The Incredible, Edible, Pigeon Pea.
Pigeon pea is a very versatile plant in a sustainable garden because of it’s many uses as food, mulch, green manure, shelter, windbreaks, living trellises, and even firewood. Read on to learn how you can grow it in your garden and benefit from it’s many uses.
Grow More Food in Less Space with Biointensive Gardening
Create a sustainable mini-farm capable of producing a complete diet using organic gardening principles based on millennia-old traditional farming systems, or just maximise your harvest in small spaces with Biointensive growing.
Grow Vigorous and Healthy Plants with Beneficial Fungi
Give your fruits and vegetables, lawns, and ornamental plants a secondary root system that is more extensive and efficient than their own to improve nutrient uptake, drought tolerance, and overall health with a beneficial fungus known as mycorrhizal fungi.
Grow Bananas Easily & Sustainably With Banana Circles
Turn your kitchen or garden waste and excess water into delicious bananas and other crops with an easily constructed and low-maintenance banana circle.
Designing Your Sustainable Garden & Property With Permaculture
By planning your garden or property before developing it, you can save a lot of time, effort, and even money. Permaculture design can help guide you in the planning and design of your sustainable garden and property.
Dry Creek Bed Design & Installation
When our client contacted us to design and install two dry creek beds in the garden we previously created for them, we couldn't wait to get started because we knew it would be such a fun project. So what is a dry creek bed?
Improve Your Garden with Plant Communities
Creating plant communities naturally increases yields, reduces pests, and protects the soil. It’s a sustainable, ecological method of gardening that imitates the diversity of natural ecosystems.