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Posts from Forest Garden Wales Blog for 10/12/2019

By [email protected] (Jake Rayson) on Oct 10, 2019 05:38 pm

Gardening for others is so much more rewarding, particularly when you know their names

Benjamin Vogt’s @BRVogt article Native Plants, Racism, & the Colonizing Nature of Garden Language is thought provoking stuff.

when we learn the names of fauna in our gardens – spider, beetle, bee, and wasp – we learn their life cycles and what they need to thrive

This idea of wildlife gardening for everyone and everything is the title of @Kate_Bradbury’s excellent book. It pulls the focus back, away from a narrow human aesthetic and toward a new garden ethic.

To this end, I am going to start cataloguing the creatures I come by and I will start to learn their names. It’s going to be a bit painful as I have panoramic blindspots in the natural world but I shall persevere and honestly, it will be more for my benefit than anyone else.

I do think it’s an interesting use of language, a liberating use rather than one of containment. As Vogt puts it so eloquently

naming is considered a classic act of ownership in environmental philosophy, in this case naming may be a gateway to equality

On with the animals

In order of appearance in just a few hours gardening. I will fill in the names at a later date!

I also saw:

  • Short legged daddy long legs

  • Medium-small spider with stripes along abdomen

  • Crow

  • Jackdaw

  • Wood pigeon

  • Seagull

So, my next step is to find their full names, and then find out what they eat, where they nest, what their babies eat. To help me with that task, there is the excellent UK Database of Insects and their Food Plants.

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By [email protected] (Jake Rayson) on Oct 09, 2019 11:45 am

I’m switching my work to concentrate on wildlife and forest garden design, with a view to an online course next year.

I gambled on making a living from running forest garden tours and workshops, using the Airbnb network to get passing holiday trade. But unfortunately, forest gardening is too niche and West Wales is too far away and I, I am simply Not That Famous (yet).

It has been great fun (and 8 five star reviews ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 😎) but next year I’ll be limiting it to a couple of forest garden tours per month, still via Airbnb as it’s very easy to manage.

Instead, I am concentrating on forest garden design, specifically remote wildlife forest garden design. The remote part, because it’s amazing what you can do with 3D maps, satellite photos, Zoom conference calls and video walkarounds. And also because West Wales is sparsely populated and can’t really support such a specialisation.

I’ve created a design for some clients in North London, enigmatically called the Green Room. It has been an absolute blast, using Whatsapp for discussions and Zoom for video conferencing. The critical thing is to get the tree spacing right; the rest of the garden is in relatively large brush strokes. Here’s a CAD plan overlaid on a satellite photo:

I have also started sketching in, which is great fun too, and I’ve been experimenting with both pencil and pen sketches, overlaid with colour in Photoshop.

I really like drawing with pencil, because it’s a good way to get a sense of the 3D space, something that’s pretty lacking in a CAD package like [QCAD]](https://www.qcad.org). The ink line drawings coloured in are better for diagrammatic type illustrations, such as this rather wonky pond:

I’m also increasingly interested in the wildlife aspects of forest gardening, having listened to Benjamin Vogt with great interest on the Roots and All podcast, and read Kate Bradbury’s Wildlife Gardening, a magnificent introduction to two separate worlds combined.

And although forest gardening is focussed on human edible crops, it is very much on the same path, the idea of building an ecosystem that sustains itself, whilst providing a harvest. And there is always room for native plants!

The next step is to re-work the website, putting garden design front and central. And then, next year, online workshops!

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