posted 6 years ago
Hi Matthew, here's my take:
I believe Geoff Lawton, among others, builds his annual gardens on contour, both to capture water, as well as prevent erosion; the rows/beds are curved to fit the contour of the slope. I don't do this with my own annuals garden because I get plenty of rainfall during the growing season. Having trees or a hedge close to your garden beds may deprive the beds of water. I have a row of fruit trees growing against a fence, like espalier (in 2 dimensions, anyway), and I keep them pruned to the height of the fence at 2 m. They don't adversely affect the moisture of the bed at this size, though they are also planted about 1.5-2 m apart, not close like a hedge.
Oh, and I know you didn't mention this, but when I moved my kitchen garden to right outside my back door, my productivity really jumped. The old location was only about 10 m away, but it wasn't within direct view of the house, and to be honest, required too much effort to visit every day! I go through my kitchen garden multiple times a day now, as I go about my daily business, and things get harvested on time, or weeds/pests get noticed right away. I highly recommend placing the annual kitchen garden as close to the house as possible.
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All in all though, I figure you might as well just jump in and try it. Better to do something imperfectly than to not do anything at all. And I'm always trying new things, and learning from my own mistakes, which I think is how most of us learn the best :) It shouldn't be too hard to change in the future if needed.