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Garden picture exchange!

 
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Let's see if this works...
garden_with_rock_walkway.jpg
garden_with_rock_walkway
garden_with_rock_walkway
 
Mark Boucher
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Cool! So, please post some pictures of your garden! Raised, hugel, urban, whatcha got? I'm wanting to transition my raised bed to a no-till type garden. I'm leaning towards direct seeding the approx. 10' x 30' area with a general diversity of veggies and cover, and staging seedings to fill in during the season. There's no wood under there, only mulch on top, but I've only scratched the surface minimally in the last two years, so I'm not sure if I want to dig it up. I've been reading at permies a lot, and think that this site is a great resource. I'm in Athens, GA, and have recently realized that something will grow here year-round... and so I'm trying to figure out a sustainable system that uses mostly seeding and cut-and-drop as the imputs, and harvesting, of course. I appreciate any advice, but would love to see any pictures of your gardens; lots of info in a picture! I hope that winter finds you well; the pic above is a little taste of spring.
 
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Beautiful, Mark. You've invested your energy well.

I look forward to seeing others' endeavors. I'm in between garden spaces right now, so will post photos later...
 
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Location: Georgia
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Here is a picture from June. Hugelkultur beds were done in ground instead of being piled up on top.
IMG_1551.JPG
Hugelkultur beds were done in ground
Hugelkultur beds were done in ground
 
Alex Ames
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Location: Georgia
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How about a few flowers.
pretty_garden_flowers.jpg
pretty_garden_flowers
pretty_garden_flowers
 
Mark Boucher
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Looking good Alex. What's your mulching process? And thanks, Gail. I guess that's the good thing about investing energy; your back can't be sore forever, right?
 
Alex Ames
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Location: Georgia
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Mark Boucher wrote:Looking good Alex. What's your mulching process? And thanks, Gail. I guess that's the good thing about investing energy; your back can't be sore forever, right?



Flower beds are under pine trees and the needles fall in the beds, as I studied the pattern of where the needles
fell and built the beds there. What misses the beds I rake up and put back in the beds. In my garden I use pine
needles in the paths and have been using wheat straw in the beds. I am having to buy the wheat straw, so going
forward, I will use leaves and pine needles on the beds as well, because that is what I have and can control.

My flower beds are unprotected from deer but I plant edibles like onion, garlic, rosemary, basil, cilantro in among the
flowers. Anything I think they might leave alone due to it's strong flavor or smell.
 
Posts: 154
Location: Cumming, GA
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Apple tree guild
IMAG1160.jpg
[Thumbnail for IMAG1160.jpg]
 
john giroux
Posts: 154
Location: Cumming, GA
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This is a trellis I made for a kiwi vine. Not the best photo,but there are 3 apple trees, granny smith, pink lady and red delicious, a few comfry plants, fennel artichokes, garlic, dill, sage,chickory, collards, mint, daisies, bee balm, chamomile, oats, wheat, plantains, dandelions, and various weeds and lots of creeping Bermuda grass. The whole area has lots of wood buried that I got from my property in different stages of decay. This spring I plan on adding more veggies and flowers to the mix and a cherry tree maybe. Also planted a few locust tree seeds. The bees are about 20 yards from this spot.
 
                        
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Full pics/details can be found on our blog...











Hope you enjoy!

-Bill, Melissa & Paige
 
Posts: 72
Location: Edmonton Alberta
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Garden, Kamloops city centre, 2011

2012
 
Posts: 308
Location: long island, ny Z-7a
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these are my raised/buried framed hybrid hugels. dug 3' deep til hit light clay subsoil , filled with logs,woodchips, horse manure,split/rotting firewood,sawdust,shavings,truckloads of grass etc.
frames are cedar fencing reused 3x over. 1 season old (2 this spring) grew like gangbusters.
thanks.
suburban hugelkultur beds



 
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My land has very shallow soil (for the most part) so I make pockets with whatever is available. Since learning the advantages of burying wood in them all my new ones (I have many) have started that way, and any of the old ones which need redoing will get wood too. It's impossible to get a decent picture of everything but this gives an idea.
beautiful_garden_ponds_lawn.jpg
beautiful_garden_ponds_lawn
beautiful_garden_ponds_lawn
 
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Location: Quebec
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I love this tread!!! More pictures please!!!
 
Posts: 1273
Location: Central Wyoming -zone 4
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hugelkultur monies dog chicken building sheep
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lovely thread, will contribute mid summer or so i think, depending on how things are looking then, just working on earthworks still so its kinda ugly if you will

also whats the website for your blog myers?
i love the wicker stuff
 
Posts: 76
Location: Newbury, VT (Zone 4)
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LOVE seeing all the abundance and life force in those lush, green pic's! Especially during a snow storm!

My HK beds are in the landscaping phase, and not even buried in soil yet, so I'll have some photos to share in a few months. I'll have to look on another computer for garden pix from last summer.
 
Mark Boucher
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Wow! What some great gardens!
Matt Davey, I love the diversity. Are you getting lots of volunteers, or are you mostly seeding/planting?
 
Alex Ames
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Location: Georgia
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Just to keep the thread moving, another picture.
IMG_1653.JPG
the garden
the garden
 
Posts: 310
Location: Seattle, WA, USA
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Myers Family wrote:Full pics/details can be found on our blog...Hope you enjoy!

-Bill, Melissa & Paige



Please post a link to your blog. I'd love to see more of the willow structures.
 
                        
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http://ourcascadia.blogspot.com/

it is made using alder saplings... not willow. we had a few thousand of them to clear so we put them to use.

-bill

Patrick Mann wrote:

Myers Family wrote:Full pics/details can be found on our blog...Hope you enjoy!

-Bill, Melissa & Paige



Please post a link to your blog. I'd love to see more of the willow structures.

 
Patrick Mann
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Location: Seattle, WA, USA
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Myers Family wrote:http://ourcascadia.blogspot.com/

it is made using alder saplings... not willow. we had a few thousand of them to clear so we put them to use.

-bill



Really nice work. Looks like you built a temporary 2x4 frame to support the work in progress and removed it afterwards? Is there any foundation or are they just resting on the ground?
 
Posts: 181
Location: Central Ohio, Zone 6A - High water table, heavy clay.
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Excellent pictures, all. Kota your picture looks like an oasis.
 
                        
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There are 4 corner posts set and buried in the ground. The 2x4 frame supported the top during construction and was removed afterwards.

Full credit should be given to our volunteers who made it happen... specifically Matt Donaldson who spent the summer with us and now lives in Portland, OR.
 
Kota Dubois
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Thanks Matt. We call our place The Anomaly, after an episode of Star Trek TNG, where they find an M-class planet that only has one square of green life on it. When I'm there I tend to think of it as the Centre of the Universe.
pond_lily_flower.jpg
pond_lily_flower
pond_lily_flower
Sky_Garden.jpg
Sky_Garden
Sky_Garden
Three_Sisters_and_a_Cousin.jpg
Three_Sisters_and_a_Cousin
Three_Sisters_and_a_Cousin
 
Kota Dubois
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Oh, what the heck, people have been warned this is a picture thread. Sorry to waste your bandwidth.
View_Up_To_The-Sky_Garden.jpg
View_Up_To_The-Sky_Garden
View_Up_To_The-Sky_Garden
Wet_Rock_Gardens.jpg
Wet_Rock_Gardens
Wet_Rock_Gardens
Sunrise_above_it_all.jpg
Sunrise_above_it_all
Sunrise_above_it_all
 
Alex Ames
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Location: Georgia
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Thanks for posting Kota and others this shows the reality of all the talk.
 
gardener
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Location: south central VA 7B
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forest garden fungi trees books bee solar
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Here are a couple~ love this - thanks!!!
friends_with_benes.jpg
friends_with_benes
friends_with_benes
003.JPG
raspberries
raspberries
019.JPG
pretty flowers
pretty flowers
 
Alex Ames
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Can't wait for these guys to show up this year!
IMG_1675.JPG
berries
berries
 
Posts: 6
Location: South Oregon Coast
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Here's my first attempt at a hugelkulture bed. It's 90% complete, I just ran out of energy for covering the last of it up...
I found a bunch of fantastic mycelium and molds on the rotting logs I used...was wondering if anyone would be able to put a name on some of these interesting looking spores. Also there is what looks like droplets of sap on the end of a log that's been in contact with the ground for a good five years...(so it's probably not tree sap)
http://solarbeez.com/2013/02/17/hugelkulture/
I looked for a web site that might be able to ID mushroom spore, but didn't find anything. That's why I wanted some more knowledgeable people to weigh in on it.
Thanks,
Pat
 
                  
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Love the pics, so inspirational!!
 
Devon Olsen
Posts: 1273
Location: Central Wyoming -zone 4
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yeah this is a great thread
 
pollinator
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Location: South West France
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goat forest garden fungi chicken food preservation fiber arts solar sheep rocket stoves homestead
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Terrace looking towards the gloriette and root cellar with Chilean potato vine in flower


The Wisteria brachybotrys 'Shiro Kapitan Fuji' is flowering on the terrace


On top of the root cellar


Very well behaved chickens


Dense planting between the oak, peach and plum trees


Pumpkin, peaches, goats and chicken




 
Alex Ames
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Back lit garden.
IMG_1334.JPG
Back lit garden
Back lit garden
 
Alex Ames
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This thread needs a bump. There are a lot of good ideas that are easier to show than tell.
IMG_1471.JPG
lot of good ideas that are easier to show than tell
lot of good ideas that are easier to show than tell
 
pollinator
Posts: 4715
Location: Zones 2-4 Wyoming and 4-5 Colorado
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A few of the wild things in Wyoming.
yellowflower5.JPG
A few of the wild things in Wyoming
A few of the wild things in Wyoming
columbine3.JPG
[Thumbnail for columbine3.JPG]
oregongrape1.JPG
[Thumbnail for oregongrape1.JPG]
 
Posts: 14
Location: Portland, OR
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This thread is like a ray of sunshine. Beautiful gardens, everyone!

having difficulty uploading garden photos from our FB page, so here's the link:

Salt of the Earth Urban Farm
 
Irene Kightley
pollinator
Posts: 480
Location: South West France
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Sloe gin time !


Still picking peppers.


Chicken feast, one Amaranth plant at a time

 
Alex Ames
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How dumb does it sound to say that France sure does look....French. It does, even the goats and chickens
look French or is it my imagination?
 
Devon Olsen
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Location: Central Wyoming -zone 4
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^well Alex, I may have to agree with you that chicken looks pretty french lol

great pics though, makes me want amaranth now... i was kinda on the fence b4
 
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