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gardens

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  • We should not confuse order and tidiness

    To the observer, this may seem like a very unordered and untidy system; however, we should not confuse order and tidiness. Tidiness separates species and creates work, whereas order integrates, reducing work and discouraging insect attack. European gardens, often extraordinarily tidy, result in functional disorder and low yield. Creativity is seldom tidy.

    Perhaps we could say that tidiness is something that happens when compulsive activity replaces thoughtful creativity.

    Bill Mollison, Introduction to Permaculture
    • order
    • creativity
    • gardens
  • Chef's Table: Jeong Kwan

    Jeong Kwan, Chef's Table
    www.imdb.com
    1. ​​172. Garden Growing Wild​​
    2. ​​The garden is a riot​​
    • gardens
    • food
    • zen
  • What this site is

    A kind of commonplace book.
    A kind of digital garden.
    A kind of Zettelkasten.
    The front end to a brain.

    Part research,
    part dissertation,
    part art project.

    A kind of essay,
    in the sense that it is
    an attempt.

    ...but at what?

    Nick Trombley, barnsworthburning.net
    1. ​​What is a commonplace?​​
    2. ​​A Brief History of the Digital Garden​​
    3. ​​Zettelkasten​​
    4. ​​are.na​​
    5. ​​Highlighter​​
    6. ​​The Art of Looking Sideways​​
    7. ​​Reading Design​​
    8. ​​Essayer​​
    9. ​​Glasp​​
    10. ​​Maintenance and Care​​
    • gardens
  • The man of the pot

    In the West the display of flowers seems to be a part of the pageantry of wealth—the fancy of a moment. Whither do they all go, these flowers, when the revelry is over? Nothing is more pitiful than to see a faded flower remorselessly flung upon a dung heap.

    ...Much may be said in favor of him who cultivates plants. The man of the pot is far more humane than he of the scissors.

    ...Anyone acquainted with the ways of our tea and Flower Masters must have noticed the religious veneration with which they regard flowers. They do not cull at random, but carefully select each branch or spray with an eye to the artistic composition they have in mind. They would be ashamed should they chance to cut more than were absolutely necessary. It may be remarked in this connection that they always associate the leaves, if there be any, with the flower, for their object is to present the whole beauty of plant life. In this respect, as in many others, their method differs from that pursued in Western countries. Here we are apt to see only the flower stems, heads as it were, without body, stuck promiscuously into a vase.

    Okakura Kakuzō, The Book of Tea
    • flowers
    • gardens
  • Each ruler commissioned his own garden

    The Mughuls of India developed a tradition where each ruler commissioned his own garden. Then, "At the owner's death the pavilion, generally placed in the center of the site, became the mausoleum, and the whole complex passed into the care of holy men."

    Lisa Heschong, Thermal Delight in Architecture
    1. ​​Poems of an Indian summer​​
    2. ​​The Abode of Fancy​​
    • death
    • gardens
  • Getty Center Central Garden

    IMG_6269.jpg
    IMG_6271.jpg
    IMG_6269.jpg
    Robert Irwin, Robert Irwin: A Conditional Art
    1. ​​Ever Present, Ever Changing​​
    • gardens
  • What can be called a response

    With living, though unconscious, matter, the creator must still adapt the work to the material, though here he experiences something that can without undue anthropomorphism be called a “response”; plants “respond” to cultivation and cross-fertilization in a sense rather different from that in which iron may be said to “respond” to hammering.

    Dorothy Sayers, The Mind of the Maker
    • gardens
  • Shortlist of interesting spaces

    Nick Trombley, barnsworthburning.net
    • craft
    • work
    • walking
    • www
    • notetaking
    • words
    • euphony
    • melancholy
    • zen
    • darkness
    • gardens
  • We must cultivate our garden

    ‘You must have a vast and magnificent estate,’ said Candide to the turk.

    ‘I have only twenty acres,’ replied the old man; ‘I and my children cultivate them; and our labour preserves us from three great evils: weariness, vice, and want.’

    Candide, on his way home, reflected deeply on what the old man had said. ‘This honest Turk,’ he said to Pangloss and Martin, ‘seems to be in a far better place than kings…. I also know,’ said Candide, ‘that we must cultivate our garden.’

    Voltaire, Candide
    www.theschooloflife.com
    • life
    • gardens
  • Secret garden

    Pattern 7.7 – There is also one garden, so secret, that it does not appear on any map. The importance of the pattern is that it must never be publicly announced, and must not be in site plan. Except for a few, nobody should be able to find it.

    Christopher Alexander, The Battle for the Life and Beauty of the Earth
    • gardens
  • Waiting to repay the gift of vision

    Like a forest or a garden or a field, an honest page of letters can absorb – and will repay – all the attention it is given. Much type now, however, is delivered to computer screens. It is a good deal harder to make text truly legible on screen than to render streaming video. Both fine technology and great restraint are required to make the screen as restful to the eyes as ordinary paper.

    The underlying problem is that the screen mimics the sky instead of the earth. It bombards the eye with light instead of waiting to repay the gift of vision – like the petals of a flower, or the face of a thinking animal, or a well-made typographic page. And we read the screen the way we read the sky: in quick sweeps, guessing at the weather from the changing shapes of clouds, or in magnified small bits, like astronomers studying details. We look to it for clues and revelations more than wisdom. This makes it an attractive place for the open storage of pulverized information – names, dates, or library call numbers, for instance – but not so good a place for thoughtful text.

    Robert Bringhurst, The Elements of Typographic Style
    • light
    • gardens
  • Turn them into cycles

    Permaculture systems seek to stop the flow of nutrient and energy off the site and instead turn them into cycles, so that, for instance, kitchen wastes are recycles to compost; animal manures are directed to biogas production or to the soil; household greywater flows to the garden; green manures are turned into the earth; leaves are raked up around trees as mulch.

    Bill Mollison, Introduction to Permaculture
    1. ​​Two Cycles​​
    2. ​​An ecological cycle​​
    • ecosystems
    • recycling
    • gardens
  • Has it begun to sprout?

    "That corpse you planted last year in your garden,
    Has it begun to sprout? Will it bloom this year?"

    T.S. Eliot, The Waste Land
    • death
    • growth
    • gardens
  • The garden is a riot

    In conventional agriculture, vegetation is kept at the weed or herb level using energy to keep it cut, weeded, tilled, fetilised, and even burnt; that is, we are constantly setting the system back and incurring work and energy-costs when we stop natural succession from occurring.

    Instead of fighting this process, we can direct and accelerate it to build our own climax species in a shorter time.

    There is no attempt to form the garden into strict neat rows; it is a riot of shrubs, vines, garden beds, flowers, herbs, a few small trees, and even a small pond. Paths are sinuous, and garden beds might be round, key-holed, raised, spiraled, or sunken.

    Bill Mollison, Introduction to Permaculture
    1. ​​172. Garden Growing Wild​​
    2. ​​Chef's Table: Jeong Kwan​​
    • gardens
  • The office landscape

    The office landscape.png

    An organic, almost forest-like office layout.

    There is an affinity with certain planned “landscapes” of the natural world – namely, the classic Italian Baroque garden. In the sample plans the Schnelle brothers devised, the arrangement of desks seems utterly chaotic, totally unplanned – a mess, like a forest of refrigerator magnets. But, as with the seemingly “wild” overgrowth of a “natural” garden, the office landscape is more thoroughly planned than any symmetrical and orderly arrangement of desks. Imaginary lines wend their way around every cluster, delineating common pools of activity; between and through the undergrowth of clusters are invisible, sinuous paths of work flow.

    Nikil Saval, Cubed
    • nature
    • gardens
  • 172. Garden Growing Wild

    Problem

    A garden which grows true to its own laws is not a wilderness, yet not entirely artificial either.

    Solution

    Grow grasses, mosses, bushes, flowers, and trees in a way which comes close to the way that they occur in nature: intermingled, without barriers between them, without bare earth, without formal flower beds, and with all the boundaries and edges made in rough stone and brick and wood which become a part of the natural growth.

    Christopher Alexander, Murray Silverstein & Sara Ishikawa, A Pattern Language
    1. ​​Introduction to Permaculture​​
    2. ​​The garden is a riot​​
    3. ​​Chef's Table: Jeong Kwan​​
    • nature
    • farming
    • gardens
  • Verona gardens

    2020-08-29 23.21.07.jpg
    2020-08-29 23.21.17.jpg
    2020-08-29 23.21.07.jpg
    Nick Trombley, Photography archive
    • gardens
  • Snipping the dead blooms

    A Quote by Robin Sloan
    newpublic.substack.com

    I recognize this is a very niche endeavor, but the art and craft of maintaining a homepage, with some of your writing and a page that's about you and whatever else over time, of course always includes addition and deletion, just like a garden — you're snipping the dead blooms. I do this a lot. I'll see something really old on my site, and I go, “you know what, I don't like this anymore,” and I will delete it.

    But that's care. Both adding things and deleting things. Basically the sense of looking at something and saying, “is this good? Is this right? Can I make it better? What does this need right now?” Those are all expressions of care. And I think both the relentless abandonment of stuff that doesn't have a billion users by tech companies, and the relentless accretion of garbage on the blockchain, I think they're both kind of the antithesis, honestly, of care.

    • care
    • repair
    • www
    • gardens
    • technology
  • Philosophy of life and gardening

    A Website by Steve Richards
    steverichards.notion.site

    I enjoy gardening the most when it aligns with my broader philosophy of life, so I thought readers might like to see that philosophy and see how I apply it to gardening. These principles are in random order, just as they are applied in life. Sometimes my focus is on having fun, other times I'm focused on planning, still other times I just want to kick back and chat to my friends and neighbours.

    Introduction / Pareto principle / Balance / Fun / Working for happiness / Family / Purpose / Order / Planning / Flexibility / Variety / Strategic Resilience / Motivation / Sustainability / Invest to save / Kaizen / Kindness / Giving back / Experimentation / Learning

    • gardens
    • philosophy
    • life
  • revisiting architectural blogging

    An Article by Alan Jacobs
    blog.ayjay.org
    Image from blog.ayjay.org on 2022-03-07 at 8.41.25 PM.jpeg

    I have appropriated from Brian Eno and others the distinction between architecture and gardening, and have described my blog as a kind of garden. But lately I’ve been revisiting the architecture/gardening distinction and I have come to think that there is something architectural about writing a blog, or can be – but not in the sense of a typical architectural project, which is designed in advanced and built to specifications. Rather, writing a blog over a period of years is something like building the Watts Towers.

    Simon Rodi didn’t have a plan, didn’t even have a purpose: he just started building. His work was sustained and extended by bricolage, the acquisition and deployment of found objects – and not just any objects, but objects that the world had discarded as useless, as filth. You put something in here, then something else, you discover, fits there … over time you get something big and with a discernible shape. Not the regular shape envisioned in architectural drawings, but nevertheless something that can be pleasing or at least interesting to look at – an organic and irregular shape. A geometry of irregular forms.

    • architecture
    • blogging
    • gardens
  • drawing.garden

    A Website by Ben Moren
    drawing.garden
    Screenshot of drawing.garden on 2020-08-16 at 1.59.18 PM.png

    Gardening, but with emojis and less time.

    1. ​​A Brief History of the Digital Garden​​
    2. ​​emojraw.glitch.me (draw!)​​
    • sound
    • www
    • fun
    • joy
    • microsites
    • gardens
  • Phantom Regret by Jim

    A Poem by Jim Carrey & The Weeknd
    genius.com

    And if your broken heart's heavy when you step on the scale
    You'll be lighter than air when they pull back the veil
    Consider the flowers, they don't try to look right
    They just open their petals and turn to the light

    • melancholy
    • nature
    • death
    • gardens
  • Working with Brian Eno on design principles for streets

    An Article by Dan Hill & Brian Eno
    medium.com
    • Think like a gardener, not an architect: design beginnings, not endings
    • Unfinished = fertile
    • Artists are to cities what worms are to soil.
    • A city’s waste should be on public display.
    • Make places that are easy for people to change and adapt (wood and plaster, as opposed to steel and concrete.)
    • Places which accommodate the very young and the very old are loved by everybody else too.
    • Low rent = high life
    • Make places for people to look at each other, to show off to each other.
    • Shared public space is the crucible of community.
    • A really smart city is the one that harnesses the intelligence and creativity of its inhabitants.
    • collections
    • urbanism
    • streets
    • cities
    • waste
    • gardens
  • A Brief History of the Digital Garden

    An Article by Maggie Appleton
    maggieappleton.com
    Image from maggieappleton.com on 2020-08-08 at 7.38.08 PM.png

    Digital gardening is the Domestic Cozy version of the personal blog. It's less performative than a blog, but more intentional and thoughtful than our Twitter feed. It wants to build personal knowledge over time, rather than engage in banter and quippy conversations.

    1. ​​Domestic Cozy​​
    2. ​​drawing.garden​​
    3. ​​What this site is​​
    • blogging
    • gardens
  • Enjoying the garden together

    A Quote by Brian Eno
    blog.ayjay.org

    And essentially the idea there is that one is making a kind of music in the way that one might make a garden. One is carefully constructing seeds, or finding seeds, carefully planting them and then letting them have their life.

    What this means, really, is a rethinking of one’s own position as a creator. You stop thinking of yourself as me, the controller, you the audience, and you start thinking of all of us as the audience, all of us as people enjoying the garden together. Gardener included.

    • creativity
    • music
    • making
    • art
    • gardens
  • Maggie Appleton's Digital Garden

    A Website by Maggie Appleton
    maggieappleton.com

    An open collection of notes, resources, sketches, and explorations I'm currently cultivating. Some notes are Seedlings, some are budding, and some are fully grown Evergreen.

    1. ​​Evergreen notes​​
    2. ​​Andy's working notes​​
    3. ​​How to Think About Notes​​
    • notetaking
    • gardens

See also:
  1. www
  2. nature
  3. death
  4. life
  5. notetaking
  6. creativity
  7. blogging
  8. zen
  9. melancholy
  10. sound
  11. fun
  12. joy
  13. microsites
  14. music
  15. making
  16. art
  17. farming
  18. growth
  19. ecosystems
  20. recycling
  21. light
  22. order
  23. food
  24. craft
  25. work
  26. walking
  27. words
  28. euphony
  29. darkness
  30. collections
  31. urbanism
  32. streets
  33. cities
  34. waste
  35. flowers
  36. architecture
  37. philosophy
  38. care
  39. repair
  40. technology
  1. Nick Trombley
  2. Bill Mollison
  3. Maggie Appleton
  4. Brian Eno
  5. Christopher Alexander
  6. Voltaire
  7. Ben Moren
  8. Murray Silverstein
  9. Sara Ishikawa
  10. Nikil Saval
  11. Lisa Heschong
  12. T.S. Eliot
  13. Robert Bringhurst
  14. Jeong Kwan
  15. Dorothy Sayers
  16. Dan Hill
  17. Robert Irwin
  18. Okakura Kakuzō
  19. Jim Carrey
  20. The Weeknd
  21. Alan Jacobs
  22. Steve Richards
  23. Robin Sloan