02-21-2012, 05:13 PM
So I'm planing on moving from the mainland to a new destination for a simpler, mostly sustainable, lifestyle. I have been looking at Hawaii for a few years as well as some other tropical locations. I have more or less narrowed it down to orchid land or Hawaiian acres(price, rain and community) for Hawaii and would go for the lowest elevation lot to maximize sun exposure(solar and plants) so now I'm looking at realistic ease of accomplishing my goals. To do so I need 2-3 acres of "farmable" land able to support real producing fruit trees, veggies and some root crops. I'm looking at a 10 year general plan.
So I know every lot is different but for generalization I assume it's 2-6" of soil on top of lava flows. From the site for orchid land estates I get that for real agriculture practices I need to rip the lot with a d9 and add cinder and mulch to produce a "top soil". Now is this what the local coffee groves have done or have they just bought good lots? I'm not too in favor of this bc it's essentially sterilizing your lot of native foliage and it doubles the cost of farmable land from purchase price. On top of that it doesn't exactly make great topsoil. I do plan on chopping down a fair amount of the vegetation, except select trees, and turning it into biochar so select ripping in stages is not out of the question.
On the flip side I hear that anything grows in puna, sounds great, and also lots of stories of 10 year old avocados and citrus not producing, not so good.
So my plan right now would be to rip the down hill side of a lot, front to back about 20-30 ft wide, add cinder and mulch, and then plant bamboo for erosion control and fruit trees. Stop by every 6mo to a year and tend it and slowly move uphill adding trees but no bamboo. The idea would be to essentially build organic topsoil from ripped lava, cinder and mulch while holding it in place from erosion with a bamboo fence and retaining nutrients with biochar.
So some questions
I get the idea that the lava provides micro nutrients, some potassium and phosphorus but no nitrogen. Anyone try growing sun hemp on straight ripped lava to add nitrogen? Any other legumes?
Do I even need to rip the land for it to be farmable, or if I planted a bamboo or citrus and walked away would it have something to root and spread? I would rather spot plant around trees.
Do I really need to add cinder after ripping or would sufficiently crushing the rock suffice(got some ideas behind that, time consuming I know)?
I've heard pros and cons to Hilo dump mulch any more are welcome, any problems with using it for non food ag purposes ie bamboo?
Anyone try growing bamboo on fresh ripped, or not ripped, land? Results?
I have a decent amount of growing experience but mostly in loam or clay soil which I understand is not like puna at all. I have done a fair amount of research but it shows up as all of hawaii usually and I know puna is different. Am I completely crazy for thinking this would work? Or is there a different moderately priced region with deeper soil I should look at. I am planning a scouting trip in a month or two but would like some questions answered before spend g a week and a few k looking at something I may not be interested in so any advice or input is appreciated, thanks!
So I know every lot is different but for generalization I assume it's 2-6" of soil on top of lava flows. From the site for orchid land estates I get that for real agriculture practices I need to rip the lot with a d9 and add cinder and mulch to produce a "top soil". Now is this what the local coffee groves have done or have they just bought good lots? I'm not too in favor of this bc it's essentially sterilizing your lot of native foliage and it doubles the cost of farmable land from purchase price. On top of that it doesn't exactly make great topsoil. I do plan on chopping down a fair amount of the vegetation, except select trees, and turning it into biochar so select ripping in stages is not out of the question.
On the flip side I hear that anything grows in puna, sounds great, and also lots of stories of 10 year old avocados and citrus not producing, not so good.
So my plan right now would be to rip the down hill side of a lot, front to back about 20-30 ft wide, add cinder and mulch, and then plant bamboo for erosion control and fruit trees. Stop by every 6mo to a year and tend it and slowly move uphill adding trees but no bamboo. The idea would be to essentially build organic topsoil from ripped lava, cinder and mulch while holding it in place from erosion with a bamboo fence and retaining nutrients with biochar.
So some questions
I get the idea that the lava provides micro nutrients, some potassium and phosphorus but no nitrogen. Anyone try growing sun hemp on straight ripped lava to add nitrogen? Any other legumes?
Do I even need to rip the land for it to be farmable, or if I planted a bamboo or citrus and walked away would it have something to root and spread? I would rather spot plant around trees.
Do I really need to add cinder after ripping or would sufficiently crushing the rock suffice(got some ideas behind that, time consuming I know)?
I've heard pros and cons to Hilo dump mulch any more are welcome, any problems with using it for non food ag purposes ie bamboo?
Anyone try growing bamboo on fresh ripped, or not ripped, land? Results?
I have a decent amount of growing experience but mostly in loam or clay soil which I understand is not like puna at all. I have done a fair amount of research but it shows up as all of hawaii usually and I know puna is different. Am I completely crazy for thinking this would work? Or is there a different moderately priced region with deeper soil I should look at. I am planning a scouting trip in a month or two but would like some questions answered before spend g a week and a few k looking at something I may not be interested in so any advice or input is appreciated, thanks!