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Turning Landscape into Legacy
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Defiance, Part I: The Last Apple Standing
I love this apple for its defiance. It’s the ultimate winter keeper apple. It is also one of the most balanced apples I’ve had—sweet, acidic, and without the penalty that plagues so many late hangers. The skin isn’t that tough, battlefield-leather armor you get with other winter apples. It’s firm, yes, but fair. The history, its endurance, though, makes it worth having.
Wolfy
Nov 21, 20254 min read


Winter Garden: What My Grandfather’s War Garden Still Teaches Me - Part 2
They understood that certain transformations only happen slowly, in the cold. That winter isn’t an obstacle but a collaborator. That time itself is a tool, if you know how to wield it. Most modern people try to fight winter. Japan fermented it.
Wolfy
Nov 15, 20257 min read


From Soil to Cell: How Nutrient-Dense Gardens and Landscapes Rebuild Human Resilience
The first act of cultivation is not planting — it’s inquiry. Test the soil. Read its chemistry and its silence. Some soils are burdened — with metals, residues, or exhaustion from years of extraction. Others are simply asleep, waiting to be woken. You must know which you have before asking it to feed you.
Tamayo
Oct 28, 20257 min read


Sweet After the Freeze: Remembering Growing, and Eating the Medlar
Long after apples are gone and pears are stored away, the medlar still hangs—brown, frost-touched, and waiting. It’s a fruit that sweetens only after the cold, a reminder that not everything worth tasting comes in season.
Wolfy
Oct 13, 20254 min read


Edible Landscape Design: Jerusalem Artichoke (Sunchoke) — Top 10 Permaculture Species
A dense patch of Jerusalem artichokes with tall green stalks and bright yellow sunflower-like blooms, growing along a hillside with trees in the background.
Wolfy
Aug 29, 20253 min read
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