Hothouse

Leah Churner

Hothouse is a podcast about design, ecology, and the way we garden now. Host Leah Churner sits down with experts and enthusiasts to talk about permaculture, the urban landscape, and how plants sometimes give us the feels. A meeting of the minds for plant people and the horticulture-curious, Hothouse is a different kind of gardening show: less of the how-to and more of the who, what, where, when, and why.

  1. ٢٥‏/٠٣‏/٢٠٢٣

    Horticulturati: The Multilayered Magic of Sheet Mulch

    On this episode, we're gettin' down and dirty with sheet mulch. Sheet mulching is a no-till, no-dig gardening practice of removing unwanted vegetation and building fertile soil by layering organic matter and letting it compost in place. While the layers suppress weeds by blocking sunlight, subterranean soil biology goes to work to break down the layers into new soil. The beauty of this simple practice is that you can do it at any time of year with materials you have on hand (like cardboard, shredded paper, and leaves) or can source for free from local sources (arborist wood chips, coffee grounds, and spent mushroom substrate). We discuss the reasons for sheet mulching, when and how to do it, and what to use. Then we dive into the corrugated controversy around cardboard and ponder the role of science in gardening.  Mentioned in this episode: "Pocket Prairies with John Hart Asher" (Horticulturati podcast episode, 2022); JHA pocket prairies ep of Horticulturati; Gaia's Garden: A Guide to Home-Scale Permaculture by Toby Hemenway (2001); "Fungal Vision with Daniel Reyes" (Hothouse podcast episode, 2018); Mycelium Running by Paul Stamets (2005); Teaming with Microbes: The Organic Gardener's Guide to the Soil Food Web by Jeff Lowenfels and Wayne Lewis (2006); "Mulches: The Good, The Bad, and the Really, Really Ugly" by Dr. Linda Chalker Scott (presentation to the Clackamas County Master Gardeners, 2019); "The Cardboard Controversy" by Chalker-Scott (Garden Professors blog, 2015); "Permaculture - More Concerns" by Chalker-Scott (Garden Professors blog, 2010). Join The Horticulturati on Patreon for bonus episodes! Email us info@horticulturati.com

    ١ س ١٢ د
  2. ٠٣‏/٠٩‏/٢٠٢٢

    Horticulturati: Humble History of the Flowerpot

    In this episode, Colleen unearths as much as she can about the largely unwritten history of plant pots. When did humans start growing plants in containers? How did innovations in materials and technology lead to the domestication of plants, plant collecting, and the growth of the nursery industry? Why are plant pots so overlooked as a facet of industrial design? (We can rattle off several iconic chair designs, but flowerpots? Not so much.) Why don't the standardized names of nursery pot sizes correspond to their actual volume in the US? We have more questions than answers, folks.  First up, Leah is practicing her drawings. And we need an alternative name for the tricky season that comes between summer and fall in Texas.  Join our Patreon for bonus episodes and more! Email us at info@horticulturati.com or call the Horticulturati Hotline to leave a voicemail at 347-WAP-Hort.  Mentioned in this episode: Rain lilies (Cooperia drummondii); Paper Garden Workshop; "Elevation to Plan" technique; Plan to Elevation (Leah's sketch); The Artist's Way (1992) by Julia Cameron; Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain (1979) by Betty Edwards; Willy Guhl designs on Artnet; a bio of Guhl; history of flowerpots from the Salem Maritime National Historic Site; "Plastic Pots and the Nursery Industry: Production, Use, Disposal, and Environmental Impacts" (2020) by the APLD; Eric Soderholtz.

    ١ س ٩ د
٤٫٧
من ٥
‫٣٢ من التقييمات‬

حول

Hothouse is a podcast about design, ecology, and the way we garden now. Host Leah Churner sits down with experts and enthusiasts to talk about permaculture, the urban landscape, and how plants sometimes give us the feels. A meeting of the minds for plant people and the horticulture-curious, Hothouse is a different kind of gardening show: less of the how-to and more of the who, what, where, when, and why.