UK EDITION · ISSUE 57 · 2024 · FREE COPY
7 CONTENTS IN THIS ISSUE OF GARDEN CULTURE : 11 Foreword 13 Contributor Spotlight 14 Marketplace 20 Confessions of a UK Hydro Store 22 Banker Plants - Eco-Friendly Pest Management 26 Eco-Optimism: Fungi Fights Climate Change 28 Spreading the Word about Biochar 32 Foliar Feeding Isn’t Special! 36 14 Benefits of Growing an Edible Perennial Garden 40 Best of the Blog - Hügelkultur Gardening: A Different Approach To Growing In Containers 44 Waking up to Living Soil 50 New Bird Names: Descriptive, Relatable, and Just 55 DIY Project - Grow Your Own Bird Seed! 56 The Way Through - Rethinking Social Interactions 58 Retain Your Strains: Regenerative Strategies for Fungal Genetics Preservation 62 F*ck, I Hate Aphids! 64 The Future of Growing is Multi-Layered 70 Notes From a Dirty Old Gardener:Thinning the Herd 72 Embrace the Chaos – Leave the Ego at the Garden Gate 80 Slashed, Smashed, or Thrashed, but Never Trashed 88 Organoponics 2.0 90 Local Growers 96 5 Cool Ways to Create an Eco-Friendly & Sustainable Garden Space 90 LOCAL GROWERS 44 14 MARKETpLACE 80 EMBRACE THE CHAOS 72 WAKING UP TO LIVING SOIL 58 RETAIN YOUR STRAINS: REGENERATIVE STRATEGIES FOR FUNGAL GENETICS PRESERVATION Slashed, Smashed, Thrashed or Trashed but Never
T5 LED Lighting Fixtures
Available in 4 Sizes:
2ft (2 tube) 2ft (4 Tube) 4ft (4 Tube) 4ft (8 Tube)
Energy e cient LED lighting for propagation, supplementary and aquarium applications
Low heat output 50’000 hours lifespan
Colour Temperature: 6500K
Ideal for seedlings, vegetating plants & supplementary blue lighting
Low running costs, up to 50% more e cient than T5 fluorescent tubes
Superior light quality for enhanced plant growth
Highly reflective aluminium reflector
2 x hanging points (horizontal or vertical)
3.1m power cable
Spare T5 LED tubes also available
by
Powered
TRUSTED BY SERIOUS GROWERS SINCE 1994
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You may not know Job Hugenholtz personally, but you definitely already know his work! That’s because he’s Garden Culture’s graphic designer, responsible for the gorgeous photos and artwork on our pages. He’s an essential and adored team member, and we’re so grateful to work alongside him every day. We asked him to
share a few things about his creative process and life outside of Garden Culture.
Did you always want to be a graphic designer?
I’ve always loved drawing and visual arts, but growing up, I never seriously considered working as a graphic designer. I studied biology and almost worked in a lab. But when looking for work after my studies, I was lucky enough to have graphic design circle back to me. It’s a real privilege to enjoy doing your work, but even more importantly, to work with a great team of like-minded friends who all have their heart and soul in this GC project.
How do you create inspiration for the beautiful covers you design?
Garden Culture’s slogan is ‘The Art of Growing’; we always try to create something unique for each new cover. Every edition follows its own ‘gardening & growing’ theme in terms of content, so each issue has its character. Eric and Celia always give me the new edition’s artwork theme and necessary inspiration. Sometimes, you hit the nail on the head straight away, but other times, it’s a lengthy process of eliminating and fine-tuning. Eric and Celia always have fresh ideas and give great feedback. The final artwork requires their stamp of approval. It’s essential to have that external input, as sometimes, you can get a bit lost or ‘blinded’ when working for hours (or even days) on the same project.
Ask the Garden Culture team, and everyone has a favourite cover. Is there one that stands out as a testament to your creative genius?
No, not one in particular. Once a cover is finished and I see it in print, I feel accomplished for about 20 seconds before I see the flaws! LOL. But I’ve loved the creative process on all of them. The ‘Eschercover’ was a cool project, because I genuinely admire his creative genius.
What’s your favourite thing to do outside of work?
I spend time with my family and friends and throw myself off mountains on my enduro mountain bike (it’s my adrenaline-fuelled nature therapy).
You’ve travelled a lot with your family!
Where in the world would you like to go next?
Ha, to be honest, I’ve not travelled nearly enough lately! I’ve still got a very long wish list: Azores, Marquesas/French Polynesia, New Zealand, South Africa, Belize/Costa Rica... don´t get me going, lol. One day! 3
Are you interested in writing for Garden Culture Magazine?
We’d love to hear from you! Send us an email introducing yourself with a sample of your work editor@gardenculturemagazine.com
CONTRIBUTOR SPOTLIGHT CONTRIBUTOR SPOTLIGHT 13
ATA NRG Upgrade
Upgrade is a slow-release fertiliser ideal for organic growers. It is produced from natural phosphate and plant-derived ingredients and is rich in organic nitrogen to support the growing plant.
In addition, Upgrade contains beneficial bacteria of the genus Bacillus that transform the phosphates and organic ingredients into nutrients that the plant can easily absorb. The nutrients are released over 75 to 100 days and are available to the plant whenever it needs them.
ATA NRG Upgrade is the certified organic fertiliser for green growers who want to upgrade their crops! Visit ATAMI.com for more information.
Plagron’s Latest Rising Star: Power Buds
The team at Plagron is thrilled to introduce Power Buds, a biostimulant that is different from ordinary fertiliser. Here’s the juicy part: The sulphur-containing component ensures continuous production of cysteine, a key player in flowering. This speeds up the transition from growing to flowering and cuts down the cultivation cycle—it’s like hitting the fast-forward button on your grow!
The plant is not accustomed to the continued production of cysteine, causing it to go into a stress reaction. This stress kicks the reproductive response into high gear, leading to an explosion in production. More buds, more glory!
Juju Royal Julian Marley
Powered by Biobizz is Now Available
Biobizz announces its initiative with Grammy-winning artist Julian Marley, who recently won the award for best Reggae album, ‘Colours of Royal.’ The initiative was conceived during a meeting for a research project in Jamaica alongside the University of the West Indies, focusing on regenerating depleted soil in the famous Nine Mile area. Products under the ‘Juju Royal Julian Marley Powered by Biobizz’ line are born from a mutual love for mother nature, inspiring both brands to create products made from natural ingredients that promote sustainable practices. The 100% organic product range includes three liquid nutrients and two substrates, a perfect tool for growers who want to cultivate consciously.
Learn more about the range: Rastorganic.com
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Check out Plagron.com for more.
Gorilla 18” Metal Wall Fan
Brought to you by Highlight Horticulture
Featuring three adjustable speed settings and an oscillating function to evenly distribute air, this 60W fan is built to last. It ensures that every corner of your grow space benefits from consistent airflow. The Gorilla Wall Fan is easy to install and operate. It has aluminium blades designed for improved efficiency and a 1.5m power lead, offering added convenience and versatility in setup. Ideal for growers of any level, this fan is a smart choice for anyone looking to improve their plant’s environment, helping prevent the build-up of humidity and heat. Available via your local Grow store today.
DAYLIGHT 100W Full-Spectrum LED Bar
LEDs are taking over the market thanks to their high/uniform outputs of rich PAR spectrums and their versatility. This single DAYLIGHT 100W PRO strip LED is no exception to that rule.This slim-line, stand-alone unit makes for an easy installation as a supplemental light to an existing LED fixture or even amongst traditional HID setups. Whatever your use for it, it gives a huge 263 umol/s of output and will help to boost the yield of almost any crop. Now complete with a dimmer to adjust your light intensity as needed!
Head down to your local store or visit GrowWithDaylight.co.uk for more information.
Average Efficiency
MILLS 70 / 30
Experience the ideal hydroponic growing medium with the pre-mixed blend of 70% Mills Coco and 30% Perlite. This perfect ratio offers superior aeration while fostering optimal plant root development. Conveniently premixed, it saves you time and effort. Formulated so it will not compact in the pot, this product ensures long-term vitality for your next grow.
Mills offers the ultimate solution for your plants’ unparalleled growth and development. Mills substrates are user-friendly while maintaining exceptional quality, providing the foundation your plants need to thrive.
Visit GrowWithMills.co.uk for more information.
What if the best fertiliser for soil was a hydro fertiliser?
Most fertiliser options can seem rather complex: two bottles for growth, two for flowering, and essential supplements. That’s why Terra Aquatica created TriPart® fertiliser: complete, easy to use, and effective. With its three parts, it meets the needs of plants at every stage of their life, whatever your playground (hydroponics, coco, or soil!).
Used by top universities and research laboratories, including NASA, TriPart® remains the ultimate formula, based on over 30 years of testing. It goes well beyond basic nutrients by offering a full range of chelated micro-nutrients for optimal absorption and stability.
TriPart® Micro, available in soft and hard water formulas, optimises calcium levels in the nutrient solution, avoiding the blockages and deficiencies often seen with universal fertilisers.
Available in: 0.5 L, 1 L, 5 L, 10 L, 60 L and 1000 L.
out TerraAquatica.com
Solar-Tech 720w LED by ControlLED
High-quality, full-spectrum horticultural LED
The Solar-Tech 720W is a foldable unit designed to fit through tight spaces. It is easy to set up with no tools needed—just unfold the wings and hang. The Solar-Tech 720W fixture features a lightweight, robust aluminium frame, making installation a dream!
Featuring Samsung and Osram chipsets with enhanced red spectrum, this fixture is optimised for flower formation and overall plant development.
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Check
for more info. Upgrade with the Solar-Tech Pro 600W Power Pack and Lighting Controller. With the ability to daisy chain up to 150 LED fixtures and control external heaters and humidifiers, you can take control of the environment. Enhance your growing experience with the Solar-Tech 720W by ControlLED. Learn more: Control-Led.co.uk
Maxibright’s NEW T5 LED lighting fixtures.
Where old-school reliability meets new-school efficiency
Maxibright’s T5 LED fixtures are available in four sizes and are ideal for compact and larger grow spaces. They emit a precise 6500K colour temperature, perfect for seedlings and vegetative growth and as a supplementary blue light source. It’s not just about doing the same job; it’s about doing it better. These fixtures match traditional T5 fixtures and boast significant energy efficiency, proving that the transition to LED is simple and smart. Witness first-hand how LEDs enhance quality and boost your plants’ start in life.
If you’re after reliability and the latest in efficiency, it’s time to consider an update. Look at how far LED technology has advanced with Maxibright lighting solutions, and see why many now trust T5 LEDs for better quality plants and seedlings.
Brought to you exclusively by Highlight Horticulture. Available via your local Grow store today.
New Millenium PK Apatite
PK Apatite contains specialised forms of phosphorus and potassium derived from rare earth minerals. Proliferate yields and essential resins from your favourite flowers and fruits by encouraging aggressive uptake of P and K. Perfect to use with standardised PK bloom boosters for an enhanced effect.
Available from Dutch Garden Supplies.Visit NewMilleniumNutrients.com to learn more.
Garland Propagation Equipment at Highlight Horticulture
Whether you are a beginner or a professional gardener, Garland provides everything the plant needs, from germination to potting. Garland products are designed to make gardening a pleasure, with a selection of userfriendly propagators, domes, and trays to help give your plants the best start in life.
Renowned for ease of use and practicality, the Garland product range available at Highlight offers practical tools for all stages of plant growth.
Available via your local Grow store today.
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Hydro Store
#confessionsofaukhydrostore #gardenculturemagazine #confessionsofaukhydrostore
Confessions of a UK Hydro ConfessionsStore of a #gardenculturemagazine
Serious UK growers have likely already heard of Root 2 Success! This hydroponics supplier prides itself on offering a massive variety low-cost products and a wealth of excellent growing advice to plant lovers across South Wales. We convinced Amel from the Root 2 Success team to join us in the confession booth.
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How have things changed since the early days? We have been in the industry for 15 years, and lighting has changed dramatically. In the early days, customers used 600w magnetic ballasts, which were expensive and hot! Then, the digital ballast came around, and that still does well. When LEDs first arrived on the market, they were costly and inefficient, but they have come a long way. Spectrum quality and efficiency have improved, and customers are thrilled and not afraid of investing in them for their grows.
How did you end up in South Wales? We initially started in Cardiff with one shop, which became busy and led to the opening of another store, then three, and now we have four spread throughout the south of Wales. Two are in Cardiff, and the others are in Newport and Pontypridd. Each store has a similar design, with knowledgeable and experienced staff and vast amounts of stock. Our central unit in Cardiff is the size of a football field! It’s our distribution hub, and we deliver stock to our shops daily.
We initially started in Cardiff with one shop, which became busy and led to the opening of another store, then three, and now we have four spread throughout the south of Wales
You carry over 60 brands of nutrients. Do you have a favourite, and what is the top seller? We stock everything, and we will get it if we don’t have it! Pro XL is a top seller for us; its highly concentrated bottles make for easy transport for customers and top-quality results! Canna and Mills are other customer favourites; they have some of the best advertisements in the industry. In Wales, customers also use brands from House and Garden, Canadian Express, Plant Magic, Buddhas Tree, Grotek, and more.
What are some of your favourite products and why?
Fan controllers like GAS enviro v2 and v4 allow users to control humidifiers, heaters, intake and outtake fans all on one controller, making it easy to sell to customers. I also like Stop Grow from Pro XL, which stops the stretch and regulates the plant’s growth. It makes growing simple if you need help with Scrog or net training your plants. An obvious inclusion is LED lighting because it comes in a wide range of colours, mimicking sunlight more accurately than other artificial lights. You can also adjust the colour to enhance growth during specific stages or add UV and CO2, which may result in healthier plants. We have soft water in Wales, so magnesium/calcium products are appreciated, especially in coco!
Your shop is doing well, even during these challenging times. To what do you owe this success? We offer the best service, always going above and beyond for our customers. We stock thousands of products and hold large numbers of each item. Soil and coco are pre-boxed and ready to go! We are reliable and efficient, and our sales team has a lot of growing knowledge. We also owe our success to the customers who are respectful and loyal.
What do you think is the most common error made by growers? We don’t think enough people use EC and pH pens/meters. Essentially, the EC of your solution will determine how much food your plants get and how well they can absorb it. So, if you’re looking to maximise plant growth and yield, it’s essential to understand the basics of electrical conductivity and how it impacts your nutrient solution. We believe many people overwater (over-fertilise), which can lead to a buildup of excess nutrients in the soil, burning roots, discolouring leaves, stunting growth, or shedding foliage.
Why don’t more growers use Stonewool? Stonewool has become less popular among our growers because coco and soil are easier and more available options. Stonewool has no nutrients or buffering capacity, so growers have complete control and don’t get any extra help.
What music will we most likely hear when we visit your shop? We play all sorts of music: 80s pop, 90s hip-hop, 2000s UK garage, and contemporary rap. We are blessed to have a few musicians on our team; some produce, and others sing. One of the lads thinks he’s a DJ in our office parties. But you will most likely hear a battle between the old and the young for the radio!
Do you serve tea to your customers? We serve tea, coffee and bottled water, but we also offer Red Bull! Most customers go for the Red Bull in our Canna fridges.
How, if at all, has Covid changed your business? We had a busy time during COVID-19 and have not shown signs of slowing.
What do you enjoy the most about working at a hydro shop? People from all walks of life come through the door, each with different stories and problems. Every day is a new day! I also love the relationships and friendships between the staff and the customers. 3
Want to be the next Hydro Store to ‘confess’?
Figure 1
Take a picture of this edition of Garden Culture Magazine in your shop, post to Instagram and tag @gardenculturemagazine. OR Send your info to social@gardenculturemagazine.com 21 UK HYDRO STORE
Banker Plants
Eco-Friendly Pest Management
Banker plants are a strategic tool used in integrated pest management (IPM) strategies. They serve as a habitat for beneficial insects, also known as biological control agents (BCAs), which help manage pests in agricultural settings. Here’s a breakdown of their functions and goals:
Banker plants are a strategic tool used in integrated pest management (IPM) strategies
BY CLAUDE ROBERT, ANATIS 22
Aphids feed on an ear of barley
banker plants can help reduce reliance on chemical pesticides or other traditional pest control methods
Supporting Beneficials Development: Banker plants provide a habitat and food source for beneficial insects, allowing them to settle and reproduce even before the targeted pest population establishes.
Increasing Allies Presence: By providing a constant food source, banker plants attract and maintain populations of beneficial insects, ensuring their presence in the crop environment.
Enhancing Effectiveness: Banker plants can increase the effectiveness of biological control by ensuring a consistent population of BCAs, which can lead to a higher success rate in pest management.
Risk Minimisation: Adopting a “standing army” approach with banker plants means that beneficial insects are already present when pests arrive, reducing the risk of pest outbreaks and minimising the need for reactive pest control measures.
Reducing Reliance on Traditional Products: By promoting natural enemies of pests, banker plants can help reduce reliance on chemical pesticides or other traditional pest control methods, thus promoting more sustainable agricultural practices.
Cost Reduction: Banker plants can reduce input costs associated with pest management by offering a more longterm and environmentally friendly solution.
Holistic Approach: Using banker plants supports a holistic approach to pest management by integrating biological control methods with other IPM strat egies, such as habitat manipula tion and crop rotation.
Aphid Banker Plant System
Parasitic wasps effectively manage aphid infestations in various settings, including ornamental gardens, greenhouse crops, and bedding plant nurseries. Employing an Aphid Banker Plant System, these wasps thrive within a self-contained sustainable ecosystem. Here’s how it works:
The system is a miniature rearing hub for natural enemies, ensuring a constant supply of beneficial insects to combat pests. Specifically, a non-pest prey species, such as the cereal aphid (bird cherry-oat aphid, Rhopalosiphum padi ), is cultivated on grain plants like barley and wheat. These cereal aphids pose minimal threat to most greenhouse bedding plants, making them an ideal food source for parasitic wasps.
Aphidius colemani, a commonly utilised parasite, targets notorious aphid pests such as the green peach aphid (Myzus persicae) and cotton or melon aphid (Aphis gossypii ). When the population of cereal aphids reaches a threshold capable of sustaining the parasite population, Aphidius colemani is introduced onto the banker plant. Over time, the parasite population burgeons, dispersing into the crop to seek out and eradicate pest aphids.
Keep producing fresh banker plants throughout the growing to maintain efficacy. At the end of the it’s
BANKER PLANTS
Cabbage Whitefly (Aleyrodes proletella) and green peach aphid or the peach-potato aphid (Myzus persicae) on the underside of a leaf.
By incorporating pollen-based banker plant systems, growers enhance the effectiveness of natural pest management strategies and protect crops in a more sustainable and eco-friendly way
The Advantages
The advantages of this banker plant system are numerous: it offers a cost-effective means of cultivating a steady supply of aphid parasites, eliminating the need for recurrent purchas es throughout the season. Additionally, it reduces the time lag between identifying an aphid infestation and procuring the necessary natural enemies from suppliers. Furthermore, it’s a straightforward process that requires minimal time and effort.
This system can be adapted to accommodate other bene ficial organisms, such as Anystis baccarum, a versatile preda tory mite, and Aphidoletes aphidimyza, the aphid predatory midge. By harnessing the power of parasitic wasps and other beneficial insects and mites, the Aphid Banker Plant System stands as a cornerstone in the arsenal of natural pest man agement strategies, offering an eco-friendly and sustainable approach to aphid control.
Other Food Sources
Sachet with beneficial predatory mites used for pest control
In some banker plant setups, pollen is an alternative food source for predatory insects or mites. Specific plant varieties have been identified for their enhanced reproductive benefits for natural enemies. For instance, the minute pirate bug, Orius insidiosus, known for preying on western flower thrips and two-spotted spider mites, exhibits increased longevity and reproduction when provided with pollen from ornamental pepper (Capsicum annuum ‘Purple Flash’), common mullein ( Verbascum thapsus), or Lobularia maritima, commonly known as Alyssum.
These augmented reproductive benefits contrast those observed in predatory bugs simply purchased and released in standard biological control programmes. Unlike the Aphidius colemani bird-cherry oat aphid system, which can be initiated as needed, the minute pirate bug system requires a lead time of three to four weeks before the crop cycle begins. For banker plant density, use one pepper plant per 500 square feet of production space. You will only require one mullein plant per 1,000 square feet of growing space.
Biosystems, can thrive on pollen plants designed to control pest mites, thrips, and other nuisances. Banker plants such as castor beans, corn, and ornamental peppers are commonly utilised in these systems. Because mites cannot fly, it’s crucial for banker plant foliage to overlap or touch crop foliage, facilitating their movement among infested crop plants.
Growers can establish colonies of predatory mites, ensuring that banker plants are populated with these beneficials a few days before or at the start of the crop cycle. This may involve infesting banker plants with mites weeks or even months before their placement in the greenhouse alongside crop plants. By incorporating pollen-based banker plant systems, growers enhance the effectiveness of natural pest management strategies and protect crops in a more sustainable and eco-friendly way.
Effective IPM
In summary, banker plants play a crucial role in promoting biological control of pests by supporting beneficial insect populations, which ultimately helps to maintain crop health and reduce the need for chemical interventions. 3
Claude Robert is an IPM specialist & technical supervisor @ Anatis Bioprotection. He is an environmental activist passionate about biology and focuses on agronomy and entomology. Claude has worked in greenhouse research and outdoor small fruit production since 2004 and currently takes care of crops at Anatis Bioprotection with a team of passionate experts across Canada and the USA. He’s also doing a lot of research and development for Integrated Pest Management ( IPM).
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BANKER PLANTS
ECO-OPTIMISM
Fungi ClimateFightsChange
Tired of all the negativity in the news? We feel you! Garden Culture Magazine wants to be a ray of cheerful sunshine; our new eco-optimism feature strives to educate and inform on meaningful environmental initiatives around the globe to get your positive endorphins going! Find plenty more feel-good content on our blog at GCMag.co
You can’t browse a gardening magazine and not appreciate fungi’s crucial role in soil biodiversity and plant health. Fungi represent a magnificent kingdom of organisms that take on various life forms; some are invisible to the naked eye, and others are fruiting bodies with sprawling underground systems. Fungi help fight climate change in many ways. They make nutrients available to plants, boost soil health, help sequester carbon, and break down common pollutants. We’re fans of the no-dig gardening method because it helps keep this precious soil life alive!
Considering fungi are incredible decomposers, putting them to work after death makes sense
Fungi Burials
Fungi and Pollution
According to the United Nations, the environmental impact of fungi extends beyond increasing soil biodiversity. They’ve been found to help decompose various pollutants, including plastic, pharmaceuticals, oil, and petroleum-based and personal care products. Studies have also found some species help with forest restoration projects and act as a natural pest control.
Fungi and Pollution
Fungi Burials
Did you know there’s a green burial industry? Standard burials are harsh on the environment due to the chemicals used to varnish coffins and during embalming. Considering fungi are incredible decomposers, putting them to work after death makes sense. Jae Rhim Lee was inspired and got the ball rolling, developing the Mushroom Death Suit for Coeio. It sounds creepy, but it’s an awesome idea. This garment is made with mushroom spores and other microorganisms that are said to help decompose a body and transfer nutrients to vegetation. At the very least, Lee’s invention got people thinking about ways to leave this Earth in an eco-friendly way.
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Mushroom Death Suit
According to the United Nations, the environmental impact of fungi extends beyond increasing soil biodiversity. They’ve been found to help decompose various pollutants, including plastic, pharmaceuticals, oil, and petroleum-based and personal care products.
Fungi and Fashion
We don’t suggest you walk around looking like Toad from the Mario franchise, but we do recommend you get in on fungi-forward fashion trends. Several companies use mycelium, the mushroom’s root structure, to replace plastic, synthetic, and animal-based products in shoes, clothing, bags, and more. The result is a product that looks and feels like leather but is biodegradable and takes less water and resources. Besides apparel, other mycelium-made products on the market include packaging and skincare products.
Fungi and Fashion
Fungi and food
Fungi and Food
If you don’t regularly eat mushrooms, consider adding them to your dinner plate. Mushrooms are extremely nutritious, high in protein, and an excellent meat substitute for vegetarians, vegans, and flexitarians. Raising meat carries a massive carbon footprint, so finding alternatives and reducing our intake is crucial. Swapping meat for mushrooms is yet another way fungi help fight climate change! 3
Sources:
• Benefits of Fungi for the Environment and Humans (decadeonrestoration.org) rebrand.ly/5ffdc6
• High on Mushroom Fashion: How Fungi are Altering the World (sanvt.com) rebrand.ly/2szuimw
• How The Mushroom Death Suit Will Change The Way We Die (fellowsblog.ted.com) rebrand.ly/a0559a
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27 FUNGI & CLIMATE CHANGE
Biochar Spreading the Word about
Biochar is a carbon sponge that empowers healthy soil and is largely considered a climate change solution. Yet biochar’s magic remains elusive and misunderstood by many growers.
BY JENNIFER COLE
Astarte Farm
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Credit: Dan PrattAstart Farm
Donna Balzer is a professional horticulturist who constantly researches what influences plant growth [1]. She learned about biochar during an online course and quickly tried it in her garden. Many gardeners lack experience with biochar, and there can be a lot of trial and error when working with it for the first time.
“I tried it as a growing media, and it was a disaster,” Balzer admits.
That’s because biochar is not a growing media. It works best as a soil conditioner when added to compost or organic fertiliser. It can work wonders in home gardens and large-scale agriculture alike, where, if used correctly, biochar can make a significant impact.
Climate Targets
In 2021, agriculture in the United States emitted an estimated 671.5 million tons of CO2 equivalent into the atmosphere [2]. Almost 10% of all greenhouse gas emissions in Canada are linked to agriculture [3] .
Charlotte Levy is the managing science and innovation advisor at Carbon 180, a U.S. NGO advocating for eliminating carbon emissions. She says biochar is a powerful tool to help achieve global climate goals.
“Using biochar has the potential to remove 0.5 to 2 gigatons of CO2 equivalents per year globally, not just in the United States,” Levy explains. “On this scale, biochar can help to reduce legacy carbon emissions and aid countries in reaching their climate goals while also positively affecting the soil and creating a more reliable crop yield.”
Proven Success
Biochar already has a proven history of success. Thousands of years ago, Amazonian civilisations buried and burned food scraps and agricultural waste in covered pits or trenches. The carbon created stayed in the soil rather than released into the atmosphere. Archaeologists still find remnants of the dark earth “terra preta” created from this process [5]
In the 21st century, biochar is produced using more sophisticated methods. Organic materials such as wood, crop residues, or manure go into high-temperature and oxygen-deprived pyrolysis units (giant kilns). As the material heats, it puffs like popcorn into complex shapes called aromatic rings.
“A single piece of biochar the size of a grain of rice contains within its layers the surface area of two football fields,” says Dan Pratt of Astarte Farms, a no-till organic farm in Hadley, Maine [6] .
Donna Balzer and tomatoes grown using biochar.
Biochar is not a growing media. It works best as a soil conditioner when added to compost or organic fertiliser
Pratt started using biochar to increase resilience in his soil systems and as a buffer against the climate crisis. As the planet heats, climatologists predict prolonged droughts and heavy rainfall events, which deprive the soil of nutrients. But not at Astarte Farm.
“We have endured several challenging seasons since we started working with biochar,” Pratt says. “The lattice structure of biochar enables [the soil] to absorb nutrients, water and a host of microbial life and then release them upon contact with plant roots. This buffering creates a more resilient soil.”
Elusive and Expensive
Despite these attributes, biochar remains elusive and expensive, costing between U.S. $600 to $1300 per ton. The largest biochar plant in North America in Port Cartier, Quebec, is set to open and, by 2026, could produce over 30,000 tons of biochar annually [7]. This initiative will make biochar more accessible and hopefully more affordable.
In the meantime, farmers like Pratt save money through on-farm production. Pratt can produce 15-20 pounds per firing using a double barrel retort. He is lucky to have untreated scrap wood on the farm. If the burned material has been treated with chemicals, harmful metals, such as copper or aluminium, will remain in the biochar and can be absorbed by plant roots.
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donnabalzer.com
Credit:
29 BIOCHAR
Growing tomatoes and peppers in biochar-enriched soil reduced the need for fertiliser by 50%
Activation Methods and Education
Biochar must be infused with life to be effective. Astarte Farm sprinkles the biochar with powdered mycorrhizae and mixes it by rolling it in bulk bags. This process activates the biochar but can be time-consuming. The good news is that biochar does not need to be reapplied to the soil like compost or other soil enhancers.
Meanwhile, Balzer adds biochar to the organic waste bin under her kitchen sink to inoculate it. She’s learned through experimentation the right amount to add to speed up the decomposition process.
“There needs to be more government support so that every single gardener doesn’t have to sort through all the methods and types of biochar available,” she says.
Her wish is coming true. If passed by Congress, the U.S. Biochar Research Network Act will provide research funding to study biochar’s effectiveness in crop production, carbon sequester and climate mitigation and provide practical information to farmers on biochar’s applications [8]
Scientists at Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada have already been researching biochar’s effectiveness [9]. Growing tomatoes and peppers in biochar-enriched soil reduced the need for fertiliser by 50%. These findings are significant because synthetic nitrogen-based fertilisers account for 2.1% of greenhouse emissions annually [10]
Uncertainty Amongst Gardeners
While biochar-enriched compost and potting soils are available, Levy of Carbon 180 says many growers remain leery.
“Gardeners and farmers would likely need incentives to implement biochar practices until a reliable market is created to bring down costs,” she surmises.
Convincing growers might be challenging. It’s always been the practical experience and results passed down through generations of gardeners and farmers that have informed and spurred new growing methods.
For example, Balzer believes that many people don’t grow broccoli because it is so hard to manage the pests. However, studies suggest that biochar promotes changes in soil microbiota, limiting pathogen mobility and insect pests [11]. For Balzer, the science is secondary to her pest-free delicious broccoli.
Back at Astarte Farm, biochar-enriched potting soil is used to grow transplants sold to the community each spring. Pratt says the farm’s loyal following of home gardeners swear by the plant starts. It must be something in the soil. 3
Sources
1. Helping Gardeners Grow - Donna Balzer (donnabalzer.com)
2. USDA ERS - Climate Change (rebrand.ly/4ce14b)
3. Greenhouse gas emissions and agriculture - agriculture.canada.ca (rebrand.ly/2ttrw47)
4. Carbon180 (carbon180.org)
5. Biochar, A Brief History - The Permaculture Research Institute (permaculturenews. org)
6. Astarte Farm | No-till Produce | Massachusetts (astartefarm.org)
7. Largest Biochar Production Plant in North America Contributes to Canadian Net-Zero Goals - Canada.ca
8. Grassley Introduces Bipartisan Biochar Research Network Act (senate.gov)
9. Biochar can turn plant waste into healthy soils and improve the environment - agriculture.canada.ca
10. Fertilizers cause more than 2% of global emissions (phys.org)
11. The Use of Biochar for Plant Pathogen Control | Phytopathology ® (apsnet.org)
BIO Jennifer Cole is a writer and garden enthusiast with a bachelor’s degree focused on history from Simon Fraser University, and a freelance writing career spanning two and half decades. Jennifer lives in Vancouver British Columbia. Her by-lines have regularly appeared in the opinion section of the Toronto Star and her portfolio includes articles in various newspapers, magazines, and websites across Canada. When not writing her own blog or visiting local garden centres, you can find her puttering, planting, and nourishing her own urban garden oasis.
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BIOCHAR
Credit: donnabalzer.com
Biochar mixing with compost
Credit: donnabalzer.com
Balzer and broccoli grown using biochar amendments, pest free.
Dan Pratt
Foliar Feeding Foliar Feeding isn’t Special !
any growers won’t reach for the spray bottle until they see a deficiency or pest issue and desire a “quick fix.” However, as Everest Fernandez explains, foliar feeding—spraying nutrients directly onto plants’ leaves—should arguably be part of your weekly garden schedule.
Nutrient Uptake through Leaves
Imagine the leaf as a bustling hub. Light hits the leaf, allowing the tiny engines inside, known as chloroplasts, to convert water and carbon dioxide into glucose through photosynthesis. This glucose powers the plant and contributes to the compounds we aim to produce. Did you know a whopping 95% of a crop’s weight comes from photosynthesis?
Did you know a whopping 95% of a crop’s weight comes from photosynthesis?
So, how does foliar feeding help? Research in 1956 by Dr H. B. Tukey unveiled an exciting discovery. Using radioactively tagged nutrients, he found that plants absorbed nutrients not only through roots but also through their leaves, and incredibly, they do so 8 to 10 times more efficiently via their leaves. This suggests that direct application to the leaves can provide nutrients where needed, boosting photosynthesis and the plant’s overall metabolic rate.
However, there’s a challenge: the leaf’s waxy cuticle.
It acts as a barrier. But science has a solution: special wetting agents that can penetrate this barrier without harming it, allowing nutrients to enter the leaf efficiently. This direct delivery to the leaf’s active parts results in a quick, beneficial response.
Understanding the Leaf’s Inner Workings
Once inside the leaf, nutrients face barriers like the cell wall and membrane. Most supplements can easily pass the porous cell wall. The cell membrane, however, is pickier. Some nutrients can move through effortlessly, while others need special channels or processes to get inside.
The good news? Plants have various methods to allow these molecules inside, such as facilitated and active transport.
The Case for Foliar Feeding
Foliar feeding’s benefits go beyond just nutrient uptake. Certain supplements, like those that enhance photosynthesis, work best when applied directly to leaves. Evidence suggests that foliar-applied nutrients can be more efficiently absorbed than root-based nutrients. For instance, a study by the University of Florida found that foliar application of certain nutrients led to substantially larger citrus fruits than ground applications.
Chelated nutrients are wrapped in molecules to aid absorption and are particularly beneficial when applied as foliar sprays. They’re absorbed and distributed more evenly throughout the plant. Urea, another substance, when foliar applied, provides an efficient nitrogen source for plants, bypassing the challenges it faces when applied to soil.
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Foliar feeding’s benefits go beyond just nutrient uptake
Foliar feeding offers a range of benefits, from increased yields, disease resistance, and improved drought tolerance to faster nutrient deficiency remedies and enhanced crop quality
Get Seaweed Extract in the Mix!
Also, seaweed extracts, especially from types such phyllum nodosum, are increasingly recognised for their as foliar spray biostimulants. These solutions contain valua ble elements, like cytokinins, auxins, betaines, and minerals, all enhancing plant health, growth, and robustness. Plants, when faced with adversities like drought, salt stress, or threats from pests and diseases, can find relief with application of these seaweed solutions. These sprays support plants by boosting their antioxidant defens es, regulating water balance, and fostering the pro duction of proteins and enzymes crucial under stress. Furthermore, these seaweed-infused sprays can lead to better nutrient absorption, invigorated root systems, and augmented crop yields.
Key Takeaways
Foliar feeding offers a range of benefits, from increased disease resistance, and improved drought tolerance to fast er nutrient deficiency remedies and enhanced crop While the method’s efficiency varies, it can be up more effective than root application. Still, while it’s a valu able tool, foliar feeding shouldn’t replace a comprehensive root-fertility programme. Instead, it should be seen as a fan tastic supplement to optimise plant health and yield.
FOLIAR FEEDING
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Benefits of Growing an
Edible 14 Perennial garden
The word ‘perennial’ originated from the Latin ‘perennis’, meaning ‘throughout the years’ and gives us a clue about their long-term value
BY ANNE GIBSON
36
Ihave great respect for perennial plants. After working with many species over the years, I compare perennials to the foundations of a house. They underpin a garden’s structure and form the basis of design elements in resilient, welldesigned edible gardens. The word ‘perennial’ originated from the Latin ‘perennis’, meaning ‘throughout the years’ and gives us a clue about their long-term value.
Edible perennials are always my starting point when planning a garden from scratch or redesigning a space. They provide long-lasting value and enjoyment and are essential to a sustainable food garden.
1 2 3 6 4 5
The Many Benefits of Perennial Crops
Long-Lived Enduring Nutritious Yields. Perennial food crops have a great return on investment with a lifespan of at least two years but often decades, depending on the species. Plant once for long-term yields. For example, well-cared-for fruit and nut trees, like asparagus plants, can last decades. Passionfruit vines provide around five years of fruit. Berries re-shoot and fruit year after year, giving diverse nutrients for health. Some varieties, like mulberries, can’t be purchased in shops due to their short shelflife. However, they produce kilos of fruit in a home garden and are best eaten fresh off the tree.
Sustainable Food Supply. We live in uncertain times with disruptions to transport, fuel, and supermarket access during weather events. Skyrocketing food prices put pressure on the affordability of many fruits and vegetables. Edible perennial crops provide food sovereignty and security. Many perennial crops provide seeds to save and the ability to be self-reliant.
Time and Money Saving. Once perennials are planted and established, you can focus on short-lived annual crops.
Extensive Root Systems. Perennial fruit trees, vegetables and herbs tend to have deeper, widespread roots. This advantage enables many to develop mutually beneficial relationships with mycorrhizal fungi and access nutrients efficiently for healthy growth. These root systems stabilise and improve soil structure, helping to reduce compaction while improving aeration. The roots also minimise potential erosion, improve water holding capacity and expand the biodiversity of microorganism soil communities—an impressive contribution to soil health.
Dynamic Accumulators. Some of my favourite perennials draw up specific minerals deep in the soil. For example, I use Stinging Nettle for its medicinal properties and herbal tea and make a liquid fertiliser from the leaves. It is a good source of calcium and potassium. Likewise, comfrey leaves return calcium, potassium and magnesium to the soil and make a nutrient-rich mulch or liquid food for plants.
Low Maintenance. With some exceptions, most perennials require far less work than annuals. They can draw up minerals and moisture deep within the subsoil layers to survive longer without watering or feeding. Fruit trees and some edibles need pruning, but we don’t have to start from scratch each season.
Edible perennials are always my starting point when planning a garden from scratch or redesigning a space
EDIBLE PERENNIAL GARDEN 37
Grapes are a perennial fruiting vine that live for years and are highly productive
Once their root systems are established, most perennial foods in my garden have been incredibly resilient
Easy to Propagate. Many perennials provide propagating material to expand your garden for free. For example, I take cuttings regularly from perennial basil, spinach and rosemary. Other edibles like capsicum, eggplant, and chillis give me free seeds. Clumping perennial herbs like chives can be divided as they touch the soil. This helps increase the number of plants I grow at no cost and with little effort.
Sizes to Suit all Gardens. Many perennial fruit and nut tree cultivars are available in full-size and compact dwarf varieties. This enables gardeners to choose suitable species according to their space requirements. Numerous fruit trees are grafted onto dwarf rootstock, ideal for pots or renters who need smaller or portable plant options.
Shade canopies. Fruit trees, vines and taller shrubs provide a vital shady microclimate role in the garden. The natural ‘umbrella’ a tree creates helps shade the soil and provide protection for sun-sensitive plants and a cool microclimate. Without these leafy shelters, birds, animals and plants wouldn’t survive in the garden for long. The branches and shade are places to retreat to in the heat, cold, storms or heavy rain.
Habitat and forage. Most of my fruit trees and many edible shrubs provide a protective haven for birds of all sizes to nest. The flowers offer a sweet nectar reward to pollinators, predatory insects and birds. These provide free pest management ecosystem services in the garden, reducing the need for chemical interventions. They contribute to a more biodiverse ecosystem in the garden.
Windbreaks. Many of the edible perennials I grow are chosen for their multi-functional roles. For example, Queensland arrowroot, galangal and feijoas help buffer the wind, reducing damage to other species. I often plant these in a guild to protect dwarf bananas or shelter shorter edibles.
Water efficient or drought hardy. Having been through several challenging droughts, I have had the opportunity to observe which edibles have been able to survive. Once their root systems are established, most perennial foods in my garden have been incredibly resilient. Some I rarely watered, and others didn’t need my help. Given the challenging climate conditions we are all experiencing, plants with low water needs are a significant advantage. Aloe vera, rosemary, garlic chives, eggplant and warragal greens are a few examples.
Store Soil Carbon. As many edible perennials lose leaves or are pruned, this organic material builds soil health by adding carbon as it decomposes. Because perennials live longer, their root systems effectively stockpile carbon, acting like a warehouse for organic matter.
Diverse colour and texture palettes. The diversity of colourful foliage, fruits and flowers, growth habits and textures provide infinite opportunities to create unique gardens reflecting our tastes. For example, I love blues and purples. So I grow perennial edibles like blueberries, passionfruit, eggplant, grapes and mulberries to add a splash of these colours throughout the garden. Their various leaf shapes and growing habits make them versatile and eye-catching as potager design elements.
Rosemary is easy to propagate by taking cuttings
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7 8 11 9 10 12 13 14
Because perennials live longer, their root systems effectively stockpile carbon, acting like a warehouse for organic matter
Factors to Consider with Edible Perennials
• They need a permanent location. Think carefully about where you plant perennials. Moving a perennial tree or plant is much more complicated once established, as its root system is generally deep or expansive. Perennials develop their resilience to climactic conditions over time. They can seek out moisture and nutrients at a greater distance than short-stay shallow-rooted annuals.
• They take time to establish. Whereas annuals sprint out the gate and are typically ready for harvest in a relatively short time, perennial edibles can sometimes take years before they are mature for harvest. Consider planting perennials as soon as possible, especially fruit trees.
• Consider mature size when planting. Allow enough space for perennial species to mature. Sometimes, I’ve underestimated just how fast some would grow and how much personal space they have needed! There’s nothing worse than overcrowding, which can contribute to poor air circulation, encourage diseases and make harvesting difficult. Research before planting and allow sufficient room with a buffer!
• Some perennials need regular pruning. While most perennial varieties are low maintenance, many fruit trees and vines need
ongoing attention to optimise their harvest and health. For example, citrus trees need shaping and decluttering. In some climates, grapes, passionfruit, and some berries will lose their leaves or die back, requiring a seasonal tidy-up.
• Choose perennial varieties of vegetables over annuals. Why plant annual leeks when a perennial variety will self-propagate into clumps for years? Over summer, growing salad greens in a warm or hot climate can be challenging. I swap to perennial options like sorrel, wild rocket, tree lettuce, dandelion, chicory, lemon balm and mint.
• Growing annuals as perennials. Depending on the climate, some edibles classed as annuals or biennials can grow for much longer. For example, in my subtropical climate, sweet basil has been growing consistently for over two years, as have my cherry tomatoes. I just never pulled them out! They like the position and soil and just keep growing. So, experiment and see what happens.
With so many benefits and uses, edible perennials are the obvious choice for enhancing our ability to live more sustainably with a resilient, productive garden for years to come. 3
BIO Anne Gibson, The Micro Gardener, is an author, speaker and urban garden community educator on the Sunshine Coast, in Queensland, Australia. Anne is passionate about inspiring people to improve health and wellbeing, by growing nutrient-dense food gardens in creative containers and small spaces. Anne regularly presents workshops, speaks at sustainable living events, coaches private clients and teaches community education classes about organic gardening and ways to live sustainably. She has authored several eBooks and gardening guides. Anne shares organic gardening tips and tutorials to save time, money and energy on her popular website - TheMicroGardener.com
Watson pummelo tree with heavy crop of fruit
Stinging nettle is a high value medicinal perennial that is used to make free liquid fertiliser for the garden
EDIBLE PERENNIAL GARDEN 39
HügelkulturGardening
Could hügelkultur gardening be the secret to maintaining a lush, self-watering container garden? Absolutely! Jennifer Cole tells us how to do it in this article from our blog. Find more sustainable gardening tips at GCMag.co.
Best of the Blog
A Different Approach To Growing In Containers
As plants in containers grow, they use valuable nutrients in the soil that they cannot replenish naturally. As a result, they may need extra compost or fertiliser regularly. You should transplant ornamental shrubs or roses growing in containers every few years to refresh the soil and replace lost nutrients. But hügelkultur containers change all this, creating permanent, self-watering, nutrient-rich, long-term homes for all plant babies.
Container Gardens & Hügelkultur
Generally, hügelkultur gardening systems create large raised or sunken garden beds by layering rotting wood and other organic materials.
By applying the same method on a smaller scale, hügelkultur gardens can be created using containers. Many needed ingredients are already in your recycling bin, kitchen scraps, yard, or along a favourite walking trail.
The recipe for assembling a hügelkultur container garden is as simple as layering and baking a lasagna. There are no set measurements; for example, extra cheese in a lasagna won’t harm the outcome, and adding more compost or fewer coffee grounds won’t ruin the hügelkultur container.
Hügelkultur gardens can be created using containers. Many needed ingredients are already in your recycling bin, kitchen scraps, yard, or along a favourite walking trail
Ingredients
• One well-draining medium to large container with a diameter of no less than 25cm and a depth of no less than 30cm is optimal. The bigger it is, the more room for layering.
• A bunch of twigs, small pieces of rotten logs, or branches.
• A medium-sized tub of yard waste, compost, or dried leaves.
• Green organics is anything you put into your kitchen waste or paper recycling bin, such as apple peelings, orange rind, eggshells, old tea bags, coffee grounds, paper towels, and even cardboard.
• One bag of ordinary topsoil.
Layering
Start by covering the bottom of the container 1/4 to 1/3 full of twigs or small branches, and pack it together as tightly as possible. You only add this layer once.
Continue by adding:
• 2-5 cm of yard waste.
• 2-5 cm of green waste (kitchen scraps). Mix in cardboard or paper towel with this layer, if desired.
• Another layer of yard waste.
BY JENNIFER COLE
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As long as it’s well-draining, any container can have a long and useful life as a hügelkultur garden!
Repeat the process, depending on your container size, or until about 40% of it is filled. Smaller, shallower containers will require less layering than larger, deeper ones.
Use a watering can or hose to moisten the assembled layers. It will look like you’ve filled a perfectly good container with garbage or a compost pile that hasn’t matured. That’s great because that’s what you’re supposed to be doing: creating compost in a container!
The top organic layers act as a reacting agent, akin to baking soda in a recipe, to begin the decomposition process on the bottom wood layer.
Once you’ve added all the layers, cover with ordinary garden soil and water again. Remember, this is where plant roots will establish, so keep plenty of room for this top layer.
Long-Term Rewards
A hügelkultur container will grow anything from vegetables and perennials to large shrubs or annuals. As the material in the container breaks down, microbial life and essential nutrients, such as potassium, phosphorous and nitrogen, are released into the soil and absorbed by plant roots.
The energy released by the decomposing material at the beginning of the process will warm the container’s temperature. This heat will help newly planted perennials or shrubs stay cosy in winter and may even prevent the container from freezing solid.
Over time, as the organic material decomposes, add topsoil. But the decaying wood at the bottom will continue to act as a sponge, keeping roots nice and moist. As long as it’s well-draining, any container can have a long and useful life as a hügelkultur garden! 3
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41 HÜGELKULTUR GARDENING best of the blog GardenCultureMagazine.com
Waking up to
Living soil is an organic gardening method that uses a nutrient-rich potting mix teeming with beneficial microbes to grow plants instead of mineral fertilisers. It aims to create a sustainable mini-ecosystem in the soil, modelled after the natural processes found in nature. Everest Fernandez discusses how growers can transition from soilless potting mixes to organic living soil.
Living soil is all about nurturing soil life. The central goal is establishing a nutritionally balanced soil mix teeming with beneficial bacteria, fungi, protozoa and more. These microbes form symbiotic relationships with plant roots, helping them absorb nutrients effectively; they break down organic matter and mineralise nutrients into plant-available forms, recycling nutrition.
Living soil can be reused from one crop to the next—nothing to compost and nothing for the landfill. Of course, for optimal results over several crops, the nutrition and overall health of the soil must be monitored and maintained.
Different Approaches
Some living soil practitioners prefer to amend their soils upfront—think “living super soil”—and irrigate with water only through to harvest. Other growers prefer a lighter starting mix to retain the control of choosing when to supplement with targeted and tailored top-dressed nutrition. In either case, it’s essential to understand the soil’s dynamic ecosystem and its effect on plant health. A thriving microbial life is a cornerstone of a robust living soil system.
Support from Indoor Gardening Stores
Some early hype about living soil could have scared some stores from stocking it! After all, what store owner in their right mind would sell their customers a bag of “magic soil” that lasted forever and freed them from ever buying a bottle of mineral nutrients again? The reality is that living soil growers require a regular influx of sundries such as water purification products, powdered organic inputs, high-quality compost, bio-stimulants, mycorrhizae, and more. Some stores are further along the curve than others when it comes to catering to living soil growers.
Living soil blenders, like mineral nutrient formulators, pay close attention to the ratios of cations (ammonium, calcium, magnesium, potassium and sodium) with the appropriate amount of total nitrogen for the intended use (higher N for water only and lower for a ‘light mix’). Over time, these minerals will become depleted in the soil. Increasingly, indoor gardening stores offer a range of specialist organic inputs that can help restore specific minerals or mineral groups to more optimal levels. See the table: Common Amendments Used to Rejuvenate Living Soils.
Maintaining Microbial Life in Living Soil
Establishing the proper nutritional balance in the soil is just the beginning. Growers also need to ensure that microbial life is present in all its forms so that these nutrients are sufficiently available to plants. If microbial life is lacking, growers must use additional inoculants and compost extracts. Products used to boost beneficial biology in soil include beneficial bacteria powders and liquids (Bacillus methylotrophicus, Bacillus subtilis, and Bacillus licheniformis), fungi (Trichoderma), enzymes, amino acids, kelp powder and extracts, hydrolysed fish proteins, and insect frass. Different microbes play specialised roles. Bacteria decompose organic materials into simpler compounds, mycorrhizal fungi draw in water and nutrients via their threadlike hyphae, while protozoa graze on bacteria to mineralise nutrients. This intricate web of microorganisms creates a sustainable and efficient nutrient cycle within the soil.
BY EVEREST FERNANDEZ
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Living soil can be reused from one crop to the next— nothing to compost and nothing for the landfill
Follow the 5 - 10% Rule
Most living soil beginners overwater their plants. It’s easiest to commit this mistake when transplanting into final-stage pots. Living soil requires minimal initial watering. Many living soil growers use “the 5 - 10% rule” to help them. Early on, they only water 5% of the pot volume. So, for a 20-gallon pot, the recommendation of 5% would be to water just one gallon—water only around the plant at first. After establishment, growers can progress to keeping the entire surface moist (still using the 5% rule). When plants are firmly established, growers can increase watering to 10% to mitigate the risk of the lower layers of soil drying out.
Remember, don’t treat living soil like coco coir and water until you get 30% run-off! Creating leachate will completely over-saturate your soil and rinse away some of the valuable nutrition it holds.
Living Soil Needs Large Fabric Containers
Large fabric pots are the most convenient for many indoor growers, providing excellent aeration to the roots. Be sure to get the size right. Think about the volume of fabric pot you might use for a large plant in a soilless mix and then double it for living soil. Generally, growers should allocate 60 to 120 gallons of living soil mix per 4’ x 4’ of canopy. So, if you’re growing four plants in a 4’ x 4’, that’s 15 to 30 gallons per plant as a minimum.
US-based living soil growers, in particular, favour a larger volume of soil. Thirty gallons would be considered a minimum rather than an upper limit! Larger volume containers facilitate a more extensive root system and better moisture retention.
The less soil you use, the harder it will be to keep your plants happy without resorting to liquid feeds. However, one issue that growers should be aware of is the tendency of living soil near the sides of fabric pots to dry out more, making life more difficult for beneficial biology at these physical fringes. Growers must pay close attention to even watering and consider insulating the sides of pots to maintain consistent soil moisture and temperature.
Living Soil Works Best in Beds
If you want to raise your growing game a few notches, consider constructing or purchasing a living soil bed to accommodate multiple plants. Gareth Griffin, the new World Record Holder for heaviest onion, grew his 19-pound (nearly 9 kg) beast in a living soil bed. This incredible feat was achieved using only organic cultivation techniques, causing many growers worldwide to start paying attention.
LIVING SOIL 4545
Some growers create different layers within the beds, the most common practice being a bottom layer of fast-draining, high-porosity material, like perlite.
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Establishing the proper nutritional balance in the soil is just the beginning
Sacramento-based living soil enthusiasts, Grassroots, offer specially adapted fabric soil beds that mitigate moisture loss through the sides. They recently collaborated with BuildASoil in the US and Ecothrive in the UK to offer living soil beds to a wider market, including an automated living soil system using Autopot’s Tray2Grow wicking system. Beds offer the advantage of fostering a ‘community root system,’ which can lead to significantly improved plant health and yield. When growing in beds, growers can go to town with allocated soil volume, and the plants benefit from an interconnected root system rather than being isolated in their container.
Rejuvenating and Re-Using Living Soil
Beds simplify rejuvenating and maintaining the soil, making it easier to add amendments and manage the soil ecosystem. Some growers create different layers within the beds, the most common practice being a bottom layer of fast-draining, high-porosity material, like perlite.
It’s a lot easier to reuse living soil when using beds. Commercial living soil growers typically veg their plants in two or three-gallon fabric pots with the bottoms cut out. At transplant time, the plant is not removed from the pot but lifted and re-positioned directly on the living soil bed. This means you lose potential head height, but vertical space is less commonly an issue for commercial growers. When transplanted, the lower roots enjoy access to the living soil below. At harvest time, growers can take the super low-labour option and cut plants at their base, leaving the remaining roots to be reintegrated into the living soil—typically via the addition of enzyme products that aid in the breakdown of the roots. However, more living soil growers are adopting the practice of cutting out root balls and replacing them with fresh living soil mix to mitigate the risk of propagating root-borne diseases between crops.
Good Practices with Living Soil
Living soils are typically based around sphagnum peat moss or coco coir—both serve as a moisture reservoir for the soil and are critical for fast-growing, demanding plants. Compost and organic fertilisers like alfalfa, bone meal, kelp meal, feather meal and rock minerals provide balanced, slow-release nutrition for microbes. Worm castings inoculate beneficial species, while bio-stimulants like insect frass can introduce microbial diversity.
Irrigating with water will suffice for most of the plant lifecycle, but some hungrier species will likely require supplementation. Be sure to use dechlorinated water so the soil microbiology can thrive. Organic liquid feeds can be used sparingly if needed, but scratching in some top dressing with organic powder amendments mixed with high-quality compost is the best way to ensure longer-term nutrition. Indoor gardening stores looking to serve living soil growers should be mindful of stocking various quality organic inputs to help cultivators replenish their soils.
Don’t forget to test your soil regularly—at least at the end of a growing cycle so you know which amendments you should be reaching for. Logan Laboratories in Ohio offers specialist soil analysis services that provide the necessary detail to amend your living soil efficiently and effectively. Commercial living soil growers will give their soil analysis to a specialist soil consultant, who advises on which amendments to add. While trace minerals are typically the first to dip to sub-optimal levels, nitrogen is the hardest (and most important) to maintain due to its volatility and high demand, followed by Ca, Mg, P and K.
4747 LIVING SOIL
The Varidri e 720W Led
The Maxibright Varidrive 720W LED is a foldable LED fixture with an impressive total output of 1870 μmol/s of full-spectrum light, delivered uniformly over a 1.5 x 1.5m area via an array of high-quality LED diodes. Additional red light makes this fixture perfect for flowering, as well as the vegetative stage of growth. Powered by the Maxibright Varidrive 600W variable power pack, giving you the option to dim the LED, as well as the ability to mount your power pack directly to the LED unit, or connect remotely to help control temperatures in your grow room.
Key FeaTures
720W power, 1870 μmol/s total light output (PPF)
6 bar LED fixture, designed for a 1.5 x 1.5m area
Additional red light for enhanced flowering
3-year warranty
High-quality diodes
Full spectrum light output for the complete grow cycle
Dimmable: 250W, 400W, 600W, 720W (Boost)
Foldable and lightweight
One-person assembly
50’000 hours lifespan
Dimensions: 1100 x 1075 x 50mm
Powered by Maxibright Varidrive variable power pack
Connect to fixture or use remotely with 10m extension lead (Lead sold seperately)
1870 μmol/s Manufactured & distributed by
A Final Word on Crop Quality
Worm castings inoculate beneficial species, while bio-stimulants like insect frass can introduce microbial diversity.
No discussion about living soil would be complete without a mention of crop quality. Maybe you’re happy with the results from soilless, Grow A & B, Bloom A & B, and liquid Hocus-Pocus—but it’s the crop quality produced by living soil gardens that’s really turning heads. Denser flowers, vivid colours, more sophisticated terpene profiles, higher potency, and longer shelf-life are just a few of the talking points. As such, the best living soil-grown produce is often in high demand. 3
Common Amendments Used to Rejuvenate Living Soils
Organic Soil Amendment
Alfalfa Meal
Basalt Rock Dust
Bat Guano
Blood Meal
Bone Meal
Calcium Carbonate
Composted Manure
Feather Meal
Fish Bone Meal
Gypsum
Green Manure/Cover Crops
Insect Frass
Karanja Meal
Magnesium Sulfate (Epsom)
Seaweed/Kelp
Soy Bean Meal
Thermo Compost
Worm Castings
Wollastonite (calcium silicate)
Nutritional Elements
N, P, K, Calcium, and other micronutrients
Micronutrients, particularly silica
High in N, P, and micronutrients
High N, some micronutrients
P, Calcium
Calcium, helps in pH adjustment
N, P, K, and micronutrients
High in N
P, Calcium
Calcium, Sulfur
Varies with crop type, generally N, P, K
N, P, K, and chitin
N, P, K (similar to Neem meal)
Magnesium, Sulfur
P, K, micronutrients, and growth hormones
N, P, K, and other micronutrients
Balanced N, P, K, and micronutrients
N, P, K and micronutrients
Calcium, Silica, and other trace minerals
4949 LIVING SOIL
New
Names Bird
Descriptive, Relatable, and Just
Descriptive, Relatable, and Just
Better descriptive names will help birds become easily recognisable and people more connected to them. In some cases, the renaming process also removes ‘tributes’ to historical figures who committed social and cultural injustices.
Many birds have two completely different names. There are the Latin or scientific names experts use and the common names the rest of us use. European settlers gave birds their common names in the 18 th and 19 th centuries.
One of the greatest outcomes and opportunities coming from the renaming process is that it will hopefully make birds more accessible and bring people to birding and back to nature
The colonial names often begin with the name of a prominent figure or a person who studied the bird for Western science. For example, Anna’s hummingbird is named after Anna Masséna, the Duchess of Rivoli and wife of prominent French ornithologist Victor Masséna [1] . Among several problems with this system is that possessive names aren’t very descriptive. Anna’s hummingbird does not describe any of the attributes of a tiny bird renowned for diving from heights of 30 metres or more.
Bird Names and Colonial Injustice
Last year, the American Ornithological Society (AOS), the world’s largest professional organisation dedicated to the
scientific study and classification of birds, announced their intention to embark on a process to officially change those possessive English common names and other bird monikers that, in the 21st century, aren’t representative of inclusivity and diversity [2]
Townsend’s warbler, for example, is a small songbird that sings to let you know it’s in the garden. It is named after a 19 th -century ornithologist who also stole Indigenous skulls to examine [3]
It’s never been impossible to change a bird’s name. The AOS’ North American Classification Committee (NACC) [4] scientifically classifies North American birds. People could always submit proposals for taxonomic and English name changes to the committee for review based primarily on scientific data that might include more precise classifications related to geography or habitat. It’s how the Rufous-sided Towhee had its name changed to the Eastern Towhee, which provides a better geographical description of where the bird lives.
BY JENNIFER COLE 50
A Thick-billed Longspur wanders the Colorado prairie
Anna’s hummingbird does not describe any of the attributes of a tiny bird renowned for diving from heights of 30 metres or more
The idea to expand the criteria for name changes began in 2019. There was a proposal to change the name of McCown’s longspur. This bird is named after Captain John P. McCown, a man who fought with the Confederacy to maintain the convention of slavery during the American Civil War [5] At the time, the proposal didn’t meet the NACC’s guidelines. But the conversation around naming continued. Eventually, the NACC reversed the decision, citing social justice concerns, and McCown’s longspur became the thick-billed longspur. But it still wasn’t enough. In 2021, the AOS created a committee to dive deeper into the issue.
the Rufous-sided Towhee had its name changed to the Eastern Towhee, which provides a better geographical description of where the bird lives
“The idea gained traction again as to whether possessive English names were a continuing reflection and legacy of colonialism,” says Irene Liu, a committee member.
Connecting with Nature
Birds Canada’s director of community engagement, Jody Allair, is excited about the name changes, not just because they correct a colonial wrong [6]
“We, as a society, are disconnected from the natural world,” he says. “Our struggles with climate change all
stem from a lack of connection with nature. One of the greatest outcomes and opportunities coming from the renaming process is that it will hopefully make birds more accessible and bring people to birding and back to nature.”
There are three million fewer birds in North America than 50 years ago [7] . The reasons for the decline include habitat loss due to development, the use of pesticides and fertilisers in agriculture and gardening, and climate change. Traditionally, migratory birds have relied on early summer insects to feed their young. However, warmer temperatures are triggering an earlier insect reproductive cycle. This means nonmigrating birds get first crack at the food source, leaving less food for the transitory population to raise healthy, long-lived offspring [8]
Liu agrees with Allair that renaming birds can be the beginning of something greater, especially if it involves the public.
“Name changes are not the end; they are a means to an end,” Liu says.
She hopes the result will be improved bird conservation by involving people who love birds, such as gardeners.
NEW BIRD NAMES
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Anna’s hummingbird
It’s how the Rufous-sided
had its
name
Towhee
changed to the Eastern Towhee, which provides a better geographical description of where the bird lives.
More than 90% of the total cumulative loss in bird populations is attributed to 12 bird families, including sparrows, warblers, blackbirds, and finches [9] . Often, these are the birds most prevalent in the garden, aiding in pollination, dispersal of seeds and control of invasive insect populations.
How the Process Will Work
There are three million fewer birds in North America than 50 years ago.
The reasons for the decline include habitat loss due to development, the use of pesticides and fertilisers in agriculture and gardening, and climate change
“What we envisioned is a forum similar to a Facebook poll where people upload their favourite names to be voted on,” says Liu.
Information on the bird, such as its habitat, description, or whether it’s migratory, would be provided on the platform to help with the renaming process. The AOS is still working out a few kinks and is compiling a list of 70-80 birds needing new monikers. A new committee is forming to aid in the naming process. This group will include a diverse representation of individuals with expertise in social sciences, communications, ornithology and taxonomy [10]
A Fresh Start
As a child, I had a book about birds. It confused me because the birds in it were named after people I’d never heard of before. It made remembering the birds difficult, and I lost interest. However, there was one name I’ve never forgotten: the red-winged tipped blackbird because the name matched how the bird looked. Back then, I wished all bird names could be that descriptive, and hopefully, soon, they will be.
For more information about the AOS and the English Bird Name Project, check out americanornithology.org 3
Footnotes:
1. How Did Anna’s Hummingbird Get Its Name: Name In Honor! (birdsidea.com)
2. Home - American Ornithological Society (americanornithology.org)
3. The McCown’s Longspur Is No More, but the Debate Over Bird Names Continues | Audubon
4. North American Classification Committee - American Ornithological Society (americanornithology.org)
5. Home - Birds Canada | Oiseaux Canada
6. Major Threats to Birds in Canada - Birds Canada | Oiseaux Canada
7. Decline of the North American avifauna | Science
8. Major Threats to Birds in Canada - Birds Canada | Oiseaux Canada
9. Decline of the North American avifauna | Science
10. English Bird Names Project - American Ornithological Society (americanornithology.org)
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NEW BIRD NAMES
Eastern Towhee
NEW
ATAMI WEBSITE
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DIY Project Grow Your Own Bird Seed!
Coneflowers
Modern gardeners can help protect and encourage local bird species in many ways, from putting up feeders to planting fruit bushes and nectar-rich blooms. Another fun way to help struggling bird populations is to grow your own bird seed! Coneflowers and sunflowers are a beautiful addition to any garden, and songbirds like sparrows, chickadees, Tufted Titmice, Northern Cardinals, and American Goldfinches adore them. Selecting the right flower varieties can save you from buying seeds while keeping the birds flocking to your feeder or garden. We gathered some inspiration from Jen McGuinness, author of the newly released Bird-Friendly Gardening: Guidance and Projects for Supporting Birds in your Landscape
McGuinness says birds love the purple and pink coneflower blooms, and they’re less work for you because there’s no harvesting required. You can purchase this hardy perennial from a nursery and plant it in the garden after the last risk of frost. Coneflowers can also be started from seed, but sow them in the fall; the seeds need cold moist stratification for proper germination. Enjoy these beautiful blooms in the garden all summer, and leave them standing after they fade so the seeds can ripen. When the colder months arrive, birds like finches will come in droves to enjoy a much-needed snack.
Sunflowers
There are many gorgeous sunflower varieties, but when growing bird food, skip any type labelled ‘pollenless’ because these will not produce seeds. Sunflowers are easy to grow, making them an excellent project for beginner gardeners or children. Sow the seeds directly in the ground or raised bed in a sunny spot after the last frost date in your region; protect them from chipmunks and other hungry critters with netting or lightweight garden cloth. As the flowers grow and the seeds begin to ripen, many birds will come to harvest their food directly from the flower. Or, save the seeds for the winter months by removing the ageing flower heads and covering them with a brown paper bag or cheesecloth. Doing so will allow the plant to breathe and the seeds to ripen. Hang them upside down in a warm, dry place with good ventilation. After about three weeks, seeds will drop out of the sunflower heads as they dry.
Coneflowers and sunflowers are a beautiful addition to any garden, and songbirds adore them.
Birds Attracted to Coneflowers and Sunflowers:
• Mockingbirds & Thrashers
• Chickadees & Titmice
• Thrushes
• Woodpeckers
• Blackbirds & Orioles
• Finches
• Crows, Magpies, & Jays
• Cardinals, Grosbeaks, & Buntings
• Waxwings
• New World Sparrows
• Kinglets
• Wrens
• Nuthatches
• Creepers
• Vireos
For expert advice on gardening for birds, pick up a copy of Bird-Friendly Gardening: Guidance and Projects for Supporting Birds in your Landscape by Jen McGuinness. 3
55 FEEDING BIRDS
The Way Through
Rethinking Social Interactions
This is the sixth and final instalment of Alan Creedon’s documentation of his journey to leave the world of social media behind. Read all about his decision and the challenges and triumphs in his previous articles in our digital magazines at GCMag.co.
This past week was a much better one. There were more blackcurrants to ‘top and tail’, and I spent the weekend in the woods taking people on a Nature connection experience. I invited each person to leave their phone in their car, which they duly did, and I was pleased about that. One person didn’t even know how to turn theirs off, as they had never done it before!
It was fascinating to watch the hesitation of the attendees as we started the retreat, wanting to take a photo of the scene or watching their habits of going for the phone to check in with the outside world
BY ALAN CREEDON 56
Ironically, I was the only one with access to a phone over the weekend; I was the emergency contact and the ‘responsible one’. It was fascinating to watch the hesitation of the attendees as we started the retreat, wanting to take a photo of the scene or watching their habits of going for the phone to check in with the outside world. But as it happened, they were already there.
Sit Spot
They quickly adapted, though. I didn’t hear anybody talking about their phone on the second day. Part of the retreat was for them to sit in one spot for six hours, having prepared for the sit spot through various relaxation and opening techniques. Seeing how they embraced the space was incredible, and all returned to childlike ways of experiencing the natural world. They played in the river, saw magical, inexplicable things happen, and reflected on their life situation in a way they would otherwise not. It does not take long.
A True Dependency
Seeing how dependent we’ve become on phones to run our lives, I feel sad. They have become a necessary part of us, something we regularly touch, check, caress, and trust to be our reliable connection to the wider world. Yet behind every phone interaction is an unknown number of people working hard to sell you useless things and use your information to make you feel more connected to your phone experience. They build your trust so they can exploit it, creating a facade of reliability and dependability when it’s mainly about exploitation. Of course, the phone itself is a fantastic piece of technology. However, at this stage in the evolution of this technology, it is highly exploitative and untrustworthy. Something about that feels wrong.
Trust Issues
We trust our phone experience but can’t trust our next-door neighbour; we feel disconnected from a world we’re destroying yet will happily allow tailored news and opportunities to flood our virtual timeline. It’s time to rethink our interactions. The connected mobile phone provides a personal experience that’s ‘ours’, i.e., nobody can interfere
with us and our ‘phone time’, which belongs to us. But that’s not true. Our natural desire to feel connected personally has been removed from the beauty of emotional commitment. It is also being observed by hundreds of organisations, selling our information and investing time and money to keep us on our phones. The dopamine hit replaces the ‘uncomfortable’ feeling of actual connection, which doesn’t have that instant pleasurable feeling but is about the ebb and flow of relationships over time. We need other people and the natural world to help us see ourselves as we are messy and wondrous beings. The phone will always show us our aspirational selves, the narcissus in the mirror, the outward, impersonal, and shallow.
Break The Chain
If we can be aware of this, we can break the chains of tech dependency and help the people around us do the same. Let’s trust that we are infinite beings who impose limitations on ourselves. Interacting with our environment and the people around us will bring us more than any phone experience ever could. So leave your phone at home and walk, knowing that the experience matters, not the second-hand experience the ‘connected’ world will sell us. Please do it now!
Will you walk on the wild side and ditch social media like Alan Creedon? Whatever your decision, we encourage you to make an effort to connect with people and our planet without the help of your phone! 3
BIO Alan has worked in local food for over a decade and in that time has been involved in retail, wholesale and growing local produce. He is passionate about people working together and enjoys bringing his ideas into the world of veg. He lives in the West Yorkshire hills with his wife, daughter, son, dog and cat and loves walking in the hills, sleeping out in the woods, and having a dip in the river (but would sometimes prefer sleeping out in -3 than a dip in the river!). He will be publishing his first book this autumn. He is a mindfulness teacher, running regular courses and events as a nature connection guide. He likes to combine the philosophical with the practical.
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BY XAVI KIEF 58
Mushroom growing starts with curiosity and can quickly become a passion. Like in any other cultivation niche, once you enjoy success, you’ll find endless directions to take your new skills and knowledge. Should you
try a similar variety or challenge yourself with more complex projects? Is it personally rewarding to falter in an ambitious leap into new territory and learn from the experience? Or is it better to fine-tune your techniques and improve the quality and yield of a familiar crop?
Mushroom growing starts with curiosity and can quickly become a passion
To see the future, look to the past
Until recently, obtaining viable and trustworthy samples of new mushroom starting materials was challenging. Seekers of new and interesting mushroom experiences had to go foraging IRL. They took to the forest, the field, or restaurants with knowledgeable chefs, speciality grocery stores, and traditional medicine practitioners.
While these options are still accessible today, habitat destruction and increased demand drive economic incentives and the everyday person’s rationale for growing their food and medicine.
It’s good that beginners can find more mushroom-specific suppliers for the basic equipment and materials for home growing and that do-it-yourself, small-budget, and grassroots knowledge-sharing are built into the mycophile milieu.
Like heirloom or heritage plants, unique fungi strains can become a dependable standby or signature of your seasonal offerings
Direct-to-consumer sales of spores and culture syringes remain largely a cottage industry, with regional specialists offering cloned local varieties alongside commercially proven strains.
If you have the financial means, you can access any mushroom culture you wish via these online vendors. Aside from concerns about the legality of certain fungi, shipping logistics (e.g. distance and in-transit environmental factors) are the main threats to the viability of purchased (or traded) specimens for starting your own grow.
You’re likely to find there are particular fungal species or subtypes that you want to keep on hand. It may not always be the “right time” to grow a certain mushroom due to environmental conditions beyond your control, or your dedicated cultivation space is in rotation, keeping some species on the bench while others are in play.
Whether or not to keep a strain archive, if there is nothing extraordinary about genetics, is a question of resources and mindset. Like gardeners, mushroom growers come from all walks of life. Financial circumstances can change without warning, and infrastructural failures, weather anomalies, or other disruptions to a production schedule can threaten entire seasons’ worth of effort.
Cultivators need only look to the recent history of plant agriculture to imagine how access to favourites can become threatened by ecosystemic biodiversity loss, DNA patenting and engineering, changes to laws and their enforcement, and global supply chain disruptions. Food security researchers agree that seed saving at the local level should be supported “actively and at scale”, informing our approach to preserving beneficial strains of fungi.
Acquire it once, grow it forever
Like heirloom or heritage plants, unique fungi strains can become a dependable standby or signature of your seasonal offerings. It could be the match is physiological, the partnership especially beneficial to your health or suited to your taste. Perhaps it’s practical, and the working relationship is smooth and fruitful. Though eternity may be elusive, regenerative techniques may work to keep that special companion in your life for more than a season or two.
So, how can a grower hold onto their mushroom genetics? Is it worth the effort?
Always Be Copying
You’ll only know if a strain is exceptional once you’ve grown it out. By this time, unless you’ve kept some of the original stock in good health, it will be more difficult to copy it.
The first time you do a liquid medium inoculation, hold at least half of the commercially-made syringe in reserve by keeping it in a sealed container in a fridge. Undisturbed in this cooler temperature range, cultures have been reported to survive for many months, even years. Consider this your “vault” and hope you don’t need to use it.
Before you move on to grain inoculation, use your first jar of living culture to make at least one more. Fill the syringe again, sterilise the needle, label it and put it in the vault. You can expand a liquid culture repeatedly if it remains uncontaminated.
Propagation of mushrooms is similar to rooting cuttings from wellknown donor plants; vigorously growing cultures are more apt to thrive, overcome adversity, and produce abundant yields.
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MEDICINAL MUSHROOMS
59
Take it to the Bank
Perhaps it won’t be long before the mainstreaming of home mushroom cultivation inspires the proliferation of genetics banks and community libraries. In parallel with seed-saving initiatives, conserving a diversity of spores and live cultures is a noble endeavour. Preserving locally adapted mushroom genetics of all types promotes and supports wellness practices at the individual and community levels. It’s in the public interest to integrate fungi into existing food and medicine sovereignty initiatives and to continue spreading education and access.
Save your faves, bond with others through trades, and be generous with your knowledge! 3
Tips for Strain Savers
Do:
• Collaborate with others in your network when ordering new strains to take advantage of better pricing and make local trading more interesting and resilient.
• Stock plenty of extra empty syringes if you have the means. Make putting backup syringes in the vault part of your production schedule.
• Label every container with a minimum of the fungal species name, origin, and date.
• Keep meticulous records of your activities, from strain acquisition through inoculation, expansion, and harvest.
• Choose a regular interval to refresh your inventory of cultures in storage, and mark it on the calendar or set an alert.
Don’t:
• Assume you can purchase the same genetics again, even if the vendor is still in business.
• Become overly emotionally invested. A lost genetic may be grieved, but you’ll find another to take its place. Get by with the help of your friends!
References:
Deuss, A., C. Gaspar and M. Bruins (2021), “The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on global and Asian seed supply chains”, OECD Food, Agriculture and Fisheries Papers, No. 168, OECD Publishing, Paris, doi.org/10.1787/ e7650fde-en.
Sperling, L. Seed security response during COVID-19: building on evidence and orienting to the future. Food Sec. 12, 885–889 (2020). doi.org/10.1007/ s12571-020-01068-1
Veena SS, MeeraP 2010 – A simple method for culture conservation of some commercial mushrooms. Mycosphere 1(3), 191–194. rebrand.ly/d20350
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BY ADAM CLARKE
I Hate
Aphids!
After discovering another aphid infestation in his greenhouse, Adam Clarke lets his emotions run wild.
Another season of growing, another aphid problem. But wait a minute; it’s the end of January, and aphids aren’t supposed to be an issue. However, my greenhouse is 80°F+, and this is another epic outbreak! I suspect that in my 20’x40’ greenhouse, we have more than 50,000 aphids, and that’s just what I can see. Two weeks earlier, there wasn’t an aphid in sight. Go away for a bit, and bam! The aphid army is back
Aphids are the bane of my existence, and I am determined to kill them once and for all
Growing Pains
Our greenhouse runs seven days a week, 365 days per year. We heat it with a wood fire in the winter and mist it throughout the summer for cooling. We can create a fantastic wintertime environment, as it’s much easier to control the humidity. I didn’t consider that not having a freeze/thaw cycle meant we didn’t have a chance to kill all of the aphids from the previous season. The aphids and I have gone to war more than I can count. These little buggers seem to bounce back again and again. We have used organic fungicide-like products, insecticidal soap, and an army of predator bugs. I have too many aphids to tackle now; they’re all over my plants. My quasi-indoor/outdoor greenhouse doesn’t allow for a tight enough environment to keep aphids out and predators in.
Action Plan
We have started a rigorous procedure of inspecting all plants and spraying them with BioCeres from “Anatis.” We have tried this in the past without enormous success. However, we didn’t follow the directions well the first time. We will give it a go every five to seven days for four weeks and see what happens. We’ll use this product in conjunction with castile soap. We aim to manage all of our pest problems without using insecticides in our soil. We do not grow organic but do our best to keep it that way. On top of this, I just ordered my largest army yet: 5,000 ladybugs. This is overkill, but 1,000 wasn’t enough last time! My war on aphids will continue, and I will up date you on the progress after we have either lost the battle or figured out how to win!
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A-hole Aphids
Aphids seem so harmless when you see them in your garden, but really, they are sucking the life out of your plants. The ants bring them in and farm the little green bastards, no different than someone who farms sheep. The ants protect the aphids and help them by carrying them around and hiding them from the cold in winter. Aphids reproduce in a few different means that all seem overly complicated. All I need to know is that you can go from almost none to an unlimited amount two weeks later.
Operation Extermination
I thought I had learned this lesson after the last two aphid infestations. However, it appears I did not. I will never run my greenhouse again without a constant supply of good bugs. Bugs are the way to go if you do not want to use chemicals.
Aphids are the bane of my existence, and I am determined to kill them once and for all.
‘Operation Extermination’ continues!
F*ck Aphids. 3
Bio Adam has provided planning and design services for cannabis and hemp cultivation and processing facilities over the last seven years with Stra tus. His projects involve outdoor cultivation, indoor cultivation, drying, pro cessing, extraction, storage, bottling and packaging, and loves all plants, including flowers, microgreens, but is most passionate about hemp and is in awe of the of the benefits it offers to
Another season of growing, another aphid problem
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The Future of Growing is MultiLayered
If you ask Christina Chung, the future of growing is multi-layered, filling all available garden space with mostly edible perennial plants
BY CATHERINE SHERRIFFS PHOTOS: CHRISTINA CHUNG & SHUTTERSTOCK 64
Look around a typical suburban neighbourhood, and you’ll often see homes sitting on plots with grass, a specimen tree, and perhaps some shrubs or a foundation hedge. In the backyard or on the patio, some raised beds, flower pots, or a vegetable patch with tidy rows of crops growing. There’s nothing wrong with these traditional landscapes, but they can be better. If you ask Christina Chung, the future of growing is multi-layered, filling all available garden space with mostly edible perennial plants. The result is a garden bursting with biodiversity, increased soil health, and much less maintenance than what has become the standard.
Before You Stress
Don’t get too overwhelmed just yet. Creating a layered edible garden doesn’t mean removing everything you already have growing; Chung recommends building on what is there, adding different layers while mimicking nature as closely as possible.
“Mixing and matching is a fun way to approach it,” she says. “This is not a cookie-cutter approach. It’s your garden and your experience with your garden. What you can give to it is unique.”
Like following permaculture practices to build a food forest, this gardening style typically includes plants of different statures from eight layers
Chung is a passionate gardener and educator (@fluent.garden) living in Vancouver, Canada. She is also the author of The Layered Edible Garden: A Beginner’s Guide to Creating a Productive Food Garden Layer by Layer. The book is about leaving the long, straight, boring rows of pest and disease-prone vegetables in the past and looking to the future: an interplanted polyculture where layers of edible plants out-compete weeds, share resources, and grow beautifully together while helping people become more self-sufficient.
Plant This, Not That
Taking a ‘plant this, not that’ approach, Chung emphasises the importance of replacing traditional landscape plants with edible perennials. For example, boxwoods serve a purpose in a formal landscape but not a layered edible garden.
“An edible shrub that looks somewhat similar is Chilean Guava,” Chung explains. “I talk about this a lot in the book; it’s one of my favourites in the garden. It’s a small shrub. It’s evergreen, with dark green leaves similar to boxwoods [...] If you have a row or even a cluster of them, it’s quite impactful. They flower white and produce red berries towards the end of the growing season. You get almost four seasons of interest, depending on where you are, and you get to eat the fruit.”
Keeping it simple is crucial; nothing in the layered edible garden has to be exotic
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65 LAYERED EDIBLE GARDEN
Taking a ‘plant this, not that’ approach, Chung emphasises the importance of replacing traditional landscape plants with edible perennials
Many Layers, Many Benefits
Like following permaculture practices to build a food forest, this gardening style typically includes plants of different statures from eight layers:
• Trees
• Sub-canopy trees
• Shrubs
• Vines
• Herbaceous perennials
• Annuals
• Ground covers
• Edible roots
Perennial plants are investment pieces that cost more at the outset and take time to establish. But once they do, Chung says gardeners are rewarded with lush, eco-friendly, and productive landscapes that don’t require much labour. Perennial plants return each year with prolific harvests. Intensely planting them prevents weeds from growing, requires less watering, and boosts soil health by keeping the ground covered and undisturbed, unlike pulling out and planting annual crops. Plus, propagating new plants from established perennials is easy, ensuring you have plenty of plants and perhaps enough to share with friends and family. More layers!
Chung is particularly proud of an apple bed she has created in her home garden, which includes a dwarf apple tree and, below that, shrubs with colourful flowers to add visual interest and soften the look. Under the shrubs, she has flowers. She’s always experimenting with different edible treasures and was particularly happy with how her Swiss chard looked when incorporated into the bed one year. Her ground cover of choice is fast-spreading and deer-resistant creeping thyme.
“Thyme is one of the groundcovers that I rely heavily on because they flower in the spring through the summer and sometimes into fall,” she says. “They’re a reliable ground cover with the right soil conditions.”
Strawberries are also an excellent choice to cover the ground. Chung encourages gardeners to research various plants and experiment from season to season, growing what they love to eat and what makes sense in their regions. Keeping it simple is crucial; nothing in the layered edible garden has to be exotic. Her book includes several examples of plants under each of the eight categories.
Scalable Garden Projects
You don’t need much property to try layered edible gardening, and you also don’t need to include plants from all eight layers. This gardening method is scalable to many different spaces and skill levels, meaning it’s always in reach.
“If you are just starting and you don’t know if this is a style that you can try, start small,” she says. “It could be a container and doesn’t have to include all eight layers. Some of the most successful and productive plantings only have three, four, or five elements.”
For example, in her book, Chung suggests a five-layered edible garden including a hops vine as a climber, roses as shrubs, hostas and sage in the perennial layer, kale, chard, and violas in the annual layer, and violets as ground cover.
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LAYERED EDIBLE GARDEN
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Gardening is an experience; it’s not a rush to accomplish something to prove to someone
A simple container garden on a patio might include a fig tree, herbs, lettuce, pole beans, and more. Live in a city with a small balcony? You can still enjoy a layered edible container garden.
“It checks a bunch of boxes,” she says. “It gives you privacy. You get this vertical lush wall that gives you food. And you get this shaded layer underneath that keeps your cooler-loving crops happy.”
Chung says you can’t go wrong when designing your layered garden space, which relieves some of the stress of jumping into a new growing venture. But she warns there are a few golden rules or guidelines that essentially lean on the good old-fashioned gardening basics.
“If you have a plant that requires sun to thrive, look for a sunny spot,” she explains. “Otherwise, the plant may be unable to do well and produce the food you want. Ultimately, in an edible garden, you want those elements to harvest at some point.”
Baby Steps
Chung understands how easy it is to become overwhelmed by embarking on a new growing journey, so she suggests starting small, researching, and getting excited about creating a layered garden space. Her book, The Layered Edible Garden, is an excellent read and an inspiring place to start. Ultimately, Chung wants gardeners to remember that growing food is not a competition and that each garden is unique.
“I am gardening in a way, at a scale, in a style, that makes sense for me and my family,” she explains. “I think that’s really the big takeaway. Gardening is an experience; it’s not a rush to accomplish something to prove to someone.”
So, what can you do with your garden space? Remember, the future of growing food is multi-layered, and there’s no better time to start than the present. 3
The Layered Edible Garden: A Beginner’s Guide to Creating a Productive Food Garden Layer by Layer is available online at most major bookstores. Follow Christina Chung: @fluent.garden
BIO Catherine is a Canadian award-winning journalist who worked as a reporter and news anchor in Montreal’s radio and television scene for 10 years. A graduate of Concordia University, she left the hustle and bustle of the business after starting a family. Now, she’s the editor and a writer for Garden Culture Magazine while also enjoying being a mom to her three young kids. Her interests include great food, gardening, fitness, animals, and anything outdoors.
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LAYERED EDIBLE GARDEN
Notes From A Dirty Old Gardener
Thinning The Herd
Regi Oneton has a public meltdown and realises that if a certain plant doesn’t bring you joy, it doesn’t deserve a spot on the windowsill.
God damn it! This house has so many botanical dependants; it’s like I’m some sort of plant polygamist with a penchant for procreation. Say that three times fast. Since I was small, I always took home the strays. Later in life, that tendency has mutated into a plant sanctuary that rivals your local animal shelter. If you have a few nice plants in your house, your local “brown thumb” will try to unload their paltry wares onto you. I always oblige, and the ongoing cycle of plant hoarding lurches forward like a travelling army. In case you haven’t noticed by the tone here, it’s the end of a mild Canadian winter, and Poppa is a little stir-crazy. Just looking around the homestead makes watering daunting, even for a young man. It’s time to decide who has been worth the toil and upkeep and who faces the scissors, snips, or bare-handed rips.
This house has so many botanical dependants; it’s like I’m some sort of plant polygamist with a penchant for procreation.
No Hope
I have received my share of nappy houseplants from friends and family, and sometimes, even after a lot of tender loving care, that plant still looks like a heaping pile of garbage. They’re perfect candidates for “the thinning” – sounds like a Stephen King novel. Apart from the visually displeasing plants, some aren’t worth the effort due to an odd watering schedule or a persistent pest problem. Aside from the nappy, difficult, and infected, you may have a plant that rubs you the wrong way, like a relative. Feel free to cut it off like your mother-in-law. Lean into it and set it on fire if it’s therapeutic. Now that we have rid ourselves of some obvious candidates let’s move on and go postal.
In My Opinion
If you can’t consume it, it’s not worth growing. I’m looking at a spider plant right now that isn’t doing a damn thing besides taking up space and energy, and I’m starting to resent it. I’ll give it away rather than kick it field goal style off the balcony because it’s still a pretty specimen and an efficient oxygen scrubber. The end of the indoor growing season signals the time for me to select seeds and toss out the mothers in a sort of pre-mature spring cleaning, which is also somewhat liberating. The constant fucking watering is enough to drive you crazy. Less thirsty pots are alleviating some stress, and I am breathing calmer. Less is more, I suppose, and with this thinning of the herd, I’m solving all kinds of problems. The lesson here is don’t let the plants take over the damn house.
Medicinal For The Win
There is another category of plant I tend to keep around when making herd thinning decisions: anything with medicinal value. Aloe plants are popular in this home for cloning and skin care. Regardless of the work involved, they will have a permanent spot in the house. Listen, I get it. You love your Monstera, but I sure as shit can’t validate its presence in my space. The only succubus of a plant that gets a pass is the money tree, and only because I have some weird OCD thought process that the plant’s health is directly linked to my success on the stock market. I know, crazy. Just be glad you don’t live here. Functionality in plant life is what excites me. If aesthetics is more your thing, be my guest and turn your home into the oasis you want. I’m just saying if the bomb drops, you can’t eat a Monstera. At least, I’m pretty sure it isn’t tasty and devoid of nutrition. At least you’ll be “thinner”.
BY REGI ONETON 70
Tough Crowd
So, let’s review. If it’s not filling your stomach or healing your body, chances are it’s not growing here; a clawing back of vegetation was long overdue. Like any collection, once in a blue moon, you have to sell off or swap some out to make room for sanity or new plants. Taking care of plants that don’t give you a return of either fruits or fantastic aesthetics should end up on the chopping block. Toss them out into the street like someone eating crackers in your bed. Who cares if your friend gave you that succulent as a gift; if they ask where it is, make something up. You can say a group of ninjas broke in, and that’s all they took. Shoulder shrug. I have one plant complaining about being too close to the heater, the other is protesting its proximity to the window, another bunch of sensitive bastards don’t like being in the bathroom, and that’s when Poppa will scream, “Start acting right. Or I’ll turn this fucking car around!”. By that, I mean tossing your botanical corpse out the door faster than the ashes from a winter fire.
What Brings You Joy?
Take a good long look around the dwelling and ask yourself if that plant in the corner is bringing you joy. Is that browning bastard beating the beauty out of you? Should you let go of that money tree? Let’s be honest: the stock market has been a gong show. Use the pot for something edible, like an Avocado tree or some banana pepper seeds you got from the old Italian dude with the stinky tank top.
Either way, my home has been liberated of the undesirables, and the watering cut into a manageable timeframe. Happy growing, my little beansprouts. If anyone needs a houseplant, a few are in a snowbank in front of my house. Have at it. 3
interests include writing and spending too much time looking at his phone.
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BY CATHERINE SHERRIFFS
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PHOTOS: STEPHANIE ROSE AND EDUARDO CRISTO
FRelinquish all control and see what sprouts
Chaos is meant to be disruptive. It’s meant to make you uncomfortable, and that’s how we learn best
or many years, gardeners have known the rules: start seeds indoors and nurture them until they’re ready to be planted outside. Don’t forget to harden them off! And for the love of God, space them properly in tidy rows or forget any harvests. Now, imagine not doing any of that, grabbing a packet of seeds and casting them haphazardly throughout the garden space. Relinquish all control and see what sprouts. Is your chest feeling tight?
Welcome to Chaos Gardening.
“Chaos is meant to be disruptive. It’s meant to make you uncomfortable, and that’s how we learn best,” says award-winning author and gardener Stephanie Rose. “I don’t feel that gardening needs to be so planned and so maintained.”
Rose should know. She’s an herbalist, permaculturist, and the author of several books, including two of my personal favourites, Garden Alchemy and The Regenerative Garden. Both books guide gardeners through working with nature and restoring the planet while growing productive, sustainable home garden spaces that don’t require much work. Rose’s love for regenerative gardening jumps off her pages, and after our recent video chat, I can confirm her passion is contagious. Rose has a way of making you want to do better, and it helps that she offers concrete and easy ways to achieve that goal in her books. During our talk, she tells me about her recent lawn adventures at her new home in Vancouver, BC, where she’s defying all of the traditional rules of growing grass. Rose didn’t prepare the land or buy truckloads of new soil. Instead, she pulled up the existing pieces of grass, planted 1,500 bulbs, covered them back up, and tossed a wildflower turf alternative over some compost mixed with sand.
“It is complete chaos,” she admits. “And I did it two months before the seed packets said I could do this.”
She’s at nature’s mercy and is perfectly fine with that. Rose is expecting some losses. Whatever grows is meant to be there; anything that doesn’t would never have survived, anyway. She’s open to learning from the plants and creating her space based on what they tell her.
“If we have too much ego going into chaos gardening, then that’s where we will not succeed,” she says. “If we go in with humility and an open mind to learn, then we will be able to grow as gardeners as our gardens grow with us.”
Garden Trends
Chaos gardening is all the rage, trending on TikTok and Instagram. Videos of ‘chaos carrots’ popping up in random garden spots are getting over a million views. The new generation of gardeners is keen on ditching the traditional growing rules and the constant work typically associated with tending plants. Rose believes today’s gardeners understand they must correct many mistakes from the past, and that’s why the topic is trending. They want to toss carrot seeds and wildflower seed bombs into bare garden spaces and see what happens. They don’t want structured gardens with tall plants in the back, shorter ones in the front, and dyed mulch between them. They’re ready to move away from the perfectly manicured lawns that are weed-free yet dying of thirst.
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Chaos gardening is all the rage, trending on TikTok and Instagram. Videos of ‘chaos carrots’ popping up in random garden spots are getting over a million views
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Stephanie Rose
Russell Taylor
Gather seeds you love and scatter them throughout the garden like nobody’s watching.
Russell’s 4-year-old son, Nicolas, enjoys the fruit from a rogue tomato plant
“The generation coming up sees this as lawful evil because it’s not supportive of our environment,” Rose says. “It is so much labour, and they’re thinking about a whole generation of people who didn’t garden because they could see how much work it was.”
The Trade-Off
Chaos gardening is the definition of low-maintenance. Rose recommends researching the plants that do well in your region and buying seeds that speak to you. Cast the seeds widely and often, forgetting about spacing completely. Water and see what grows.
“You’re going to have far lower germination rates than you would if you followed [directions] and had done it in a greenhouse and set all the plants out,” she says. “However, seeds are inexpensive. Your time is valuable. Your energy is valuable, so you’re doing a bit of a trade-off here.”
As the plants grow, you will notice some varieties thriving more than others. When they establish, Rose recommends digging up anything that doesn’t fit the space properly and placing it elsewhere in the garden. It’s as simple as that, and that is regenerative gardening. Or, should we say, chaos gardening?
“Well, it’s just a different name for the same thing, right?” Rose explains. “But I love where this is coming from because this is a whole new generation embracing the idea of chaos as something positive.”
Sowing Chaos
Russell Taylor, vice president of Live Earth Products and international Certified Crop Advisor, turned to chaos gardening as an act of desperation.
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It’s chaotic, regenerative, and wonderful
“I had an area in front of my house and planted some boxwoods, but they died. And then I planted a small pink Japonise willow, and that died,” he recalls. “I just couldn’t get anything to grow. I had to have something green. I cleaned out the seed bin, threw it out in front of the house, and what grew is what grew.”
Today, he has a beautiful self-propagating area of zinnias and salvia growing outside his front door. That’s what nature intended for his space, and Taylor has learned to listen and embrace the chaos. He also experiments with vegetable crops and fresh herbs, randomly sprinkling radish, spinach, arugula, kale, and cabbage seeds throughout his raised beds. Strawberries roam around the base of his asparagus plants. He planted dill ten years ago and hasn’t replanted it since; the herb just won’t quit! Taylor suggests watching these more invasive crops to give others a fighting chance, thinning as needed.
“Carrots, for example, whether it’s chaos-seeded or planned, if they’re too crowded, they don’t get the proper nutrients,” he says. “So, you thin them. One of the keys is to say, ‘We sowed some chaos. Now let’s get some organisation, so these things aren’t competing too much.’”
Taylor is a soil guy, so he stresses the importance of building living earth to allow the plants to reach their full potential. He also recommends understanding seed habits, especially if you live in a small space where porch and patio varieties are better than anything indeterminate.
Small and Indoor Spaces
Rose sees no reason why people living in small spaces shouldn’t scatter seeds in a pot and watch them grow. She also encourages indoor gardeners to get in on the chaos on their windowsills or wall planters. Culinary herbs are an excellent start, but we can take things further by regrowing food from kitchen scraps in water. These crops may not be as productive as the ones growing outdoors, but something is always better than nothing.
“Great mistakes are how we learn,” she says. “The biggest thing to watch out for [with chaos gardening] is not being open to what the lessons are.”
Nature’s Lead
Luckily, nature’s lessons are everywhere in our gardens, meadows, and forests. Crowded plants die back in natural settings, allowing others to intermingle and thrive. Dense woodland plantings provide living mulch, preventing soil erosion and water evaporation. They also offer habitat to beneficial insects and other wildlife. It’s chaotic, regenerative, and wonderful.
So, don’t be afraid. Gather seeds you love and scatter them throughout the garden like nobody’s watching. Don’t worry about spacing, density, losses, or any other great mistakes you might make. See what grows, be excited about nature’s surprises, and learn from them. Most of all, let loose and embrace the chaos. 3
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Slashed, Smashed, Thrashed or Trashed but Never
What to do when healthy plants don’t make it out alive
BY XAVI KIEF 80
It can be rough out there for plants. Even in controlled environments, growers constantly evaluate the pros and cons of letting a given individual reach the end of its natural life in situ
For tidiness and IPM, folks intervene on ‘weeds’ and other ‘volunteers.’ Breeders “rogue” atypical, underperforming, and otherwise undesirable plants from their seed-making populations to ensure consistency and make improvements. “Extras” are thinned to create space and focus resources. Gardens are inherited from people with entirely different aesthetic or horticultural priorities.
The climate also plays a part in forcing decisions. Early frosts, major weather events, and lack of water can stunt or stop the development of a plant, enough so to consider a compassionate sacrifice for the sake of another’s growth.
It can be rough out there for plants.
It’s a perfectly rational choice: nature takes over, and microbial recyclers disassemble those discards into available nutrients for future generations
Often, for simplicity, these are relegated to compost. It’s a perfectly rational choice: nature takes over, and microbial recyclers disassemble those discards into available nutrients for future generations.
Of course, many folks also employ “chop and drop” techniques, both in-season and during times of transition.
But what about when you need damage control or get whole plants out of the way and start fresh in their spots? Preparation, a positive attitude, and creativity can get you pretty far, even when the unexpected happens.
Slashed: Cut Down Before Their Prime
Sometimes, we must sacrifice a perfectly example, pollen-bearing plants where seedless goal or cross-pollination among varieties is undesirable. Annuals and biennials in their second year (e.g., over wintered kale and other cruciferous veggies) are often great candidates for the table or for mak ing food for other plants in the form of fermented plant juice (FPJ).
When plants have to be cut down for other practical matters (e.g. a stealthy grow is about to be discovered, site maintenance or development requires access to the space), they may be “saved” by attempting to root cuttings elsewhere.
Storm’s a-brewin’!
Got a hunch (or meteorological tech-enabled prediction) that a major weather event is on its way to wreak destruction on your grow?
Immature fruits and veggies lying scattered on the ground after a high wind or intense rain are only sometimes salvageable. It is better to grab them off the vine before they get battered and try ethylene-assisted paper bag ripening, homebrewing them into vinegar, or making fermented fruit juice (FFJ) to feed your garden.
Smashed and Thrashed
Companion animal hijinks, garden-adjacent horseplay, the occasional trip-and-fall, and similar mishaps can lead to botanical injuries. Wind-broken and torn, damaged at the roots by washout or flooding, even a rather weather-thrashed plant might not be beyond rescue.
Those hurt while still immature can sometimes recover if their immune systems are well-developed and damaged sites are given some First Aid. You can stake or string up a plant with weakened footing (imagine you’re providing a crutch or a sling). You can make a splint with nearby vines and sticks or use tape for bent and fractured branches. It’s risky to leave plants open
DAMAGE CONTROL
Raspberry cuttings
1.
Can it be food or medicine?
The first question is whether or not your salad bowl, soup pot, or fermentation vessel has a place for these discards. Mulching-in-place is less work, but with a couple of seasons’ familiarity with your growing environment, you’ll likely identify some recurring space invaders as nutrient-rich, tasty, and often medicinally valuable herbs. Until you need the room for intentional plantings, these precursors feed and support the microbial life in your soil.
The yearly battling back of stinging nettles and aggressively spreading mints is an excellent opportunity to replenish next winter’s tea supply. Lambsquarters and sorrel, frequent opportunists in healthy gardens, can either be chopped at soil level or uprooted by the fistful, roots cut off with shears over a bucket fated to microbe-rich compost tea, reserving the tops for a bright addition to spring salads.
2. Can it be propagated?
Berry bushes, fruit and nut trees, and other multipurpose perennials (e.g., roses, hostas, herbs) are worth the effort to propagate at regular intervals. This practice prepares you, with both supplies and skills, to act when circumstances insist you must. If you end up with more than you can use, rooted cuttings make excellent gifts to welcome new neighbours, thank helpful friends, or brighten communal spaces. They’re also a good way to make a few extra dollars, especially if your collection includes less common varieties. To close the loop, consider putting that income into a “rainy day fund” for supplies to repair and replace future casualties or use it as a fundraiser to upgrade weather-proofing.
The yearly battling back of stinging nettles and aggressively spreading mints is an excellent opportunity to replenish next winter’s tea supply
Perhaps surprisingly, the leaves of some plants harvested for their mature fruits, seeds, roots, or flowers are often edible. These include roses, blueberries, cucumbers and other cucurbits.
Be sure the plants are correctly identified and safe, in the given quantity and stage of maturity, for the particular consuming species (human or non).
This habit is also a good management strategy for building resilience. When a favourite berry bush gets completely shredded by a rambunctious canine (of course, your dog friend would never do this,) hopefully, there are either a couple of rooted copies in pots nearby or thriving in a nearby plot.
If it has at least three nodes, you can stick an otherwise healthy branch, broken or pruned from a plant, into the soil and bury it above the first node. This site, where the plant would have intended to grow more aerial parts, can sprout a new set of roots instead. Lateral, younger growth that hasn’t become woody is most likely to succeed: depending on the time of injury, you might take a handful of cuttings from a limb already in flower. It’s a low-stakes opportunity to see if any will gain a footing because failures will follow the same destiny set when they become detached from the main plant in the first place.
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DAMAGE CONTROL
MADE BY
EXCELLENCE
ESSENTIALS FOR
Keep a go-to list of fast-growing companions that may be transplanted on a whim.
Although often relatively small, each is the same age as its parent and will try to bear at least a little bud after rooting. Clipping these at harvest time will be as easy as picking wildflowers. Under indoor lighting, put them on a shelf or hanging planters to provide better access to light. No patience for 1-2 gram runts? If you have the means, you can try reverting these cuttings to veg and making them into “monster” clones. Otherwise, you may know someone with pollen who could be persuaded to share! Instead of putting these cuttings into an open garden plot or grow room, grab a small pot that can easily be isolated and maintained to maturity in a protected environment. Keep it alive for a minimum of four to six weeks after pollinating, and you might come out with a handful of unique seeds to start your next crop. Remember to pay your pollen-providing friend back in kind!
Strike a balance between allowing beneficials to thrive and not completely excluding or eliminating exposure to challenges
companions that may be transplanted on a whim.
Good candidates include scallions and other onions, celery, salad turnips, lettuce, or anything else you can regrow from the cut end of a harvested homegrown, farmer’s market, or storebought veggie. These are particularly suited to “seat filling” (your garden, like a televised awards show, shall show no empty spots!) because they don’t need to be fully mature to be enjoyed again. It’s also a convenient and cost-reducing diversion of scraps that, while handy for soup stock or compost-making, can be given a second life in your garden. The additional harvest is a 50% reduction in their cost the first time around!
3. Can I “Yes, and…” in this situation?
As a land steward, improvisation comes with the territory. There will be, from time to time, a little unexpected extra room in a garden bed, row, or container. Keep a go-to list of fast-growing
Rolling with the Punches
The best-laid plans will inevitably, occasionally, go awry. You can’t protect your garden from all possible environmental surprises and haphazard events, and it’s healthy to practice accepting vagaries that are part of life as a grower. Set out with good intentions, learn new skills, and discover a taste for the unusual! 3
Xavi Kief is a writer, researcher, and lifelong learner with their hands in the dirt and their imagination traversing the universe. Seeking always to deepen and integrate their connection with the living planet and its diverse inhabitants, Xavi finds joy by infusing their practical and playful approach to cultivation with a healthy dose of science.They grow food and medicine for their family and community on their NorthEast Coast homestead.
Bio
DAMAGE CONTROL 8585
CANNA RHIZOTONIC
At CANNA Research, we are continuously testing our products in order to make improvements. In May 2024, RHIZOTONIC will be getting an upgrade! When using the improved product you will experience increased effectiveness and tank stability. The shelf life has doubled from one to two years and you no longer need to worry about raised pH levels in your tank when applying the product. For growers, who were using RHIZOTONIC before, rest assured you will not need to change the way you use it and you can still expect exceptional results from your plants.
PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR
INTERVIEW
CANNA RESEARCH, HOLLAND MR. BAKKER
1. WHAT WAS THE REASON FOR CANNA TO DEVELOP A NEW FORMULA FOR ONE OF THE BEST-SELLING PRODUCTS, CANNA RHIZOTONIC?
We are continuously testing the products in order to make improvements and to better understand how they perform in different circumstances. In the case of RHIZOTONIC, we noticed some stability issues as the product aged (precipitation and loss of colour), and a relatively high pH of the product. While we are aware that some users consciously use RHIZOTONIC to increase their pH-values, not all users pay attention to the pH of their nutrient solution. Therefore, the product could pose a risk to the ideal pH of the solution, which we would like to keep between 5.2 and 6.2. So we looked at the production and extraction process of the algae we use, and were able to obtain an extract that is not so high in pH. In addition to a pH that is better suited for plant growth, this also enabled us to increase product stability – doubling its shelf life to 2 years.
2. WHAT ARE THE BIGGEST DIFFERENCES COMPARED TO THE OLD FORMULA
Defi nitely the pH and the stability! The different extraction and production process also increased the (stability of the) colour. It has a noticeably darker colour than the old formula. Rest assured; the amount of organic matter from the algae is similar, so you can use the same dose of as you did before. There won’t be any differences in function. Additionally, the product has less of a marine (fi sh-like) odour due to the acidity of the product, although there is just as much marine algae in there.
3.WHAT WILL THE GROWER NOTICE IN PRACTICE?
During cultivation, there will be some differences, the pH of the nutrient solution after applying the improved product will behave differently compared to the previous formula. It will not increase the pH any more, previously it could cause your nutrient solution pH to rise above 7. Now the solution will be neutral or slightly acidic, depending on what else is in it.
Just as with the old formula, the plants will be more tolerant to stressful situations (e.g. the repotting of cuttings or small plants, whilst providing increased root production.)
4. WHAT TIPS WOULD YOU LIKE TO GIVE THE GROWER ON THIS NEW FORMULA?
Growers that measure and modify their pH should continue to do this after using the new RHIZOTONIC formula and, depending on your water quality, increase the pH if required. Growers that use RHIZOTONIC without checking the pH, can rest assured that the pH will now be less likely to cause problems.
Be aware that RHIZOTONIC contains organic matter. If left in nutrient solution (or irrigation tubes) for too long, microbes may feed on it. While this doesn’t have to be a problem, it’s not the best look. Depending on your set-up, be sure to frequently change/fully use the solution and if necessary, fl ush irrigation tubes with water or nutrient solution.
Although we understand that it is tempting to use high concentrations of RHIZOTONIC to give the plants the best care possible, using higher than recommended concentrations on young, sensitive, and/or already stressed plants is not always beneficial. Taking good care of your plants is also knowing when not to overdo it.
Organoponics 2.0 Organoponics 2.0
A Brief History
Organoponics, or organoponicos, is a method of growing developed in Cuba as a response to a massive food shortage caused by the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1989.The traditional way uses low-level concrete walls filled with soil and organic material. Growers laid out drip irrigation lines left over from Soviet-era hydroponic growing practices to deliver water to the crops in the beds. I’m unsure if I can call how I farm ‘Organoponic,’ but it’s pretty close. Let’s go with Organoponics 2.0, Hyrdoganic, Organohydro, or possibly HydroOrganic. All I know is it has changed the way I grow.
All I know is it has changed the way I grow
The Shift
Throughout my horticulture career, I’ve grown hydroponically or organically in soil or LSO beds. In 2021, after a change in ownership of a producer where I was Master Grower, I was tasked with changing how we grew plants.
The facility used hydroponic flood and drain tables and dripto-waste irrigation. The new ownership wanted a more organic approach to the cultivation practices.
Many consumers know the difference between hydroponically or organically grown food - in taste, smell, and structure. It got me thinking about producing a product that would appeal to both sides of the spectrum. Because I had been growing hydroponically for several years, I didn’t want to do a complete organic conversion to the facility. It would have been incredibly time-consuming and expensive. So, I used that conversation about hydroponic vs. organic farming to in -
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BY DUSTAN MCLEAN
spire a different way to grow our crops. I began introducing water-soluble nutrients (salts) to an organic media with an amended coco coir and peat moss base - the results were surprising and exciting.
The Results
Throughout my horticulture career, I’ve grown hydroponically or organically in soil or LSO beds
To begin, I used equal parts peat and coco coir with added perlite (ProMix HP CC came out shortly after, and we began using that) and amended with a base 4-4-4 fertiliser, worm castings, crab meal, bone meal, blood meal, rock phosphate, dolomite lime, azomite, and humic acid. We put the mixed media into two-gallon pots and placed them on flood and drain tables for wick irrigation - with the plan of doing one top watering a week while the plants were wicking up their feed (drip irrigation works well in this media, too). With an ideal balance of porosity and drainage capacity, the media offered a more delicate control over the rhizosphere. It was also more forgiving than soil if mistakes happened during irrigation using nutrients. A few times, new staff members who were learning about irrigation gave the plants too much water, and we found it challenging to overwater with this
media. If someone made a mistake in the nutrient dosage, we could correct it with a ‘mini flush.’ Water retention improved using peat mixed in with coco coir, and usage dropped significantly compared to the previous hydroponic system, which only used a coco coir/ perlite combination.
We also discovered a significantly wider pH range(5.87.2), offering flexibility to play with what and how we were feeding the plants and how they would handle uptake. I would often ‘ebb and flow’ my pH and deliver a lower pH feed one week while giving a higher one the next. I let the plants tell me what, if anything, they were missing. The plants thrived in this range. During the crop cycle and pre-harvest, it was easy to leach any built-up salts out of the media and use it again. We could use the same media three times before adding amendments. Throughout the crop cycle, we found the environments of our grow rooms to be more stable than the hydroponic room, with less stress on the HVAC equipment. The media was excellent for more complex environmental conditions outdoors or in greenhouses.
8989 ORGANOPONICS
BASE NUTRIENTS & ADITIVES Distributed in the UK by
GREAT FLOWER COMES FROM POWDER CRAFT POWDER
With an ideal balance of porosity and drainage capacity, the media offered a more delicate control over the rhizosphere
The resulting product was gorgeous, with an increased yield and potency, and the terpene profile was incredibly robust. It appealed to hydroponic and organic consumers and surprised many. In 2022, the company won Canadian Craft Producer of the Year at the GrowUp Conference and Awards.
The feedback has been so positive I haven’t changed how I farm since for the following reasons:
• More control over the root zone
• Better quality, potency, and a more robust end product
• Higher yields
For the water-soluble nutrients, I went with REMO Nutrients. As a long-time customer, I knew their products use high-quality chelated ingredients without chlorides or carbonates. The whole idea was to fill any nutritional gaps that may be in the media we created. We did not follow the feeding chart provided by REMO because of the amendments used.
Just like the pH, I would ‘ebb and flow’’ my total dissolved solids in my nutrient mix - ranging from an EC of 2.7 down to 0.5 through a week of three feedings. I did this until the plants’ final week or two before harvest when the EC was at 0.0.
• More forgiving than soil and easier to correct deficiencies and mistakes
• Better water retention than coco coir
• Better balance of porosity and drainage
• Well suited for challenging environments and easier in indoor environments
• Having water soluble fertilisers fills in any missing gaps there may be in the organic
• material used.
Using the best of both worlds brings the plants to their full potential. I’m sure I’m not the only one who grows this way, and if you do, please feel free to reach out via my social media accounts and let me know your take on it. 3
BIO With 30 years of cultivation experience, Dustan has dedicated a good portion of his life to medicinal plants. He was a founding partner and Head of Cultivation/Master Grower for Parkland Flower Inc. He is now the Head of Cultivation and Master Grower for Big League Cultivation in Alberta, Canada. He provides incredible genetics to Canadian producers and selected flower and concentrates for the international market.
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ORGANOPONICS
Local Growers
WHO’S GROWING WHAT WHERE
Alex Smith Alex Grows Food
Cambridge in the UK & Ireland
It’s incredible how Mother Nature captures all sorts of talent to work in her favour. Alex’s professional experience led him from writing academic software related to climate science to winning Garden Video of the Year at the 2023 Garden Media Guild awards. The video ‘Can You Be Self-Sufficient While Working A Full-Time Job? ’ stirred conversation among many gardeners, highlighting the pros and cons of juggling work and gardening.
With a PhD in Computational Physics, his focus wasn’t on gardening until lockdown when he experienced the reality of food quality and shortages and developed some health issues. His focus started with reducing his intake of potential pesticides and turned to growing veg and flowers. Taking inspiration from YouTube videos by experts like the no-dig guru Charles Dowding, Alex quickly adopted his easy-to-follow method. He loved the simplicity of building lasagna gardens, which was imperative since he suffered from dizziness, low energy levels, arm pain, and numbness. Alex’s passion resulted in growing his first crops and sparked an interest in sharing his journey through short vlogs.
Having researched soil health and regenerative agriculture, he was overrun with beans in the first season. He covered an ugly fence with sweetcorn, peppers, tomatoes, and sunflowers, quickly running out of growing space. A small greenhouse followed, resulting in a surplus of Sungold tomatoes. He suspected that his undiagnosed illness was related to food, so his dedication to taking ownership of his supply chain resulted in hundreds of kilos of produce. He also got chickens and started making cheese.
As his garden and vlogging ventures progressed, the reality of holding a full-time job clashed with the smallholding dream. Alex was left exhausted when dealing with work issues, leading to his
precious crops rotting on the vine. Fueled by his angst, he recorded the video mentioned above, and for him, the answer was no, you can’t be self-sufficient while holding a full-time job. The revelation brought not only a change in his working plans but also recognition and an award presented by Charles Dowding during the ceremony awards. Alex’s health also improved, and in 2024, we can continue following his growing journey.
Learn more: alexgrowsfood.com
Instagram: @alex.grows.food
YouTube: @alexgrowsfood
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BY MARTYNA KROL
Would you like to be featured as one of our local growers? If you’ve got a garden, grow room, or farm and have a story to share, contact us at: growers@gardenculturemagazine.com
Pembrokeshire, Wales Welsh Worms James Taylor
This gardener cultivates nutrient-dense food in his garden, but his primary passion is living compost. James Taylor (aka Tay) started his growing adventure by creating quality vermicompost to supplement the nutrients in his pots. Much like a scientist, he took a keen interest in learning what makes ‘elite’ worm castings: nutritionally dense material.
During lockdown, he and his wife ended up in Pembrokeshire in a house with a large garden that needed some care. Tay describes it as the best time ever. Tay learned a lot about black gold thanks to dozens of podcasts, online groups, and a book by Jeff Lowenfells, ‘Teaming with Microbes.’ He learned that compost is not just a ‘product’; it’s a system of ecological interactions essential to plant growth. As his garden grew in new veg beds, his composting methods evolved; now, he incorporates techniques such as hot composting with Johnson-Su bioreactors. This method can produce biologically rich compost quickly thanks to an effective heating mechanism.
The quality of the final product can be measured and quantified by the number of micrograms of soil organic matter (SOM) per gram of soil. To an untrained eye, it looks like someone diluting some compost with water, putting a drop of solution on a microscope slide, and searching for strands of fungal hyphae, amoebas, nematodes or protozoans. During the growing expo, Product Earth, Tay met Adam Swan from Soil Agroecology Lab and Soil Smiths. Tay’s production of living compost improved, as did his microscopy skills. Recently, he found predatory fungi (not a nematode) that attack nematodes. The world under the microscope is so vast, and all of it plays a role in the nutrition of our foods.
Tay’s journey took him from working in industrial kitchens with little attention to nutrition to creating one of the most nutritionally dense composts, which feeds his soil and plants. Deeply understanding how it works is so rewarding that he shares his knowledge wherever possible. He’s proud to have supported two groups of startups in their vermicomposting journey, and he is currently creating living compost en masse for a regenerative tree nursery in Wales. The soil quality is crucial to the project’s success, and they’re using techniques such as DNA barcoding and microscopy to ensure a suitable microbiology and nutrient profile.
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Instagram: @kompost_king @welshworms
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WAYS to Create an Eco-Friendly & Sustainable Garden Space
Becoming an organic-regenerative gardener is worth every effort, helping you produce healthier crops and connect to Nature. The good news is that implementing sustainable practices in your garden can be as simple or complicated as you’d like; many different projects and efforts contribute meaningfully to the health of your plants and surrounding ecosystems. Looking for ideas? Try these 5 Cool Ways to Create an Eco-Friendly & Sustainable Garden Space.
Start with Soil
One of the most powerful things you can do as a gardener is to treat your dirt like gold. Living soil will help you grow productive gardens while protecting a precious resource. Forget chemical products; compost is your best friend. You can create a composting system that works for you, regardless of your space. Adding organic matter to your garden instantly boosts soil nutrient content, creates air pockets, and helps the earth better retain moisture. Leave no patch of soil uncovered; always mulch your garden space. Covering the earth with a layer of wood chips or leaf mould will prevent water evaporation and add nutrients to the soil as it decomposes. Consider sheet mulching (lasagna gardening) and hugelkultur beds to build nutrient-rich earth while saving water. And avoid digging if you can. Leaving life below the garden surface intact while nourishing it is a top priority. Stepanie Rose’s The Regenerative Garden: 80 Practical Projects for Creating a Self-Sustaining Garden Ecosystem is an excellent resource for gardeners leading the change.
Support Wildlife 2
We do so much to keep certain critters out of our gardens; don’t forget to put the welcome sign on the gate for many others. Supporting wildlife and making safe spaces for them is essential to thriving ecosystems, and it can be a lot of fun, too. Build some insect hotels or leave stumps or pieces of driftwood in the garden for beneficial bugs to move into so they can help you with pest control. Strategically place birdhouses, baths, or feeders and plant berry bushes to encourage our feathered friends to pop by. Design pollinator islands that include a wide variety of mostly native and only chemical-free plants. Between bee balm and liatris for the bees, coneflowers and milkweed for the butterflies, and foxglove and honeysuckle for the hummingbirds, you’ll end up with a downright gorgeous flower buffet to please the essential pollinators that help your garden grow.
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Stop Weeding 3
We often hear that we need to go back to our roots, and the saying is true for many different reasons. In The Climate Change Garden: Down to Earth Advice for Growing a Resilient Garden, Sally Morgan and Kim Stoddart write about how gardens of the past were rarely decorative and served the functional purpose of growing food for the family. Weeds were encouraged to grow alongside crops for their medicinal properties and ability to attract pollinators and beneficial insects to the garden. Plus, keeping every inch of ground covered was essential for retaining moisture in the summer, nutrients in the winter, and preventing soil erosion. Take a page from the past; let plants like chickweed, lamb’s quarters and ox-tongue self-seed and grow alongside other plants. They’re beautiful in their own right and create the cottage garden look everyone longs for these days. Fighting Mother Nature is too much work; let her do her thing and reap all the benefits.
Reuse and Recycle 5
Build a Wicking Bed 4
Wicking beds are an exciting option for water-conscious gardeners.These large, DIY container-like gardens capture water runoff and store it in a reservoir under the bed’s soil so it’s readily available for the plant roots whenever needed. Kiss the garden hose goodbye and say hello to healthy crops with strong roots! You can build wicking beds in the ground or as a raised garden, preferably with recycled materials or cedar posts. You’ll need an impermeable barrier at the bottom to act as the reservoir, drainage pipes for water flow, and gravel to store the water. Place garden fabric on the gravel and fill the bed with soil and plants. You can water the wicking bed manually (about once a week in the summer) or connect downspouts to the garden and let the rain do the job for you. The Regenerative Garden (Rose) offers excellent step-by-step guides to building wicking beds, keyhole gardens, herb spirals, and more.
Finding creative ways to use things you already have in the garden is budgetfriendly and reduces the amount of waste in landfills (or sitting in your shed). In their book, The Urban Garden: 101 Ways to Grow Food and Beauty in the City, Kathy Jentz and Teri Speight encourage gardeners to find new purposes for items rather than buying new ones. Doing so adds layers of history and depth to the garden because it connects you to previous gardeners and owners or past experiences. Anything that holds soil can be a planter if you create drainage holes. Old bathtubs, sinks, rain boots, and metal trucks can all be used as containers. An old brass bed frame makes a garden trellis and metal chairs can be placed anywhere to create a cosy relaxation and garden observation spot. Grow vertically in repurposed rain gutters and edge garden beds with rocks from your travels, old cinder blocks or terracotta roof tiles. Finally, Jentz and Speight warn never to throw out broken garden tools. Have a bucket handy to collect broken parts; you can eventually put something together with the pieces. Besides, old rake heads make great hanging racks for garden gloves and small tools! 3
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