HOME GARDEN TECHNOLOGY LEAFLET 11
PROTECTION WITH PRODUCTION
Food crops need protection from animals and, sometimes, people. The idea behind a living fence is to use certain plants that make good fences and at the same time produce useful things for people, for livestock and for soil improvement. A good living fence can:
TABLE 1
The different benefits and uses of living fences
Fuelwood, timber and basket-weaving |
Fruits and other food |
Fodder and feed |
Mulch and green manure |
Acacia spp. |
Annona squamosa |
Acacia albida |
Acacia |
Bamboo |
Balanites aegyptiaca |
Acacia nilotica |
Crotalaria ochroleuca |
Casiorina |
Banana |
Acacia tortilis |
Gliricidia spp. |
Colletia spinosissima |
Bitter leaf |
Artocarpus spp. |
|
Eucalyptus spp. |
Cassava |
Gliricidia sepium |
|
Parkia biglobosa |
Drumstick |
Grewia optiva |
|
Prosopis africana |
Papaya |
Leucaena leucocephala |
|
Pterocarpus spp. |
Passionfruit |
Morus spp. |
|
Raphia palm |
Pigeon pea |
Ziziphus mauritaniana |
|
Schinus molle |
Yam |
Table 2 lists plant and tree types suited as living fences for specific areas.
TABLE 2
Species for living fences in humid, semi-arid and arid zones
Species for arid and semi-arid zones |
Species for humid tropics |
Acacia mellifera |
Aberia caffra |
Acacia tortilis |
Agave |
Caesalpina |
Crotalaria |
Dichrostachya cinerea |
Euphorbia |
Jatropha curcas |
Erythrina |
Opuntia ficus indica |
Gliricidia sepium |
Parkinsonia aculeata |
Leucaena leucocephala |
Prosopis |
Yucca |
Ziziphus |
These tree types are only examples. The local agricultural extension worker can suggest living fence tree types suitable to the local area.
EXAMPLES OF LIVING FENCES WITHIN A HOME GARDEN
Goats that roam freely in villages can cause a great deal of damage to home gardens. Fences should be erected around vegetable areas and other food crops. A living fence of Leucaena sp. planted close together and bound with strips of bamboo will keep goats out and at the same time provide them with fodder. Another type of fence can be made with sticks of cassava bound with bamboo strips.
FIGURE 1
Plant a living fence with edible leaves
Chickens that roam freely in the home garden and scavenge for food, such as insects, worms and larvae, also strip leaves from plants and seriously damage vegetables and young plants. Living fences around plants help keep chickens out. The type of living fence selected depends on the area. The local agricultural extension worker can assist home garden managers in choosing the appropriate type of living fence for a particular area and purpose.
FIGURE 2
Plant cassava or use bamboo or other sticks around plants
FIGURE 3
Protect root crops by placing coconut shells around the base of each plant
FIGURE 4
Living fence, using cactus plants or agave surrounding a home garden