Students of the the Dawes School
Edible Garden Project, a program of Slow Food Chicago.
Dawes School
Edible Garden Project via Slow Foods USA hide caption
Not exact matches
The long - running
Edible Schoolyard
project just launched a beautiful new website a few days ago serving up a searchable network of school
gardens, kitchens, and lunch programs worldwide, and made all their resources freely available.
The
Edible Schoolyard
Project offers this online resource to promote networking of the educational
garden, kitchen, and lunch programs around the world with a place to share lessons and best practices.
The
project will return extremely hard - packed soil to a permeable state, remove invasive plant species, install smart water capture and reuse features, and introduce an
edible garden and landscaping that prioritizes native plant species.
Colin also mentioned the high profile of demonstration
projects in St. James's Park, where there is now an allotment site / Dig for Victory
edible garden.
RISC is an inspirational
edible roof
garden project atop the Reading International Solidarity Centre, a development education centre in the heart of the busy city.
Permaculture
Projects Gaining Popularity With permaculture projects like UMass Amherst's on - campus edible forest garden becoming ever more common, and peak fertilizer continuing to be a looming threat, it's great to see folks creating more and more accessible, easy - to - follow resources for permaculture
Projects Gaining Popularity With permaculture
projects like UMass Amherst's on - campus edible forest garden becoming ever more common, and peak fertilizer continuing to be a looming threat, it's great to see folks creating more and more accessible, easy - to - follow resources for permaculture
projects like UMass Amherst's on - campus
edible forest
garden becoming ever more common, and peak fertilizer continuing to be a looming threat, it's great to see folks creating more and more accessible, easy - to - follow resources for permaculture design.
Back in March of last year, I posted on a
project by UMass Amherst students to convert a campus lawn into an
edible food forest and no - dig permaculture
garden.