Posts tonen met het label DIY. Alle posts tonen
Posts tonen met het label DIY. Alle posts tonen

vrijdag 26 juni 2020

Compostwormen in de Schooltuin



100 jaar Schooltuinen Amsterdam


Ter viering van het 100-jarig bestaan van de schooltuinen in Amsterdam heeft de Vink Schooltuin in het Frankendaelpark in Amsterdam Oost een wormenhotel van Compostier gekocht. Het team van de schooltuin wilde graag zelf het wormenhotel bouwen en om die reden werd voor het doe-het-zelf bouwpakket gekozen van Compostier. 


Het wormenhotel zou reeds in April geopend moeten worden aan het begin van het schooltuin-seizoen, maar helaas konden de basisschool kinderen dit jaar niet naar de schooltuin komen vanwege de maatregelen die zijn ingesteld vanwege het Corona virus. Van de week werd daarom het wormenhotel feestelijk in gebruik genomen door de kinderen van de natuurclub van die wordt georganiseerd door Dynamo kinderopvang. 


Natuur educatie. 


De schooltuinen spelen een belangrijke rol in het leren over de natuur voor de kinderen van de basisscholen in Amsterdam. Op de schooltuin leren de kinderen waar ons eten vandaan komt. Ze leren planten opkweken uit zaad en verzorgen een klein stukje moestuin. De opbrengst van de moestuin mogen de kinderen mee naar huis nemen. 
Om meer te kunnen vertellen over de bodem en het bodemleven in de natuur educatie lessen op de moestuin werd het wormenhotel bij de moestuinen geplaatst. De kinderen kunnen nu ook zelf zien wat er met de restjes fruit en groenafval gebeurd wanneer dit wordt gecomposteerd. 



De Vink Schooltuin in het Frankendael park in Amsterdam Oost met links (bij de ingang) het
nieuwe wormenhotel. 


donderdag 27 februari 2020

Bouw je eigen DHZ Wormenhotel

 

BEZOEK ONZE NIEUWE WEBSITE:

WWW.COMPOSTIER.NL  !!

 

Compostiers eerste bouwpakket wormenhotel.




Trailer met fragmenten uit de instructiefilmpjes die Joeri Bleumer (zinis.nl) maakte. Muziek van Shanti Snijder ©2020.

Al lange tijd stond dit op mijn verlanglijstje: het wormenhotel aan te kunnen bieden als een bouwpakket. En nu is het zover. Het eerste bouwpakket wormenhotel is nu beschikbaar voor groepen die graag samen een wormenhotel willen bouwen. 

De WºRM21 is een praktisch en stijlvol ontworpen composteer meubel dat geplaatst kan worden op straat om daar lokaal groen afval te verwerken tot levende grond. In het meubel leeft een complex eco-systeem waarbinnen de compostwormen een heel belangrijke rol spelen.

De WºRM21 is zo ontworpen dat iedereen die een beetje handig is het zelf kan bouwen met het bouwpakket van Compostier. In het bouwpakket zitten alle onderdelen, op maat gemaakt en voorzien van gaten op de juiste plek. Het enige dat nog zelf gekocht moet worden is wat lijm en verf. In de handleiding staat precies aangegeven wat er nog aan extra zaken gekocht of geregeld dienen te worden voordat het vermicomposteermeubel gebouwd en in gebruik genomen kan worden. Met een minimum aan gereedschap kan iedereen het wormenhotel nu zelf bouwen. 

In een duidelijke bouwhandleiding wordt stap voor stap getoond hoe de onderdelen verbonden moeten worden. De schroeven en bouten zitten bij het pakket inbegrepen. Voor kopers van het bouwpakket is er ook de mogelijkheid om korte filmpjes te zien die het bouwen per stap laten zien, dit ter verduidelijking van de bouwhandleiding. 

De eerste bouwpakketten worden gemaakt in een sociale werkplaats. 

Heeft U interesse in een WºRM als bouwpakket, stuurt U dan een email naar: info@compostier.nl


De WºRM21 klaar voor gebruik. Hier in buurtmoestuin
Sweetgrass in de Polder in Diemen Zuid. 




zondag 13 mei 2018

Circular Food Bike Tour Amsterdam

Swarming bees seen through the window of Restaurant As

Discovering some of Amsterdams most fun & circular food initiatives on bicycle.

The hungry city.

Poster of the Voedselkringloop at De KasKantine
In a place like Amsterdam it seems so normal to have food ready for you at every corner of the streets. In the supermarkets, local shops and countless restaurants and bars of Amsterdam food is available in abundance. Or at least that is how it seems to be. That all this food comes from outside the city and is produced with many inputs & costs to the environment is not clear to many in the city. 
The more so it is a pity that huge volumes of this precious food is not actually ending up on our plates but in the dumpster. 

I started making the worm hotels to show it is possible to use the organic waste that is produced in the city for food production. By composting the organic waste that is not edible we can make a rich fertilizer to feed the soils. 

Growing more food in the city helps to reconnect to nature and provide healthy food in the city. 




Circular Food Initiatives of Amsterdam.


Luckily there are many initiatives in Amsterdam that are working to show other ways and help us learn how to rescue and preserve good food and to appreciate and grow food in urban settings. 

Menno shows the garden of De KasKantine.
In the past years through the projects of Le Compostier I was able to meet with many great food initiatives. I thought it would be great to organise a tour to go visit these initiatives.  So yesterday I took a small group on a tour through Amsterdam on bike to visit some them. 

We started at De KasKantine. The location where StadsOogst is making its Wormenpoep and Le Compostier is building the worm hotels since beginning of this year. Menno (the founder of De KasKantine) gave an introduction and explained about the mission of the place. To show we can build a real place with what is available to us in urban settings with what is thrown away. Most of the materials used at the location are recycled and De KasKantine aims to be fully selfsupporting in the midst of urban devellopment. 

After a short introduction we visited some of the inititives connected to De KasKantine. StadsOogst showed some of the ways we can compost in the city and Le Compostier presented the first DIY worm hotel: The WºRM. The manual for this DIY worm hotel is now available. 

We visited another member of De KasKantine and the group learned about the food that is thrown away at supermarkets and food distribution centers in town with De Voedselkringloop by founder Jaap Söntjens. For many of these corporations it is cheaper to waste then to preserve. Therefor it is really necessary that initiatives like De Voedselkringloop show another way and help safe this food. 




Educating and reconnecting with nature at the Green Living Lab.


On our next stop of the tour we visited The Green Living Lab. A green oasis at the heart of the financial district of Amsterdam. The project is founded by Aveen Colgan who's mission it is to reconnect people with nature and show the value of nature for healthy living in urban settings. 

One of the programmes of the GLL is the Green Student Bootcamp Challenge where university students are given the chance to discover nature and the effects of green on our health. 

Le Compostier was able to develop the first worm hotels at the location of the GLL and it was fun to show the group this unique location. 




Restaurant As teaches about the taste of pure food.


The first restaurant to use a worm hotel of Le Compostier is Restaurant As. The restaurant of Sander Overeinder works with respect for life and death. One thing dies to feed another. A continuous flow of life and transformation. This is shown especially by how the chefs of the restaurant care for the plants and animals that provide the restaurant with produce to cook with. 

When we arrived at the restaurant the group was witness to a special natural event. A swarm of bees had left one of the beehives that are placed at the back of the restaurant. For a short while the garden was filled with bees until they all swarmed around the new queen bee. 

When it was safe to enter the garden the group was invited to enjoy some yummy treats and artisan bread from the in-house bakery and some refreshing water on the terras of Restaurant As before getting on our bikes again to head to the the next location. 

Chef Rick explains why Restaurant As
is using a worm hotel to make compost
for their vegetable garden. 
Watching the bee swarm safely from inside the restaurant. 






























Enjoying pure food at the terras of Restaurant As


Visiting the artisan bakery that is located at Restaurant As.








 


Amsterdam is a city of bikes & community gardens.


Amsterdam is a great city to explore on bicycle. The city is full of bike paths and using the bike is the fastest (and cheapest) way to go around the town. The group that joined the Circular Food Bike Tour enjoyed the great weather and got to meet eachother and chat while visiting the different locations.

Going by bike paths away from the main roads we got to see some of the many community gardens of Amsterdam.



Crossing the Amstel, the river that gave
its name to Amsterdam.



Arrival at the worm hotel at the Kraaipanstraat
in Amsterdam-Oost.

On many locations in Amsterdam there are now small
Community Gardens. This one is in Amsterdam-Oost.
























Instock & Potverdorie show that Rescued Food can also be used to make high quality cuisine. 



At restaurant Instock we were treated to some welcome refreshing water and yummy treats made from food rescue from that day. Veerle Tuijnman told the group about how Instock started and the succes Instock is having in making it logistically possible to rescue big volumes of products from supermarket-chain Albert Heijn and using the rescued products to offer a high standard menu in their restaurants. 

Also Potverdorie shares this mission; they turn food rescue into tasty and high quality products by using traditional food preservation techniques. At Instock Joep Weerts told us about where they get their products and about the techniques they use.

Putting the art of cooking of Instock together with Poterdorie's chutneys and jams was a tasty experience for the group while listening to the food rescue stories.








Local initiatives to make the neighbourhood more green & circular.


One of the Community Compost projects I was fortunate to be a part of is at the heart of touristic Amsterdam. In the busy area around the red-light district tourists are not always aware of the (sometimes negative) impact their visit can have for local residents. To create more of a 'village feeling' Bernadette De Wit asked Le Compostier to make a worm hotel for the Bantammerbrug. She explained to the group what the community composting project has had for impact on the place since it has been started.


The worm hotel at the Bantammerbrug brings a
village feeling back to this busy and touristic location
in the centre of Amsterdam.




Sharing food rescue dinner with locals at Buurtbuik.


On 6 locations in Amsterdam the organisation Buurtbuik is offering dinners and lunches for free. On set times in the week each location offers a meal made by volunteers and from donated food rescue from local businesses and supermarkets.

We were offered a three course meal for free and enjoyed a great variety of dishes. While enjoying the dinner we got to meet the locals who come to Buurtbuik and it became clear that for some of the people having organisations like Buurtbuik is very important to get a warm meal. Some of the people explained they don't have enough income to eat fresh food all the time. The more the reason to rescue food where we can.

Strange to know so much food lands in the waste bin while your neighbour might not know where to get his or her next meal from.



Dinner at the food rescue initiative of Buurtbuik
in Amsterdam Oud-West. 

Full circle by planting some food rescue. 


After the tour was over I returned to my workshop at the KasKantine where the tour started. At the Bantammerbrug Bernadette had given me a bag of  Galangal Root. Somebody had left it at the worm hotel and since the roots were already sprouting I thought to give them a chance and plant them in the greenhouse of StadsOogst. 

They might go well with the Pepper plants we are growing in the greenhouse for Let's Salsa's hot sauce. Who knows...

Pepper plants growing in StadsOogst's greenhouse
as part of project XXX of Let's Salsa.
Galangal root at the greenhouse of StadsOogst




zondag 8 april 2018

Back To Eden Gardening in a Honeycomb Gardenbox.

Community garden Sweetgrass in de Polder (Diemen Zuid)

Paradise in your own backyard.

Last year I made a couple of raised beds in our community garden 'Sweetgrass in de Polder'. To make them more playful I decided to make them in the shape of a Hexagon (read also: Composting Worms in a DIY Honeycomb Gardenbox). 

The gardens became very beautiful and the plants grew well. Some of the gardens were given to children in the neighbourhood and they enjoyed growing their own veggies.



Unwanted plants in the gardenbox.

To prevent roots from the trees and other plants to grow into the garden beds I had covered the bottom and sides with one big piece of anti-root cloth before filling them with soil. But the many seeds that fly and fall into the garden still resulted in having to take out many weeds, or choose to let the gardens turn into hexagon lawns.

I love working in the garden, but I don't like weeding. And in a garden so full of grass and wild flowers there will be many to deal with. Taking out plants with root and all disturbs the soil and this is something I rather would not do. It's much better to leave the plants and let the soil life do its thing. Plants and micro-organisms build a complex network to benefit each other and taking out plants disturbs this process. 

Compost & composting worms
 for the garden
Another issue was the watering of the plants. In the warmer periods the garden boxes still needed to be watered. This also takes a lot of time and energy and the children would often forget to do theirs, resulting in double work for us adults. So what could be a solution? 


Back To Eden Gardening.

Some time ago I came across the concept of Back To Eden Gardening. The technique is fairly simple: keep the soil covered... all the time! (And pray a lot ;) ) You can use different sources for ground cover but the one mostly used is wood chips. At first I was surprised since I was always taught that for veggies to grow well you better dont use wood chips as a mulch. But it seems that people using the Back To Eden Gardening method have  great results and with a lot less work! So today, after taking out the weeds and grass ((hopefully for the last time) from the raised garden beds I decided to give the method a try. 





Weeds and roots removed. Compost added to the soil. 
I had just emptied my own Worm Hotel and had a wheelbarrow full of fresh compost full of composting worms and baby worms. The tubes in the centre of the Hexagon gardens were a bit empty and so I decided to fill those with this fresh vermicompost. The worms would not be happy with the bare top layer of the garden so I had to cover the soil with something. And so the idea for the BTEG-method came back to mind. 





Fresh Vermicompost crawling with worms & baby worms
The wood chips will decompose over time and will add to the structure of the soil in the garden beds. But mostly they will help now to keep the moist in the soil and the weeds out! The worms love to hang out under a layer of wood chips and there they will help improve the soil in the garden beds.















The tube is a nice home for the worms. From time to time some
organic waste can be added. Holes in the tube allow the worms
to move in and out of the tube into the raised garden bed. 
When I will plant my seedlings in the garden all I have to do is move some wood chips to the side and plant directly in the layer under the wood chips. Then the wood chips are moved back around the little plant. 

















Cover of wood chips to keep moist in the soil and weeds out
of the raised garden bed. The worms love to live under
the moist decomposing wood chip layer and will add to the
fertility of the soil.

Perennial plants.

Using perennial plants instead of annuals will also help to build a good soil-food-web and keep unwanted plants out. Many of the plants that come unwanted are pioneer plants; plants that come when the soil is disturbed. So weeding and turning the soil will automatically create great opportunity for the weeds to grow. Better to leave the soil unturned and covered. 










Let's get some plants in here! 



Build a DIY Honeycomb Garden box for your own garden.

Building these fun hexagon shaped garden beds is not difficult at all. All you need is some simple hand tools and the proper wood. In this blogpost you can read how to make your DIY Honeycomb Garden box. Good luck! 

And if you enjoyed reading this blogpost, please feel free to leave a comment under here! Thank you. 


More fun DIY blogposts from Le Compostier are found here!



Build your own DIY Honeycomb Garden box



woensdag 21 maart 2018

Feestelijke Opening van het Wormenhotel in d'Oude Stad

Koffie&Compost bankje van Le Compostier
Initiatiefneemster Bernadette de Wit en
Rowin Snijder van Le Compostier 
toosten met koffie op 
het "Koffie&Compost bankje". 

Het Wormenhotel brengt 

het dorp terug in de stad. 


Amsterdam, en dan vooral het centrum, wordt steeds drukker. Méér mensen die er wonen, méér verkeer, en vooral ook véél méér toeristen. 

Dat laatste is voor veel bewoners een steeds grotere bron van ergernis omdat het de stad - en dan vooral het centrum - onpersoonlijker maakt en vooral ook omdat de toeristen doorgaans weinig zorg hebben voor de plek die ze bezoeken.

In sommige delen is de overlast van on-zorgzame toeristen groter dan in andere. Op de Geldersekade is de overlast de afgelopen jaren flink toegenomen en om die reden kwam Bernadette de Wit met het idee om de Bantammerbrug aan te pakken en op te schonen. Het moest een plek worden waar de mensen uit de buurt elkaar kunnen ontmoeten. Er moest meer groen komen en een wormenhotel. 


opening wormenhotel bantammerbrug
Grote opkomst bij de feestelijke opening van het wormenhotel
op de Bantammerbrug in Amsterdam.





StadsOogst's ambachtelijk geproduceerde
Wormenpoep

Oh Wormen Wonder.

Een Wormenhotel is een compostmeubel waarbinnen een klein eco-systeem de mooiste compost maakt van groenafval uit de stad. De compostwormen versnellen het composteren door het materiaal luchtig te houden en de nuttige micro-organismen in het composterende materiaal te verspreiden en te vermeerderen. Wormencompost zit vol Wormenpoep. En juist deze wormenpoep maakt de wormencompost zo speciaal. Gebruik van de wormencompost vergroot de biodiversiteit in de bodem en zo helpt deze ook de biodiversiteit boven de bodem te ondersteunen.


Wachtlijst wormenhotels.

Om het Wormenhotel te kunnen plaatsen benadert Bernadette de gemeente Amsterdam. Voor het wormenhotel dat Amsterdam zelf maakt is echter een lange wachtlijst.

Nadat de gemeente Amsterdam Bernadette had laten weten dat er geen budget vanuit de gemeente beschikbaar was voor haar initiatief besloot Bernadette op zoek te gaan naar steun in de wijk. Aan Le Compostier werd gevraagd om een voorstel te doen voor het plaatsen van een wormenhotel en middels een crowdfunding in de buurt werd de benodigde financiering gevonden om het project te realiseren. Zo werd dit het eerste buurtcompost project dat geheel gedragen werd door de buurt zelf. 

Kin Ping Dun (Dun Yong Department Store)
voert de compostwormen.


Gesproken Woord & het Wormenhotel.


Gistermiddag werd het wormenhotel op de Bantammerbrug feestelijk in gebruik genomen onder grote belangstelling vanuit de buurt. Initiatiefneemster Bernadette heeft vanuit de buurt veel steun gekregen en dat bleek ook bij de opening. Er waren meerdere buurtbewoners die hun talenten inzetten en er samen een unieke gebeurtenis van maakten. De compostwormen kregen een warm welkom in de vorm van een straat-opera, gedicht en een haiku, speciaal voor de gelegenheid geschreven. 



Buurtdichter Adriaan Deurloo schreef speciaal
voor de gelegenheid het gedicht 'Bantammerbrug'.

Hoofdsponsoren


De compostwormen werden door hoofdsponsoren Arjen van den Hof (eigenaar van Vondel Hotels) en Kin Ping Dun (eigenaar van Dun Yong Department Store) naar hun 'kamertjes' gebracht. Daarna konden de buren allen een kijkje in het wormenhotel werpen en hun vragen stellen over de werking van het compostmeubel. 

Er bleken zoveel buren mee te willen doen, dat er nu al gekeken wordt naar extra locaties om meer wormenhotels te kunnen plaatsen. 

En ook eigenaar Arjen van de Hof van Vondel Hotels vertelde graag bij enkele van zijn hotels een wormenhotel te plaatsen. Het wormenhotel netwerk groeit gestaag verder! 


Wormenhotel brengt bijeen tot nieuwe grond - de wormen wurmen dankbaar afval om tot een bloemrijke toekomst voor je tuin. 






Gedicht van Adriaan Deurloo.

BANTAMMERBRUG
Sierijzerleuningen,  lantaarnwerk, brugbeslag
en dwarse kinderhoofdjes leiden naar
de overzij (en terug) waar Bantam lag,
ooit toekomstdroom van tropenwonderwaar,
maar – wormenvoer – jij naar de haaien ging.
Hier, deze brug, plaats van vereniging,
waar je elkaar tegen- en je samenkomt
en je je welkom weet op goede grond:
zelfs wormen vinden hier een wellekom.
Gastvrijheid immers is een stil fortuin:
de wormen wurmen dankbaar afval om
tot een bloemrijke toekomst voor je tuin.




Start ook zelf een buurtcompost project! 


Buurtcompost project Bantammerbrug
Urban Composter 700 met
Koffie&Compost bankje.
Copyright Le Compostier 2018. 
Het netwerk van wormenhotels in Amsterdam groeit lekker door. Steeds meer buurten nemen niet meer genoegen met een afvalcontainer waar rest- en groenafval bij elkaar komen. De mensen in Amsterdam willen op duurzame wijze hun groenafval gebruiken voor méér groen in de stad. Ook andere gemeentes zijn inmiddels aan het kijken hoe de wormenhotels te gebruiken in hun eigen afvalbeleid. Amstelveen en Diemen volgden reeds. Komende maand starten wij ook projecten in Den Haag (Eetbare Velden) en in Den Bosch. En ook Rotterdam komt op bezoek bij Le Compostier om te horen hoe een wormenhotel De Havenstad circulair kan maken.

Maar U hoeft natuurlijk niet te wachten totdat uw gemeente een stap doet. Samen met uw buren of collega's kunt U ook uw straat, onderneming of school circulair maken en net zoals de buren van de Bantammerbrug zelf het initiatief nemen. Le Compostier helpt U daar graag bij met advies en begeleiding. Wij kunnen voor U een wormenhotel bouwen, of U bouwt (samen) een DHZ Wormenhotel met de bouwtekening van Le Compostier. 

Haiku van Mariken
Wilt U meer informatie? Stuur dan een email met uw vraag. 

Wilt U op de hoogte blijven van de nieuwste ontwikkelingen rondom de wormenhotels en Le Compostier dan kunt U zich opgeven voor de nieuwsbrief onderaan deze blogpost.


Dank en wellicht tot ziens bij het wormenhotel in uw straat (buurt/school/kantoor/restaurant/....)!

Rowin van Le Compostier. 



donderdag 28 december 2017

How to make your DIY Wormbin ?



A Wormbin made out of recycled buckets.

A cheap and easy way to make your own Wormenpoep.


In many households it still is not a custom to separate organic waste. Big volumes of organic waste are added to the trash and are burned or end up in landfills. And that is a shame. Especially because this organic waste could be used to feed the soil if it would be composted.

If you would like to start composting at your home there are a few options. When you have limited space available in your garden and would like to start composting vermicomposting can offer a solution for you. If you like to start vermicomposting before investing in one of the many  wormbins that are on the market, you can make one yourself out of recycled plastic buckets. All you need is 2, 3 buckets, a fitting lid and a drill to make holes in the buckets. In many fast food restaurants you can get buckets for free.





maandag 3 juli 2017

Build your own DIY Honeycomb Garden

Easy & Fun! Build your own Honeycomb Container Garden

Square Foot Gardening in a DIY Hexagonal Garden Container



Even with two left hands you can build your own DIY Honeycomb Garden containers. With a saw, the right kind of wood, some screws and a screw gun you can make a hexagon garden container in less than one hour.

A local hardwood is favourable, or pinewood like Douglas Fir (will not last as long as hardwood) is suitable to construct the edge of your container.

For the example below I have used Douglas Fir boards of 250 mm (= 10 in) high and 25 mm (= 1 inch) thick.





 1. Building the edge of the container.


Cutting the wood. Cut the wooden boards into 6 even parts.
The length of the boards should be in between 40 cm and 70 cm (= 15,7 - 27,5 in). Shorter boards will make a smaller container, longer will make it bigger.
I recommend to not make the parts bigger than 70 cm; the container would become to big to reach the center easily. 

Cut both of the end faces of each parts into an angle of 60 °. 
It's most easy to do this with an electric shortcut saw. 
When cutting wood, please be sure to wear safety glasses and gloves and fix the wood well.
Fix the Anti-Root Fabric on the 2 corners of 1 side first. Then
alongside the edge. Repeat with all 6 sides.  
If you don't have any experience to use electric powertools, please ask advice to a professional in your neighbourhood or have the wood cut for you in the size you want by a professional! 

Fixing the boards. Use Stainless steel screws of 5mm by 50 mm for fixing the boards together. Place the ends of the boards in an angle of 120 ° and fix the boards with clamps to the workingbench so they don't move while fixing the boards. 

Before putting in the screws pre-drill holes of 4 mm width alongside both end faces of the boards to prevent splitting of the wood!


 2. Placing the wooden container

A staple gun is a handy tool for fixing the fabric
onto the wooden edge
Location. Choose a good spot in your garden for the container (look at sun exposure and shadow cast by trees and objects in the garden).
Lay the hexagon shape flat on the ground.

Copy the shape on the ground. Use a spade or knife and follow the shape of the inside of the hexagon to draw the hexagon on the ground.

Digg a hole. Remove the wooden edge and digg a hole of approx. 25 cm (= 10 in) deep in the shape of the hexagon. 

Make sure the hole is less wide than the wooden edge, so the edge will rest on the ground and does not fall in the hole!



Anti-Root Fabric helps to keep grass and unwanted plants
 out of the container garden.

Add the old soil first.

3. Cover the inside of the container with Anti-Root Fabric



Anti Root Fabric. Cut a piece of anti-root fabric with a pair of scissors. The fabric helps to protect the wood and keeps unwanted plant roots out of the container.

To get the right measurements you place the wooden edge on top of the fabric and cut around it. Cut the piece bigger than the wooden edge. The fabric will have to be at least 60 cm (= 23 in) wider on all 6 sides than the wooden edge.
Place the wooden container back on top of the hole in the ground.

Fixing the fabric. Fold one edge of the fabric and place it alongside one of the 6 sides of the wooden container.
First fix the 2 corners with staples or nails. Than fix the fabric in between the corners.
Do this with each of the 6 sides.
Folding the fabric so it fits nicely is a bit of a challenge. Try to make sure there are no air pockets inbetween the fabric and the bottom of the hole.

It can help to sit inside the container, or throw some soil on top of the fabric to keep it fixed on the bottom of the pit while fixing the fabric alongside the edges.




Shred cardboard and make a thick layer of it.
Cardboard works well to retain water in the container.

4. Bottom of the Honeycomb Garden


If you made the hexagon-shaped pit in your garden soil, you can reuse the soil to refill your garden container. If you made the pit in sandy ground, please only use (biological) garden soil to fill the container. 

Bottom layer. Fill the bottom of the container with a layer of about 10 cm (= 4 in) thick of (old) soil.

Cardboard. On top of this you make a layer of shredded cardboard. Use uncoloured brown cardboard and remove any plastic labels and tape.
The layer of cardboard can be about 10 cm thick (= 4 in).
Watering the bottom layer with rainwater.
The cardboard helps to store water in the container and adds extra carbon. The composting worms love to hang out in between the pieces of cardboard.

Finishing the bottomlayer. On top of the cardboard you put a layer of the rest of the old soil, or a layer of new soil of approx 15 cm thick (= 6 in).

Water. Wet the cardboard and the soil on the bottom of the container.
If possible use water from a stream or ditch, or collected rainwater. This water is more alive and full of beneficial micro-organisms. 
(Note: Please make sure the water is safe for use on the garden and is not from a polluted source!



5. Cut and drill the HDPE Tube


HDPE tube with 10 mm holes.
Get the right kind of tube. Buy some HDPE tube at your local hardware store or online. The tube should be approx. 14 cm in diameter (= 5,5 in).
Make sure if using another material that the tube is made of Food Grade Plastic! 

Cut the tube. Cut the tube with a regular handsaw for wood. Cut a piece of 50 - 60 cm long (= 19 - 23 in).

Drill holes. Use a drill bit fit to drill in metal to make the holes for the composting worms to migrate from the tube to the garden and vice versa. Use a drill bit with gauge BS5 (716 in)  or 10 mm.
Make about 20 holes in the bottom 40 cm (= 15,7 in).
Fix the tube with a clamp on to the workbench while drilling the holes and please use protective clothing and eyewear!
Fill the Honeycomb Garden with organic garden soil
& Vermicompost.

Place the tube. Place the tube in the heart of the container.
If your garden container is the right size you should reach the tube easily by stretching your arm while not leaning on the soil.

Cover the tube. You can close the tube with a cap or piece of wood to prevent rats or mice to enter the tube and eat the organic waste inside.
If you use a tight fitting cap you might want to drill some holes to allow rainwater to enter the tube to keep the composting material inside moist.



6. Filling the Honeycomb Garden with soil & worm castings

Use sticks or rope to make a division.

Soil. Use a healthy organic garden soil to fill your container garden. Fill the container to the edge and build up to the center of the container to create a little hill.
The HDPE tube should still stick out two fingers above the soil. Don't push the soil down, keep it fluffy. 

Compost. Add a layer of compost. If available use a layer of 1 to 2,5 cm (= 1/2 to 1 in) of pure worm castings and mix in with the soil.
If you have some vermicompost available or regular compost you can add up to 8 cm (= 3 in) as a mulch instead of the castings.


By making a little hill you have increase the surface
of the garden.


7. Divide the hexagon & Plan your harvest by using a Sowing Calendar

Clear devision. Use a rope, pieces of wood or sticks to divide the hexagon in 6 triangels.
Each triangle can be used to grow 1 type of plant.

More harvests per year. By using a sowing calendar you can have more than one harvest per triangle. After harvesting one crop a new one can be planted.
For the UK & Europe please see this Sowing Calendar (choose your country on top left).
For the USA please see this Sowing Calendar (choose the state or climate zone where you are living). 


Adding the composting worms to the HDPE tube
in the Honeycomb Garden

8. Composting worms feed the garden 

Small eco-system. Place a handful of composting worms in the HDPE tube at the center of your Honeycomb Garden. The worms will migrate through the garden using the holes in the tube.
The worms are at the base of a healthy garden. Digesting organic matter & helping to build a strong Soil Food Web is what they are good at.

Feed the garden with your organic waste. 
You can add little bits of organic waste (uncooked, unprocessed plant material + egg shells, coffee grounds & tea) to the tube to feed the worms. The worms will digest the material and their worm castings (worm poo) will feed the soil life and the plants in the garden.
Check if the worms are digesting the material you offer before adding more. 



 

9. Plant something Yummy & Beautiful in your garden.


Plant what you eat. Choose herbs, fruits & veggies that you use regularly in the kitchen so you love using what you grow.

Plant for Pollinating insects. Adding flowering plants to your garden makes the garden look great! It also attracts insects that are essential for growing fruit and help reduce pests. 

Visit your garden regularly. If you love to eat what you grow & like to look at the colours of the plants & like to see the little creatures that visit your garden, you will like to go there often. Passing by often will help maintaining the garden with ease. It won't be much work to keep weeds at check and harvest the goodness of your garden.




A playful effect by using different size hexagon garden boxes
 in combination with fruit trees and Hügel cultures in the Community Garden.





Text and images are owned by Rowin Snijder. All images and text are copyrighted. Use of any images or text (or part of the text) is not permitted without written authorisation.