Recently, Sara and Abel have been doing battle with insects who have been eating our crops away. This challenge has been pushing Sara to get creative with her methods of dealing with the hungry pests in an effort to keep our garden organic while at the same time respecting the natural balance and harmony of the native ecosystem. Sara mentions that,"[she] would like to find a way to let the insects eat while allowing us to eat as well," and she has tried multiple times to dissuade the insects from devouring our harvest by using natural pesticide/deterrent methods such as covering the soil with coffee grinds, coating the leaves of our plants with coffee and Mapacho (tobacco rustica) juice, and placing cups of aromatic onion garlic juice at
the base of many affected plants, all to nil or ill effect. The problem, says Sara, is that by clearing the land using slash and burn methods, we destroyed most of the indigenous food supply for the insects in the area who now have no other choice but to eat our food that replaced theirs. Sara is now beginning to look into other possibilities of dealing with the insect problem, "If we really want to eat from our garden, we need to learn from the locals," and thankfully with the help and knowledge of Abel, as well as Ruben our head curandero Maestro and his medicinal garden, we have many exciting avenues to explore!
Coming up in Part II... Plant Spirits, Curanderos, and Old Traditions
Hi there,
ReplyDeleteWork with someone who knows Permaculture techniques -mulching , never leave the soil bare as on picture,it will erode with hard rain and sunshine
Copy-Observe what nature does, old traditional gardening technique is a crime for the soil .
all the best
Thank you for the advice. We are learning new permaculture techniques each day. :)
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