Table of Contents

Forest


“It is the cumulative yield of all the plants living on the same piece of land that makes forest gardens productive, not the high yield of individuals.” ― Patrick Whitefield

What is forest gardening?

It’s gardening in a way intended to mimic a natural forest ecosystem, except that the species chosen are mainly edible. Some will be chosen for other reasons too – for example firewood, nitrogen fixing, flowers or medicines.

“Imagine a garden that needs no weeding, watering, digging or feeding and can be left to look after itself for weeks, even months, on end.” – excerpt from Jill Tunstall’s article _[the Garden of the Future?](https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2007/dec/06/ethicalliving.conservation)_ from _the Guardian_.

Figure 1: Three layers of perennial plants – the herb layer is valerian (medicinal), the shrub layer is flax (fibres), and the canopy is fruit and firewood trees.

So a forest garden is a sustainable garden using diverse, perennial edible species, based upon the structure of native woodland, which means that there are layers – from the tops of trees down to the ground, and to the roots underneath it. Seven layers are generally identified:

Great introductory video from Permaculture People.

Forest gardening is an ancient practice; there’s evidence that people (and animals) have consciously shaped the forests in which they lived for millennia. In tropical Asia, China and Africa, complex forest gardens have existed for thousands of years. In the UK most of the temperate forest was lost a long time ago – cleared for monocultures of grain crops, grazing or felled for building ships and housing.

Forest gardening pioneer Robert Hart) visited tropical forest gardens, studied ecology, and then used his knowledge to create the first temperate forest garden in Shropshire in the 1970s. He also wrote the first books on the subject. His work has been the inspiration for the UK forest gardening movement and many people have built upon his work, refining and adding to the theory and practice.

Figure 3: The seven layers of a forest garden. Image: Graham Burnett, CC BY-SA 3.0

There are now hundreds of forest gardens (often also called ‘home gardens’) in the UK. Most of these are less than 20 years old and small scale (0.25-2.5 acres).

Here are some examples of the kinds of produce you can expect to harvest from a forest garden:

Trees: apple, pear, cherry plum, quince, mulberry, medlar, peach, chestnut, pine nut, almond, hazelnut, juneberry, strawberry tree, pawpaw, blue bean, persimmon, bladdernut, snowbell tree.

Shrubs: currant, Chilean guava, plum, blueberry, wineberry, Oregon grape, almonberry, whortleberry.

Perennial vegetables: bamboo (shoots), sea kale, perpetual spinach, perennial broccoli, wild garlic, Babbington leek, good King Henry, fat hen, everlasting onion.

Geoff Lawton explains how to maximise output and minimise input with a ‘food forest’.

Roots: pignut, Jerusalem artichoke, horseradish, earthnut pea, wasabi.

Herbs: whole range of herbs for cooking and medicinal use.

Climbers: grape, loganberry, tayberry, strawberry grape, kiwi fruit, hop.

Fungi: oyster, shiitake, lion’s mane.

Cut and come again salad: sorrel, wild rocket, lambs lettuce, mustard, wrinkled cress.

Plus: fuel wood from coppice, basketry materials, dye plants, garden canes and ties.

Figure 5: This is a good example of a guild – a group of plants that are mutually beneficial; here comfrey provides ground cover and is a mineral accumulator (can be cut to produce a mineral-rich mulch for fruit trees), aromatic herbs protect fruit from pests, currant bushes are planted around the drip line of the trees so that they get watered, plus redcurrants do well in the shade of the apple tree.

What are the benefits of forest gardening?

At present most of our food needs are met by giant agri-businesses who use monoculture systems to produce fruit and vegetable crops. These systems are heavily dependent on oil, pesticides and synthetic fertilisers, and are slowly eroding and polluting our soils and watercourses. Forest gardening presents a different approach to food production, that:

Figure 6: Harvesting gooseberries from a forest garden, with rhubarb in the foreground and apple and damson trees forming the canopy.

What can I do?

Possibilities

Robert Hart, temperate forest garden pioneer, demonstrates his forest garden.

Preparation

Figure 8: Examples of good ground cover for a forest garden – marjoram, wild strawberry, New Zealand flax, buckler-leaved sorrel, Babbington leek and good King Henry.

Getting started

Specialist(s)

Thanks to Mandy Burton of Redfield Community for information.

Chris Evans has been involved with permaculture for over 30 years, both in the UK where he’s a partner at Designed Visions, and in Nepal, where he works with the Himalayan Permaculture Centre. Chris was a regular visitor to the original forest garden at Robert Hart’s residence in Shropshire, and now teaches his own courses at Applewood Permaculture Centre in north Herefordshire and other venues.

Date on Lowimpact:2013-01-31