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Fox Forest Farm: Chicken Broilers

Fox Farm chicks being moved to chicken tractor cage.Fox Farm chicks being moved to chicken tractor cage.The Fox Forest Farm, located on Kapehu Road in the Papa’aloa Homesteads area near Laupahoehoe in North Hilo, is run by Shane Fox with the help of wife Christie, three year old daughter Anna, and Honey Girl, the family dog. The 17 acre farm is a breeding home for organically raised broiler chickens, and in addition manages 7 cows, 1 ram, 19 ewes and a couple of hens for eggs for the family’s consumption.

Shane, whose day job is as a ranger on Mauna Kea, has been farming for about 10 years, but didn’t start the broiler chicken operation until about 7 years ago after reading the book Pastured Poultry Profit$ by Joel Salatin. Salatin's farm and methods have been featured in Michael Pollan's book The Omnivore's Dilemma and the documentary movies Fresh and Food, Inc.

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Wanted: Volunteer Hilo Gardeners for "The Plan"

Natural Farming: From one person to another

What would happen if we planted taro in our public spaces?
  • 10 People
  • $100 “Micro-loan”
  • 1000 Square Feet of Food

What is The Plan?

Our goal is to help 10 people create ten gardens (10 feet x 10 feet) in Hilo. Each person will receive $100 worth of Korean Natural Farming materials and training (IMO, Biochar, Soil Preparation Solution, 3 hours of instruction from Drake Weinert of Natural FarmingHawaii.net, and 10 taro huli). We want to give 10 people first-hand experience with Korean Natural Farming, feed the soil with IMO and biochar, and feed family and friends in 9 months.

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Newsletter 39 - May 2012

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Aloha!

Everywhere one looks these days, one sees new growth and vitality in gardens, small-scale farms, local food markets and restaurants. In the local and sustainable food movement, there's good news everywhere.

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Kohala High School Ag Program Grows Again

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Volunteers spent Earth Day reviving the grounds of the Kohala High School Ag Program.

For 30 years Uncle David Fuertes was the agriculture teacher at Kohala High School. In its glory days the ag program made $25,000 per year by growing and selling its own products. The program emphasized entrepreneurship and leadership skills, as well as agricultural skills. They had a greenhouse, certified kitchen, four acres of vegetables and animal pastures. Many of Kohala’s leaders today were students who were mentored by David in the Hawai‘i Future Farmers of America (FFA) program—including High School principal Jeanette Snelling, and Adriel Robitaille, the new Ag teacher. After attending college it was Adriel’s dream to come back to Kohala and to revitalize the ag program. That dream is now becoming a reality.

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Self-renewing Fertility in Edible Forest Gardens: Part 2

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Nitrogen fixing plants have the ability to grow in poor soils and provide a source of nutrient-rich organic matter.

Part 2 of a 2-part series.  For Part 1, click here

This part continues the presentation of in-depth information on nitrogen-fixing and dynamic accumulator plants.

Diversify the Leaf Litter to Aid Nutrient Cycling

Research has shown that diverse forms of litter on the forest floor aid nutrient cycling in the litter layer and topsoil. Diverse litter provides for better decomposition and diversity in the decomposer food web. Therefore, using various kinds of mulch and planting plants that provide diverse kinds of litter will improve self-renewing fertility.

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Expanding a Food Forest in Kona

Bernard Matatumua-Vermeulen prepares to harvest the first large bunch of bananas from the food forest he tends at Kona Seventh Day Adventist Church.
Bernard Matatumua-Vermeulen prepares to harvest the first large bunch of bananas from the food forest he tends at Kona Seventh Day Adventist Church.

By day, Bernard Matatumua-Vermeulen is a Soil Conservationist with the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service (USDA NRCS) in Kealakekua—and in his spare time he is one of the green thumbs behind a food forest project at the Kona Seventh Day Adventist Church.

The church is adjacent to the Amy B.H. Greenwell Ethnobotanical Garden in Captain Cook and is located in the kaluulu—a 18 mile-long breadfruit grove that was for centuries an abundant food producing region in Kona.

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