Posts tagged diy
Outdoor vertical succulent garden
Feb 3rd
Joan and William Feldman had a backyard with a little pond in LA, California. However.. it didn’t have enough green for their tastes so they wanted to spice it up a bit. The didn’t have a lot of room.. land prices being what they are.. so they needed a solution to get some green on the bare walls to make them really pop.
Landscape designer Mia Lehrer and her associate, Holly Kuwayama, came up with a solution.. which was to hang a garden on the wall, that could thrive without much soil or water. Succulents were used as they need little water, so they’re light, and they have shallow roots, so not much soil is required.
Vines can take a while to fill up a space.. whereas vertical gardens can be installed relatively quickly. They also have the added advantage of being able to use a bunch of different colors from different plants in the design. They went various nurseries for the right plants to use in the living wall: echeverias and aeoniums, plump sedums and crassulas, senecios and kalanchoes… which all said and done.. provided a lot of interesting colors.
The designers came up with using a three-by-five-foot steel armature with two layers of metal mesh to create a wide, shallow box. The box was then stuffed with a blend of sphagnum moss and cactus mix to use in place of soil.. and was planted with hundreds of cuttings. About 45 days later, once the plants took root, the living wall was ready to mount, with eyebolts and heavy brackets.
For maintenance.. all that’s needed is a spray from the hose once a week.. fertilizer isn’t needed at all. The only issue they had was some of the aeoniums grew a bit too big to keep the uniform look of the wall planter.. so they have to be cut back every once and a while.
All in all.. it’s a great design that really makes a small outdoor space green up.
Container Gardening Vertically
Feb 1st
Here’s a diy guide to container gardening – vertically. It has 35 containers growing plants.. could even be something like strawberries.. that takes up the footprint the same size as one plant. But since it grows up, this container garden uses less space.
The basic idea is to use PVC piping (you don’t even have to glue/cement it) with holes drilled through to insert galvanized wire. Then you just insert your pots into the loops of the wire and you’re about done.
The guide is from here and that gives a plan of how to build a vertical container garden but I’ll put a run through here. The whole thing can be built for about 20 bucks.
The first step is to get some galvanized wire. Bailing wire will rust. You’ll want to wrap the wire around something to make it a circle. You could use the container pots themselves, or use an abs pipe. You’ll use some kind of pliers to twist the wires together at the ends. Below are some pictures:
You’re going to want to tilt up the twisted part of the wire about 90 degrees. That way when you stick it in the holes in the PVC pipe, it’ll stay put indefinitely.
Next you’re going to assemble the PVC structure. You can customize it to whatever size you want. In the end, you just need some pipes and some T’s.. that’s about it. This one uses 3/4″ PVC and 3/4″ PVC Tees. Stick the ends of the pipes in the T’s as you see fit to build your structure. Then drill some holes in the pipe to insert the tips of the galvanized wire circles. The holes will be 1/8″ to 5/6″ depending on the size of the wire you used. To finish it, just stick the pots in the circles of the wires and you’re done.
It’s a great idea for a container garden just for use in a small space like a balcony of a condo/apartment or a small spot in your garden.
Sphagnum Moss, Topiaries and Living Walls
Jan 15th
Using sphagnum moss as a growing medium is another great way to build a vertical garden. It appears to be used in some spots in Europe but could be used anywhere. Basically you take some wire.. about 10 gauge.. and form it into a 3D box. You can make the box any size you see fit, but about 1 ft by 1ft by 6″ deep works fine. Then you simply stuff the sphagnum moss into the wire frame you make and you’ve about finished the actual system.
It’s super easy to plant, just push the spagnum moss out of the way a bit, then push the plants in. The sphagnum moss can hold 20 times its weight in water and it’s inert so it’s a great growing medium. It’s best to use this as an outdoor living wall because bringing it indoors would be pretty messy using this type of growing system. But outdoors, you can just spray it with a hose for watering.. but by far the better technique would be to set up a simple hydroponic system using drip irrigation that can be found at your local hardware store. You can also deliver a liquid nutrient system through the hydroponic setup.
One way to do a freestanding wall of these living wall modules, you’ll dig a hole every 6 ft or so, put a steel rod down each hole and backfill it with cement. Then you’ll put a wire fence of sorts as a backing from rod to rod, then stack each sphagnum moss module one on top of the other against the fence. Then just use twist ties or something of that nature to attach the modules to the fence.
This seems to be a great system. The pictures are mostly from http://gardenbreizh.org/ but if you go there you’ll notice it’s in French.. but it looks like this is a pretty popular way to build living walls in France.
In the case of the photo to the right, you’ll notice they’ve build the cages, then pre-planted them so they’ll be all set when they’re installed vertically. This is possible to do with this system obviously, but it’s not completely necessary as it can also be planted after it’s installed.
This system is similar to topiaries. They’re made out of wire frame, stuffed with a growing medium (usually Sphagnum moss from Chili, although New Zealand sphagnum moss is also really good) and planted. Here’s some more pictures of these living walls below:
Cheap Do It Yourself vertical gardens
Jan 3rd
These vertical gardens can be built and designed by you on a budget. These were found from http://www.lushe.com.au.
Bag and Plant
The first one is an easy-to-build vertical garden made out of a hessian bag.. or really almost any type of mesh bag.. stuffed with rockwool. Just cut some slits in the bag and the rockwool, stuff in your plants and water them. The rockwool holds the water and nutrients while retaining enough air pockets for the roots to grow and thrive.
The downside may be that you’d have to manually water it and you could only use it outside (no vapour barrier or water catch basin).. but the upside is that it’s super easy to make and very cheap. The rockwool is able to hold onto the water for a decent period of time as well.. so the watering wouldn’t be too much of a burden.
Bamboo Living Wall
Bamboo hung horizontally on a wall with holes cut out to allow a place to put the dirt and the plants. The trick with this one would be the watering – it’d be pretty tough to water without the dirt falling out the ends of the bamboo unless the ends were capped.
Mosaic Living Wall
Painted Terracotta pots hung on a wall. You could go restrained or all out with this idea. With that big one.. watering must be a nightmare.
Shelf for Vertical Gardens
A shelf system that the plants simply sit on. The shelves are then covered by waterproof plywood (could use marine ply.. or perhaps plywood treated with linseed oil.) with sections cut out to give room for the plants. You could paint the plywood whatever colour you want and that’d also help with waterproofing if you use the right kind of paint. The plants used are bromeliads.
What do you think? Would you use any of these vertical gardens yourself?



















