orchardsalong
Orchardsalong is a concept used in agroforestry and landscape planning to describe the systematic placement of fruit trees along existing linear features such as field margins, hedgerows, embankments, roadsides, or waterways. The term emphasizes the alignment of trees along these lines to create edible landscapes that can be managed as continuous belts rather than as isolated blocks. In practice, orchardsalong arrangements vary by crop and locale, but they share goals of productive yields, landscape integration, and simplified access for harvest and maintenance.
Design and management: Trees are selected for compatibility with the line feature and local climate, with attention
Ecological and economic context: Orchard belts can reduce soil erosion, provide habitat for pollinators and beneficial
Regional use and reception: The approach appears in various forms across temperate regions where agroforestry, rural
See also: agroforestry, alley cropping, windbreaks, riparian buffers.