[Community_garden] Shade Structures in Community Gardens
dandelion
dannybowers at gmail.com
Tue Jul 22 20:28:14 EDT 2008
here in santa cruz the uc farm has an arbor built like an igloo with
two entrances, then there is a viney flower (maybe clematis) gowing to
cover the whole structure. they also have a small dome built from bike
rims, one could expand on this and build a recycled shade structure
with rims and bike frames shade provided from squash, morning glory,
ivy, etc.
enjoy!
On Tue, Jul 22, 2008 at 3:10 PM, DAN-TAMMY BOWDEN <bowden0317 at msn.com> wrote:
>
> I highly encourage the use of shade structures to create a more varied garden experience.
>
> I'm brand new to the CG experience, but my own personal experience with gardening involves a site on my land with varied sun exposure due to the surrounding oak and pine forest. One corner of my garden is almost always shaded, so I just plan on the shade being there and incorporate it into my garden. It's a great way to extend cold weather crops like lettuce and radishes into the warmer months by keeping them shady and cool. The peas in the sunny areas of the garden have almost all dried up, but the ones under the trees are still strong and producing more flowers - despite our 95F weather (sometimes over 100F).
>
> I like to use biomimicry to decide what to plant where. Cold weather crops do better in summer shade. Drought resistant plants (rosemary, sage, lavender, etc.) will flourish in areas that get less water. Blueberries are forest natives, so they can do well in a shady spot, etc. etc. If you look at your garden as a collection of miniature biozones you'll start seeing how you can use each unique area to your advantage. If your garden is homogenous, then you can create biozones with plantings and buildings.
>
> On the regulatory side, you might want to have an area of the garden designated for shade structures to be installed by individual gardeners if they so choose, with the understanding that other areas of the garden may not have shade structures installed. Or don't allow individuals to erect shade structures at all, and leave it to the garden committee to determine what to erect and where.
>
> Just my $0.02. Best of luck!
>
> DanCREATION SPEAKS
> Inviting man to the heart of God through the biblical mandate to care for creation
> www.creationspeaks.org
> ___________________________________________
>
> On Jul 21, 2008, at 11:58 PM, KBR wrote:
> Does anyone have any experience with community gardens installing shade structures in their gardens? I'd like to hear the pros and cons.
> Kate, Wisconsin"If at first the idea is not absurd, there is no hope for it." ~Albert Einstein~
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