african keyhole garden

When I first came across a short video of the African Keyhole garden, I was immediately struck with optimism and enthusiasm regarding their potential. This was a growing system that could be put together out of discarded materials, it was a very efficient and ecologically sound system, and it produced results.

What is an African Keyhole garden?

An African keyhole garden is basically a small scale intensive raised bed growing system that is fed through a central composting system which is made in the design of a basket to allow water and nutrients to access the soil where the plants are growing.

How do you make one?

Making an African Keyhole garden is very simple; you will need some discarded bricks or rocks, either a compost bin, or some wire mesh to make a cylindrical composter from. Make a circle with the bricks, stack them 4 high if you are laying them in the manner of which you would when making a brick wall, or you can stack them three high if you choose to stack the bricks on their side. You need to make your brick circle big enough to accommodate a composter in the centre of the circle, and you need to ensure that your outstretched arm just is able to reach the composter in the centre; this will mean that you are able to reach all of the crops that grow in this system. You will need to make a break in the circle to enable you to walk up to the composter and access it directly, if you check the picture of my own African Keyhole system below, you will see what I mean about where the break in the circle needs to go.

If the soil that you are putting your African keyhole system onto is of very poor quality then you will need to add more than just compost. In Africa where some of the soil is of very low nutritional quality they add a few rusty broken up tins at the bottom of the keyhole system to provide iron for the plants, they also add wood ash to provide potassium for their growing system and layers of carbon based materials such as cardboard and paper and green waste. please check the video link out at the end of this article for complete visual instructions on how to make one.

How do African Keyhole systems work?

through-the-keyhole-gardenThe composter in the centre of the keyhole system provides a number of important inputs for the system, firstly it provides nutrients from the materials that are composting in the centre of the system, and as a result of watering the system through the composter this ensures that more valuable minerals and nutrients go from the composter through to the plants that live in the system. The central composter also generates heat which in turn warms the soil up in the system which aids the growth of the plants.

For a permanent culture

African keyhole growing systems would be an integral part of providing a resilient and long lasting food supply in a future with little or no oil. These systems also provide intensive low carbon local food production within a limited space due to the levels of warmth and fertility that they are able to generate. In terms of a home based food production system that recycles kitchen waste, the African Keyhole system is the most simple and direct way of combining the two, as this system does not work by composting separately as is the case with conventional gardening and home food production methods, the composting and growing a part of one interactive system that produces a multitude of benefits.

Steve