Wilbur with his canche

This is a typical way of gardening in the Yucatan.  We are learning more about it every day.

Wilfrido, in the photo is shown in his canche.  The beds behind him in Maya are called eras and grow healthy crops of radishes, leaf lettuce, cilantro, garlic and, to the right of the garlic, lemongrass. Both the eras and the canché accomplish the goal of gathering soil in one place so that it’s thick enough to be worked and to support plants. 

In the Yucatán this is often necessary because in many places the soil is exceedingly thin atop the limestone bedrock and so poor in organic matter that it dries out fast. The thinness isn’t entirely the result of erosion caused by frequent deforestation. Friar Diego de Landa in his manuscript of 1566 Relación de las cosas de Yucatán writes:

“Yucatán is a land of less soil than any I know, being all flat stones with very little earth, so that there are few places where one can dig down without meeting great banks of large rocks.”

The canché has the advantage over the beds on the ground in that it’s harder for animals to get at the plants. You’ve heard about our animal depredations. The newest one is that someone, probably a Coati, dug up a cantaloupe-size jícama tuber, or yam-bean, and ate the whole thing, killing the sizable vine that had sprouted from it.

Wilfrido’s canché is composed of an elevated bed of poles atop which banana leaves are placed thickly enough to hold the soil deposited atop it. It’s not absolutely animal-proof, but it’s a little more so than a bed on the ground. (article is an excerpt from Jim Conrad’s Naturalist Newsletter)

This project is on hold as we wait for the soil to dry out and get the seeds ready for planting. Ixil lost most of their seeds to the storms.