Discussed possible prototype Hope Garden in one of 2 sites
Would like to use one site for dual use ie possibly develop into more permanent covered fire pit area. Possible to incorporate fire pit into assembly space design, with view to build on later
In the WhatsApp group, concern over using recycled plastic benches for prototype garden, not fitting into ethics. Totally agree, I was just thinking about price. Plastic benches about £140. David Hunter (artisan roundwood craftsperson) can do them for equivalent price, in wood, slab, Larch:
“Can gardens literally save the world? No…
Gardens can save the world by saving us. They can bring us back into contact with diversity…
Gardens as activism as surely as any art form…
Gardens that stir our senses and give us actionable faith and hope.”
Plant a big fat Dandelion front and centre. Edible, native wild flower, great for pollinators.
Bugle, Yarrow, Meadowsweet. I will start adding these to spreadsheet
Cheap, repurposed agricultural water trough as central water feature? Idea is to open source plans and costings, and make garden affordable for other community projects.
I spoke briefly with Natalie from RHS last week, she said ‘size not an issue’ at Hampton Court, so more leeway on width than 10m
Had a good talk with Gary, with whom I’m creating the primary school garden. He suggested a technique for creating a shape in self-binding gravel. Bury rigid yet flexible drainage pipe into the gravel, tamp it down, then lift out the pipe and replace with appropriate aggregate. In the case of the school garden, this is a labyrinth. For the Hope Garden, this could be markers for the moving benches.
Clockwise from top left: Craf y Geifr, Peradyl Garwm, Penigan y Forwyn, Pani Cymreig, Bysedd y Cŵn, Triagog Coch
Hinge brackets to lock benches to ground level brackets. Pics to follow.
Woodland path, green wall. Ivy wall, grown on relatively lightweight wire, portable. Ferns? For the shady back.
Imperfection at the centre, like a Persian rug
Promote diversity of species, cultures & languages
More plant ideas
Honeysuckle (flowers July)
Hawthorn
Hazel (cultivar? nuts forming in July)
Holly (pruned?)
Valerian
Pennywort
“A designed space to foster equal communication”
A profusion of very orange Welsh Poppies, a homage to JSO!
XR Waverley & Borders newsletter
It’s really important to have hope.
Today it might feel as if we are losing the race to save ourselves. From every angle we are beset by disasters which we know are caused by climate catastrophes because of human activity.
Hope is a natural resource and we all have it. Sometimes it’s hard to find. Sometimes it’s overwhelmed by the negative things we see or experience. But it’s there, waiting for us to use it. Hope, when everyone taps into it and uses it positively, is a more powerful resource than oil and gas put together. It’s a more powerful resource that cynicism and greed. Hope drives us to action and when those two combine, great things can happen!
Hope is what keeps XR rebels going. We know that by taking action against the government, fossil fuel industries and their financiers we are doing the right thing.
Naturewise Community Forest Garden, Cardigan - still waiting to hear back from Claire Turner. Ideally sited, next to the police station within walking distance of Cardigan
Yr Ardd community garden, Llandysul - don’t know much about the project, think it’s in the town, I know one of the directors vaguely, strong Welsh links
Meads Project, Milford Haven - early co-design stages. Bit of a trek (1 hour) for me but really interesting project using community assemblies
Ffion Gwyn, artist using Welsh wildlife names. Appeared on Countryfile
Public access RHS Hampton Court:
“For gardens over 80m2, walk-through access is possible and should be specified on the application form (one-way access
requires a minimum path width of 1.5m; two-way access requires a minimum path width of 2m)
The questions and framing of the questions is crucial to getting a successful outcome. If eg 2.5 hours per assembly, the rule of thumb is equal division of time between INTRO phase / DELIBERATION phase and OUTPUT / COLLATION phase. Denise XR Gardener
So, 2½ hour assembly would have 50 minutes for intro, deliberation and collation phases.
Will email Jane Davidson, one of the architects of the Future Generations Act may well be interested in the project, as she apparently supports Community Assemblies.
Movable benches in assembly area, to show 2 different modes
John Little approach of varied growing medium, build in complexity of habitat.
Infrastructure needs consideration of assembly and dis-assembly and moving to another location after RHS.
Liaising with speakers eg
Dave Goulson - Bumble Bee Conservation Trust
Cleeve West – homeless garden creator
Need support with facilitators and to promote training to get practice in regularly in advance
The XR Gardeners will be pulling together a list of experts for local groups to draw on
Jake input
Wildlife and forest garden
Creating habitat for wildlife, by building in structural complexity (ie nooks and crannies!) into the garden infrastructure (paths, hedging, growing material, seating, pillars etc). #
Diversity of native plants and wild flowers, to support larval stages of inverterbrates, as insects are the backbone of the ecosystem.
Growing perennial edible crops that are resilient to climate changes, which also highlights the need for agriculture to change (ie toward agroforestry, away from energy intensive farming)
Possible topics: gardening in a climate crisis, industrialised horticulture, peat compost, native plants, perennial crops, community gardens, mass extinctions, resilient gardens, community gardens…
Hope as a working name
Had a chat with Beth, I think Hope is a better working name than Crisis.
Better name than The Crisis Garden? Other alternatives? Forum, talk, discuss, air. No-one likes a moaner!
Hope
Doombusters! cf Doomster
Public access
Paths for public access on exhibits
Exhibits are encouraged to be designed for public access to support the interactive nature of the area. Paths for public access must be a minimum of 1.5m wide.
~ Exhibitor Manual pp27 (Discovery)
Public access is not allowed on gardens.
~ General Regulations pp4 (Gardens)
Client’s Brief
All Gardens are required to submit a Client’s Brief with their application. The Client’s Brief will be considered during both the application and judging processes and may be changed up to three weeks before the Show opens. The form will be sent to designers to review 6 weeks prior to the show with a return date of 3 weeks prior to the show.
RHS Hampton Court info
Show Gardens are offered in three different sizes: Option A: 100sqm and larger; Option B: 50–99sqm; and Option C: 24–49sqm. With an open theme, Show Gardens allow talented designers to turn unique artistic plans into a feast for the eyes.
The Royal Entomological Society Garden “During the week of the show the lab will be used for real scientific research, monitoring and studying insects visiting the garden.”