The bones of the Hope Garden
Paths are the bones of the garden. They define the space, open it up to exploration, enable access for the care required to tend the plants.
Paths are the bones of the garden. They define the space, open it up to exploration, enable access for the care required to tend the plants.
The site of the Hope Garden is at the lower end of a clay rhos pasture field in West Wales. As you can imagine, there is a lot of water, and it all flows through the garden!
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:
CAD plan sketch of layout for assembly area
“A designed space to foster equal communication”
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.
Had a chat with Beth, I think Hope is a better working name than Crisis.