Category: Landscape News

  • Extracts from Stuart Taylor’s weekly reports

    Extracts from Stuart Taylor’s weekly reports

    Much of the week, starting on the 24th June, has been spent as “project hand over” from Elaine to me and this offered the opportunity for me to familiarise myself with the site and landscape, as well as meeting key people at The School. I am really impressed with what has been achieved so far on site and very much hope to be able to continue the good work.

    I have been briefed on Elaine’s designs for the residential courtyards, Zojila/Khardongla House (Courtyard 1) and Warila/Penzila House (Courtyard 3) and we have had a refresher meeting with Angdus to ensure these remain on the schedule of works for the next couple of months. The courtyards are easier to identify since the arrival of some rather smart signs in time for the opening of the Ladakh International Film Festival at the school.

  • More extracts from Elaine’s weekly reports

    More extracts from Elaine’s weekly reports

    This week in the nursery we have been continuing with the ever expanding watering regime. Tsetan and I have continued with our quest for more vegetables to plant.

    The landscape team has been building wigwams from old willow stems for planting up beans as well as planting still more veg into the bays.

    Rigzin and I finally spent a day together to get the willow arch into the ground in the Playground with the help of the house mothers and some drop in assist from some of the labourers. It’s not the prettiest arch in the world but it is currently alive and well. It’s a little late in the season but the willow had been stored in water and had roots sprouting from the stems so I am hopeful that it will take with appropriate irrigation.

     willow

     

    We have artichokes forming from last year which is rather exciting. It’s a new vegetable for the people here so I might suggest a cook up one lunchtime.

    Artichoke

    The infants made an impromptu visit to the nursery on Tuesday morning and I showed them around, which was fun.

    Infants  Infants 2

  • Resident Landscape Architect Weekly Report 12th to 18th May 2014

    This week has seen more preparation of the vegetable beds by the landscape team.

     experiment with thorny shade for seeds-224

    We have also been planting up more seeds into beds and trays. The upside of planting into trays is being able to monitor and control them from the more negative impact of the flooding water irrigation regime, which can be quite harsh on emergent seedlings. The downside is that they need watering twice a day but this isn’t unusual for smaller containers in any climate and has been easy enough to achieve so far. I am wondering about seeing if there are any residential children who may be interested in a spot of light Sunday / weekend seedling watering for when I am not here. The seedlings will be potted on or transplanted soon enough.

    It was school planting and gardening afternoon on Saturday towards the gardening competition, which was boisterous and productive. I prepared an A4 sheet of very simple garden criteria for each classroom to have. Karma walked me around the classrooms and I distributed a few little plants and seeds as well as talked about the children’s plans for their gardens. I look forward to watching the gardens develop but it will be Stuart who will judge them later on in the year.

       Planting-IMG 2622-224   Adventure playground entrance-224

    Basset from JAINS also arrived on Saturday for an initial analysis of remaining works to the irrigation system. Mathura, Tsetan and I walked around the site with him assessing the installation and we also discussed the pump installation with Angdus. Basset did not seem to think there were any great hurdles and estimated a fully operational system within a month.

    See what can be done in one year below.

    The Plant Nursery Spring 2013, first fruit trees               

    PlantNursery2013-new--treesIMG 2341-224size     

    The Plant Nursery Spring 2014, fruit trees blossoming         

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  • Resident Landscape Architect Weekly Report 5th to 11th May 2014

    The tree stock in the nursery is coming into leaf and following a few light rainy periods everything is looking a little cleaner and less dusty than usual.

    green nursery 2-224

    The week has been focused on beginning to purchase seeds and flower and vegetable seedlings and plant them into the nursery or distribute them to the house mothers and classrooms around the school. We have tried to buy alfalfa three times now from the agricultural department in Leh but have had the misfortune to arrive at just the wrong time to get the right chap to give us the ticket to take away some of this precious commodity.

    buying seed-224

    I met with Angdus to discuss remedial and new construction works for the play area. We looked at a variety of different tyre-based features that should be easy enough to build. This structure will be somewhat dependant on how many tyres we can source in the meantime.

    I arranged for a children’s planting day in the classroom gardens for the garden competition.

    children planting-224

  • Resident Landscape Architect Weekly Report 28th April to 4th May 2014

    Tsetan and Ritzen collected the willow for the spine on Monday morning and set about planting it for the rest of the week.

    Wednesday was a residents gardening afternoon and there was a whirlwind few hours when the children and house mothers set about digging the soil in the Spine and planting it with (French) marigold seed around the grasses.

    IMG 3148-224     IMG 3150-224

    Watering seems to be under control but it is time consuming and requires some thought to get it all done especially as we begin to plant up more and more bays in the nursery and it gets warmer and warmer. I have been planting more seeds with a view to increasing flower and seed stock and have been experimenting with a mix of planting in containers in the office and in the outdoor soil bays. I am also experimenting with creating some permeable shade (and dog proofing) in the outdoor bays using the dead  poplar and willow stems and buckthorn. It’s much warmer now and the second polythene roof of the polytunnel has been taken down.

    blossom-224

  • Resident Landscape Architect Weekly Report 21st to 27th April 2014

    The poplar and willow replant has continued.

    willow-for-spine-224      planting-poplar-people-224

    The majority of the vegetable beds in front of the plant nursery have been dug over with manure and reshaped into bays in preparation of planting them up, below left. I have planted some more flower seedlings and some of the previously planted seedlings are beginning to come through, which is jolly exciting. There’s sunflower, English marigold and a few as yet un-identified species.

    prep-nursery-224      seedlings-2-224  

    seedlings-224      res1-garden-224

    Many of the residences are preparing their flower beds in advance of the garden competition. It is great to see that many are looking really very neat.

  • Resident Landscape Architect Weekly Report 14th to 20th April 2014

    This week has mostly been about planting poplar to replace the dead stock. We have re-planted in the plant nursery, at the top of the residential spine, at the visitor centre and the long strip adjacent to Rancho’s cafe as planned.

    Poplar-planting-224

    I am working on a watering rota to discuss with Tsetan as there is now a fair amount to manage ahead of JAINS arrival to get the drip irrigation system tested and commissioned. A few gaps in the plant nursery fence have been fixed to try to prevent dog incursion. If this works it will avoid needing a whole new fence. The knock-on effect is that the kitchen green waste isn’t getting eaten by the dogs but it is getting a bit smelly so we will need to think about that. We have got some great shelves in the landscape office and the skeleton of a small table I pulled out of the scrap heap has had a new top put on to it. Everybody wants to use the Landscape Office now.

    Office-shelves-224

  • Resident Landscape Architect Weekly Report 7th to 13th April 2014

    POPLAR-IN-TANK

    The Poplar cuttings arrived for planned planting next week. We have put them in the water storage basin ahead of planting. They were almost immediately a prop for lots of birds, which was lovely to see and hear.

    BIRDS-IN-POPLAR

    Tsetan and I went to Nimo nursery on Wednesday to collect some more apricot trees, We managed to get 120 trees. This brings our fruit trees total to about 200.
    Apricot trees

    The plan was to take three days to plant these trees into the nursery and to mulch them and clear up. We got 100 in by the end of Friday, which is pretty good work, especially as it is hard work and although the soil in the nursery has been worked previously there are lots of rocks, some very big, to dig out, and there are other watering duties to do.

    planting-trees

    I arrived on Saturday morning to discover that the polythene cover to the large polytunnel had blown off in the high winds the previous night and knocked a bunch of pots off with it. It looked like quite a big job to fix but all of a sudden a load of children and their house-mother appeared and made very light work of it in about 5 minutes.

  • Resident Landscape Architect Weekly Report 31st March to 6th April 2014

    I arrived into Leh safely and with all my luggage and limbs intact. We were taken to the Botho Guesthouse in Shey and rested up on Friday.

    airport-Mathura-Elaine

    Over the week I have met with most of the construction team and school staff and everybody has been really very friendly.

    IMG 8423

    Sadly there is a large loss of trees that were planted last season.

    Tsetan showed me around the nursery which is clean and tidy and we had a good walk around site when he showed me areas that he thought needed attention – such as some willow to pollard and reposition and a few soil level changes and plant losses. He talked with me about the planting season for trees, flowers and food and we talked about the season ahead.

    Other tasks completed this week include seed collection across site so now we have a healthy supply of ornamental seed.

    We have cleared the front nursery beds in preparation (I hope) of planting more fruit tree stock. Lots of spinach was harvested and sold to the kitchen.

    spinach

  • Dragon Garden Inauguration

    His Holiness Gyalwang Drukpa was invited by His Eminence Thuksey Rinpoche, Chairperson of the Druk Padma Karpo School, to inaugurate the “Dragon Garden”, and to watch a series of performances by the school children and a presentation by the landscape architects from UK.

    Tour-PlantNurseryInauguration-224  Vegetables-PlantNurseryInauguration-224 

    Dancing-PlantNurseryInauguration-224  SpeechPaddy-PlantNurseryInauguration-224  Blessing-PlantNurseryInauguration-224