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George.com 27-11-2009 08:09 AM

Open source work garden planted out
 
I made a significant planting in the workplace garden I have been working on
for 6 months. A cherry tomato plant went in today to match the sweet corn
and parmanent mandarin tree.

The ground is old builders fill. The 'garden' is heaps of leaves, coffee
grounds, bits of paper, fruit peels, weeds etc mulched down with the help of
some worms. I don't expect a great harvest from it this summer.

Its first mission is to be a show garden. To demonstrate to people that and
piece of land can be productive and that urban gardening can take place
almost anywhere. And perhaps to inspire some people to give it a try
themselves.

It will also serve as an open source garden. I will kick it off & keep it
tended but others may like to plant in it.

Finally the produce will be open source as well. If people in the building
take home the odd tomato or the odd mandarin, thats fine.

rob


Wildbilly 27-11-2009 06:40 PM

Open source work garden planted out
 
In article ,
"George.com" wrote:

I made a significant planting in the workplace garden I have been working on
for 6 months. A cherry tomato plant went in today to match the sweet corn
and parmanent mandarin tree.

The ground is old builders fill. The 'garden' is heaps of leaves, coffee
grounds, bits of paper, fruit peels, weeds etc mulched down with the help of
some worms. I don't expect a great harvest from it this summer.

Its first mission is to be a show garden. To demonstrate to people that and
piece of land can be productive and that urban gardening can take place
almost anywhere. And perhaps to inspire some people to give it a try
themselves.

It will also serve as an open source garden. I will kick it off & keep it
tended but others may like to plant in it.

Finally the produce will be open source as well. If people in the building
take home the odd tomato or the odd mandarin, thats fine.

rob


Good on you George. It may, or may not work, this time. Just like
planting seeds. Sometimes they come up. Sometimes they don't. It sounds
like a great chance to grow a community as well.

Good luck.
--
³When you give food to the poor, they call you a saint. When you ask why the poor have no food, they call you a communist.²
-Archbishop Helder Camara

http://tinyurl.com/o63ruj
http://countercurrents.org/roberts020709.htm

David Hare-Scott[_2_] 27-11-2009 10:59 PM

Open source work garden planted out
 
Wildbilly wrote:
In article ,
"George.com" wrote:

I made a significant planting in the workplace garden I have been
working on for 6 months. A cherry tomato plant went in today to
match the sweet corn and parmanent mandarin tree.

The ground is old builders fill. The 'garden' is heaps of leaves,
coffee grounds, bits of paper, fruit peels, weeds etc mulched down
with the help of some worms. I don't expect a great harvest from it
this summer.

Its first mission is to be a show garden. To demonstrate to people
that and piece of land can be productive and that urban gardening
can take place almost anywhere. And perhaps to inspire some people
to give it a try themselves.

It will also serve as an open source garden. I will kick it off &
keep it tended but others may like to plant in it.

Finally the produce will be open source as well. If people in the
building take home the odd tomato or the odd mandarin, thats fine.

rob


Good on you George. It may, or may not work, this time. Just like
planting seeds. Sometimes they come up. Sometimes they don't. It
sounds like a great chance to grow a community as well.

Good luck.


Yes good work. A tip: builder's rubble often contains cement which is quite
alkaline. If some things don't do well for no apparent reason test the pH.

David



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