
Hugelkultur is a permaculture technique that is usually used to create a raised bed on a flat piece of land by covering the area with logs.
Source: My Hugelkultur Experiment
Hey there! Thanks for dropping by Old School Garden! Take a look around and grab the RSS feed to stay updated. See you around!

Hugelkultur is a permaculture technique that is usually used to create a raised bed on a flat piece of land by covering the area with logs.
Source: My Hugelkultur Experiment
Nigel Boldero aka 'Old School Gardener'
| Anonymous on PicPost: Carrot, my foot! | |
| 18 Surprising Hydran… on Plantax 16: Hydrangea the wate… | |
| Nigel Boldero on Poppyland: A Victorian romance… | |
| Anonymous on Poppyland: A Victorian romance… | |
| Anonymous on Plants to die for… | |
| Isabella Childress on PicPost: Forest, but not as we… | |
| Happiness Factor on Is child-friendly planning a l… | |
| zidane on Top Tip: On a Pedestal- make m… | |
| Claire Gillespie on Transforming an indigenous gar… | |
| Nigel Boldero on GQT: Pleached hedges |
Nature Connectedness Research Blog by Prof. Miles Richardson
Connecting People with Nature
A daily selection of the best content published on WordPress, collected for you by humans who love to read.
Celebrating gardens, photography and a creative life
Writing, photography and more by Daniel Greenwood
Lydia Rae Bush Poetry
Australian Pub Project, Established 2013
The Journey from Finnish Rintamamiestalo to Arboretum & Gardens
Because even in chaos, there’s always gin and a good story …
RANDOM BITS & MORE TIDBITS
.....and nurturing my soul
Cultural Heritage and the Digital Economy
Sense of place, purpose, rejuvenation and joy
Notes from the Gardeners...
Connecting People to Nature, Empowering People to Live Sustainably
A girl and her garden :)

I might give this Hugelkultur a try. I have piles of wood etc for the bonfire, piles for wildlife, piles for rough compost and piles for leafmould. I also have piles of sandy soil excavated from the terracing / garden model railway site. It looks like this could be a way to bring them all together more productively, although GQT was urging us all to create more wildlife piles this afternoon.
Hi, sounds like a neat way of solving multiple piles problem! So the railway is taking shape eh? hope you leave enough room for a vegetable patch! You can still leave piles of wildlife friendly stuff round the edges..and maybe create some other forms of habitat; I’m just finishing off a ‘bug hotel’ made from some leftover oak …hopefully pics in my next ‘Dear Walter…’ 😉
There have been delicate negotiations between the railway builder and the vegetable gardener. Hopefully both will have enough space. I don’t recall IK Brunel having this problem.
Ha ha, I think you’ll find that he diverted his routes around ‘important’ sites…though I think they were usually owned by wealthy nobility…or retired headteachers in the modern day 😉