- layer for productivity
- vertical or semi vertical slopes used for supporting species
- the idea is to put everything needed for supporting beds on the wall
- goals
- utilize vertical or semi-vertical slopes and wall structures to host support species
- maximize flat surface area of beds for high-value or productive species
- integrate species that fulfill key regenerative functions:
- selection criteria for wall species
- fast-growing biomass producers
- aggressive rooting for erosion control
- tolerate shallow soil or rock wall crevices
- easy to propagate: cuttings or seeds
- multi-role functionality
- tolerates pruning or coppicing
- species used for walls in edem
- crown: every 0.5-0.8 m - herb + herb + shrub + herb + herb
- facewall: every 0.5 m in zigzag or diagonal lines
- footwall: every ~2 m
- edge: every ~3 m
- key advantages
- reduced competition for resources in productive beds
- vertical surfaces become extremely functional ecological zones
- species offer secondary outputs: medicine, fodder, mulch, flowers
- enable structured pruning cycles for biomass or compost input