the farm has evolved, we're in the middle of a pretty serious drought, we've got some fires that aren't too far away and making everything quite hazy, but we're gonna go through and check what's goin' on the farm right now, so how about you come for a stroll. Let's go. (birds chirping) - (Chickens clucking) This are here is the integrated poultry run, and this services the chickens, they layer chickens, layer khaki campbell ducks and the breeding khaki campbell ducks. We've got some exclusion growing tunnels set inside this integrated pen that allow us to grow vegetables without it being harmed by the chicken and the ducks. It's important when considering integrated animal management systems that you try to promote natural habitat for your animals. You know, one of the things we try to do on Limestone Farm is incorporate forest layered level systems to give them not just the fodder, but the protection they require. So, these forest layers give shade And essentially, you're giving a stable environment for the animals to enjoy life. And that's important. It's been amazing to see the farm really grow over the last four years. The design we implemented back in 2010/2011 it has moved forward in such a way that it's ramping up at a faster and faster speed. So nature's actually taking over what we originally set up, so we're excited about that. It's hard to be full-time on a farm with an income that only has one income stream, you have to diversify. So even using permaculture principles in your business is really important. - [Nici] Which is a form of farm-steading. - [Brett] Yep. - [Nici] Um, you got homesteading, which is making good use of your own produce and on your farm and farm-steading is a way of making a bit of cash from that as well to keep the farm ticking. - [Brett] So in February 2018, we officially became full-time on the farm. Oh my goodness. (goats bleating) His head's sticking through the barley. Over here we've got our whicking beds. These things are fantastic for saving water. I mean you've got a raised bed system has a water retention well in the base of it you've got this whicking action that via capillary action, draws water up through the soil. It reduces the amount of water that you need. You've got an integrated mesh trellis coming through which creates a kind of a canopy. We've got worm farms in over the back over here, which build in some ecology to the soil because these things are disconnected to the ground. So they're a great little integrated unit and either on the farm or in a unit on the veranda these things are perfect. We've only been on this property since 2010. We understand that, but one thing we know is that 2010 to pretty much 2015 we had a relatively regular rainfall that met our annual rainfall that comes with this region. That has dropped off dramatically, started dropping off at the end of 2016 and hasn't stopped. We're now down to a stage where we're not even making half our rainfall for this particular area so you need to set your place up in a way that you've got a stable environment that captures the morning sun, is protected from the harsh winds, has land forming in place that retains moisture, retains water, so when it does rain, and it does rain, when it does you capture every drop. You get the maximum benefit out of it. (Birds Singing) Over here we've got our three bay compost system. You can have two bays, four bays, five bays, it just assists you with being able to turn your compost and keep it in some form. The idea of your compost, obviously is for promoting soil conditioner, which is something you put in the soil for good health, but the secret ingredient for making hot compost is this really stinky manure and weed tea. So we use comfrey, nettles, dandelion, we use our chicken poo, usually the sloppiest of the chicken poo and we make these tea bags up and we soak it for about a week and then we use it straight into the different layers of the compost build and it promotes the biology in there to actually build that compost into something really special. So guys, this is the harbored shady areas, more importantly it's the quail amazon. So when you were last here, it was mainly a vegetable producing area and we've now turned this into the quail amazon. Um, and thus the habitat that we've created here is to actually give them a more natural environment. From their height looking up, they're looking at papayas, they're looking at various different bananas. The bonus we get back from the quail as well they do very light scratchings, there little poops that go through the soil. For us, there's a nice little symbiotic relationship of them looking out for our plants, and us getting something back that in return. So it's awesome. [Birds Screeching] The Gentelman's Pissatorium. It's water saving, and the most important part, when you're actually going to the toilet to do a wee, you're weeing onto a hay bale and you're providing your rear into a carbon base that's then removed and used in a composting process and in return it gives you great soil. This is very worthy. Guys we're in our northern market garden here. What's important about this little area here is we've got little zones of mixed plant guilds and forest layers. In this bed here, this is a ginger crop set up, you can't see the ginger at the moment, because we're actually building the forest layered canopy in readiness for the ginger. We're looking at corn as being the canopy, buckwheat has been the sub canopy, we've got beans and cucumbers that are going to climb and then create a webbing through there which they also make up part of the canopy, and that's going to create a protective system for the ginger growing through that harsh summer. So the ginger is the main crop, but in the meantime, as part of the protection system, we're getting corn, we're getting beans, we're getting cucumber, we're getting buckwheat. We also get parsley and chickweed to go into the salads. So you've got this ability to support the main crop being the ginger, which is the idea around plant guilds. Beneficial communities of plants supporting a main crop or main plant, and then you're getting all that extra bonus food because you're setting up that protection. Again, this is just a worthy example of how you can actually get the most from each garden bed. The important thing for us, when we're actually setting ourselves up to be working on farm, is the diversity of income. So in the early days, the first thing that we could do was we could grow food. We produced vegetables, herbs, there was some quick growing frit that we could put out and you know, we started going to markets and then slowly had brought in, you know, farm tours, because people were interested to see what we were doing. We've got the courses, we've got the workshops, we've got farm tours. Education for us would be the most important fact of what we do now. We get a lot of enjoyment, um, it's a passion. And so we're teaching at all different levels. And obviously Nici is working through um food, nutrition. - [Nici] Yeah. - [Brett] And I'm working through farm design, garden design um planning, growing, you know, plant guilds, forest layers, you name it. - [Nici] Yeah, we're finding that people are coming here thirsty for not just knowledge of how to take food production back into their own hands, but also they are quite desperate for getting their health back on track and their wellness. Physical and mental. - [Brett] We have consultancies, we do off-site project implementation and we still get produce sales, it's just that the bulk of our produce these days comes back into the students, it comes back into our guests so what we're finding is- - [Nici] Into my cooking. - [Brett] Yeah, back into Nici's cooking. - [Nici ] I am so passionate about good clean eating, because it's not just helping me with my overall wellness and my gut health and my energy levels, but it also is helping other people as well. My personal experiences and my knowledge, I can pass on to other people, because there are so many people out there with that are desperate for answers to their unknown illnesses. And not all of it, but a lot of it can be food related, not just what we're eating but how we're eating it. - [Brett] Hey guys, we're in the Muscovy duck pen. They've got protection from trees that actually drop fruit for them. The really good thing about these shatoots is that you give them a little shake and it provides fruit. The wind usually drops it for us. We have a self-watering system up here that gives the ducks enough water there to obviously drink and have a washing and the excess water runs down into this pit area here. This isn't actually a pond, it's actually a silt trap, so the idea is that with all the duck's manure, we add a little bit of height to that and we drag it up and we actually make another from of compost. When we have a reasonable rain event, it overflows into here and goes down into this little swale system and this, once again, is a silt trap so the idea is we're always collecting nutrient uh, and that nutrient and that soil then gets used back in the garden, and that's important. So this is the Hills Hoist Vineyard. Uh, when we first moved here, there was a Hills Hoist clothesline sitting in the back of the place. So we've repurposed it and we've used it here to grow grapes over so it's a great vertical growing structure. We've got three varieties of table grape. It's supporting as a canopy for the sub canopy plants to grow, it's nice and protected throughout summer. The good thing about something like this is you get high production in a small space, which is ideal. [Birds Singing] We've got Bam Bam and Buttercup here. So in the goat run, here guys, this is a bit of an integrated goat run. We've got vertical fodder trees running through the center. The idea is these guys browse by climbing the sides of the mesh here. So it's a protected zone away from the goats but it actually provides the goats with food. We don't introduce any pellet or anything else to these guys, they've got enough here between the prunings from the fruit trees, the benne grass, the mulberry, the vertical fodder and the stuff that grows through the actual pen itself, to feed these guys year around and we're pretty excited about that. Guys, we're in the swaled orchard area. The idea of a swale is, it's designed to actually hold water for a period of time and slowly release it underground. And to my right, we've got a terraced area, terraced beds, and these guys don't actually hold water, they just slow water down. We've got our espalier apples through here, backed up by some of our larger fruit trees and olive trees. They provide protection from the west. This supports and protects this little veggie garden through here. The system works, we don't use much water down here, and it really has been surviving the drought quite well. It's been really good. - [Nici] Really exciting to see so much interest and increasing interest in what we're doing here on the farm and people wanting to put that into practice in their own lives in their own homes. We're looking at probably educating, feeding, nourishing over- - [Brett] Over a hundred. - Over a hundred, probably average about a hundred people a month at the moment. [Goats Bleating] - [Brett] Another project on Limestone Farm is our goat tent arbor. It's an integrated system where first and foremost it's going to eventually protect the goats during summer so the idea is our various vegetable vines will grow over the top of the arbor, providing shade back to the goats. More importantly for us as well, is it's gonna provide us with approximately over a hundred square meters of ariel growing so here we're going to get pumpkins, squash, cherkos, guards, cucumbers. We think this will work for us, and we're watching it grow right now. So we're in the kitchen garden, we're in the zone one. And we've been picking veggies out of here since April, it's now coming up to November, so the gardens have done really well to get to this stage. We're in the final throws where most of the veggies are going to seed, which is perfect. That's our time for seed saving. So we're waiting for that to actually produce it's seed heads and dry out. There's still plenty of food in here, I mean we can just pick carrots out willy nilly I mean there's still plenty of food to be had. So we've still got potatoes, we've still got broad beans, still some herbs to be picked and the flowers are beautiful, but essentially what we're after now is seed for next year's crops. - [Nici] As the world is changing, as the environment is changing, we're changing as well. Changing our thought patterns. - [Brett] Adaption is survival. - [Nici] Yeah. - [Brett] We got a farm that has become it's own ecology, it's own set up, it's own system. And we've now got the ability to be able to show quite a few, if not most of the permaculture principals on this farm. We've learned many lessons since us getting here, so you know, we've been here for nearly nine and a half years, but more importantly in the last sort of four years, one of the biggest lessons I'm really starting to understand is that there's no such thing as a final design. Don't get caught up in the stuff you can't do right now. Learn about the things that you can get happening. - [Nici] And put it into action and you'd be surprised once you start to live this type of life whether it's in urban or rural, and start to eat fresh vegetables and watch nature and live with the seasons, it makes you a much healthier, happier person. - [Brett] This our outdoor oven, um it's very special to us. Um, it took three months to build. Not only can you set the fire up and cook pizzas on the first night, but once you get to a certain core temperature, you can then shut the door, the fire goes out and we get four more nights of cooking after that. The temperature does slowly decline, but we cook according to those temperatures. What's important also for this oven, is that all the timbers we use come off the farms. So we've got cherry wood, apple wood, pear wood, acacia timber. It usually only takes about a wheel barrel load and essentially we've got enough timber to then look after this and that for us, brings some form of self-reliance on our ability to cook into this farm. So we love using our own timber off our farm, and it makes a delicious pizza. We feel privileged to be able to say that, "Yes we can survive, we can earn enough income to pay everything we need to pay, live a healthy and happy life, and be where we want to be in our dream property." I mean, it doesn't get any better than that, seriously. - [Nici] Taking a bit more control of our future. - [Brett] Yeah, absolutely. - [Nici] And our family. - [Brett] Yeah, you know, I'm happy. - [Nici] Yeah. - [Brett] We got so much more to do here and I think that's the beautiful thing. You never not want to have something to do. - [Nici] Yeah - [Brett] So, you always want the challenges, you always want something to strive for and for us we just think that this is, this place, this property has so much to offer us back, and we've got so much to give to it, and we'd like to think that maybe in a few years time you'll come back and check that out.
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Channel: Happen Films
Views: 1,415,855
Rating: 4.9684606 out of 5
Keywords: permaculture, homestead, farm, garden, tour, australia, permaculture design, design, 1 acre, small scale, small, permaculture garden, permaculture farm, permaculture homestead, market garden, organic, animals, goats, chickens, ducks, permaculture principals, property, documentary, food forest, swales, permaculture australia, happen films, gardening, growing food, food
Id: dztgMnaH1rw
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 17min 39sec (1059 seconds)
Published: Thu Apr 16 2020
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