Sustainability without compromising beauty
9 February
2010 Sustainability without compromising beauty A
sustainable garden does not have to compromise on beauty as
Soil and Health Canterbury and The Good Gardeners’
Association Christchurch will demonstrate at this year’s
Ellerslie International Flower Show. Sustainability with
Style will be a garden where organically grown fruit and
vegetables will nestle among herbs and flowers, all thriving
in healthy soil enriched with compost and mulch. Soil and
Health Canterbury partnered at last year’s Ellerslie
International Flower Show with Project Lyttelton winning
bronze for theirDig This exhibit, a community garden
designed on sustainable principles. This year the
Association wanted to design a completely different garden
using the same sustainability principles but in a more
elegant, traditional home garden setting, says Soil and
Health New Zealand Chairman Dr Matt Morris. “We wanted a
sustainable garden which was also very
beautiful.” Designed by Phil and Linda Ducker of The
Good Gardeners’ Association, who were part of the gold
medal winning Canterbury Horticultural Society exhibit last
year,Sustainability with Style will have “beautiful
architectural features, including a traditional church gate
entrance, brick fencing and a magnificent
summerhouse”. “The structures will be built using as
much recycled materials as possible and the garden will be a
sanctuary for the gardener to contemplate the bountiful
fruits of his labour.”
Dr Morris says the design will
maximise the use of space for food production, juxtaposing
heritage fruit and vegetable plants with companion flowering
plants. “Many heritage plants will be used in the
garden. It is important we preserve their use to ensure they
are not lost forever. Every plant has an intrinsic value to
our gardening culture; many heritage varieties offer a
higher nutrient value.” He says Soil and Health has a
long history, being the oldest organisation in the world
promoting organic composting. “We just love compost and
having it at Ellerslie. “I think compost heaps are a
thing of beauty and so magical in the way they transform
waste into a healthy product to enrich the soil.” The
Good Gardeners’ Association has been established in
Christchurch for more than 30 years, promoting organic,
no-dig gardening. Dr Morris says Ellerslie is a great
place for Soil and Health and The Good Gardeners’
Association to get their messages out to a wide audience
which would not normally be exposed to its ideas. “Our
gardening principles are relevant for all gardens; we are
about considering the garden as an eco-system that needs
nourishing and enriching.” He says the organisation’s
2009 Ellerslie exhibit was overwhelmingly received by
visitors to the Show. “Gardens are part of the total
sustainability picture for the city and we see our
relationship with Ellerslie as having some
duration. “Each year, Soil and Health wants to be part
of the Ellerslie experience, partnering with different
organisations to present our messages in different
ways.” ends
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Ellerslie International Flower Show is New
Zealand’s premier week-long Garden Party in
Christchurch’s North Hagley Park from 10 to 14 March 2010.
The Show celebrates Christchurch’s Garden City heritage
and the best of national and international garden design.
Check out the website for further information
www.ellerslieflowershow.co.nz