Another lunch hour on the plot. Found a flattened coal scuttle/witches cauldron. Mulched more saplings. #allotment #coppice #treecare
While trying to get photos for the little story about coppicing and seeing nuts on a branch I avoid cutting, I wanted phots to show how the tree is now coming out, up, and around from where it was chainsawed 2 or 3 years ago. Just luck that some sort of newt or lizard (maybe not a gecko this time?) came up onto the coppiced part.. I can't remember the names of all the different lizard-like creatures around here. Some kids I saw yesterday had one that may have been a different kind. They were outside with bug nets with a teach from the after-school facility (and Saturdays too to meet the needs of over-worked parents...) The teacher was telling the names of 3 different lizard-like species.. I generally can only remember two YaMori (Home Protectors? because the geckos eat bugs? around the house?) and IMori (a longer darker shinier kind that you don't see in or on the house so much just among the rocks and bushes around the house... Or maybe I'm thinking of the KanaHebi? Whatever is not a gecko I just refer to as Imori... If I should be more vague/ambiguous to avoid mistakes I should just call them snakes with legs so people know to allow for my ignorance, I gues..)

I feel an affection for the little creatures, harmless as they are. That affection usually helps me avoid the urge to catch them and let the chickens to their imitation of Jurassic Park with them.

#Lizard #LIzardLikeCreature #NotAGecko #イモリ#カナヘビ#Newt #NewtLikeCreature #WalnutTree #Coppice

Yesterday was a good day for cutting willow stakes and stabbing them back into the ground. So I spent four and a half hours doing so, and accomplished this!

It’s maybe 20 feet of #fedge that will eventually become an actual hedge to fence in the horses.

For now it needs protection in the form of an electric fence to keep them from chewing off all the growing parts before it gets established. It will take me multiple seasons to extend it all the way to where I need it to go.

Why do this instead of building more board fencing, you ask? (No one asked. I’m going to tell you anyway.) Well, the land our rural co-op exists on is very hilly, which means some parts are high and dry - great for putting posts in the ground and having them last for decades - and some parts are low and soggy - terrible for putting fence posts in because they will rot. Also, board fencing can be pricey, even if we’re doing all the work to install it ourselves.

But we still need fencing in those areas to keep the ponies contained. I don’t like using electric fencing for perimeter fencing. I want a real physical barrier that won’t suddenly stop working when it’s icy, snowy, the charger isn’t working, etc etc. I also don’t super like having the horses get shocked. Which does happen to poor Henry sometimes, because he can’t see very well and doesn’t always register that the fence is there before he walks into it, and then he gets a nasty surprise. There are things I can do to mitigate each of these problems, but… long term, I want to reduce the use of the zappy fence as much as possible.

Luckily, willow will grow into a nice coppiced thicket with a bit of encouragement, and we have lots of it growing here! I can cut whips from right nearby and use them to build living fencing that will benefit more creatures of our landscape than just the horses, and it doesn’t even damage the areas I harvest from because they’ll sprout right back up with even more stems. I think this is so cool. I can hardly wait to see it sprouting once the weather warms up a bit more!

I’m also looking forward to getting my hands on Paul Lamb’s new book, Of Thorn & Briar, about the craft of hedge laying in the UK. This willow weaving thing I’m doing isn’t quite that, but it’s not entirely dissimilar, either.

#hedge #OfThornAndBriar #HedgeLaying #LivingFence #willow #coppice #homesteading #sustainability #PastureManagement #LivingWithTheLand #FenceWeaving #grow

@ghost_shit Yes, somewhat similar. Daisugi is what it's referred to (platform cedar).

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daisugi

This is the Euro/UK-centric pollard with #coppice being in the same ballpark. End result is similar in all 3, depending on the end use. Willow coppice and pollard are heavily featured in basketry, for one example.

Daisugi - Wikipedia

#Coppice? What's that?
Learn all about creating a multi-functional polewood economy with Mark Krawczyk. #permaculture #agroforestry #polyculture #woodlot #TreeCrops #video #trees #fodder #fuel #fungi #furniture #fencing #baskets
https://youtu.be/ctXviDGjspg
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Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.

Exploring a new #wood to me #today. In #flower, in order of encounter, #primrose, #violet, wood #anemone, lesser #celandine, and the underspoken Dog’s Mercury. In fine leaf, biding their time #wild #garlic and ‘lords and ladies’. Coming out of the woods, the joy of #blackthorn in #blossom in the #hedgerow. #Spring is here! And the joy of #hazel #coppice and #oak standards. Proper #traditional #woodland #management. I

An update to earlier shots after another prune in Spring. After a long dry period, a single rain has come and growth has accelerated.

#coppice #pollard

@timsmalley You're local to the forest? Do you mind tagging #coppice #pollard when you identify and photograph one? They're two tags I follow and me being in Australia with mostly American arboriculture teachings, coppice and pollard are basically unknown dark arts here.