background preloader

Potager en sac

Facebook Twitter

Grow Bag. Comme si vous plantiez vos plantes vertes d’intérieur directement dans le sac de terre, "Grow Bag" est un pot à hydro-culture en PVC expansé soudé réduit à son strict minimum créé par le designer Martino D’Esposito pour ligne roset. Original ! Eco gardening secrets from Africa | My Climate Change Garden. An excellent charity called Send a Cow, have developed a unique method of growing vegetables in a keyhole garden using knowledge from African Farmers. They won a silver medal at the BBC Gardeners World Exhibition with their display which aims to save water and grow vegetables in a small area such as a patio or balcony. As you can see, Key Hole Gardening is an extremly attractive way to grow veg with heaps of soil based around a compost that continually feeds the garden with the rotting matter as it grows.

This a great way to use up kitchen waste and means you can grow lots of vegetables in a small area, all year round. Perfect for city balconies or terraces where space is at a premium and there is often nowhere to have a compost heap. The height is good for elderly people who may find bending down to tend their vegetables more difficult. For many families in Africa these amazing keyhole gardens are the difference between life and death. 1. 2. 3.

ShareThis. Planter un jardin Sac pour la production rapide temporaire. « Bag Gardens  « «Jardins et Potagers Urbains. Février 27, 2009 par jardinpotagerurbain Un autre concept présenté par l’organisation Send a Cow : le bag garden. Véritable petit potager vertical, composé d’un sac de jute, d’un substrat enrichi et d’une colonne de distribution d’eau en pierre. Une idée géniale qui sauve des vies en Afrique et qui est tout à fait transposable en ville dans une cour ou sur un balcon… Like this: J'aime chargement… PRODUITS | Bacsac, la nature est dans le sac. Bag-riculture Urban Style. Pardon the bad pun, but a bunch of posts that deal with urban agriculture using a variety of containers motivated me to post on the selection and phenomenon. Gardens are one of those things that require some sort of container in which to hold soils, plants, and allow for growth.

Typically this container is our limited but mostly expansive terra firma - which provides for countless thousands of acres of production years. :: YMCA Vancouver Rooftop Garden - image via CityFarmer There are cases where growing food can benefit, or by necessity requires, elevated/opportunistic/ephemeral containers to either avoid contamination, occupy spaces temporarily, or allow for visual and agricultural excitement by confronting urban dwellers with - honest to god - veggies growing right in their own city! The following is a range of examples culled from the ether... for your education and enjoyment. :: Ceramic Vegetable Garden Installation - image via Dwell :: Mobile Forest - image via Dwell.