I usually train the plants up into the trees , but I’ve let them do their own thing this year. One plant has climbed up a hogweed (bjørnekjeks) and then on up high into the birch tree, others have just clambered around on the ground…
Hablitzia roots have an astonishing number of shoots waiting to grow if you cut them down…I like to think that this is an adaptation to human grazing pressure, so that we can repeatedly harvest without killing the plants ;)
Root cuttings work to quickly multiply plants , just ensure you use a sharp knife and have at least one shoot on each root slice! See the pictures!
The reason for my trip to Canada in March / April 2017 was because I was invited by Jean-Martin Fortier to visit and give a talk and discuss perennial vegetables at La Ferme des Quatre Temps, an amazing farm near Hemmingford, Quebec (south of Montreal and near the US border). Jean-Martin is well-known for his book “The Market Gardener” which has sold more than 80,000 copies! This album of pictures gives my impression of my short visit on the farm in very early spring, where a whole area is devoted to trialling permaveggies for the market, the best commercial operation I’ve seen! Thanks for the invite Jean-Martin!
This is the Wikipedia entry on the farm: “In the fall of 2015, Fortier was recruited by André Desmarais, Deputy Chairman, President and Co-Chief Executive Officer of Power Corporation and son of Paul Desmarais Sr, to design and operate a model farm, La Ferme des Quatre-Temps, on a 167 acres property in Hemmingford, Quebec. The mission of the farm is to demonstrate how diversified small-scale farms, using regenerative and economically efficient agricultural practices, can produce a higher nutritional quality of food and more profitable farms. The farm consists of four acres of vegetable production; sixty acres of animal grazing rotation including beef, pigs and chickens, ten acres of fruit orchards, a culinary laboratory for processing and creating original products and a huge greenhouse to produce vegetables throughout the year. The principles of permaculture were applied to ensure ecosystem balance: flowers were planted, ponds were dug to accommodate frogs and birdhouses were built to naturally control the proliferation of pests. Ten bee hives have also been installed on the property to promote pollination and mobile chicken coops allow hens to roam from one pasture to another to feed the worms in manure from cows.”
I was picked up in Montreal by one of Mr. Desmarais’ chauffers. Here we are approaching Hemmingford (wise to remember to turn off just before the US border…)
Chauffeur driven car
The driver wasn’t sure where to go and asked at Mr. Desmarais’ on-site house first.
Jean-Martin Fortier
The lecture was in this building..
I gave a short Around the World talk before lunch to staff, contractors and wwoofers…
Jonathan Pineault introduced the work on growing permaveggies for sale at the farm!
Each plant had a nicely set out slide with information relevant to marketing! Here is Hablitzia!
The permagardens were already looking good, note the nest boxes!
?, Jonathan Pineault and Alexandre Guertin (from Écomestible, www.ecomestible.com, who were contracted to the permaculture on the farm!) FB friend Carmen Porter, second from the right had kindly offered a place to stay locally and also showed me around the next day (more later)
Jonathan Pineault and ? with skirret :)
Cattails (but not planted with food in mind)
Perennial plantings
Horseradish I think…
Tour of the greenhouses…
There were lots of birds on the farm…here a distant belted kingfisher I think…
Insect hotel
What was the story behind this? A deviant scarecrow?
Red-winged blackbird
…and even Killdeers on open ground on the farm (NB! the strange name killdeer is from the bird’s kill-deer call ;) )
I was blown away by Kerstin Lye’s garden in the Hurdal Ecovillage….a great example of a naturalistic polycultural mix of perennials and annuals and a great inspiration for the other ecovillagers….Kerstin has clearly worked very hard from the start in developing her garden! Thanks for showing me around!
t’s like a dream come true wandering around the Ecovillage at Hurdal with veggies everywhere!
….shame that the houses weren’t built with cellars…but the solution is to build your own root cellar…
Entering Kerstin Lye’s garden and I’m greeted by a familiar face, the climbing spinach from the Caucasus (Hablitzia tamnoides) is happy here in Hurdal..and where Habbies are Happy, I am habby too ;)
Hostas in the shade of the house!
I hadn’t expected such an abundance of vegetables, many perennials when i entered Kerstin’s garden, she had clearly devoted a lot of time to developing her own paradise, complete with a root cellar….
Malva
Allium victorialis
Ligularia fischeri (I had had seed with me when I talked in Hurdal in the winter!)
I eat wild fish now and again, but there’s always masses of veggies….and today musk mallow (Malva moschata) is at its most productive, with various Russians sorrels, day lily buds and nettles. Also not shown, I used Croatian St. John’s onion (Allium x cornutum), garlic “Aleksandra” (still going strong, stored in my kitchen since autumn), chili and golpar (spice from the seed of Heracleum persicum, Tromsøpalme)
With summer just about beginning here (well, it has just reached 20C five times this year), this is what my biggest perennial vegetable looks like today….and, yes, I’m standing up at the base of the plant and I’m 1.83m tall! I didn’t harvest that much this year as I was away so much!
Perennial vegetables, Edimentals (plants that are edible and ornamental) and other goings on in The Edible Garden