Planting A WILDLIFE-FRIENDLY PRIVACY Fence - Ep. 251

Тәжірибелік нұсқаулар және стиль

Now that we have a new front deer fence and gates on the homestead, we can start planting on the fence line, which we have been looking forward to. Our main goal is not to create total privacy-but a wildlife-friendly fence line, which will also provide some beauty and great visual interest. A key focus was including vines that serve as the host plant for many of our native butterflies and moths-but also fruit and flowers for humans and for wildlife alike!
Special thanks to ‪@EspomaOrganic‬ -our partner-sponsors on this video.
00:00 - Introduction
02:00 - Espalier apples
11:50 - Aristolochia macrophylla
16:14 - Humulus lupulus
21:05 - Lonicera dioica
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Пікірлер: 67

  • @limitlessends
    @limitlessendsАй бұрын

    Yes!! Please do a video on the host plants of North American butterflies and moths. I love your content and learn so much from you. I’ve also seen some videos about making a puddling station. It’s a simple project: shallow dish, sand, manure, and water. Helps them drink and get nutrients. Would also EAT up a video on butterfly and caterpillar identification.

  • @johngault8688
    @johngault8688Ай бұрын

    Host plants take attracting butterflies to another level. I've never seen (or heard of) a Zebra Longwing butterfly, until it showed up after I planted its host plant, Maypop (Passiflora incarnata) vine.

  • @SeekingBeautifulDesign

    @SeekingBeautifulDesign

    Ай бұрын

    I was emphasizing more edible trees like chestnut before I better understood host plants. Now there are more oaks than there would have been. Them being the "best" host plant in temperate climates is great. Would be nice if I could improve the acorn leaching process so they could host me.

  • @thepipingbagbakery4399
    @thepipingbagbakery4399Ай бұрын

    Yes!!!!! Any videos we can have from YOU on native and host plants would be gold! Thanks to you both!

  • @EighteenandCloudy
    @EighteenandCloudy23 күн бұрын

    I learned something new, I had no idea that it was possible to graft multiple apple varieties onto one trunk. I had only ever heard of regular grafting. That fence is going to look amazing once the vines and trees have really taken hold! As always you've made very thoughtful selections with the plants you've chosen.

  • @TaxEvasion777

    @TaxEvasion777

    23 күн бұрын

    You can graft different fruits onto the same tree as well. Not all work and it’s very difficult but some different fruits can be mixed together

  • @ac42405
    @ac4240526 күн бұрын

    Oh man, vines are lovely but I would totally be planting trees, especially small "groves" of evergreens along that fence line. Tree lined roadways always look wonderful and provide such a great shelterbelt for yards.

  • @TaxEvasion777

    @TaxEvasion777

    23 күн бұрын

    Plant multiple species and it looks way better than the copy paste hedges most people do. It looks like an actual forest when people change it up a bit

  • @cefcat5733
    @cefcat5733Ай бұрын

    Nice idea to have the fence function like a green wall, especially, with the trained apple branches. Will it act as an activity decoy, to drive the deer crazy, trying for fruit, while your garden remains safe? You've solved a mystery for me, in this episode. As a child I found a dead creature, which looked like a Humming Bird, without a beak. I'd never seen such a thing. Now, I believe that it was the moth you mentioned. Cool. My picture books couldn't have everything in them.

  • @myhealing1004
    @myhealing100429 күн бұрын

    May beautiful plants decorate your fence.

  • @MichaelGlaspell
    @MichaelGlaspell13 күн бұрын

    Passiflora incarnata is a host plant for Fritillary Butterflies. I live in Louisiana and the Gulf Fritillary and Variegated Fritillary are the most common species to use it. Not sure if you have fritillary species in New York. They will also die back to the roots every year, even here in our mild winters. They will come back from the root stock, but not always from the parent plant. They sprout from root runners anywhere from a few feet away to 30 feet or more from the original plant. They grow quickly and reach full size in a single season.

  • @cosmiccatfish25
    @cosmiccatfish25Ай бұрын

    Passionvine hosts gulf fritillary, variegated fritillary, and zebra longwing caterpillars.

  • @gardengatesopen

    @gardengatesopen

    Ай бұрын

    Yessss, came here to say this! The fritillaria caterpillars are voracious eaters, and this suits the passiflora perfectly! BTW, the growth rate of the passiflora is well known to, at best, be A BEAST!! At worst, it's growth habit is compared to an out of control wisteria. Even though it makes a fantastic screen, maybe it would be best to reconsider planting one on this fence... ? (Maybe plant it further INSIDE the fenced area so as not to tempt the deer so much?) The good news is those caterpillars WILL take the passion flower vines back to zero!! (Thus, saving the fence from all that weight.) But of course, the vines do not die. They simply leaf out again. And again. And again! And actually, since the passiflora is such a fast & heavy grower, it's the caterpillars that keep it in check. Altho, I do not know if fritillaria makes it that far up north? Speaking of the passiflora being such a heavy grower, I'm sitting here envisioning the weight of that vine putting a great strain on that fencing! The posts seem hefty enough to support it, but the actual fencing seems a bit questionable to me... But then, what do I know? I'm not there. Maybe that fence is stronger than it looks? Hopefully there will be enough caterpillars keeping the weight down, which will prevent the vine from ever getting too heavy!! Either way, the deer will be thanking you for providing their nice dinner!! That small stretch of road might just become the new road hazard in the neighborhood! It could be the new place for auto insurance agents to get to know as they end up writing so many cars off after being totaled from hitting a deer... (Let's hope not!) Again, maybe I'm wrong? Maybe the deer won't try to eat the apples thru the fence? Maybe they won't want to eat more leaves on the passiflora than the voracious fritillaria caterpillars? Maybe the deer will never find this banquet by the side of the road...

  • @OldManse09
    @OldManse09Ай бұрын

    Thanks for the usual great content. We would love a host plant video.

  • @K414nn4
    @K414nn4Ай бұрын

    This channel and the way its content is presented, brings me so much peace, I wish I could afford this life style🙏🏽 God bless you🙏🏽

  • @peterkondratowicz9771
    @peterkondratowicz977128 күн бұрын

    Love watching your videos! I live in the city and your videos transport me out into the countryside =)

  • @Lori-Bell-4-BPT
    @Lori-Bell-4-BPTАй бұрын

    This is very much what I have envisioned for the roadside of my new property in Kentucky as well: deer fence and espalier trees! It's part of the overall Permaculture design I submitted as my final class project for certification. My additional parameter was being near a powerline right of way, so I can't have trees growing too tall or spreading out as the main path under the powerline has to be accessible. Keeping them in a plane on either side of the powerline made the most sense. Thanks for the additional plant suggestions! 👍😊👍

  • @SeekingBeautifulDesign

    @SeekingBeautifulDesign

    Ай бұрын

    Have a similar problem...consider coppiceability in your Permaculture designs. More in main comment.

  • @dmiller9786
    @dmiller9786Ай бұрын

    I really like that quality fence. With deer it seems that its necessary to do it right. In my experience, vines in particular should be planted on the posts more than the wire for fence longevity. Don't want too much wind loading on the wire. In the future I feel you should consider removing any vines that become too massive. An eight foot fence is essentially a sail when covered with large vines. Unfortunately few native vines evolved to be small. I look forward to every video!

  • @SMElder-iy6fl

    @SMElder-iy6fl

    Ай бұрын

    My mother's mantra was "prevent work". I heard that constantly during my childhood and didn't really understand what she meant. Now in my 70s, I certainly understand and am working on my own garden to eliminate plants that will cause me more work as I age.

  • @Lori-Bell-4-BPT

    @Lori-Bell-4-BPT

    Ай бұрын

    Would it maybe help in this particular situation to simply add more posts for greater support between the current spans of fence?

  • @gardengatesopen

    @gardengatesopen

    Ай бұрын

    I gotta agree... These are all very good points! I predict more posts will be needed. I've never seen anyone plant between the posts either, for the very reasons listed above. Perhaps they'll prove us all wrong! 🤞

  • @cathyscreationandvlog4224
    @cathyscreationandvlog4224Ай бұрын

    Do you have a video on the fence installation? I would love to know more about it.

  • @kali-66

    @kali-66

    20 күн бұрын

    there was one a couple of years ago when they did the first section

  • @paulwilliams1007
    @paulwilliams100729 күн бұрын

    I am sure there is a local resource recovery site that has mulch and compost as opposed to getting organic supplies shipped in bags. OCRRA has a site where you can drop off woody material and vegetation and pick up into containers trucks and trailers. Love the series thank you!

  • @TaxEvasion777

    @TaxEvasion777

    23 күн бұрын

    Local supplies tends to be contaminated with boomers using pesticides and herbicides

  • @jasonfalk
    @jasonfalkАй бұрын

    I often end up with too many bare root trees to plant at once so I just dig them into a annual bed (though our ground rarely freezes hard) then they can stay in the bed until they start to bud, sometimes a few months. Never had an issue with this method. Pots should be fine too if you get frozen ground.

  • @KeithSilva2
    @KeithSilva2Ай бұрын

    That fence looks pretty light to be a trellis for trees or vines.

  • @SeekingBeautifulDesign

    @SeekingBeautifulDesign

    Ай бұрын

    It's the wire deer fence, not the plastic one. Pretty sturdy. Trellises generally are there to keep plants in "line" and bear some but not most of the weight. Hurricane winds are another issue, but hopefully that never comes up.

  • @TaxEvasion777

    @TaxEvasion777

    23 күн бұрын

    They’ll have more trees hopefully grow and support more weight but that shouldn’t be an issue for a while. That fence can catch a deer running through it if it’s the fence I think it is.

  • @elmerfisher9446
    @elmerfisher944629 күн бұрын

    Very good video

  • @gasperkanoni8838
    @gasperkanoni8838Ай бұрын

    I love your widnes of understanding the space around you❤❤❤

  • @Thewildmanwoods
    @Thewildmanwoods7 күн бұрын

    Beautiful plants ….we have lots in common….apart from the spade 😂id love to buy you a decent spade ….i get old very sharp stainless steel that have had a lifetime of wear ( hand down) ❤❤but still very sharp …watching you trying to dig 😂🫣😉😉

  • @besottedorchids3605
    @besottedorchids3605Ай бұрын

    I have done the espalier method with my fruit trees. i get young ones so I can easily train them. they are on my garden enclosure.

  • @PlantNative
    @PlantNativeАй бұрын

    As the espalier ages, they develop a large, knobbly base near soil and it looks very interesting.

  • @sharonknorr1106
    @sharonknorr1106Ай бұрын

    Yes, would love a video on host plants, which I am trying to learn more about. Love hops plants, but when we lived in Phelps, near Geneva, they got eaten every year by the Japanese beetles; however, last time we visited a few years ago, I saw that one of our neighbors was growing a bunch of them and they were for a local craft brewery.

  • @rebeccaz789
    @rebeccaz789Ай бұрын

    You're welcome for the fence idea

  • @Neilhuny
    @NeilhunyАй бұрын

    WOW! I hope you get Pipevine Swallowtails in the near future - they're spectacular. And who doesn't love a Tree Swallow? They are great insect eaters ... I can see the conflict there ... but butterflies and Clearwings are not the targets of swallowtails; mosquitoes and similar hideous biting insects are.

  • @peterbathum2775
    @peterbathum2775Ай бұрын

    thank you from the great lakes

  • @Tminus89
    @Tminus89Ай бұрын

    Cool Aristolochia! I have 2 Macropylla that are in their 2nd year. They all have something unique and interesting about their inflorescences😁

  • @ratnajena5683
    @ratnajena5683Ай бұрын

    Where did you buy the fence and poles from ? TY

  • @DeuceDeuceBravo
    @DeuceDeuceBravoАй бұрын

    Would love a video on host plants. Working on rehabbing a large piece of property that has been overtaken by invasive barberry and hoping to turn part of it into a host/pollinator meadow.

  • @Arboreal_Fungi
    @Arboreal_FungiАй бұрын

    There is a hops native to the Northeast, Humulus lupulus var. lupuloides (synonym = Humulus americanus). The European hops is closely related, so the butterflies likely feed on both the same. They also cross-pollinate occasionally. The native species is seldom available commercially, but I've planted this one in my garden from a cutting of a wild hops plant.

  • @charlesbale8376
    @charlesbale8376Ай бұрын

    Enjoyed the video and appreciated the plant suggestions.

  • @nancymathisen9707
    @nancymathisen9707Ай бұрын

    A hops vine can grow to 60’ in a summer, but is amenable to cutting back to keep it short.

  • @deirdredear
    @deirdredearАй бұрын

    So informative. I love it!

  • @karensicard7304
    @karensicard730429 күн бұрын

    I am curious, won’t planting applies along the fence, encourage deers along the fence line? Possibly harassing the fence?

  • @alanFconrad
    @alanFconradАй бұрын

    Nice Project !

  • @FireflyOnTheMoon
    @FireflyOnTheMoonАй бұрын

    A quick way of dealing with a tree/bush that can't yet go in the ground, is to bury them in a bag of compost for the duration. Keep well watered. -- Be sure to keep grass and weeds away from the base of the plants, and - big tip - when adding mulch, put it nowhere near the base. I have just lost an old espalier by putting manure to close in. The trunk rotted and it died. --- I think shrubs and trees would have worked much better for you than espalier. These need careful and specific pruning several times a year. Hawthorn shrubs or the like would provide good nesting options as well as food. Espaliers won't. Be warned that hops can grow huge and be very heavy. Please make sure not to damage your fence.

  • @gasperkanoni8838
    @gasperkanoni8838Ай бұрын

    Young steams are asible like asparagus 🇸🇮🐉🌈💪🏾

  • @SeekingBeautifulDesign
    @SeekingBeautifulDesignАй бұрын

    Thanks for the video. Boundaries have recently become a thing for me... 1. Multigraft fruit trees tend to be favored by people with small spaces. They tend to be quite expensive. How did you decide on a triple grafted apple vs 3 apples of the same variety given you have lots of space. 2. 10 or more years ago neighbors planted a noise barrier to a road and previous owners planted a privacy hedge between my property. The power company contracted a rather terrible arborist and they bulk shredded both hedges. So, planning for such things may sadly be needed. a) No chance your fence is on government land and future boundary disputes could occur? b) Any thoughts on what you're doing under power lines? I've a solution using permaculture and coppicing for a power company proof hedge, but I've not seen nor heard of people thinking of this. 3. The hedge could also be a neighborhood draw and education point for your neighbors given dog walking traffic. Introducing new edibles/aesthetics. The channel Canadian Permaculture Legacy and some others have created boundaries with food/flowers to build community with and feed their neighbors. 4. You are looking comfortable squatting to work the soil. It's nice to see vs earlier videos kneeling on the soil. I've found it's led to a stronger back and legs as well as no ticks.

  • @karendurston2528
    @karendurston2528Ай бұрын

    You mention a new fence. Did you do a video on it? I saw the videos from 2 years ago but you called it "new". Maybe it is new but similar to the 2 year old so not worth a video. Anyway, it looks nice - and enjoyed the video.

  • @kimberlycrisler6834
    @kimberlycrisler683429 күн бұрын

    Any reason you opted not to dig a water well on the downslope side of the fence? I garden where water wells are essential, but perhaps they aren’t needed in your area.

  • @nancymathisen9707
    @nancymathisen9707Ай бұрын

    Wisteria sinensis and the native wisteria twine in opposite directions from each other. I don’t remember which one is clockwise or which is counter clockwise.

  • @jimlebo5642
    @jimlebo564222 күн бұрын

    i have lots of deer, and have parts of my garden where I fence them out, but a wildlife friendly deer fence is a little bit of an oxymoron

  • @SMElder-iy6fl
    @SMElder-iy6flАй бұрын

    How much will you need to water while these get established? Can you get a hose to the fence line?

  • @nancymathisen9707

    @nancymathisen9707

    Ай бұрын

    Did you watch the video? She brought a hose to water the apple tree.

  • @tracy419

    @tracy419

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@nancymathisen9707sure, but she used a bucket for the second half of the video. Could always link hoses though.

  • @LindaLolaa
    @LindaLolaaАй бұрын

    Will deer nibble on the vines if they are grown on the deer fence? I also was thinking of growing honey suckle on our deer fence we want to put up, but wasn’t sure if that is smart until I saw you are doing it too!

  • @SeekingBeautifulDesign

    @SeekingBeautifulDesign

    Ай бұрын

    I have had deer nibble plants through large fencing. But the fence can provide some intimidation to deer and it's a bit harder to nibble through a fence, so there is some benefit. Also, this fence is next to a road, so traffic and the open space makes deer less interested in hanging out next to the fence...exposed and weird round wheeled noisy beasts hang around. As well, Summer mentioned dog walking neighbors, so do scent and view (as well) as people are further deterrents.

  • @CurlyQsgarden
    @CurlyQsgardenАй бұрын

    Where did you get the espalier trees from?

  • @nancymathisen9707

    @nancymathisen9707

    Ай бұрын

    She mentioned the nursery, I believe it’s Raintree, in the beginning of the video. You can find it in the transcript.

  • @kathymacomber5115
    @kathymacomber5115Ай бұрын

    Some plant high..did you

  • @gardengatesopen

    @gardengatesopen

    Ай бұрын

    She DID mention (several times) that planting spot is on a hill, so drainage won't be an issue.

  • @kathymacomber5115

    @kathymacomber5115

    Ай бұрын

    @@gardengatesopen was just a question.. I heard her say that .

  • @gardengatesopen

    @gardengatesopen

    Ай бұрын

    @kathymacomber5115 Ok, maybe you know something I don't, (I don't pretend to know everything!) is there another reason to plant high, other than proper drainage? I live in the South where we don't have much cold weather, maybe the cold is a factor? I dunno...

  • @GreenhornBonsai
    @GreenhornBonsaiАй бұрын

    Humulus lupulus is native to North America as well as Europe and Asia. I'm in Colorado and native hops grow on the creek banks near me.

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