Showing posts with label rock wall. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rock wall. Show all posts

Saturday, October 24, 2020

Mandala Garden Update

Progress on the mandala garden continues. Kate and I have finished the whole outline of the rock wall, and just need to work on building up the height and filling in gaps. One wheelbarrow at a time, we're slowly filling the beds with a mixture of compost and sand and random organic matter.

Whew! We've come a long way since we first started this project. I've learned a lot through trial and error about dry-stacking rocks, and I feel like I'm finally starting to get the hang of it now that we're almost done. C'est la vie.





Saturday, April 25, 2020

Mandala Keyhole Garden

Here comes the design -- the moment you've all been waiting for! 

As anyone who knows me has probably figured out, I detest straight lines in the landscape. Circles and curvy irregular shapes will always appeal to me more than straight lines and rectangles. They have a more organic feel that I love, and are often be a more efficient use of space, too. I wanted to design a feature garden that would incorporate a wide variety of edible annual and perennial plants. A circular garden with a keyhole pathway is a shape that I've been thinking about for a while, and that simple design has an almost spiritual feel to me, in a way that's hard to describe. When I saw a mandala design in Toby Hemenway's book Gaia's Garden: A Guide to Home-Scale Permaculture, I knew that was what I wanted to implement:


Thankfully Caera and Kate approved of my wild idea to turn this dream into a reality. So after weeding over 1,200 sq ft of land and marking the outlines of the beds, Kate and I got to work building the walls of the interior raised bed.


This was our first time constructing a dry stack stone wall. I enjoyed the process of selecting rocks and trying fit them together. And it's a really great feeling to finish that first keyhole! I'm so excited about this garden. It's gonna take a lot of hard work, but Kate and I are motivated.


This is the completed rock wall of the inside bed, which will be slightly higher than that outer bed (for aesthetic and practical/material reasons). When we started filling the bed, we first added cardboard, alder branches, small logs, and a year's worth of kitchen scraps to save on soil. 





Stay tuned for more updates.