It takes approx two hours to water them all... i do it in a staggered way.Just wondering how long it takes to water all the plants
Thanks, the plastic containers are chosen for reducing the weight, portability and durability... can't do much about the color though.Lovely garden! Must be an effort to tend to it. But the joy of seeing that greenery and enjoying the fruits must be more than compensating.
I hope you don’t mind me saying this, but the plastic drums don’t go well with the bounty of nature there - both in terms of the material and the color. Aren’t there equivalent alternatives made of clay? Or may be just soil beds?
I enjoy watering them personally... didn't want it too mechanized.@hydrovac Why haven't you tried the drip irrigation, since I think watering is quite laborious.
Your garden reminded me of permaculture. A design concept that enables one to identify patterns , energy flows in ones space and design a garden that is aesthetically pleasing , sustainable and yield bearing while not being too taxing on ones time and efforts.
I once met a permaculture resource person many years ago. He used to conduct workshops alternately in Darjeeling and Bangalore. Now off course such expertise is available on the internet. He told me that permaculture gardens are not meant to wow you with a lot of colour - energy and effort intensive gardens like the Miracle Garden of Dubai are an antithesis of permaculture- but rather they are habitable spaces in which you are inside the garden , living in it, rather than looking at it or visiting it occasionally from the outside.
Most permaculture principles are not new. They have been a part of the accumulated vernacular wisdom handed down through the ages - like growing climbing legumes on maize plants ( legumes help fix nitrogen while the maize provides support).
But its advantage is that it has organised these principles and practices into a body of knowledge which one can use to identify what is available and possible for ones garden- irrespective of whether that garden is a luxurious plant paradise spread over many levels of terrace spaces or a box of greens in the kitchen window sill.
+1 moktan
as is often the case with permaculture, it all comes back to observation: noticing what is already there, rather than what we want it to look like, or think it ‘should’ look like... labeling farms as “permaculture farms” seems to me to be an attempt to set them apart, based on ideology rather than action.
Permaculture doesn’t teach you how to farm... it can teach you how to look at things from different angles and see different perspectives, but it doesn’t teach you how to lay hedges, or put up a fence.
I learnt how to farm on my own way, and am still learning.
Although permaculture is often thought of as being about gardening and farming, it actually applies to any aspect of life.
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