usare come base per annotare osservazioni e variazioni:
Questioni aperte:
1 - TIPI DI PAINTE
le piante devono essere
perenni (se annuali occorre rinnovarle ogni anno)
non crescere troppo (es basilico) per non richiedere potature
di colori diversi
IRRIGAZIONE
vedere come automatizzarla con buon drenaggio e riciclo down-up senza lavare via i nutrienti
INDIRIZZI da cui recuperare info
http://www.greenerideal.com/lifestyle/diy-gardening-how-to-create-a-vertical-wall-garden/
http://lifeonthebalcony.com/how-to-turn-a-pallet-into-a-garden/
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ghsl7aAzdv8
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IzM23fh8h98
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_zKFBuuLPMs
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_TnOQMlxVjw&list=TLWIneonRHhu8
http://www.youtube.com/user/mediamaker2000?annotation_id=annotation_454539&feature=iv&src_vid=MjUV1O7X4ns#p/u
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MjUV1O7X4ns
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q1C9zP5uJrE
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Nfcat6jXBo
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MPvgkZhrWUA
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y5i7zn0zt5U
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EJjAWF2DfWY
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h9Jx8NRkWTo
http://tumbleweedtraveller.blogspot.it/2011/03/how-to-build-your-own-living-wall-or.html
29 March, 2011
How to Build Your Own Living Wall or Vertical Garden
Liz, myself and the newly planted vertical garden.
A few years
ago now, on a trip to Paris, quite by chance I came a cross a vertical
garden or living wall created and installed by the French gardener and
designer ‘Patrick Blanc‘.
The plants are rooted into a thick hydroponics membrane through which a
nutrient enriched solution trickles, pumped up from a reservoir at the
base of the wall which keeps the plants fed and watered.
The vertical garden on the wall of the Musée des Arts Premiers Quai Branly in Paris.
I had often
spoke with a friend of mine ‘Will Giles’ about how we could create a DIY
version, looking at all the possible ways of supporting it, what to use
as the membrane, how to hold it up, what to use as the reservoir and
how to feed the plants among many other things. After a while we came up
with a much simpler solution, as the best ideas always are. Do away
with the expensive and intricate hydroponics and build a structure that
is essentially a series of hammocks, a bit like a multi story window
box. It may take a little bit of daily care to keep the plants watered
and looking good but is much easier and cheaper to build.
It was while I was working at Urban Jungle
hardy and exotic plants nursery that I had the opportunity to put the
idea to the test. I had a rough idea of how the structure might work but
no set figures to work from. I could see ‘Liz’ my boss and one of the
owners of Urban Jungle looked a little apprehensive as I was attaching
12ft high pieces of timber to the edge of one of the pergolas in the
middle of the nursery. Once the wall had taken shape and looked as if
the monstrosity was going to work, apprehension quickly turned to
plants. Once the wall was up and the pockets filled with compost we set
about rounding up plants from the nursery and setting the out on the
floor in front of the wall for planting, and then planted well into the
night. The wall turned out to look not too bad and after a week or so,
when the leaves had turned themselves up to the light, it looked pretty
damn good. Many visitors to the nursery asked how it was built so here,
at last, are the designs for the vertical garden. Sorry about the wait.
Planting the wall by headlight.
The wall is
now coming up to its second season and has endured one of the coldest
winters for years, where I’m shore the entire thing would have been
frozen solid for several days if not weeks at a time. I’m no longer at
Urban Jungle but have heard from Liz that some of the plants are now on
the move and in a short time she will be able to see what had pulled
through and what needs tweaking. Some plants were not hardy so there
will inevitably be some gaps to plug. Liz is going to put up a post on Jungle Drums, the Urban Jungle blog, in
the coming weeks on the progress of the wall, what has worked, what
hasn’t and the new plants that will fill the gaps. As soon as it’s up
I’ll post a link.
HOW TO BUILD YOUR OWN LIVING WALL OR VERTICAL GARDEN
1) CHOOSE A
LOCATION- Once the wall is planted and watered it will be very heavy so a
suitable structure is needed to support the wall. If the base of the
wall is resting on the ground and this is not a solid surface, place
slabs under each of the uprights to spread the weight and prevent it
from sinking into the ground. If the wall is not resting on the ground
make shore the brackets used to hold the living wall to the supporting
structure are strong to take the weight of the wall when saturated. If
the supporting is a house or shed wall the structure should be mounted
away from the supporting wall to leave a cavity and avoid causing damp
problems.
2)
ORIENTATION- The place we chose for the wall at Urban Jungle by chance
faces east. This in my opinion is the best direction for it to face as
it gets direct light up until noon in the coolest half of the day. If
the wall was south or west facing more particular attention would have
to be paid to watering and plants would have to be selected to tolerate
direct light. Regarding watering, it is important to be diligent as
anyone who has let a hanging basket dry out knows it takes a while to
re-wet, and you cant dunk the wall in a bucket. North facing walls would
require less attention but the constant shade will limit the choice of
plants.
3)
CONSTRUCTION- The wall at Urban Jungle was 12ft high, 7ft wide and build
against a large pergola for support. I used three uprights made from
12ft lengths of 2x4 tantalised timber. The two uprights on the edge of
the wall were attached to the uprights of the pergola with brackets and
the middle upright stabilised by a post in the ground and two cross
members. Each of the uprights was rested on a paving slabs to help
spread the weight. The horizontal spars that support the planting
hammocks were made from tile baton. Each spar was screwed in place with a
little wood glue for extra support. The spars were placed 10cm apart.
This made the pockets closemouthed together so that when planted not too
much gaps are left but there is enough room to squeeze the root balls
in.
How to build the timber structure that supports the wall.
4) POCKETS-
Because the wall had three uprights there had to be two series of
pockets as they cant cross the uprights. The pockets were made from
heavy duty landscape fabric which needs to be about two and a half times
longer than the height of the wall and about 20cm wider than the width
between the uprights. Start by folding about 10cm in each side so the
fold is facing the front and attach to the back of the top spar with
staples or by screwing a second spar over it. Push the fabric in between
the top and second down spar so it forms a pocket about 15-20cm deep.
Place a few staples in the second down spar so the fabric doesn’t slip.
This will not need to be as secure as on the top spar as the weight of
the compost will hold each pocket in place. Repeat the process down to
the bottom of the wall and securely attach the end of the fabric to the
bottom spar.
How to attach the landscape fabric to create the pockets.
5) FILLING- We
decided not to add any ingredients to the compost like pumice or
perlite to reduce the weight as we were happy that the structure would
support the weight. We mixed plenty of slow release fertiliser granules
into the mix as there will be a large amount of plants in a relatively
small volume of compost. We also added a quantity of swell gel to aid
water retention. Fill the wall from the bottom pocket up so that each
filled pocket rests on the one previous. Fold up the excess landscape
fabric that was folded in on either side to prevent the compost from
spilling out the end of the pockets. Each pocket should only be filled
three quarters as the root balls from the plants will take up a
proportion of the space and the soil level in the pocket must be just below the spar so water can soak in and not poor off the wall.
The newly planted wall before the leaves have turned up to the light.
6) PLANTING-
We set the plants out on the floor in front of the wall to create a
design before we started to plant. Spacing will depend on the plants you
use and the size of the plant used. Start planting from the top down.
If you plant from the bottom up the lower plants will be covered with
compost. Lay a sheet down bellow the wall as a lot of compost will be
spilt. Make shore the plants are well watered before planting as many of
the root balls will have to be teased apart and squeezed into pockets.
Despite our planning we changed the design considerably while planting
as it looked so different when vertical. Liz more so than other
gardeners is a very impatient gardener so we planted a little closer
than was probably necessary and plugged the gaps with Tradescantia
cuttings, Spider plants and Begonia sutherlandii. These quickly grew and
filled the gaps. We debated weather to use only evergreens but decided
this would be too limiting on the design possibilities and would make
the wall predominantly green. The down side to using deciduous or
herbaceous plants was that the wall will look a little sparse over
winter. We put a few dwarf Daffodils in the wall to see how they would
fair. These wouldn’t hide the landscape fabric, but would add a splash
of colour before the new shoots emerge.
7) WATERING-
The wall will have to be completely manually watered. Rain will have
little if any benefit to the wall other than slowing the rate at which
the wall dries out, plus the leaves will arrange themselves like roof
tiles shedding all the rain water. We didn’t get around to installing a
trickle irrigation system and hand water the wall daily, sometimes twice
if it is really hot and or windy. From autumn to early spring watering
will be much less but still important. To install a trickle system there
would need to be one trickle pipe along each pocket with dripper every
30cm or so. The dripper pipe would need to be the sort that delivers a
specific flow of water rather than a simple leaky pipe as the bottom of
the wall would receive more water than the top. The watering regime
would have to be little and often to prevent the nutrients from being
leached from the compost.
8) FEEDING-
The slow release fertiliser we put in the wall was more than enough to
see the plants through the first season with no signs of stress. The
second and subsequent years are where attention is needed. Each
perennial plant should have a hanging basket pellet pushed into the
compost near the root ball. Any annual or replanted patches should have
the old compost removed and replaced with fresh compost and slow release
fertiliser. The old compost will be matted with the roots of perennial
plants which should be carefully cut without cutting the landscape
fabric. If a trickle system is installed a liquid drip feeder could be
attached or if hand watered use an occasional folia feed.
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