Bioproductive Balcony
FoAM offered me to transform their small balcony into a Bioproductive site. It will allow me to practice gardening and garden design.
The balcony is facing East and South. Walls protect it from West and North. Thanks to its position at the last floor of the building, he gets sunlight during most of the day. He can also benefit from rainfalls, as it is not cover by a roof or another balcony.
Design principles
I borrowed this fantastic book from Annemie's library, and extracted most of the following design principles from its deliciously-written pages.
Here are the design principles I will try to apply in the design of the Bioproductive Balcony:
- Big planters need less water: biggest pots & planters dry less quickly and need less watering.
- Small plants go in the front: place the smallest plants on the front of the balcony to avoid shading by taller ones.
- Place shade-tolerating plants behind sun-liking: place the shade-tolerating plants (mostly leaf- and root-vegetables) behind the sun-liking (mostly fruit-bearing plants).
- Apply companion planting: place plants benefiting from each other the one next to the other.
- Perform crop rotations: do not plant the same plants at the same spot all the time & make several harvests within one growing season.
Here are some sketches representing potential designs for the balcony.
Vegetal Work
After getting some seeds, I planted most of them, sometimes looking for instructions.
Hardware Infrastructure
Here are some details about seedling pots made from waste, planters made out of grocery bags, self-watering trials and windshields.