Hi friends! New to the sub, not so new to indoor gardening. But giving my first run at a living wall so that my indoor guys take up less space. This is from my south facing window, and I feel like my only concern is lighting from up top, so I'm thinking of supplementing with some grow lights.
Has anyone else tried the pocket planter for a living wall and had success? Has anyone built off of. 1.9K votes, 68 comments. 990K subscribers in the IndoorGarden community.
A place to discuss tips on growing an indoor garden, including herbs. An alternative to this is to make a frame that holds pots close together, and use some mature hanging plants like pothos, ivy, ferns, etc. to create the illusion of a plant wall.
It's not quite the same, but it's definitely less time consuming and easier to maintain than a true living wall. Hi, I am under the impression that living walls are difficult, high maintenance etc. Does anyone have any contrasting opinions on this? Maybe there's a secret?
About Community Everything about exterior and interior living walls Created Mar 1, 2022 3 Members. The water then enters the tanks below and is topped up about once per week (can be plumbed to automatically refill). We're really excited to have provided this residential living wall and have lots of exciting products on the way to make living walls more accessible to homeowners.
I'd love to answer any questions you have. Open the build menu, move to the tab with the portal icon, plants are in there. dont have any except the flora containment, i thought i had more.
you have to unlock the blueprints for farmable plants., You can either do the agriculture missions (part of the base building mission line) or buy them on the Anomaly. A living wall is a great way to max out a small garden space, and is easy to create in just a weekend with our ultimate DIY guide. The allure of walls filled with plants dates back at least to the Hanging Gardens of Babylon, circa 600 B.C., one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World.
Fast forward a couple of millennia to the 1980s, and the modern-day concept took root in contemporary culture, largely thanks to French botanist Patrick Blanc. Blanc's work with vertical gardens helped popularize the idea of living walls. A vertical garden is truly a living wall.
It generates oxygen while offering a visual focal point that's arguably as stunning as, and more affordable than, a piece of fine art. While a vertical garden requires more maintenance than most other wall coverings, it brings texture, energy and life to a room the way all houseplants do.