When we think of organic gardening and permaculture  we tend to 
conjure up images of leathery-skinned bearded warriors who dedicate  
their lives to working long days in their vegetable plots.  Whilst this 
may be a wonderful way to live  your life, it doesn’t suit the average 
suburbanite with a full-time job and a  hefty mortgage.  
Growing food is typically seen as either an  art form or damned 
hard work.  It’s no  wonder very few people do it on a serious level.  
But what if a technique came along that was  so easy and so prolific 
that even the busiest corporate executive could grow a  significant 
portion of their family’s food in less time than it takes to drive  to 
the shops.  Ecological gardening just  might be the answer.  In my 
experience, it’s  the ultimate modern-day convenience veggie plot.
I didn’t have a light bulb moment that  said, “Ah, so this is 
ecological gardening”.   My vegetable garden was no different to anybody
 else’s for many years  until I made a few changes.  The first  and 
probably most significant was squeezing far more plants into a given  
area.  The second change was to never dig  the soil.  And thirdly, I 
upgraded my  composting system.  Once these simple  strategies were in 
place I noticed the garden taking on a life of its own.  Weeds virtually
 stopped growing in the beds  and plants started living much longer.   
The garden could endure longer periods without water, I was yielding far
  more than I ever had and I could harvest every day of the year.   I 
wanted to know what was happening at a  scientific level and applied my 
university training as an environmental  scientist to understand why I 
was getting such amazing results.  I had to completely let go of all my 
 preconceived ideas as a gardener and look at the plot through the eyes 
of an  ecologist.  After some time I realized  that I had created an 
ecosystem made up of edible plants, and it behaved in  exactly the same 
way as a natural habitat.  I became more of an observer than a gardener 
 and the role of head gardener was pulled from under my feet as nature 
took up  the reins.  
                      
Employ Nature, she works for free
                        The  wonderful thing about nature is that she 
works tirelessly, 24 hours a day,  seven days a week.  Nature follows 
very  simple laws and works in the same way, on any system, anywhere in 
the  world.  When we create an ecological  garden we are creating a 
living, breathing ecosystem.  By doing this we get nature working for 
us,  and not against us, and her great stamina works in our favour.
      
Niche  Spaces and why they are important
       A pristine ecosystem is made up of  thousands of living and 
non-living components all coexisting in a given  area.  Each living 
component occupies its  own niche space and the role of the niche space 
is very important to understand  when creating an ecological garden.  
Let’s  look at an example.  Imagine a giant  rainforest tree crashing to
 the ground after standing tall for hundreds of  years.  Such a large 
tree would have  filled an enormous niche space.  Lying in  the soil, 
hundreds of dormant seeds spring to life, desperately fighting for  
their opportunity to occupy the best real estate in the forest: the 
empty niche  space.  The niche space is quickly filled  and harmony is 
restored.  
When we look at a traditional vegetable  garden with this type 
of insight, what we see is a very unnatural system.  There is very 
little diversity and a lot of  empty niche spaces.  Nature enforces her 
 will on vegetable gardens in exactly the same way she does a 
rainforest, and  this means that empty niches spaces will be filled as 
quickly as possible.  However, in a traditional vegetable garden there  
are no desirable seeds waiting to fill the niches spaces, so weeds fill 
them instead.  
The solution is to create a garden that has  tightly filled 
niche spaces so that weeds don’t have any opportunities.  We can do this
 by planting the garden very  tightly with a diverse range of plants of 
differing shapes and  characteristics.  The result is a dense  
jungle-like planting arrangement that can yield an unbelievable amount. 
 The denseness also creates a highly protected  micro-climate.  This 
ideal growing  environment causes your plants to last much longer.  
Greens don’t bolt to seed as soon as a hot  spell hits and cold 
sensitive plants are more protected as well.
How  to manage an ecological garden
       Managing an ecological garden is different  to managing a 
traditional vegetable garden.   With an ecological garden, there is far 
less to do.  As you become the observer and allow nature  to take over 
as head gardener, you will notice that the garden is in a  continual 
state of gentle change, just like a natural ecosystem.  It can be 
difficult for the traditional  gardener to stand back and observe as we,
 human beings, like to control  things.  This style of gardening calls  
for a great deal of faith in natural laws. Sure, there will be times 
when you  need to step in and direct the system in a certain way; 
however that is almost  always because a certain plant species is 
getting too successful and the system  is at risk of loosing diversity. 
 
                      
Natural Pest Management
                        The dense  mixed-up nature of the ecological 
garden creates a natural form of pest management.  Pests generally 
locate their target plant  species using sight or smell.  Imagine  how 
much more difficult it is to see your target plant when its outline is 
blurred  by a sea of green.  And how on earth  could you smell your 
target plant when there are so many conflicting  smells.  
      
                      
No More Need to Rotate Crops
                        Crop  rotation is practiced by dedicated 
gardeners for a very good reason.  Different plants require different 
minerals  from the soil, in different proportions.   After an area has 
been planted with a certain species, the soil can be  left depleted of 
certain minerals.  To  lessen the effects of this depletion a different 
crop will be planted in the  area the following year.  In addition, many
  gardeners rest their garden beds periodically and grow a green manure 
crop,  usually a legume such as Lucerne  or field peas.  These plants 
add nitrogen  from the atmosphere through a process called 
nitrogen-fixing.  However, crop rotation simply isn’t necessary  with 
ecological gardening because the mixed-up planting arrangement 
counteracts  the effects of mineral depletion because a single species 
doesn’t dominate a  single area.  Likewise, green manure  crops are not 
necessary as nitrogen is topped up in two ways.  Firstly, through 
planting edible legumes such  as peas and beans within the jungle-like 
mass.   And secondly, by the addition of compost to the surface of any 
bare  areas.
      
Composting 
       Compost is an important part of the ecological  garden and is a 
very valuable commodity.   To me, composting is a way of building 
valuable nutrients that will, one  day, feed me and my family.  The 
average  person buys food from a shop, consumes it and then sends the 
waste away.  This is simply buying nutrients, taking what  you need for 
that precise moment, and disregarding the remainder.  It’s a nutrient 
flow that only flows in one  direction, like a fancy car roaring down 
the road.  You admire the car for a moment, but after a  second or two, 
it’s gone.
My goal is to slow down the car and then  get it to do a 
U-turn.  I want to keep  the nutrients within my property where I can 
capitalise on them.  By doing this, I am able to use the nutrients  
again, so I don’t have to buy them for a second time.  In effect, I am 
creating a system that is  self-sustainable.  Composting is a  vehicle 
in which we are able to create a nutrient cycle within our property.  We
 are part of that cycle because we consume  the nutrients when they are,
 for a brief time, in a useful form.  Then they return to the compost 
and slowly  make their way into another useful form where we consume 
them again.  This cycle can go on and on indefinitely.  
                      
Throw away the hoe
                        Natural  ecosystems don’t require gardeners with
 shovels and hoes to come along every  season to turn their soil, and 
neither does an ecological garden.  However, it is best not to walk on 
the garden  beds as this will cause unnecessary compaction.   Of course,
 this requires the installation of permanent pathways that are  
positioned in a way that the gardener can obtain access to the plot.  
       Digging  soil upsets the soil structure which, in turn, 
reduces the soil’s ability to  pass on valuable nutrients to plants.   
The loss of soil structure also reduces the soil’s ability to hold  
water.  Developing good soil structure is  actually the best water 
conserving technique I know, and when practiced in conjunction  with a 
dense planting arrangement creates a holistic soil ecology management 
plan.  A dense planting arrangement will shade the  soils surface, 
stopping surface crusting which causes runoff and nutrient  depletion.  
Developing good deeper  structure will allow soil organisms to do what 
they do best – turn organic  matter into available plant nutrients.   
      
Self  Seeding
       If you are lucky enough to visit a pristine  rainforest you will 
probably be awestruck by the towering canopy.  However, the future of 
the rainforest lies in  the soil in the form of seeds – tiny cells of 
life waiting for their  opportunity to prosper.  If we are going to  
create an ecological garden then we have to make sure it too, has a  
future.  By allowing some plants to go to  seed, we can build up seed 
stores, just like the rainforest.  And like the rainforest, we should 
aim to  have thousands of seeds of many varieties spread right across 
our plot.  Most of these seeds will never germinate  because in the 
ecological garden the niche spaces are so tightly filled that  
opportunities for new life are limited.   However, eventually a plant 
will be eaten and an empty niche space will  appear.  If we have 
thousands of seeds  lying dormant, the chances of the niche space being 
filled with something  desirable are pretty good
                      
Who should set up an ecological garden?
                        Absolutely  everyone from farmers to inner-city 
townhouse dwellers.  It may seem strange, but if you have never  grown 
food before then you are, in some ways, at an advantage.  Experienced 
gardeners may like to see  themselves as adopting some ecological 
gardening techniques, but find it  difficult to let go of the need to 
control the system.  Like all industries, the gardening industry  can 
get stuck in doing things a certain way and most seasoned gardeners will
  inevitably over-work the garden.  As a  species, human beings 
prospered when we learnt to cultivate food using tilling  and other 
traditional agricultural methods, so it’s difficult to turn back to  
where we came from - nature.  It might  even feel like a step in the 
wrong direction.   But if we can let go of our need to control every 
living thing on the  planet, and start to work with nature, we actually 
gain more control by being  able to grow food more efficiently than ever
 before.  It’s a paradox - but it works!
      
Setting  up an ecological garden
       Any existing vegetable garden can be  converted into an 
ecological garden.  Firstly,  get your pathways laid out so that you 
never have to walk on your garden beds  again.  After that, get a good 
composting  system going and apply it to the soil surface.   Then plant 
densely and diversely.  
If you don’t have a vegetable garden, my  suggestion would be to
 create a classic Esther Deans ‘no dig’ garden to get you  started.  
Once erected, simply follow the  ecological gardening method.  
                      
Mini-ecological garden
                        If you live  in a unit or townhouse with no soft
 ground you could create a mini-ecological  garden using a series of 
containers.   Polystyrafoam boxes with drainage holes are ideal.  Fill 
them with good potting mixture and  arrange them side by side using as 
many as you can fit onto your verandah or  patio.  Rather than 
developing a large  composting system, you could purchase a worm farm 
and add the worm casts to the  soil surface as fertilizer.  Once the  
boxes are set up, simply adopt the ecological gardening method. 
      
The  Ecological Gardening Method – the key principles.
- Plant densely
- Plant a diversity of plants within a given area
- Get a good composting system set up and use the compost as a       surface mulch on bare patches
- Allow some plants to go to seed
- Only interfere with the system when a single species of plant
       over-dominates and simply scratch out excess plants when they are
       small.  
 Growing food is not hard work, especially  when you have nature 
helping you 24/7.  A  small area can provide you with such a bounty of 
food, saving your family  thousands of dollars per year.  Most of  us 
don’t have much time to spend in the garden, including me.  I only 
invest around eight hours of time per  year to growing my food, and 
although I live on a small farm I only use a space  of around 6 x 6m.  
That’s an area that  could fit into many suburban backyards several 
times over.  The most wonderful thing about this method is  that I know I
 can ignore my vegetable garden for months and it won’t miss a  beat.  
So, if you believe growing food is  only for tough bearded warriors with
 lots of land and time, think again.  Ecological gardening could be just
 the thing  for you.