Syntropic Agriculture

I believe it would be very useful to create a pattern language for syntropic agriculture. Potential pattern names include:

Every five meters there is a row of fruit and timber. Vegetable gardens between the rows.

The main objective is to start from an area with a recent history grain monoculture and to transform this semi-urban land into a beautiful, stratified, biodiverse system that guarantees successive harvests since the first cycles. Restoring the Soil. From Multi-story tree line

See What is Syntropic Farming? Ernst Götsch was born in 1948 in Raperswilen, Switzerland, and migrated to Brazil in the early 1980s, establishing himself in a farm in southern Bahia. Years before, Götsch had decided to quit a research job on genetic enhancement at the state-owned FAP Zürich-Reckenholz (today’s Agroscope), after a disturbing questioning: “Wouldn’t we achieve greater results if we sought ways of cultivation that favor the development of plants, rather than creating genotypes that support the bad conditions we impose them?” Ernst Götsch Aware that the answers he looked for would not come from the laboratory, he resigned, and in 1974, leased areas in Switzerland and Germany to begin his experiments in the field.

Ernst Götsch (born 1948) is a Swiss farmer and researcher working mostly in Brazil. He has originated a system of climate and biodiversity friendly sustainable farming techniques known as syntropic agriculture or dynamic agroforestry.[1]

YOUTUBE YBPLrr9Hph0 Syntropic Garden in New Zealand