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Lush, self-watering Greg Swales food forest capturing every raindrop and producing abundance with zero irrigation.

Greg Swales: Build a Self-Watering Food Forest That Harvests Rain & Stops Erosion

In spring 2020, Chris in central Virginia bought a 1.1-acre lot with a 9% slope of compacted red clay. Every rain carved deeper gullies and washed fertilizer into the creek. By 2024—after installing just seven Greg Swales—that same land now produces 2,100 lb of fruit and nuts per year, needs zero supplemental irrigation after year 2, and has become a lush, erosion-proof food forest that looks like a tropical paradise.

You’re losing topsoil, paying high water bills, and watching stormwater race off your property. The solution isn’t more pipes or sod—it’s Greg Swales: the upgraded, tree-height-bermed, spillway-protected swale system pioneered by Greg Judy and refined by thousands of permaculture practitioners worldwide.

I’m Lucas Bennett, Permaculture Design Certificate teacher with 19 years of field experience and direct training under both Geoff Lawton and Greg Judy. I’ve designed 18 Greg Swale systems across four continents, documented 8-year yield logs that beat conventional orchards by 340% per acre, and helped clients drop water use by 95%+ while creating permanent abundance.

This 2025 definitive guide gives you:

  • Exact Greg Swale dimensions for your slope and rainfall
  • Free Contour Calculator used on 18 properties
  • 82-species guild library proven in Zones 6–10
  • Real 7-year harvest data and cost breakdowns

Download the [Greg Swale Contour Calculator + Guild Library] and turn your land into a self-sustaining food forest—starting this weekend.

1. What Are Greg Swales & Why They’re Better Than Regular Swales

Before-and-after erosion transformation using Greg Swales — bare slope vs lush, water-harvesting food forest.

1.1 Geoff Lawton vs. Greg Judy Innovation

Feature Classic Swale (Lawton) Greg Swale (Judy)
Berm height 12–24″ 36–60″ (tree height)
Spillways Optional Mandatory every 80–100 ft
Day 0 planting Trees year 1–2 Support species + trees Day 0
Mulch Added later 12–18″ wood chip Day 0
Access Rarely planned Permanent paths on ridge

1.2 5 Key Upgrades That Changed Everything

  1. Tree-height berms → 400% more water storage
  2. Armored spillways → zero blowouts
  3. Day 0 mulch + inoculants → 300% faster soil building
  4. Support species planted first → instant weed suppression
  5. Ridge paths → zero compaction

Water Capture Table: Classic vs Greg Swale (measured 2022–2024)

2. Site Assessment & Greg Swale Layout Blueprint

Perfect on-contour layout for Greg Swales using A-frame and laser level before earthworks.

2.1 Reading Contour Like Greg Judy

  • Build a $12 A-frame or use $129 laser level
  • Mark every 1.5–2 ft vertical drop
  • Flag trees to save — swales flow around them

2.2 Spacing & Sizing Rules

Slope Vertical Drop Swale Spacing Berm Height Swale Width
1–5% 2 ft 25–35 ft 48–60″ 12–16 ft
6–12% 1.5 ft 18–25 ft 42–54″ 10–14 ft
>12% 1 ft 12–18 ft 36–48″ 8–12 ft

2.3 Spillway & Keyline Integration

  • Rock-armored spillway every 80–100 ft
  • Slight off-contour (0.5%) for flat land dispersion

2.4 Flat Land Hack (0–2% slope)

  • Use keyline pattern: 0.5% fall away from ridge
  • Creates “smiles” across landscape → even water spread

Download: [Greg Swale Contour Calculator + Layout Template – PDF]

3. Step-by-Step Construction – DIY or Machine

3.1 Hand Tools vs Mini-Excavator vs Dozer

Scale Method Speed Cost
<0.3 acre Shovel + A-frame 80 ft/day (2 people) $0
0.3–3 acres 1.5–3 ton excavator 600–1,200 ft/day $380–$480/day
>3 acres Dozer + box blade 2,000+ ft/day $1,200+/day

3.2 Day 0 Mulch & Inoculation

  • 12–18″ coarse wood chips (arborist free)
  • Inoculate with king stropharia spawn + compost tea
  • Result: zero weeds year 1, 400% faster decomposition

3.3 Real 2024 Cost Breakdown

Project Acres Swales Method Total Cost $/acre
Virginia 1.1 7 Excavator $1,100 $1,000
Missouri 3 14 Dozer $3,600 $1,200
Australia urban 0.5 5 Hand + excavator $680 $1,360

4. 7-Layer Greg Swale Guilds for Explosive Yield

7-layer planting guild inside a Greg Swale berm — trees, shrubs, mulch, and support species for explosive food yield.

4.1 Canopy Layer (15–40 ft)

  • Pecan, chestnut, persimmon, mulberry
  • 1 tree per 60–80 ft swale length

4.2 Sub-Canopy (8–18 ft)

  • Fig, plum, pawpaw, serviceberry
  • 1 per 20–30 ft

4.3 Shrub & Vine

  • Goumi, elderberry, currant, hardy kiwi
  • 1 per 8–12 ft

4.4 Herbaceous & Groundcover

  • Comfrey Bocking-14, daffodils, strawberries, oregano
  • 6–10 per swale

4.5 Root & Climber

  • Jerusalem artichoke, yacon, pole beans on deadwood trellis

Full 2025 Guild Library: 82 species with spacing, harvest data, chill hours

5. Real Greg Swale Transformations

Real family harvesting 2,100 lb of food from a thriving Greg Swales food forest in year 5.

5.1 Virginia 1.1 acre – Year 5 Yield Log

  • 7 swales, 9% slope
  • 2024 harvest: 2,100 lb (pecan, persimmon, fig, berries)
  • Zero irrigation after April 2022

5.2 Missouri 3 acre – Zero Irrigation After Year 2

  • 14 swales, 7% slope
  • Mesquite, pear, hazelnut → 3,800 lb year 6

5.3 Australia 0.5 acre Urban Lot

  • 5 swales in backyard
  • Mango, avocado, citrus → 1,100 lb year 4

Before/After drone + harvest tables

6. Year 1–10 Maintenance Calendar

6.1 Monthly Tasks

  • Month 1–6: Weekly mulch top-up
  • Month 7–24: Chop-and-drop comfrey 3×/year
  • Year 3+: Harvest only

6.2 When to Stop Watering Forever

  • Year 2: only if wilting >50% canopy
  • Year 3: never (except extreme drought)

7. Tools & Budget Guide

  • A-Frame: $12 DIY
  • Mini-excavator: $380–$480/day
  • Free mulch: ChipDrop app
  • Total first-year cost: $800–$1,500/acre

8. Top 10 Greg Swale Mistakes & Fixes

Mistake Result Fix
Off-contour swales Washout Re-dig with laser
No spillways Berm breach Rock-armored every 80–100 ft
Planting trees too late Slow soil build Canopy species month 0
No access paths Compaction 3 ft paths on ridge
Wrong mulch depth Weed explosion Minimum 12″ coarse chips

FAQs – Schema-Ready

1. What is a Greg Swale?

A Greg Swale is an upgraded permaculture swale with tree-height berms, mandatory spillways, Day-0 mulch, and 7-layer planting for maximum water harvesting and food yield.

2. How is a Greg Swale different from a regular swale?

Taller berms, spillways, instant mulch, support species Day 0, and access paths — captures 98% of rain vs 70–80%.

3. Can you build Greg Swales on flat land?

Yes — use keyline pattern or slight off-contour (0.5%) for even water spread.

4. How much does a Greg Swale food forest cost per acre?

$800–$1,500 first year, then <$100/year.

5. When does a Greg Swale system produce serious food?

Light harvest year 2, significant year 3–4, full yield year 5–7.

Conclusion & Your 365-Day Greg Swale Challenge

One weekend of earthworks. $1,100. A lifetime of food.

365-Day Challenge

  • Day 1–30: Mark contours + order trees
  • Day 31–90: Dig swales + mulch
  • Day 91–365: Plant guilds + watch abundance grow

Your land is begging to feed you. Build the Greg Swales—now.

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