Frankster
Never trust a doctor who's plants have died.
Supporter
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- 313
The problem out there is the underlying clay, buried beneath 7-13 foot of very light and highly drainable soil, that's been growing on it since the glaciers melted there 10,000 years ago. Below is what happens where those two eco-systems intersect. It's a very delicate eco-system. When the drainable soil soaks in the constant rain water, it produces springs that crawl along the clay base, and work their way downwards, it's a constant battle of erosion, that's playing out.Adding myco couldn't hurt, but you've got a 68% slope. If it was forested with the soil interlaced with tree roots, I don't think myco would have stopped it.
If you can control the capture and flow,then redirect and minamize soil capacity?
You can control the erosive nature of the slide area.
I like terrace farming.It is a lot of work but once in you can really use a slope to your advantage.
Mycelium will help but isn't the only part to the solution.
I hope you are independently wealthy. This idea sounds good in theory, but in reality will require massive inputs in structural bracing of the cliff side to allow plants to reestablish intertwined root systems capable of holding the earth on its own durring spring runoff.
Planting trees and scheduled forestry maintenance will be required to rebuild the root zone to prevent errosion.
The reason why people are not fungi farming for errosion purposes is because it's not profitable and is a job best left to army corp of engineers or someone with deep pockets.
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