Citation Information

  • Title : Case study: a hayfield conversion to a multi-layered planting.
  • Source : Agroforestry: A Profitable Land Use. Proceedings of the 12th North American Agroforestry Conference, Athens, Georgia, USA, 4-9 June 2011
  • Publisher : Organizing Committee, 12th North American Agroforestry Conference
  • Pages : 125-129
  • Year : 2011
  • Document Type : Book Chapter
  • Language : English
  • Authors:
    • Ebert, W.
    • Olson, R.
    • Demchik, M.
  • Climates: Continental (D). Warm summer continental/Hemiboreal (Dsb, Dfb, Dwb).
  • Cropping Systems: Dryland cropping system. Irrigated cropping systems.
  • Countries: USA.

Summary

In fall of 2006, a 2-acre hayfield on a tree farm in central Wisconsin was laid out into 10-foot wide terraces/swales along contour lines. The beds were strip sprayed with glyphosate and a two-bottom plow was used to create swales. A total of 2400 linear feet of planting bed were created. Each terrace was planted to 2-3 rows of plants, with trees on 20-ft spacing and shrubs interplanted at 5-8 foot spacing. This will create a multi-layer canopy with crops from each layer. Over 40 species/varieties were planted on the site in the spring of 2007 (240 trees, 480 shrubs, and 250 perennials). The entire site was electrically fenced. Plants were mulched with either wood chips or fabric mulch and treatments of drip-irrigation or no irrigation were applied to the plants. After three growing seasons, no difference was found between treatments. The swales and mulching was adequate to ensure survival and growth without the need of supplemental irrigation. Growth and fruiting of individual species as well as other observations will be discussed in this presentation.

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