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Design & StylesHave a Mini-Farm in Your Own Backyard -
1
Do you yearn for a few acres and a self sufficient lifestyle?
Well, while you are waiting it out in suburbia, you can still
create a productive mini-farm in your own backyard, just by
utilizing the space to its best advantage.
Fruits, Vegetables & Herbs
First draw up a scale plan of your backyard. Note which areas
receive full sun, which partial shade, and which full shade. You
may have to change a few things to get the best use from the space.
For example, if there is a shed in an area that would be ideal for
an orchard, move the shed to an area less inviting to plants.
Study your plan carefully and look for the best sites for the
various elements of your mini-farm. You don’t have to have
everything, but with careful planning, you can have an orchard, a
thriving vegetable garden, an herb patch, a beehive, a chicken coop
and a goat for milk. You will have to check local government
regulations and the tolerance of your neighbors on the last two.
Mark out the main areas with spray paint, and attend to any
tidying up that needs to be done – removing old plants and weeds,
digging over the soil and adding soil improvers where necessary.
Locate your orchard in a sunny part of the garden. Fruit trees
love the sun and produce their sweetest fruit under its warmth. You
orchard won’t have to take up a lot of room if you use the new
dwarf trees that are available. Some fruit trees require two trees
for germination. Discuss this with your nurseryman, and choose
trees best suited to your own area.
To make room for extra trees, you can espalier them against a
wall or fence. This simply means planting the tree close to the
fence and spreading the growing branches by fastening them against
it. Espalier is an old technique that still works very well where
backyard space is at a premium.
Fences, trellis and other supports can also be called into good
use. If you have the climate for it, plant grape vines in these
areas. If it’s too cool, or you don’t want grape vines, plant other
productive vines such as runner beans, peas and tiny tomatoes.
Where you want hedging, use bushy lavender and rosemary. You
will have a fragrant garden feature and a regular supply for
kitchen and home of these very useful herbs.

More herbs can be grown in the spokes of an old wagon wheel
filled with soil, or in any small patch that receives at least
partial sun. If there is simply no space to spare, grow your herbs
in pots on a sunny window sill or lined up at the back of the
house.
You need at least two separate vegetable plots, so you can
rotate them. Plant leaf vegetables in one plot and root vegetables
in the other and change them over after harvest. Putting your
vegetable plots in raised beds will make planting and harvesting a
lot easier, and improve drainage in heavy soil areas.
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