Forest Gardening in Germany
When we bought our garden in Schlossborn, the actual selling factor was that nothing could be planted. So if nothing could be planted, I had nothing to care for. “Bought”, we told the sellers. We were not interested in the subsidized German Schrebergarten as it comes with lots of regulations and the Schrebergarten Polizei will control it, too.
In our forest garden, even if you were to plant something, you would get frustrated as the plot’s soil is too dense with tree roots, stretching from both sides – fence to natural border of trees. So basically, if it does not grow wild on its own, it will not come up. A bit of Darwinsim, I might add.
Our garden plot is the length of a soccer field (I’d suppose) and unusual things come up through the soil in every season, every year.
- Wild mushroom
- These mushrooms have their own life… growing around dead stems
- A little loner of a mushroom
- The only fly agaric in our garden this year
- Our stretch of forest garden
- Napping on the swing
- nature’s idyllic setting
- Autumn roses…
- Fungus everywhere
- View from our garden across the fish pond
We have chopped down 39 of the original 53 mutilated pine trees. Most of them were just hanging dead in each others’ arm branches and were dry enough to be chopped down with only an axe. We have gained much more sunlight which has changed the overall vegetation as well.
The Taunus mountains have a lot to offer and they are beautiful in every season.
Tags: fungi photos, Schrebergarten, wild garden in Germany












October 18th, 2009 at 10:24 pm
The view is so nice!!
It must have been quite a lot of work chopping wood!
Now you can enjoy the nature
November 4th, 2009 at 10:07 am
[...] Maria Shipley » Blog Archive » Forest Gardening in Germany [...]
November 7th, 2009 at 11:52 am
[...] Maria Shipley » Blog Archive » Forest Gardening in Germany [...]