I want to promote gardening... on a city rooftop, a balcony, a deck, a backyard, or a vacant lot... and to help the poor to grow food. I found this idea on a website by two 13 yr old kids and improved it into a garden system... You can get free instructions from AlaskaGrowBuckets.com anybody can grow food at home...
I always worry about the extra weight on a roof , especially after a good rain . If you're gardening on a roof , how are the poor to access much less know about it , unless they live in the building It's a long way up to carry soil , fertilizer , water , etc.
Wow; that's some serious grow-buckets! Your business? Good luck....I hope some big buidling owners see this...great rooftop projects for cities!
There are many cities that are welcoming this; Here's an article about it being done in Milan, Italy. Search Singapore high rise gardens for more.
Posted by FrostyJim...as you Sow, So Shall you Reap
Posted by FrostyJimSurprise! Alaska has farm country too.
Posted by FrostyJimSurprise! Alaska has farm country too.
Posted by JolantaHappy hormones.
Posted by FernappleThe little woodland garden, is a symphony of blue, purple and white now. Hyacinth, Honesty, and Ornithogalum.
Posted by KateOahuThis morning I went to a class for making a terrarium with native plants at the Waikiki Community Center, which is about three blocks from where I live.
Posted by FrostyJimToo cold to plant outside for another month here in Wasilla Alaska.
Posted by FrostyJimToo cold to plant outside for another month here in Wasilla Alaska.
Posted by JolantaUnusual fungi.
Posted by FernappleI am trying to grow some extra salad crops this year in the new greenhouse.
Posted by JolantaBugg life.
Posted by glennlab My first flowers of this spring. Lotus and blue bells
Posted by glennlab My first flowers of this spring. Lotus and blue bells
Posted by FrostyJimSeedlings ..
Posted by FernappleIts Hellebore season now.
Posted by FernappleIts Hellebore season now.