Growing an Abundant Perennial Food Garden Workshop

The workshop was sponsored by the Hawai’i Homegrown Food Network and held at Mohala Lehua Farm near Hawi, North Kohala as part of the the North Kohala Eat Locally Grown Campaign. The workshop presenters were Craig Elevitch, Neil Logan and Sophia Bowart.
Craig Elevitch began the workshop with a photo presentation about perennial edible gardens and food forests in several Polynesian and Micronesian island nations, where the environmental conditions and cultural contexts are quite similar to the Hawaiian Islands. Sustainable cultivation in the Pacific started at least 9,000 years ago in Papua New Guinea and 1,500 years ago in the Hawaiian Islands. In native Pacific cultures, children are taught from an early age the how to grow food and manage their resources sustainably. Open space and ornamental plantings are kept to a minimum. Food producing plants such as coconut, breadfruit, banana, plantain, moringa and other larger trees and plants form a canopy with smaller plants such as sweetpotato, taro, cassava, and yam growing underneath.

Fast fruit producing plants (within 18 months of planting and some sooner) bananas, papayas, pineapples, pepino, naranjilla, tomatillo, poha, liliko’i, mulberry and star fruit. Some plants store water in their trunks such as the Abyssinian banana, which has an edible stalk.
During a walking tour of the extensive agroforests at Mohala Lehua Farm, I learned that for best results, establish ‘clump or island plantings’: a tall center plant, tree or bamboo is surrounded with lower growing perennial and annual edibles.

For food security in Hawai’i, Elevitch reminded attendees that we need to start on the personal level. The advantages of home or community gardens are clear: no mileage to transport food far and wide and burning fossil fuel; safer, since we know how they are grown; stable and sustainable, since each plant helps the others, creating a much more efficient use of the land that surrounds us.
By choosing carefully what we plant in our own landscape, we can provide our own food, fuel, medicine and fiber while preserving our watershed, promoting biodiversity and minimizing the damage to our land by using sustainable methods.