Pip Magazine

Starting a food forest

What food forests are and how they function

Food forests are production systems that try to mimic nature. Rather than growing trees in grass, we aim for a variety of plants of different shapes and sizes among the trees. Like natural forests, food forests include layers from the ground up. By selecting plants relevant to each layer, space can be used efficiently and competition reduced. We also want to replicate the interactions between animals, soil and plants that make a forest ecosystem function.

In 2010 I was invited by a Canberra primary school to revive its garden which was started in 2008 and develop a food forest. The following guide uses that project as an example (see green text).

Setting goals and budgeting

Start by setting goals and intentions for the space: why a food forest? what to grow? how much time and money do you have? Good goals will match the

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