Archive for the ‘Living Wall’ Category

Stephanie’s Corner: Woolly Herb Shack

Saturday, April 17th, 2010


photo credit: Suthi Picotte

Wally loves herbs (and vegetables)! This charming surf shack grows annual vegetables, perennial herbs, and some flowers for the pollinators.

Window Wally (W3)
One cherry tomato anchors each pocket, flanked by basil (a good companion plant – Genovese and ‘Magic Mountain’), Swiss chard (‘Bright Lights’) and ornamental salvias (Cleveland Sage, ‘Sage of Bath’). The dramatic black sweet potato, Ipomea ‘Chillin’ Blackberry Star’ will spill down to the ground as spring turns to summer. Always plant a few flowers to make sure your veggies get pollinated.

Herb Door (W1 x 5)
Top row: prostrate rosemary (on sides), evergreen bunching onions, everbearing strawberries
Pepper row: ‘Yolo Wonder,’ ‘Chervena Chuska,’ ‘Golden Treasure’ with Greek and Italian oregano spilling over
Eggplant row: (two each)‘Lavender Touch,’ ‘Chinese Eggplant’ – with thymes (German and ‘Variegated Lemon’)
Fourth row: cilantro, onion chives, Italian parsley
Mint row: ‘Orange mint,’ ‘Pineapple Mint,’ ‘Apple mint,’ ‘Spearmint’

Ingredients:
one sunny wall (at least six hours of full sun!)
herbs, vegetables, flowers (plants and/or seeds)
really good potting soil (vegetable mix)
Wallys – as many as you like! (hanging hardware included)
handy water source (hose or big watering can)
organic vegetable food
tools: level, drill, masking tape, pencil

Instructions:
1) Measure your space, calculate your Wally order, shop for plants and soil.
2) Hang your Pockets
3) Fill halfway with soil
4) Plant your garden
5) Water (regularly) + feed (follow the instructions!)
6) Harvest + eat


photo credit: Suthi Picotte

Notes:
Think about how your plants will grow, both on top and in the Pockets. Aggressive rooters, like mints, should be in their own Pocket as they won’t be good neighbors.

Combine upright plants (eggplant, peppers, onions) with low growing and spilling plants (oregano, strawberries, sweet potatoes).

Plant what you really want to eat and drink. Hate salads? Don’t plant lettuce. Love mojitos? Plant LOTS of mint!

Don’t forget to include some flowers. Many of the herbs will bloom, but you need some big beautiful blooms to attract those friendly pollinators.

Trim the bigger plants (tomatoes, rosemary, sweet potatoes) as they get leggy. Pick the fruit as it ripens, and cut off herb stems and leaves as needed – don’t pull out the roots though, as they will keep growing.

Replace annual vegetables and flowers as their seasons end. If your climate allows, rotate crops seasonally (broccoli in the fall), and try a cover crop (alfalfa, vetch) from seed in the winter, or early spring, to refresh your soil.

Compost? Worms? Winter color? More on these to come…

Happy Gardening!
Stephanie

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Meg Glasser of Urban Farming

Monday, March 29th, 2010

good

If anyone knows how to grow an edible vertical garden it is Meg Glasser, regional director for Urban Farming. Over the past 5 years, Urban Farming has helped to create over 800 urban gardens in 30 cities. Check out her 5 easy steps to growing a vertical garden, including using Woolly Pockets!

www.good.is/post/how-to-grow-an-edible-vertical-garden-in-5-steps/

www.urbanfarming.org

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Lushe Urban Greening

Saturday, March 27th, 2010

Are you looking for inspiring vertical garden installations? Lushe is a great website from the Land Down Under full of cool ways to vertical garden from all over the world! We’re really inspired by the bathroom vertical garden over a bathtub.

www.lushe.com.au

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Sprout Home owner Tara Heibel in Chicago Home and Garden

Saturday, March 27th, 2010


In the latest issue of Chicago Home & Garden, there is a great profile of Tara Heibel, owner of Sprout Home. We love how she utilizes Woolly Wally’s to add a splash of living color! Sprout Home has locations in Chicago and Brooklyn, both stocking Woolly Pockets!

www.sprouthome.com

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Apartment Therapy L.A.: Buy or DIY Vertical Gardens

Thursday, March 11th, 2010

apartment


Apartment Therapy
looks at 4 options for creating Vertical Gardens

If you want to go a more dramatic route, you can look into Woolly Pockets which have larger pockets for planting bigger plants like ferns and begonias (Image #3). They’re made of fabric that breathes so you won’t get mold or mildew building up in the pockets or on your walls. Plus you can hang them as a partition in a large space like a loft!

www.apartmenttherapy.com/la

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Martha Stewart Goes Woolly For Vertical Gardens!

Thursday, March 4th, 2010

martha

Be sure to catch tomorrow’s episode of The Martha Stewart Show where she’ll discover how easy it is to create a vertical garden using Woolly Pockets! We’re thrilled to be sharing our innovative products with Martha and her audience! Go to www.marthastewart.com for showtimes in your area!

UPDATE: Video of the segment is now online at http://www.marthastewart.com/article/living-walls

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So Easy A Bear Can Do It!

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

Grizzly Bear Modern shows just how easy it is to add beautiful plants to any space with Woolly Wallys, even Bear Caves!
griz1

The pocket is stupid easy to install. If you know how to put in a screw, you can put up one of these babies. The bathroom was the natural choice for us because, 1) we spend a lot of our time in there and 2) it has a great southern facing window. The window is frosted, so succulents (mi amor!) would not have been too happy. No matter, these lush jungle plants are perfect and I’m sure they appreciate the Mrs.’s steamy morning showers.

griz2
Their installation looks great! Good Job Guys! www.grizzlybearmodern.com

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Wallys Pop Up In Sunset Magazine

Monday, February 22nd, 2010

Be sure to pickup the March issue of Sunset Magazine on newsstands now. There’s a great article all about gardening in nontraditional spaces that includes the Wally Living Wall System! Thanks to Digs Inside and Out for the heads up!

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Vertical Gardens Exhibition Opens Today at AIA SF

Thursday, February 18th, 2010

aiasf

Woolly Pockets is proud to sponsor Vertical Gardens, an exhibition opening today at the San Franciso chapter of the American Institute of Architects.

The past decade has seen an overwhelming emergence of green roofs and vertical gardens, designed to combat the lack of flora in the city. Buildings around the world—from the Musée du Quai Branly in Paris, to the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco—have embraced green walls or roofs for their economical, environmental, and aesthetic values. Vertical farms and gardens are also being envisioned as new ways to feed local and organic foods to city dwellers. Largely based on the principles of hydro-ponics, vertical gardens are mostly self-sustaining because they capture large amounts of natural sunlight and water, and use wind as an energy source. In a country where cities are suffocated by high rises, cement and industrial materials, where can green space exist? As this exhibition demonstrates, one possible answer is “up.”

Vertical Gardens features over two dozen projects, both imaginary and real by an international array of artists and architectural practitioners, including local studios Rael San Fratello Architects, Min Day, Boor Bridges Architecture, GLS Landscape | Architecture, environmental designer Lisa Lee Benjamin, and local nursery Flora Grubb Gardens.

February 18 – April 30, 2010
Opening Reception February 25, 6:00-7:15 pm | Lecture 7:15-8:00 pm
AIA San Francisco | Center for Architecture + Design Gallery
130 Sutter Street, Suite 600, San Francisco

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Nando’s Indoor Garden

Thursday, December 31st, 2009
Nando's use of luxurious ferns creates a jungle-like living wall inside his home.

Nando's use of luxurious ferns creates a jungle-like living wall inside his home.

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