Wall gardens, which having been gaining in popularity since last year, are a great way to show off a greens thumb while displaying a love for
art.
Whether you choose to display indoor or outdoor, be your choice ferns or vining tomatoes, your display should be installed vertically-mounted on a wall or fence. This will make your garden a work of art.
Those popular for vertical garden installations use a combination metal frame, PVC sheet for rigidity and to protect against water damage, and a felt layer made of synthetic fiber. Instead of plants snuggled into soil pockets, the roots grow laterally along the material.
A drip-irrigation system is placed atop the framework. Water drips down the structure and the felt acts as a sponge which absorbs the water for plant use.
Ideally you’d choose plant them is where you can express yourself in art. Intricate patterns and styles will give your display a wow factor that is sure to impress.
There are many famous examples of vertical gardens across the states, but San Francisco seems to be the focal point of vertical gardening. One hotel entrance boasts a courtyard wallscape that contains tightly planted eheveria. Tillandsias are spaced widely along flanked panels The effect is marvelous foyer that screams taste and beauty.
Find a vertical gardening store and you can purchase twenty-inch squares of small planting cells that slope upward in order to contain soil and water. These cells will enable you to form any pattern of panels to transform any space, indoors or out. The panels accommodate irrigation fittings and run just under ten dollars a piece.





