Portable vertical gardening | DIY Garden Projects | Gardening Australia
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- Опубликовано: 22 янв 2021
- Learn how to green up your own vertical space from an expert who has been beautifying empty walls near his flat for years.
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Landscaper Newton Bishop has taken on the task of caring for his block’s communal garden, even the brick ventilation vent for the underground carpark, which he has covered with bromeliads and tillandsias that can cope with the heat and exposure of this open setting.
On the shadier side of the vent are epiphytic ferns that are also adapted to living on the trunk of a tree, and so don’t need soil. The frames of living plants he makes are also useful in rental situations, as they can easily be removed and taken with you.
Newton hangs the plants on timber boards and shows Costa how to make one.
What you need
A frame of stiff metal mesh or steel reo to hold the finished board
Various pieces of flat timber;
A drill
Wire
Wirecutters and pliers
Epiphytic plants
What you do
Choose a suitable piece of timber to fit your chosen plant
Drill two holes in the top to hang it from.
Work out where the plant will sit on the finished board and drill two more holes around this for attaching the plant later on.
Cut two equal lengths of wire to act as hooks - the length will vary depending on the chosen timber and plant.
Insert these into the drilled holes and use the pliers to secure one end around the timber and bend the other end into a hook shape. Line up the hooks so that the plant hangs straight.
Using another length of wire, attach the plant onto the board.
Hang the plant on the frame, which can be positioned against any vertical surface.
Featured Plants
Basket Fern (Drynaria sp.)
Elkhorn (Platycerium sp.)
Filmed on Garigal Country, Sydney, NSW
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Kosta is my spirit animal
From the Principality of Asturias, in the North of Spain..... CONGRATULATIONS for this AMAZING GARDEN.
FROM SPAIN.... BIG HUGS TO AUSTRALIAAAAAAAAAAA...... ;o)
That is an easy and wonderful way to make a space look better. Thanks for the post!!
Thank you 😊 That’s cool! It’s too cold here for tropical plants except in summer. But gives me some ideas for my garden.
Man you Look wild!
i love it , great inspiration for my future garden, watching from the Philippines
Great work. I might be wanting to try this in my bedroom.
Thanks for sharing. I'm gonna try this at my place.
Genius idea
Looks great!
Awesome! I wish I lived in a warm land
Lovely idea.
beautiful
Super video. Greetings from Chile
Amazing!
fantastic use
I would like to know about the maintenance of something like this. How is it watered and how often.
I like this channel
Nice information
Great idea. Thanks for sharing. Would those plants be suitable for Melbourne’s weather ?
Great idea!
Bromeliads usually sold in a pot.
How to do safe transision fm soil grown bromeliads to epiphytic plants?
funstuff!!
❤👍
😊
I live in dee why. I’m trying to figure out what street was that
Great idea for an ugly fence.
How do the bromelias cope with the winter temperatures
Subtropical part of Australia.
Im in Stanthorpe, my bromeliads are mostly protected by trees, but when the frosts really get going they struggle
He only grow non edible plants, why not plant edibles?
Too polluting, hopefully Google and RUclips with it leave Australia soon so we can finally make videos that expose Australias problems without getting destroyed by dislikes.