One of the most important things in any vegetable garden is getting your soil right. Recent research has shown that annual ploughing and digging can disturb the microorganisms within the soil. Turning over the soil will help new vegetable plots to become aerated and relieve any compaction. Here I have turned the soil once, built basic raised beds with fencing gravel boards and filled to the top with nitrogen rich compost. This is the first stage of the Ecospaces Urban farm I am looking forward to a productive season.
1 Comment
|
AuthorPaul Nicolaides is a landscape Architect from North London and Director of Ecospaces Limited ecological Landscape design & build contractors. His ambition is to help accelerate change to a more sustainable ecological society. A society that plans its urban environments integrating agriculture, wildlife habitat, natural processes, recycling, industry, and sustainable urban drainage. Above all Paul aims to integrate these disciplines and realise there compatibility both on a local and landscape level. Archives
July 2018
Categories |
Photos from Tauralbus, Kurayba, ChodHound, tristanloper, scott1346, Sustainable sanitation, RobBixbyPhotography, The hills are alive*, Bobby McKay., ell brown, ncwetlands.org, Drantcom, alh1, Verokark, U.S. Embassy New Delhi, John Brighenti, umseas, wuestenigel, nestor galina, Sander van Dijk, mikecogh, oatsy40, foundin_a_attic, ndrwfgg, The Garden Smallholder, Aaron Volkening, wallygrom, Sander van Dijk, Base Camp Baker, Local Food Initiative, Kansas Poetry (Patrick), blachswan, infomatique, Phil Roeder, aschutz57