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Gliricidia Cuttings for Sale

Gliricidia sepium is a fast growing nitrogen fixing legume tree.  Excellent permaculture tree for establishing food forests quickly.  Best planted by 2-4 ft woody cuttings but smaller  semi woody cuttings can be used.  Several small slits are cut at base of cutting to encourage rooting.  Gliricidia will typically be a 8 ft tree within a year from planting, growing up to 30 + ft if left unpruned.  Great for chop and drop and free fertilizer.  Plant 10-15 ft from fruit trees and when cut back (up to 2x a year mulch) is used to feed neighboring fruit trees.
 
The Gliricidia tree releases nitrogen from nodules that form on the roots system every time it is cut back this in turn feeds all plant life around it with nitrogen saving a lot of work in hauling in manure and fertilizer. Good to plant in planned orchards before fruit trees are planted to act as a nurse tree providing windbreak, and semi shade to young vulnerable fruit trees.  Once established it will provide quick shelter meaning less grass and weeds to maintain around trees.  Can be used in conjunction with fast growing shrubs like cassava  and other quick shorter legumes to make a swift transition from grassland to forest. Can be used on garden edges if regularly pruned to provide constant source of mulch to protect tropical soil and suppress garden weeds, or tilled in for green manure 2 weeks before planting.
 
 
Gliricidia is a fixture in shade grown cacao production where it got its nickname “mother of cacao”. However In most systems it is phased out once fruit trees establish a canopy and by then has provided 100’s of pounds of free nitrogen and tons of mulch. If planted with bananas and cassava and other shrub / tree perennials parallel to slope or contour in rows it will provide nearly complete shade around plantings.  This method is a great way to phase out grasses and weeds from polyculture systems in the lowland tropics. This ultimately saves on a huge amount of labor and gas that would be spent hand weeding, mowing and weedwhacking in the early stages of orchard establishment.