So, I mentioned this in my swale thread, but I wanted to go a little deeper into it. I'm just thrilled at this realization, although I know it's nothing new. It just took me a little longer to get it. :)
In Eliot Coleman's "Four-Season Harvest" he states, "Along the 44th parallel, a garden on soil sloping 5* to the south has the same solar climate as flat land 300 miles further south."
To someone who has all North facing land, and has felt a bit discouraged by this over the years, this is a HUGE revelation. And it got me thinking, how big of a hill do you need before you have a south facing slope? I pondered this because I used to always think "if only I was on the other side of this hill." As if 1000' to the south was going to have a different climate. I realized that it's not the size of the slope at all. I'm just very, very excited to combine this knowledge with my current raised bed gardening technique, as well as hugelkulture mounds and swales.
My thinking is, if I can create large mounded Hugels, swales, and beds, I can plant on the south slope and get a micro climate that changes my growing environment completely. I'm kinda freaking out over this, as it could be a total game changer in my cold, ocean view hill side, north facing slope. I've constantly struggled with trying to warm things here, even in summer. It's rarely over 70*, so if I could warm up the growing areas by even a small bit this will change things for me immensely.
Does anyone have any first hand experience with this? I'd love to hear your thoughts.