PLANTING - Growing food on fences #2 - What we've planted so far! VIDEO

in homesteading •  7 years ago 

This is an update to my previous post Preparing fence Line for Food Production. Visit Growing Food on fences #1 to see how we prepared this fence line for food production!

See below for what we planted!

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This an area of fence line we just recently prepared that is adjacent to the fence line we planted out.
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Squash will quickly produce food as well as help with shading out the unwanted grasses and weeds with their large round leaves. This shaded environment also does well to help the Okinowan purple Sweat potatoes establish themselves. By the time the squash fruits and dies back the sweat potatoes should be well established.
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Here a young cassava is doing well shooting new growth. Cassava, also known as tapioca or manioc or Yuca is an amazing root crop and probably the most important crop you never heard of. Cassava is the primary food staple for around 800 million people, with more than half the world’s annual production, now around 260 million tons, in Africa. Nigeria is the world’s leading producer. Cassava is one of the last 'starch' crops you can grow in highly degraded soils which makes it ideal for places where resources like fertilizer are limited. The roots and greens can be eaten when cooked properly and the root can be left in the ground for up 13 months making them an ideal survival food.
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Have any questions or comments?
Have you ever planted food on a fence or trellis? What did you plant?
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that is a great cost cutting idea, using an existing fence to provide support to climbing varieties of food crops. initially i was bamboozled when i read about "sweat " potato, then i saw pic of the sweet potato, cassava plant and it clicked :0
will follow you for further updates. Keep at it

Here I let the invasive and wild blackberries climb my fence, though the weight eventually starts to pull it down. We have very aggressive deer here which will eat anything you try to grow on the accessible side of the fence.

having grown up in valleys of California i have seen what deer can do as well. you are totally right, this wouldn't work where you have hungry ungulates. Here in Hawaii we don't have a deer problem, but we do have a wild pig problem. I expect the pigs to graze on what they can reach of these plantings from the outside of the fence.

That's an interesting way to grow food crops.
A lot of times I notice things in a picture that aren't part of the subject matter, in this case, the nice size rock sitting on top of the wood fence post. That must be a fairly common human urge, I see that a lot, and I do it myself. :-)

The rock really draws my attention too. thats why Its been there for over a year