Tag archive for "grow your own"

Compost Awareness Week

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Compost Awareness Week

No Comments 04 May 2010

(image via Apartment Therapy)

If you’re not making compost by now you’re missing out on one of the easiest, most rewarding methods of recycling around. Now is the perfect time to get involved, with Compost Awareness Week running from 2-8 May and a plethora of web-based resources at your fingertips.

Why compost?
Composting might seem a bit unnecessary considering that you can buy bags of it ready-made at any garden centre, but the environmental benefits of making compost out of your kitchen waste are vast. In a landfill air circulation is hampered and methane gas is released during decomposition which is harmful to the environment. In an above-ground compost pile or bin oxygen allows the compost to break down releasing hardly any methane which is much more environmentally friendly. The organic matter produced will be a great plant food rich in nutrients and act as a water-retentive layer and a protective mulch. It will also be peat-free, which is another environmental benefit.
can o worms
The Can O Worms is an ideal size for getting started.

Give It a Grow
The theme of this year’s Compost Awareness Week is ‘Give it a Grow’ – extend your recycling and composting into new activities such as growing your own fruit and vegetables or starting a wormery. You could also think about trying out new things in your composter – scrunched up paper, vacuum cleaner contents and shreaded leaves and green waste are all suitable for composting and will reduce your contribution to landfills even further.
compost-crock
A cute kitchen compost bin means you won’t forget to sort kitchen waste every day.

Top Tips for Composting
1. Start off small – not only in terms of the volume of your compost bin but also the contents. Shred leaves and paper, break up food waste and crumble egg shells. This will make decomposition quicker.
2. Water, water, water – compost needs water to speed up the process, so water little and often for the best results
3. Toss and Turn – dig in with a fork or trowel to turn the compost and break it up. If you don’t have a lot of strength go for a small compost bin or two bins you can split the compost between.
organic_allotmentgrow_organicall_about_compost
Books available from Garden Organic

Resources
For more information, advice and tips try:
1. Home composting at Recycle Now
2. Garden Organic composting pages
3. BBC compost gardening guide
4. Your local government website

The Issue: Urban Agriculture

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The Issue: Urban Agriculture

1 Comment 15 February 2010

You can’t have missed the recent resurgence of the humble allotment in the gardening and mainstream media. Growing your own never went out of practice in England, but it certainly hasn’t been fashionable. Until recently the idea of allotments and vegetable patches conjured images of middle-class leisure and eccentricity – it wasn’t exactly necessary and seemed an extraordinary amount of work for relatively little yield. But with the recent economic downturn it appears that growing your own is experiencing a real comeback, not least because of it’s vintage appeal.
growmorefood2digonchild dig
Like ‘make do and mend’ and second-hand chic, ‘Victory gardening’ is the latest way to relive the (imagined) good old days. Hence the saturation of the market (both gardening and mainstream) with cutely packaged grow-your-own novelty kits, retro-style garden tools and book after book of step-by-step home allotment guides. The idea is to save money and increase self-sufficiency by growing your own fruit and vegetables instead of paying over the odds for supermarket stock.
salad-and-veg-stripes-490x367rocket garden herb
My concern is that when the economy starts to pick up and people are no longer driven by an economic imperative, companies like the brilliant Rocket Gardens (images above) will lose custom. Yet there is hope for the longevity of the allotment, due primarily to the sustainability issue. A quick scan of the fruit and vegetable aisles of the average supermarket reveals that most products are imported from far-away places; herbs from Israel, berries from Chile, oranges from Spain. An increasing number of people don’t want that many air miles attached to their five-a-day. So this is where urban agriculture comes in: that is, a sustained and permanent effort to grow, process and distribute agricultural produce in urban environments and to incorporate agriculture into urban planning.
cuba
It has been successful around the world, most famously in Cuba where gardeners can use allocated state land at no cost to produce food for themslves and their families (image above). This was begun out of necessity, since the USA banned imports to Cuba in the 1960s and food scarcity was a najor issue. But we shouldn’t wait until we are faced with a similar crisis in self-sufficiency before we start to produce our own food. It seems that the UK is finally catching on, as the National Trust has just launched their plan to set up ‘super allotments’ for the use of local families in locations around England (read story at the Telegraph. Admittedly this ‘Community Supported Agriculture’ won’t necessarily be based in urban centres, against the backdrop of high rises and main roads as it is in Havana, but it is a step in the right direction. And if the futurists are right, as the Guardian recently reported, the next ten years will see a rise in the number of skilled agricultural workers and entrepreneurs as the demand for fresh, organic and locally-sourced food increases.

So what about the supermarkets, those monolithic beacons of unsustainability with their high energy costs, hard landscaping and high importation quotas? Birmingham-based architect Joe Holyoak wrote an interesting article about this very topic recently, and suggested that supermarkets could partly offset their negative environmental impact and fulfil growing demand for localisation by planting rooftop gardens complete with vegetable patches and free-range chicken farms. He also mentions the efficiency of vertical gardens, which can often pack a lot more produce into a smaller surface area. Cafes and restaurants could also use this model, utilising their roofs for urban food production. It would mean a greater committment to eating locally and seasonally, but this seems like a small price to pay for food security in the future.
For more information and resources about urban agriculture visit Sustain Web; Research Centres on Urban Agriculture and Food Security; Urban Farming.

Outside in: vertical gardens

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Outside in: vertical gardens

6 Comments 20 January 2010

The garden of the future is… inside your house. Urbanisation, the threat of climate change and soaring house prices have led artists, ecologists and architects to experiment widely with creating vertical indoor gardens. Environmental credentials aside, they look rather amazing.

greenmeme

Greenmeme is the ongoing collaborative project of Freya Bardell with Brian Howe focussed on sustainability and ecology. In Live With Skin (above) various spiky, tumbling and protruding green pants emerge from a modular framework as if bursting through the steel surface.

planter-wall-tiles

Maruja Fuentes explores a similar theme with her ‘Green Pockets,’ a series of smooth, white tiles attached to an indoor wall that appear to have organically sprouted like seed pods.

These are art pieces exploring the intersection between ecology and technology. For a more practical take look to Australian company Fytowall whose various products are a response to the problem of creating sustainable ecological systems in urban environments. I especially like the Fytowall herb garden, designed to rejuvenate the kitchen garden in Australia’s cities, which have declined due to lack of space and freqent drought.

fytowall vertical garden

How does it work, you may well ask. Fytowall (above) is an aminoplast resin foam – a fancy scientific alternative to soil. Plants are grown in this material and then inserted into a framework before installation, when they are hooked up to a drip-feed irrigation system. Voila! Most ground-cover and house plants will thrive in it, and the company provides already-grown plants and a detailed guide for maintenance.

anthropologie renderinganthro complete

Similar work is done by UK company Biotecture using their product BioWall. Above is the rendering and completed project they undertook at Anthroplogie in Regent Street, a textured tapestry of multicoloured foliage for which they used 11,000 species including the ribbon-leaved house-plant favourite Chlorophytum (spider plant) and the elegant, sculptural peace lily.

Biotecture provides a statement relating to the environmental benefits of living walls in urban contexts, such as air purification, noise insulation, sustainability (many use rain water irrigation systems) and psychological well-being. Indeed research presented at TED 2009 carried out in New Dehli, a city with poor air quality, revealed that the air purification qualities of house plants are quantifiable, and they recommend ‘growing your own fresh air’ using Areca Palm, the wonderfully-named Mother-in-law’s Tongue (Sansevieria), and various types of money plant. My favourite vertical wall plant? The sweet little button fern Pellaea rotundifiolia. But anything long-leafed and glossy looks great.

As botanist and vertical garden pioneer Patrick Blanc states, wall gardens don’t have to be a criticism of the city, a way of closing it off and shutting it out. They can bring plant life and urban landscape together: the juxtaposition is often what makes these plant walls so striking. Utilising the natural propensity of plants to spread out their roots over surfaces as well as down into soil, Blanc has been designing luscious, tropical walls for Parisian apartments and the overflowing, colourful walls bursting with life look even more vibrant against a minimalist architectural and colour scheme (see below).
patrick blanc

So what should those of us who can’t afford to commission Patrick Blanc do to increase the ecological credentials (and air quality) in our houses and flats? There are some great innovative products on the market. My absolute favourite is the Woolly Pocket, a breathable planter made out of recycled plastic that comes in all kinds of shapes and sizes to suit your space. Fed by a drip irrigation system, it’s ideal for a kitchen wall garden – planted up with fragrant thyme and rosemary.
Woolly_Pocket

So far I haven’t come across many suppliers doing this kind of self-assembly, practical product in the UK. If I’m missing something please let me know!

Growing Guides

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Growing Guides

No Comments 08 January 2010

The Fennell and Fern blog is a visual feast – full of sumptuous photographs and stylish design. So I was delighted to see that their beautiful vegetable growing guides are printed out and ready to go. Each card has two guides on it, and they are easy to read and wipe-clean so you can have them on-hand in your allotment or plot. Definitely more practical than lugging around a hardback book with more information that you could possibly sythensise! Check them out here: Growing Guides.

Matchstick Gardens

Stocking Fillers

Matchstick Gardens

No Comments 16 November 2009

These Matchstick Gardens are truly ingenious – each little matchbook contains enough seeds for a complete miniature garden of flowers or greens of your choosing. Implanted in the tip of the matches are a mixture of seeds that you just need to pop tip-down in some soil and water. It really couldn’t be easier to start growing your own!

Garden Boutique has a selection of Matchstick Gardens available: Wild Flowers, Mixed Greens, Mixed Herbs and Italian Garden. We think they’re a great stocking stuffer, and an ideal gift for amateur gardeners – especially for young children who haven’t yet discovered the pleasures of tending their own garden!


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