Natural Phenomenon and Wonders at My Farm

Red kiwi on the move. Beauty in motion.
Jujube in my polyhouse without water for two years. Did better than the twenty five year old plants which are still 6 inches tall out in my field somewhere.
A beetle lives in the box elder tree. The excretion from the beetle causes red stains in the wood.
Conglomerate. Pudding. How?
Two decades later lily from seed found in a ditch along the road. Seed grown. Northern Michigan. Patience has its rewards.
Red trillium. Durability is the key and this is the only species that continues its trek around my farm unlocking the doors of cultivation.
The weight of the seed. The Chinese red birch bowed to the ground upon which it emerged.
I can heal if you give me time. American hybrid chestnut.
Blue Spotted Salamander. This expression and its larger diploid form is found here at my farm. They lived in my greenhouses for many years. Discovered while taking down my last greenhouse, I gently moved him under the walnut and pawpaws 10 feet away.
Largest pawpaw cluster discovered so far at the very top of the tree.

Enjoy. Kenneth Asmus

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About Biologicalenrichment

I started a farm in the early 1980’s called Oikos Tree Crops. It was once a 13 acre pasture and overtime became a forest. Today I am dedicated more than ever to finding, preserving, creating and disseminating a wide variety of food plants. At my farm I explore new plants and healthy ways to raise them. I currently focus my attention on my seed repository while providing seeds and bring these new discoveries to the public at large. My farm is one of the oldest and most diverse maintained tree crop plantings in the U.S. using many plants from around the world as a form of global agroforestry applied at a local level. Every plant grown on my farm is grown from seeds. I use the tree crop philosophy as a means to expand the use of perennial, woody tree and shrub crops raised from seed without the use of chemical and high energy inputs.The two story agriculture is alive and well at Oikos Tree Crops. This blog highlights ecological enrichment as a means to improve human health and raise awareness of the possibilities of creating a healthy earth and a wealthy farmer. My story is told by describing my 50 years of farming and life experiences surrounding agriculture filled with my love of nature and my constant search for a greater diversity beyond the cultivar on a global stage.
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