Monday, March 4, 2013

Organic Producer

I have written the following article as the first in a series about Hugelkultur for Organic Producer magazine. I 
will be a regular contributor there.  My articles will be monthly or bi-monthly and will relate to the urban side of organic agriculture.  It is an amazing opportunity, and I am honored to have been asked to contribute.  Here it is:


Hugelkultur in Milwaukee, WI
By Will Martens

Here’s a little introduction.  I am an arborist by trade and a tree-hugger at heart.  I have learned a lot about trees by walking among them and touching them.  I also had the fortune of being born to parents whose own parents had been farmers, or were raised on a farm.  Growing food and preserving that food has been a part of my life since I started developing memories.  Indeed my favorite and most vivid childhood memories involve plants, gardens and preserving the produce. 
As an arborist I have trees to thank for my livelihood.  I have learned much from them.  I had a realization that the material that is produced by trees is often treated as a waste product.  This product is treated as waste by clients, but also by the community at large.  It costs a lot of money to truck wood and wood-chips around town from individual properties to the place where the material can finally be described as “disposed”.   When I moved to Milwaukee I learned about a growing movement of farmers who are turning under-utilized urban spaces into urban farms.  People like Will Allen and Robert Pierce of Growing Power, and Gretchen Mead of The Victory Garden Initiative have had the vision and character required to buck the trends.  Instead of waiting for a large corporation and the tax money that it would ideally bring to the community to produce prosperity in the urban environment these people are reclaiming the land and trying to produce food in these spaces. Their problem is that the soil on many of Milwaukee’s urban lands is so depleted or poisoned by years of pollution that they cannot even legally grow food in it, as recognized by the USDA. These visionaries have found ways to overcome these challenges. One solution is to build soil through composting directly on top of the soil in deep mounds. 
In the reclamation of these spaces these farmers are increasing the quality of life in blighted neighborhoods by strengthening the social bonds and increasing the overall health of the community.
 I have started making my contribution with hugelkultur.  Hugelkultur is an ancient technique of sheet composting.   It has been practiced in Eastern Europe for at least 2.000 years.  Though it can aid in the production of the mounds, hugelkultur does not require the machinery that is necessary for making wood chips and then adding wood chips to compost.  The wood – branches and stems - is buried and used to build a mound upon which food is grown.  In addition to the wood, the builder will add as much woody debris or other locally available plant material as possible.  The soil that was taken out in order to bury the wood is then replaced.  On top of this, it is best to add fresh compost.  What is planted can be vegetables, shrubs, trees or anything that produces edibles.  Last year a client of mine was still harvesting tomatoes from their hugelkultur in November.  That is late fall in Wisconsin.  I have been amazed at what we were able to accomplish.
The real value in this composting technique is, realized over the long-term however.  This is because the buried wood soaks up water and decomposes for years.  While this occurs the cellulose and lignins in the wood also sequester nitrogen.   Over time, the mounds  store water and nitrogen for the gardens as well as for any trees planted near them. 
An example of the benefits is the large Bur Oak (Quercus macrocarpa) in my client’s yard.  This tree is easily 24” in diameter.  It is a veteran.  Last summer was unbelievably hot and dry in Milwaukee.  Under such conditions there were many trees like it that died of drought stress or were at least defoliated.  The negative impacts of these stressful situations will play out for years to come.  My client’s tree put on almost a foot and a half of new growth last summer, largely in part because we built a hugelkultur bed directly over the tree’s root zone!  It not only was living, it was thriving.  The wood that was used to build the mound came from the normal pruning of deadwood as well as structural pruning to provide clearance for power lines and the client’s garage.  By building the mound out of this material we turned waste into a vital component in the long-term management plan for this property.  It was much more cost effective to build the hugelkultur for the client than it would have been to remove the material and dispose of it. 
The vegetables that were produced were amazing, as you can see on my blog Vertical Urban Gardener.  I bought three cubic yards of compost from a local composter and used it to top off the mound.  This provided an amazing growth medium for the vegetables.  We grew beets, carrots, beans, squash, tomatoes, peppers, melons, peas, and more in this garden.  With few exceptions I was impressed at the results.
The poor soils in urban environments are in need of such improvement that the value of building hugelkultur should be pretty obvious.  The trees that are already able to live in the nutrient poor environment produce material that when utilized properly can build good quality, nutrient rich growing medium.  The water and nutrients that are sequestered by the decomposing wood benefit the garden and the trees thereby making the whole greater than the sum of its parts. While Hugelkultur has been practiced for thousands of years in Eastern Europe, its value is being realized today in the urban environment of Milwaukee, WI. 
Hugelkultur should not however been seen as a solution to an exclusively urban problem.  On the contrary, the use of hugelkultur in a larger-scale permaculture project will only enhance the success of the farm.  Authors such as Michal Pollan, Joel Salatin, and Toby Hemenway all extol the virtues of biodiversity within the context of agriculture.  Hugelkultur is the essence of this.  The soil that is produced in such a paradigm promotes life in general.  Indeed it is almost impossible to eradicate the many creatures and plants that grow there without the intention of the agriculturalist.  This biodiversity contributes to further biodiversity.  Within the mounds, the wood is the basis for water retention.  Water retention is a problem to which any agriculturalist can relate.  The mounds literally take on a life of their own.  While the farmer sleeps, the insects, plants and mammals as well as (and especially) worms and grubs turn the mounds into rich repositories of soil that is perfect for growing food.  That soil promotes a diversity of plants that attract pollinators whose benefits seem self-explaining.
On bigger farms there are always trees of some kind.  Almost any type of wood (except treated lumber) can be used for hugelkultur.  I encourage the reader to look into the practice and survey their own resources.  In the process they will realize that they have everything they would need to start a project.  I suggest starting on a small scale using the materials that are readily available such as fallen branches, dead trees and other high carbon content wastes.  It could be that there is need for a berm or hedgerow or some other type of barrior.  That is a perfect place to create a hugelkultur using plants with which  the agriculturalist is already familiar.  These projects are long-term in scope.  However they can be quite rewarding as they require little maintenance at first and literally no maintenance after the first five years.
Hugelkultur is an ancient answer to an ancient problem.  The poor soils that are a product of urbanization as well as intensive agricultural techniques can be enriched by this practice.  Though the method requires a long-term commitment to reach its fullest potential, the agriculturalist can produce relatively impressive results within the first growing season.