Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Building an Urban Garden Design for Your Urban Oasis

By Simon Adderton


Living in large city while great, might be a bit of a difficulty if you'd like your own garden. Unless you happen to be living in a house with sufficient yard space, you only have room for growing your greens. But things have changed over the last years when urban garden designs make their way to little residences and high-rises in the city centres.

An urban garden design is just about what you believe it is: It is a garden that you set up in the tightest corners of your home. Because most city dwellers do not have enough lot space to work with when it comes to gardening, an urban garden design will help you create your own little oasis in the city.

Though you're going be using simply a tiny space for your garden, it may not mean that you cannot get as much food from your garden as you would with a gigantic one. Space efficient designs, which you can create with almost anything you can find in your yard, garage or trunk of your car, will yield you tons of crops which is more than needed for everyone.

There are lots of techniques on how you can create your urban garden design. Here are some concepts to inspire you in making an urban garden of your own.

Vertical Gardening

Stack a few different-sized raised beds, fill them with garden soil and plant your favourite herbs and veg. Using this expandable step garden permits you to grow your crops without consuming so much space. Because the beds are above ground, you do not have to stress about pests and illnesses in your plants. Start with a tiny layer "three levels would be good" then expand your garden when you get into the swing of it.

Square Foot Gardening

It is interesting how much you can grow in such a small space. Square foot gardening employs 3x3 or 4x4 raised beds. Fill the beds with good-quality soil, divide the entire bed into square-foot sections and plant away. This guarantees correct spacing between plants so that they can grow healthy and yield lots of crops. Make efforts to place taller plants at the north part of your square foot garden so they do not hold back the smaller, sun-loving plants from getting daylight.

One-Pot Garden

Beginning gardeners can do so much with an one-pot garden. By employing a galvanized trough or a big can, you can plant plants and herbs that you often need in the kitchen. This works perfectly with practically any type of herb or vegetable, but ensure you get complementary groups of plants so they don't compete with one another when it comes to nutriments.




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