Greening the Games Project
Enviro Doctor sourced
from its suppliers tubs (from Garden City
Plastics),
troughs (from Container Connection), plants
(from Andreasens Green), wire
supports (from Whites Wire and Wire Mesh
Products), Sphagnum Moss (from
Austmoss), Easy-Mulch (from Hayward Stock
Feeds) and bark (from ANL).
There were experienced
several areas of potential difficulty which
were
addressed through the development of the
unit.
The wire gauge had to
be sufficient to hold the weight of the
fill and
flowering units when fully wet. There was
discovered to be a very
significant weight variation depending on
the water penetration of the
sphagnum ranging from 0.4 Kg to 3.8 Kg.
The flex capacity of the
wire allowing for sufficient depression
of the
flower units had to be matched with sufficient
tensile strength to carry the
dead weight of the material as it changed
in moisture absorption.
Understanding the changing
character of the Sphagnum through the range
of
its absorption took a little getting used
to however it proved to be the key
element in the success of the units.
The plant material proved
more difficult especially with the late
failure of
several of the species and late variations
to the foundation material.
An hundred and forty millimetre
(140mm) unit flowering plant size was
selected with a seventy five litre capacity
feature planting. We were able
to accommodate the larger one hundred litre
unit as we were with a four
hundred millimetre (400mm) container grown
unit but found limitations with
the smaller forty five Litre (45Lt) capacity
unit.
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Sizygium leumanii and
australe 'Southern Form', /
Eucalyptus maculata, displayed in coppice
form,
Elaeocarpus eumundii,
Acmena smithii,
Ficus benjamina, topiaried,
Waterhousia elegans and
Howea forsteriana. |

Howea
forsteriana
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Bracteanthe spp.
Brachycombe sp
Rhodanthe sp.
Anigozanthus spp. |
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