
We garden on a windy roof balcony on the 12th floor overlooking English Bay.
We have four different microclimates; everything grows in containers (currently 112); all trees, shrubs, grasses and perennials have to survive outside year round (no space inside). The biggest single challenge is the wind coming at us from all directions in all seasons. For the most part, plants that need staking are out of the question and vines are a challenge and a risk. Often the climbers are torn to shreds as soon as they start to take off.
We’ve created garden “rooms” (because we simply can’t cover every square inch of the cement): the SE sunny side, the SW and West English Bay garden, the NW “bamboo” garden and the NE shade garden.

We rely on grasses, bamboos, trees and bushes to survive the worst of the winds. The hebes and a camellia brighten things up in fall and winter. Colour in the spring/summer arrives with the seasons: in spring, rosemary, tulips, Rhododendron ‘Hotei’, California lilac; in summer, escallonia, roses, annuals (usually geraniums); in late summer, lobelia (L. cardinalis ‘Queen Victoria’), Clematis tangutica and grasses. Have we mastered our garden challenge? Not entirely, but by choosing a majority of plants that can withstand wind (some trial and error was involved), the bones and structure of the garden can be maintained. The rest is up to nature.
Margaret, thank you so much for sharing your gorgeous and creative balcony garden with us, and congratulations on winning our Gardening Challenge contest! – Ed.
Comments
Margaret, Thank you for this
Comment by Anonymous, January 23, 2009 at 11:22Margaret,
Thank you for this lovely post and the wonderful pictures of your garden. Your ideas of garden rooms and managing your microclimates is one that will be important on a larger scale for healthy communities and sustainable economies. But it all starts with ideas such as yours.
I would encourage you to please come and visit Valcent's blog to see the advancements we are making with vertical growing, a technology that will become imperative in the near future a healthy agricultural system. We've managed to grow a range of produce vertically and using 5% of water compared to a traditional crop.
Our research facility is in El Paso, Texas; however, our head offices are Vancouver as well.
I just wanted to thank you for informing people of this idea, and invite you to come and see what we're doing in a similar field.
http://blog.valcent.net
And please please feel free to contribute your thoughts!
All the best,
Jessica Brock
Valcent- Vancouver
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