No Dig
World Map
If you would like to be featured on our map, please send some details about your no dig garden or allotment, plus a photo if possible, to anna@charlesdowding.co.uk. Please also share your location!
And if you would be happy for no dig neighbours to get in touch, please let Anna know and she can include your email address in your bio.
Lani Hayward
Near Willowmore
We are in the very dry, very hot Karoo district, close to the town Willowmore in South Africa. I started the no dig way about 2 and a half years ago, and have seen better and better results every single year. It has been unseasonably warm very early in spring this year, with day time temps reaching low 40°C.
I have to put a lot of mulch everywhere, using woodchips for around every patch and the walkways and using from grass clippings to leaves for the beds themselves, and trying to utilise as much natural shade as possible. The garden itself does not look like much but it has given me and the kids so much joy to be able to eat straight from the ground.
And although it does not seem that green to the untrained Karoo eye, compared to the natural landscape, my garden looks like a mini forest!
The photos is of of the garden, it's not much, but it is enough for all 3 of my kids to always get some kind of fresh snack from the garden anytime they feel like it.
Philip Gooding
Seaton Carew, Hartlepool
I've been no dig on my allotment now for three seasons know and I'm getting much better results than previously.
I work two half plots with raised beds.
Stacey High
Great Yarmouth, Norfolk
I have grown produce since I was young as my dad had an allotment. I lived in Cyprus 14 years and started to practice no dig there (following Charles online) and have always made my own compost. I returned to Norfolk in 2020 and joined an older lady at our local allotments who needed help as her husband passed away and she could not manage it alone. I have also been a Master Composter volunteer for Norfolk for 3 years which I love as well as growing my own produce. I am also a member of Garden Organic and Heritage Seeds
Our no dig allotment has been no dig for 25 years. We have cob trees, bramleys, russet, blackcurrants, rhubarb, wild flower beds at each end, a herb patch and grow a variety of vegetables every year. We save seed and use organic seed as much as we possibly can. We have 2 large compost bays and spread this over the land every year about this time. I also have a worm farm which we use as feed (vermicompost and liquid gold!) and also grow comfrey for mulch and liquid feed. We also have a greenhouse and shed.Stacey
My email address is: sgthigh@hotmail.com
Shawn Smith
New Braunfels, Texas
I started my no dig garden in 2023. We live in a regular subdivision with a good size backyard and it was covered in Bermuda grass sod.
I have been following Charles on YouTube since right after he started on there and have learned so much!
Living in South Texas, we have a lot of challenges during the hot summer, but there is a great growing season here since for many years the winter has been mild.
My plan is to fill the entire space with growing beds using the No Dig method because it really works.
Thanks again for all the wonderful information.
Jared and Lauren Bare
Scott Depot, West Virginia
We had a great year of harvests for our first no dig garden (slightly over-zealous with the wood chips).
My wife and mother-in-law got so tired of all the squash and cucumbers we had to give or sell around half of it!
I enjoy all the videos and the learning curve has been steep but immensely enjoyable at the same time. Thanks from across the pond!
Roy Thompson
Terrassa
I have a 12*25m allotment plot of which about half is cultivated.
I've been using NoDig for about 4 years.
The photo shows the allotment in November 2024.
If you'd like to get in touch, my email address is: royinspain5@gmail.com
Joanna White
Nettleham village, north of Lincoln, Lincolnshire
I started no dig properly in 2022 with minimally raised beds and just built a triple composter so I’m now starting to create my own compost (trial and error!) but established the garden with municipal bought compost.
Me email address is: joanna_white@me.com
Happy to chat with local no dig gardeners if there’s interest!
Therese Johnston
County Cavan
We grow and preserve lots of our food. We are just over a year growing here on our 3 acres of land.
Macseain@gmail.com is my email .
Mike and Angelika Curtis
Eagle Point, Oregon
Our 1/8 acre no-dig garden is located in Eagle Point, Oregon which is in the southern part of the state just north of the California border. Winter is very similar to yours in the UK, but our summers are completely different, dry and blazing hot!
We sold a 7 acre market garden which was way too much work and scaled back to this acre plot next door, 1/8th of which we just started in no-dig this past spring. It has exceeded all our expectations and is so much more pleasant and human scaled for my 62 year old body! I grow almost all our fruit and veg for the three people in our family and all comers.
I also have a pantry full of canned goods which will last us all year. Charles's methods are life-changing, we appreciate all the work he does and spread the gospel whenever we can about this amazing method of gardening.
Sam St Clair-Ford
Midhurst, West Sussex
My no dig veggie plot has eight beds surrounded by hollow breeze blocks mostly with box hedging growing in the hollows. (I wouldn't do it like this if I was starting again!) The beds are each about 1m x 2.5m.
We are a retired couple and try to grow most of our fresh veg for the year, except potatoes and onions. I also have a small 8' x 6' greenhouse which is helpful for propagation and tomatoes in summer, spinach in winter.
I have three pallet-sided compost heaps turning the side ones into the centre for spreading in the autumn/winter.
The photo is from July 18th 2024 – climbing French beans on tepee, bed cleared after broad beans, with purple podded peas still going, leeks under mesh cover, parsnips behind. Sweetcorn and squash behind peas.
Daniel Barry
Ratho Mains, Newbridge
Have been no dig for about 6 years in our garden at Ratho Mains now. A farmhouse garden growing food for our large family and some surplus to sell, helping it to break even!
I hate weeding and the damp Scottish summers mean that hoeing is not always an option. Compost beds can be accessed when damp and pulling weeds is generally easier than in compacted, damp soil. In general the yields are more reliable and the plants quicker to establish in the compost. Have also made better use of the greenhouse to establish plants and pop them into the beds when still small or temperatures are low in the spring.
Still have issues with grass weeds and slugs from surrounding hedges and borders, possibly because I don’t always get round to topping up the beds every year. Potatoes do better and have less scab in a dug bed so I do try to keep some space for them too. Even our flowers beds get a good covering of municipal compost as it helps them and the soil structure.
Many thanks to Charles Dowding for all his videos and books, definitely the inspiration behind what we do here.
The photo shows the garden in Oct ‘24.
Pascale Rouquie
Avril
I have just started no dig this spring and I can already see a difference.
I have a vegetable garden of around 100m2 in 1500m2 garden.
Helen Fenwick
Hull, East Yorkshire
We just got our allotment this year in late Spring (2024) and have been no dig from the start. It is just a half plot but we have really enjoyed planting this year - and no dig seems to have really helped against the pests who have attacked neighbours plots. We have four beds the width of the plot we put in, and just added more compost to 8 small beds that were already there - it is still a work in progress but had good returns all summer. On my allotment site there are just over 90 plots - but not found anyone else so far that looks like they are completely no dig - but one the of the neighbours popped their head round and said 'I see you are doing a Charles'! Working the allotment with my 13-year old son Jenson who also loves no dig and all of Charles' videos!
Happy for people to get in touch: H.Fenwick@hull.ac.uk
Richard Gooderick
Hayling Island
I started to No Dig without knowing what it was. I was staying in a cabin on the west coast of Scotland during lockdown. Intuitively the best way to create a vegetable patch seemed to be to collect the leaf/seaweed mulch at high tide and use that to smother the weeds.
Since that time I bought my place on Hayling Island and discovered Charles Dowding's videos.
I am no expert but I have grown a lot of different vegetables including a rather excellent red onion crop: planted after we were flooded with seawater for five days in April this year.
Cécile Meynier
Saint-Jean-Bonnefonds, near Saint-Etienne
My garden is 1200m2 and my vegetable garden is now 12 beds, each bed is 2m2. I choose to use raised beds because the soil is very dry and tall hedges are drying it even more. As my garden is on a slope, it also gives me a way to maintain the soil.
It's the 3rd year of growing vegetables and 'm still learning, but ilove Charles videos, and it helps me a lot understanding the different plantings.
I also use a lot my two compost bays. It's really important for me to enrich my soil for all my plantings.
Thank you for the positive message no dig is sending to the world.
Joanna Bryant
Berkhamsted, Hertfordshire
I am an allotment holder using the no dig method and following all of Charles’s advice.
The allotment is flourishing as a result - third year now! Still lots of weeding and grass edges to cut, but we’re getting there.
Glen Selle
Overland, Missouri
I just built out my first no dig garden bed - see photo.
I’m hoping to create a mixed bed with perennials as well as some vegetables (especially cool season). Excited to get planting on some of those this fall.
My email is: glenselle@me.com
Alice Syson
Dalkeith
I’ve been gardening organically since 2011, using raised beds (so not digging), but I found out about proper No-Dig around 5 years ago. I’ve had limited success with vegetables and didn’t understand why, but I took Charles’s ‘Skills’ book on holiday last year and read it cover to cover, which has been a huge inspiration and education.
Learning about sowing indoors and having things ready to plant out, spacings, and succession planting has already started to make a difference. The wooden sides of my raised beds are rotting, so I’m currently removing them instead of replacing them, which is a huge job, so will supply a photo next year! (2025)
In 2024 I have had great success with potatoes, garlic, rhubarb, spinach, chard, broccoli, cauliflower and broad beans. Other beans are less successful – a challenge for 2025 – and the wet summer has beaten the sweetcorn, but will try again next year. The compost has been enhanced by the purchase of a shredder also.
Katie DiBerardinis
Port Angeles, WA
My husband and I have lived in Port Angeles for 3 years, at which time we put in our vegetable garden.
I tilled the first two seasons, and this season was my first season of No Dig. What a transformation! Significantly less weeds, more beneficial insect activity, and despite a cool start to the summer, my garden is flourishing.
I'm a huge believer in this practice and am ecstatic to keep learning. Thank you so much!
Vesna Lalović
Bajina Bašta, Serbia
Since 2019 I have a polytunnel and I called him “Hiroshima”.
I have a small garden too, near by my polytunnel and in my yard I have about 5 small seeds plots (or sowing bed).
The photo is from 2024.
Doug Zarookian
Fairfield, Connecticut
My garden is located in suburban Fairfield CT, USDA Zone 7 A, not far from where Ruth Stout pioneered her work with No Dig gardening. It’s now 13 years old and consists of 6 raised beds totaling approximately 380 square feet. I found Charles on YouTube in early 2022 and have been “No Dig” ever since. Using his “No Dig” techniques I have, without back breaking labor, expanded my growing area with 3 new beds each being highly productive in their very first year.
I grow a wide range of crops and have benefited greatly from Charles’ teaching and wisdom. He has inspired me to add perennial crops such as asparagus and raspberries and to try my hand at winter gardening. I have purchased two of his online courses and would highly recommend the “From Seed to Harvest” module which has proven to be an invaluable on-going resource for successfully growing a multitude of vegetables.
Thanks Charles!
Heidi Hodgson – Small Time Farm
Fairview, Utah
After following Charles, and reading his books, we finally took the plunge in 2022 to buy a farmhouse on one acre of land in Fairview, Utah, where we have been hard at work building our first no dig market farm.
I have also started and manage our local farmer’s market, just around the corner from our farm. Though it is still small by comparison to many markets around the world, we have over 30 vendors participating now, and we are very proud of our what we are building here in this tiny mountain village.
It is my dream to travel to the UK, to study in person with Charles, in the next year or so, and my hope is to create an incredibly beautiful space on our farm here in Utah, that will provide a platform to educate others about Charles’s practices (which are already blowing the minds ofour local farming community).
heidi@smalltimefarm
www.smalltimefarm.com
Rachael Combs
Dobbs Ferry, New York
I nestled two No-Dig beds along established perennial beds—one in part shade and one in mostly sun—using my recycling pile of cardboard and irrigation that was already in place (because I knew I’d be traveling during the height of the growing season and would not always be here to water).
I put the beds in myself with the help of my nine year-old daughter (and a truck load of compost) and have found this to be the most accessible and even feminist way to garden because building skills and He-Man strength are not necessary for any part of the process. Weeds are negligible, production has been high, and the biggest challenge has been keeping my dog out of the beds!
My first crop of lettuces and greens is already mature and my second sowing of carrots, beets, and peas that I interspersed are now taking off. I also planted some perennial herbs and edged each bed with marigolds to discourage pests and prevent erosion.
Enrica
Frassinoro, Modena
We are on the hills between Emilia-Romagna and Tuscany (Italy). Our altitude is pretty high, 900 meters, so winters are cold (also -10°) but summers can be hot (no more than 30°).
This is my first time having a garden on the hills, as I usually have it in the plane of Modena (very hot and humid weather, perfect for tomatoes and melons).
So... it's an experiment, as the no dig method. At the moment, I find it's a beautiful way of growing vegetables and the garden is healthy and doing well.
Lisa Chase
Larchmont, New York
Lisa is founder of Victory Farms, a collective of small-garden suburban growers producing vegetables and herbs for their neighbours in need.
Here is what she says about her garden:
I’m off to a slow start, because, I think, I used poor quality compost and not enough of it. I’m about to plant the next round of seeds, for fall harvest, after adding a lot of high-quality compost. Keeping hope alive!
Emma Medina-Castrejon
Aldan, Pennsylvania
I love that making a no dig garden was possible in just a couple of hours with the help of two friends. I now get to walk past herbs, flowers and food every day.
It looks beautiful and I’m so excited for the added life to my side yard. I'm proudly displaying the no dig sign at the front for neighbours and passers by to see!
Tracey Shaw
Mamaroneck, New York
Tracey says a few years ago Her backyard was barren and she had no interest in gardening until a neighbour suggested planting a few flowers to brighten up her space and her days.
And then the neighborhood kids taught her about no dig. She loves that it's just mulching, that she’s building soil with compost and she sees how year after year it's getting more and more lush.
Now she's moving on to vegetables. One box at a time and continuing with no dig of course!
Ashley, Colin, Meadow and Maiah Maiarano
Mamaroneck, New York
Colin is 10 and his favourite activity in the garden is checking in on the worms in the compost heap and in the wormery! He loves cucumbers and adores pulling out carrots and potatoes.
Meadow is 6 and says she loves to listen to the sound of the animals when she’s out gardening and composting.
Maiah is 4 and her favourite thing about gardening is aerating the compost with the compost crank and seeing the worms hard at work. She also says she’s no longer scared of the cute little mice that live there.
Ashley says she loves the ease of no dig and knowing that she’s building soil and soil health which leads to healthy dinners for her family. She says gardening has brought them together. They enjoy their nightly watering ritual. And she’s so proud of her kids who help give no dig tours. They teach adults to use their imagination to visualize the universe which is the soil food web under their feet!
Basile and Eleonore Le Bertre
Rye, New York
Basile is 13. He says he loves giving no dig tours with his buddies! He says no dig is simple to understand and explain and he loves building things so putting the compost bays together was great fun.
His mom Eleonore says she loves that with no dig there are way less weeds. She can go away to visit family in France in the summer without being worried she'll come home to a crazy weedy mess! She finds growing food at home is such an enjoyable and educational process that she can then easily share with others thanks to no dig.
Bosque Mallin
El Bolson, Rio negro
My name is Matías Beltrame, I have been researching different ways of cultivating the land for more than fifteen years.
After taking several courses and travelling through various projects I settled in Patagonia, Argentina to promote the farm and agroecology school "Bosque Mallin". This is a project dedicated to research, production and teaching of permaculture techniques, edible forests and no-till agriculture created in 2015.
We receive volunteers in the summer season and improve every year with the work of spreading more efficient and friendly ways of cultivating the soil and all that it provides us with. I am currently translating various books and articles related to agriculture, as well as directing the aforementioned agroecology school.
If you are interested in knowing more about the project, contact us by email bosquemallinpermacultura@gmail.com or through our instagram https://www.instagram.com/bosquemallin.agroecologia/
Isabelle Leger
Salaberry-de-Valleyfield, Quebec
Isabelle is super excited to start her No Dig Garden. She already had everything on hand to start: Cardboard, soil and temporary sides! She promises to update her picture next year!
Monsieur Rene Longtin
Salaberry-de-Valleyfield, Quebec
Monsieur Rene says he's been gardening for 50 years but only found out about no dig 3 years ago when a fellow community gardener lent him Charles' Vegetable Garden Diary.
He says he loved it instantly and that it made perfect sense to him. He figured even though England is not in the same zone, he would just take the best from the booklet and it's been working really well for him in southern Quebec.
He says he's discovering nature and all its advantages with less work for sure!
And, for the first time this spring he convinced the town NOT to systematically rototill all the plots which they always did in the past! From what I understood from him, this spring the town maintenance crew were instructed to just leave the machine out for whoever wanted to use it instead of just doing it to all plots in one go.
Michelle
Larchmont, NY
It's season number one for me and I'm so excited and inspired by what the children taught me on the tour. I'm telling everyone about No Dig!
Lisa and Noah
Mamaroneck, NY
Noah, who is 13, says about No Dig: "Two words. It's fun. It's respectful."
His mom Lisa says: "It's simple and I love that the perennials I started last year came back four times the size! My kids know more about No Dig than I do because they've been teaching others about its benefits. It feels purposeful and mindful."
Normand Leger and Lyne Noël
Salaberry-de-Valleyfield, Quebec
Normand:
I've been a gardener since I was a little boy. I've always been interested and sensitive to soil life.
No dig makes sense. It's less work and soil life works for us. I'm just helping nature do what it already does so well.
Genevieve Pilon
Grande île, Quebec
It's year two of no dig for me. It's simpler and the soil is healthy!
Nicole
Salaberry-de-Valleyfield, Quebec
I love no dig because it's so much easier!
I had an allotment and tried it out there with great success. Now I'm slowly shrinking my lawn at home to grow more food and showing all my visitors.
Stefanie Maska
Glasford, Illinois
I’ve got a 45x65 no dig garden on a clay mix soil with heavy weed pressure. I mulch heavily with ground leaves and grass clippings.
The perimeter is 68” electric netting to keep out deer!
I get 2 loads of fresh horse manure every year to compost.
I’ve been no dig for 8 years. Found Charles on YouTube in 2019, and my way of gardening is forever changed!
İSTEK Kaşgarlı Mahmut Okulları
We are working at schools and design school gardens with kids as a part of Nature and Kid lesson which are we write the curriculum of it.
Simon and Jane Higginson
Ealing, West London
We have a 5 pole (126 sq mtrs) allotment in West London. The site is very heavy clay. We've been no dig for 3 years now and are lucky enough to have space at the bottom of our plot for 3 compost bays each of which is two pallets wide, so we are self-sufficient in compost.
We used to have wooden sides to the beds but got rid of those because they harboured slugs. We now use woodchip for paths in between the beds which we replace annually and add the old path to our compost. The layer of compost is now more than a trowel deep so planting out and weeding are both very easy.
Rich Densem, Greyburn Farm
North Loburn, Canterbury
We supply seasonal vegetables and fruit to our local community from our small market garden.
Having been long-time followers of Charles Dowding's videos and enjoying his online course we have transitioned to no-dig production.
The focus on complex soil biology and health through uncomplicated, enjoyable gardening methods has resulted many hours saved weeding with moisture retention in our hot dry summer, improved soils and beautiful produce with exceptional flavour.
Katherine
Larchmont, NY
I have ONE spot in the garden that has enough sun for vegetables. Right by my front door. Perfect for No Dig. Lazy composting, small gardens and No Dig. Right up my alley.
Mary
Mamaroneck, NY
It's year 2 for me. No Dig makes it easier! No Dig and farm fitness! And I love that the neighborhood kids teach and help me in the garden and with the composting.
Jen and Frankie
Mamaroneck, NY
Jen and Frankie are a mother and daughter duo. Frankie, 13, has this to say about her garden:
"It's easier than a regular garden and I love how we're helping the soil and the planet and NOT disturbing."
Josh and Adele
Mamaroneck, NY
Josh and Adele are a Dad and daughter duo. Josh says:
"I've been gardening for 14 years. My kids are the ones who taught me about no dig and a neighbor about composting. No more $10 holes for a $2 plant! This is SO much easier!"
Nathalie Monin Voelker
Larchmont, NY
I have two front beds and my backyard converted to "No Dig" some years ago.
Sarah Sutcliffe
Levignac de Guyenne, Lot et Garonne
I started no-dig in Somerset in 2014 when we moved to a new house and I heard about Charles when I visited Bruton.
It ticked all my boxes for gardening and so I rushed home and made our 1st garden.
At the end of 2020 we moved to the Lot et Garonne in France and started again. This year we are starting a new area on the other side of the house.
Caroline Edward
Annan, Dumfries and Galloway
1st time allotmenteer in year 3 and my no dig has been very successful, thank-you Charles Dowding.
It was a field which the council kept short and they fenced some new 8mx8m allotments after the covid demand.
It’s a south facing, slightly lumpy exposed slope but with no dig I’m enjoying it very much.. Weeding is easy unlike for my neighbours who just keep on digging, they like digging. I hint at the alternative but no takers so far.
Other than achieving straight edges, the biggest challenge is heavy manure and compost gathering (I’m still making beds, 4 so far), holding the grass back and pigeons and slugs. 🐌 C’est la vie.
Priya
Southwick, near Trowbridge, Wiltshire
I was lucky to get an allotment in Southwick, near Trowbridge, Wiltshire, in February 2021. It was completely covered in weeds on top of 2 layers of plastic. The clay soil underneath was not being used at all. I did not dig it.
After clearing all of the plastic, couch grass (+ very long roots) and other perennial weeds, I planted a couple of beds that summer. I used the no dig method with cardboard and compost, wood chip paths, and had a good harvest.
The subsequent years have been so abundant - I have fed several people with organic fruit and vegetables. Still using canned and frozen food from last year!
I want to spread the word, be in touch with other no diggers. My email address is: mariamargaritaterner@icloud.com
I love my little plot of land - it helps me keep fit and healthy (I am 70 tomorrow!) and I feel I am reclaiming a small area, returning it to nature. There are so many worms and mushrooms!
Thankyou to Charles, I have learnt a huge amount from his videos.
Community Roots
Mount Pleasant Ecopark, near Porthtowan, Cornwall
We are Community Roots, a community veg growing project based on the North coast of Cornwall at Mount Pleasant Ecopark, near Porthtowan.
We have converted one acre of bare agricultural land into a productive, no-dig, market garden. We produce low-impact, locally grown, healthy food for our community, growing without using chemicals in ways which encourage biodiversity and soil health.
We do this with our community, offering volunteering and learning opportunities and hosting activities and events.
Our email address is info@communityroots.uk
Elaine Richardson
St Arvans, Monmouthshire
My plot is spread across a space that comprises either rockery or land that was a previous village water works. The tanks are filled-in with concrete waste blocks, and thinly covered with soil.
Hence I have raised beds and use as much compost as I can, and grow as much food as possible. The greenhouse is on a path! I've been no dig for 8 years and I garden for wildlife, using no chemicals at all.
Claire Fenwick
Colchester, Essex
I took on this old grazing pasture two years ago. I’m growing a mix of herbs, vegetables (perennial and annual) and soft fruits. The soil is a mix of Essex clay, and sandy, gravelly soil. But I haven’t dug it over just added cardboard and manure and the soil is already much improved - with minimal effort, full of creatures and a nice loose structure for pulling out weeds and planting seeds. Unfortunately the weeds are winning at the moment, but I’ll cover with cardboard until I have something to plant out.
The Garden of Ideas
Taradell, Catalunya
In May 2022, I started with a blank canvas at our local high school.
The concept that the school director had was to have an integrated learning experience for the first year students who are around 12 years old. He wanted them to do some learning outside, in English and to learn more about gardening, nature and integrated skills.
I am a recent gardener, having become interested during the pandemic. So, I started reading and learning. Everyone said the most important thing was planning but as I was new, I had no idea what this meant. I grew tomatoes from seed and put them rather randomly. Over time, as I read and learnt more, I became hooked. The garden is now in it's second year with the students and it's a great success. The garden is called 'The garden of ideas' because we experiment a lot. We use a variety of gardening techniques including no dig, square foot gardening and we have a couple of lasagna beds. Local cafe's donate coffee, I get pallets from around the area to make the beds and use recycled materials wherever I can.
As we are in a drought, we have a variety of water systems including ollas, water bottles with wicking systems and holes.
Now, we have 9 homemade beds and we cover these topics during the 3 month rotation with the students. Each group of 3-4 students has a bed of their own, colour coded. They look after the bed for 3 months then make a poster to hand the bed over to the next group. We experiment with different plants growing together and this last group just planned their bed and what they want to plant according to various factors.
We cover:
- companion planting and planting in general
- life cycle of a plant
- support structures - students look at different types, make a prototype then create their own support structure and look at the pros and cons
- water systems - ways of watering, saving water, deep watering and they make their own water systems
- lasagna beds, square metre beds, no dig
- mulch - we collect leaves in autumn to make leaf mulch
- feeding the soil - we grow borage and I collect nettles to make teas for the plants
- testing the soil - red cabbage juice as a Ph tester and we use it to check acidity or alkalinity
- growing seeds and keeping last year's seeds
A few months ago some trees at the school were cut down so we got the chaps to cut the trunks into smaller pieces and now we have an outdoor classroom which is so calming for the students.
It's exciting to be part of a movement :-)
Barbie Silva
Mountain Park, New Mexico
I started this year in January with my little plot of garlic and have slowly added other beds as I go along. I always need more cardboard, more wood chips and of course more compost as I make new beds.
My email address for anyone wanting to get in touch is: floresbarbie150967@gmail.com
Jayne Griffin-Stanton
Wylam, near Newcastle upon Tyne
We are a small community of allotments which belong to the village (Wylam Allotment Association).
We don't have a water supply or electricity, there is a spring and we collect water on the plots.
We are surrounded/protected by mature trees and only about 40m to the banks of the beautiful river Tyne (we swim there when the risk of sewage overflow is low 🫣).
My plot is also just a few metres from the track where Puffing Billy first ran - now a path for people and bikes.
I have been no dig for 10 years. My email address is: jaynestanton03@gmail.com
Judy Johnson
Conroe
I have enjoyed the no dig gardening this last year or so, it prevents my husband from having to drag out the tiller and struggle with it especially as we're aging, but my garden looks beautiful.
We covered it in compost last fall and and tarped the areas that would be planted during the fall and so I'm looking forward to a great summer harvest.
Richard
Leashaw Road, Crich, Derbyshire
I share my allotment with my neighbour, she has about a quarter and I have the rest plus a polytunnel my wife bought me for my birthday last year.
I have Charles's book and calander which are very informative.
I got the allotment 2 years ago, it hadn't been used so it took some clearing but that was before I started watching your YouTube videos.
I've planted some Alderman peas, lettuce, onions from seed, first early potatoes, carrots, parsnips, peppers and I've garlic in the polytunnel as last year outside I lost all 70 ish of them.
Seedings coming on are 4 types of tomao, celery, coriander, parsley, sunflowers, more peas as back up. And starting today ,sweetcorn, spring onions, radish, more coriander and parsley.
Ron Heath
Publow Lane, Pensford, Bristol
This is my second allotment, the first is also on the map - Hillside Allotments on Kenn Road.
it's about 60x20ft. As you can see from the photo, it needs a little work but it's a great opportunity to experiment with no dig. The good thing is that there appears to be no bind weed or mares' tail, perhaps it's too early to tell. So far, the plot has had a rough cut to reduce grass length and I'm now in the process of gathering cardboard (bike boxes from our local cycle shops, these when cut on one corner open out to cover 40sq. ft in one go) to cover the ground which will have the cut grass placed back over the top to help keep the cardboard in place.
Much of the plot for this year will be planted with pumpkins/squash to aid ground cover as a weed suppressant and produce green waste for compost or further ground cover through next autumn/winter, another patch will be experimented with by densely sowing white mustard as ground cover to also supress weed growth.
Hopefully, we may make enough progress over the weeks ahead to plant anything which we think may work in the space left available, our objective if is to bring the plot back to production within 12 months and to see if this can be achieved with as little expense if any as possible whilst limiting the amount of work needed at the same time, apart from seeds and plants which may be to hand.
Pupils at GBS De Pagaaier
Nieuwpoort, Belgium
The pupils of GBS De Pagaaier in Nieuwpoort have embarked on an innovative project by establishing a "No Dig" vegetable garden. This method, which enhances soil health by avoiding disturbance, is particularly suited to the clay soil typical of the Flemish polders.
The garden features a variety of plants carefully chosen by the students, including dahlias, potatoes, onions, peas, culinary herbs, carrots, wildflowers, radishes, and marigolds. Additionally, fruit trees and bushes such as apples, raspberries, and strawberries have been planted.
Plans are in place to cultivate maize, pumpkins, and beans together in the future, as the Maya’s did in the past. A notable contribution from the parent council is a polytunnel that will serve as an outdoor classroom, fostering a hands-on learning environment.
The students are enthusiastic about using this space to grow flowers for sale, aiming to make the garden self-sustaining. Surplus vegetables will also be sold in the school store, integrating practical business skills with agricultural education.
This initiative not only enriches the students' learning experience but also promotes sustainability and community engagement.
Tracy Redpath
Benllech, Anglesey
I'm no dig, or as I like to call it "The Dowding Method" in my parents garden.
1 small greenhouse, 2 (roughly) 2x4 metre beds and a compost heap.
I plant the flower beds with plants for day and night pollinators.
Gary Horwell
Harlow, Essex
I have just retierd and have made a no dig allotment. I was given it in June 2023 and I worked on clearing the plot. Not knowing what the finished layout would be I just cleared it, sort of, flat and added a layer of wood chips all over. My thinking was the wood chip would be working for me suppressing weeds and conditioning the unused soil until I had a plan.
By that point, I had discovered Charles and realised no-dig is a thing. Greenhouse went up and I started laying out the frames, not raised beds, ready for spring this year 2024.
In September 2023, the frames and paths were ready. Down went a layer of card with more wood chip on the paths. A £30 load of horse manure, with free worms, was dropped off. The manure was spread 40 to 50mm in the frames to be left over the winter months to settle.
The beds are now ready to be tickled and planted. The photo is from April 2024 – the front bed is already planted with Charlotte 2nd early. The bed top left was planted with onions and garlic in October 2023 to overwinter. Today as per Charles’s calendar I am sowing sweetcorn in the greenhouse.
Angela Monaghan
Skipton, North Yorkshire
I created an organic, no-dig veg and fruit patch in my garden in 2022 (still feel very much a beginner) and have followed Charles from the beginning. His book, sowing calendar and videos are hugely helpful.
I have 11 beds, a greenhouse, 3 pallet compost bays, plus a couple of terraces nearer the house, which I use for salad and herbs. Last month we created a wildlife pond to encourage frogs, to help control the many slugs we have.
2022, my first year, went pretty well but 2023 was much more difficult and I lost several crops, including all my tomatoes. I remain hopeful!
The photo shows the garden in mid-April 2024. The only things you can see growing outside are garlic, field beans, and raspberries, but lots of seedlings coming on in the greenhouse.
Bertrand Hamel
Goussainville, France
I am a doctor, and gardener ! in an old farm « les avenages »
I started permaculture with covid then no dig for six month with intensive fabrication of compost with complicity of friends sailors of vegetables.
Everything seems to have good start in the garden ( vegetables and flowers ).
Erik van Bommel
Zeist, Netherlands
We have long waiting lists for vegetable gardens in the village whereI live. I was very happy I finally had the opportunity to pick one at a nearby garden association in October 2022.
The garden I picked was full of perennial flowering plants and neglected old apple trees, and was totally overgrown with brambles and bindweed. During my preparation for this garden I came across Charles’ video’s and website and immediately decided that No Dig was the way I wanted to maintain my garden.
I have made 8 no dig beds with wood chip on the paths in this 100m2 allotment. It has provided our family with loads of fresh fruits and vegetables right from the start already.
I learned a lot my first year and got lots to learn in the years to come. But It is really fantastic how easy it is to maintain a no dig garden and it’s a joy to look at and work in!
Carol Procter
Kirkcowan, Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland
My little plot is doing well, never bought any veg last year.
It can be difficult due to my crocked body, but it gives me immense pleasure.
My email address is for anyone wishing to get in touch is: carolprocter123@gmail.com
Unze
Driebergen-Rijsenburg, The Netherlands
My No dig garden in my own backyard is about 100 m2 for about 4 years now.
The difference between the starting point and right now is astonishing!
Before I started my Nodig garden it almost looked like a sandy desert with no soil life. After 4 years it is a garden with a healthy soil full of life, buzzing with insects and some very tasty veggies (almost) year round.
Every creature, from bacteria and funghi, worms and ground dwelling insects, frogs and toads to birds and even slugs, has a place in this little but wonderfull backyard No dig ecosystem!
Louise Collins
Chatham, Kent
I have a no dig garden and a no dig allotment 3.6 miles away (completely different soils).
I've had my allotment since 2006, but halved it about 4 years ago. A peaceful haven.
Julie Breton
Bonsecours, Québec, Canada
We have 2.5 acres, yet not all cultivated, we have around 3000 square feet now plus a 4 seasons passive growing dome (33 feet diameter - shown in the photo).
This is a family project with a community goal, work in progress.
Chris Southall and Rosie Dodds
Clacton-on-Sea
We structure our garden on organic, no-dig, Permaculture principles, recycling our rainwater and grey water through a reed bed.
Our home uses solar energy and wood for cooking, space and water heating and we generate solar electricity.
We grow and eat our own vegetables, fruit, eggs and honey.
Our website link is www.ecodiy.org
Lleu Williams
Cardiff
I’ve been practicing no dig for six years now (I was doing it out of laziness before I realised what it was).
However I’ve been practicing it properly since being on my allotment in August 2021, and expanded to my second plot in March 2023.
More than happy for people to get in touch if they are local, my email is: lleu.no.dig@gmail.com
Judy
Langley, British Columbia, Canada
The photo shows my winter garden with just a few leeks, parsnips and walking onions left to harvest.
I have narrow beds and wide paths as i am in my eighties and need space to walk and vegetables easy to reach.
I have been gardening for many years and No Dig has produced my best results.
Thanks for all the information.
Adeline Provent, Head of Projects and Operations at the Green Flower Foundation
Bishoftu, Ethiopia
The Green Flower Foundation is supporting Bishoftu Polytechnic College (BPC) in providing training in organic farming practices to TVET students and local communities.
We are very much interested in the no-dig technique. The BPC garden is a demonstration site for students and we wish to explore different technologies in line with organic farming.
Photo to follow once we have started our no dig practice!
My email address for anyone wishing to get in touch is adeline@greenflowerfoundation.org
Aiden Bertolino-Haley
Lucerne, California
I am a gardener in northern California. I have spent the last couple years developing a no-dig/no-till vegetable garden in my backyard.
I have documented it on my instagram: aidens_gardening.
Eileen Alexander
Lilienthal
As a follower of permaculture it's not far to no dig.
Clear a piece of land and put down cardboard and old wool carpets and cover them with homemade compost. Works a treat.
Now I not only gather flowers,fruits, nuts and herbs from my forest garden, but am growing vegetables that I sowed as seeds following Charles Dowding's advice very closely. xx
My email address is: Eileenak32@t-online.de
Clair Roser
Betws Ifan, Wales
We started our no dig in a very small back garden near Heathrow Airport!
Inspired by the ease of No Dig and a longing for the countryside, we moved to Wales and bought an 8 acre small holding. We are developing our vegetable garden and have converted from grass, a poly tunnel, multiple outdoor beds and an orchard, all on about a third of an acre.
We have also planted over 2500 trees/hedging, mostly using a slit planting and no dig mulch method.
Derek Muggleton
Burton Latimer, Northamptonshire
I have been operating no dig for five years on my allotment. The plot size is about 90ft x 60ft so it is not a standard allotment size, the plot belongs to the local Baptist Church where I am a member. I have been running the allotment for around 16 years, to feed my own family and friends and to supply the local food bank with fresh veg when I can.
I have also tried to help my friends with gardens and allotments with no dig trials, with good results. I collect coffee grounds from a local garden centre to help with composting and recently found that the pile of grounds left on my allotment for a few months have been taken over by thousands of worms, who seem to enjoy the coffee. I am now trying to work out how to make a wormery using the coffee grounds, and waste food from our house.
I take in grass cuttings, prunings and household food remains from 5 other households/friends and I hope to be almost self sufficient in the next year or so (the cost of having a compost bin in Kettering is now £45 per year so I am saving just under £250 for my friends who receive donations of fresh veg in season).
The photo is from March 2024 – plantings are a bit sparse but most of the beds are ready for the new plantings. I have beetroot, lettuce, Brussels, peas ,onions, leeks and various flowers in the greenhouse growing well and should be out in the ground in a week or so. As I am retired I can spend most of my spare time at the allotment.
Violetta Faulkner
Orford, New Hampshire
I have been gardening for many years, establishing a new garden every time I move. The photo shows my latest vegetable garden, started in 2020, and the most successful. Compared to others, it was much easier to get going, and it is very easy to maintain. I have never had such a great abundance of produce, and enjoyed such good health of my plants.
I owe a great deal of gratitude to Charles Dowding for his generous spirit, incredible knowledge, and amazing website where I took one of his courses. Just when I thought I knew how to grow plants, I was introduced to a great deal of new, and well practiced, information. The No Dig method of gardening is all joy!
Tara and Brian
St. Mary's, Ontario, Canada
We live in Canada in the Summers on a Smallholding near Stratford, Ontario - Zone 6a.
We have had great success with the no-dig method of growing! We grow Veg and fruit on about an acre which includes an Orchard with heirloom varieties of Apple and Pear Trees.
Our farm is organic and pesticide-free, and we grow primarily for ourselves,though when we have an excess, we then sell locally.
You can visit our Facebook page at: https://www.facebook.com/pottersburrowfarm
Tessa Pritchard
London, SE27
From a rectangle of grass I have transformed my garden to a flower paradise.
I wish I had done it the No Dig way. Now the beds get a mulch of homemade compost most years.
(My no dig allotment is also on the map.)
Tessa Pritchard
London, SE21
I have had Plot 470 at Rosendale Allotments, since 2012. Started off in the way I learned from my Dad by digging the whole thing.
Over the years I have changed how I look after it and in the last three years have been cultivating it the No Dig way!
Last year (2023) I had the best crops I have ever had with no deep cracks when the clay soil inevitably dries out.
Many other plot holders are now going No Dig.
Kim van Megen
Nieuwstadt, the Netherlands
My garden is organic and no dig. We moved in two years ago and after extensive renovations inside, only just started to convert the garden last year with a cold greenhouse and a no dig veggie bed inside our family garden.
This year I am making two more no dig gardening beds 🎉 and I can’t wait to recreate the no dig set up I had at our previous house.
The photo shows the start up veggie beds (they’re only small raised ones, the big beds are not yet ready).
Ximena and Marc
Regensburg, Germany
We started our no dig garden in 2022 (after a few failed attempts the 2 years previous because we didn’t follow no dig!)
We have a normal (rented) house in the suburbs with a generous garden area in which we created 6 full size beds and a couple of small patches here and there.
We also added 7 hens to our lot for the most amazing eggs and we practice electroculture!
In 2023 we had the amazing opportunity to meet and interview Charles at Homeacres for Ximena’s YouTube channel!
We are happy to be contacted on ximena@ximenadelaserna.com - we need to meet our 2 no dig neighbours on the map!
Annie Cunningham
Wellington, New Zealand
My garden has been No Dig since the first lockdown. I did some of Charle's courses, Skills Growing and From Seed to Harvest.
I started with 4 original garden beds and now have 14 of various sizes. We've had very high winds all summer here in Wellington which has kept knocking the plants back. Very dry and temps in the high 20's.
I'm almost self sufficient in compost and my wormary is doing very well too.
My vision is impaired but I've found using the no dig method, there are generally less weeds unless I miss them, however, I now think of weeds as compost inputs.
Blooming Green
Linton, Maidstone, Kent
Blooming Green was founded by cousins Bek & Jen and has since grown into a happy team of staff and volunteers who, together, form the unique business that exists today. Established on an acre of ground that was once a Bramley orchard, the plot at LoddingtonFarm is still at the heart of the business. Organic, no-dig and what many people call their ‘happy place’… we love sharing our flower plot with others.
For more information visit our website, follow us on social media or sign-up to our newsletter online
Blooming Green, Loddington Farm, Linton, Maidstone, Kent ME174AG
E: theshed@bloominggreenflowers.co.uk T: 01622 298676
www.bloominggreenflowers.co.uk
Four Acre Farm
Ringwood, Hampshire
Four Acre Farm is a Community Interest Company in Ringwood, Hampshire. We are setting up a weekly veg box scheme for local residents, selling in local shops and supplying restaurants.
We are caretakers of 4 acres of farmland and have already planted over 4 thousand trees to form a new native mixed species hedgerow, 130 fruit trees for a new orchard and sown wildflower seeds for the meadow and orchard to create permanent ground cover .
Our goal is to repair soil, create new & diverse habitat for thousands of species & provide chemical free food for the community. We want to show people how food can be grown locally with care and how they can be a part of the story.
Our methods grow alongside natural systems not against them. We are a No Dig farm and do not use any pesticides, herbicides , fungicides, artificial fertilisers or slug pellets!
Natuurboerderij KipEigen | Eva Vos & Ellen Bosgoed
Loosdrecht, The Netherlands
On 1.872 m2 we grow 60 variaties of vegetables and herbs. This no-dig garden is part of our regenerative farm, that started in 2018. The no-dig garden was added in 2023. In 2024 we deliver veggie-bags for 120 people and fresh eggs for 200 people. We also have a small food forest, an orchard and peat meadow, with some turkeys and sheep. Chickens play an important role in our garden. They clear new garden beds, and ‘rake’ the beds in between crops in chicken tractors. We have a small polytunnel, where we grow all our plantings from seed, after the chickens cleared it during winter. Their compost provides extra warmth.
In the market garden, the first meter of each bed is reserved for flowers/herbs/perennials, we have a wildlife pond and we started planting hedgerows. We see no-dig gardening as a way of creating synergies between nature and farming: nature can prosper while we produce healthy food for the local community. And during that we can regenerate ecosystems! We are very passionate about that and share our knowledge and experience in our courses, workshops, lectures and via consultancy.
Name: Natuurboerderij KipEigen | Eva Vos & Ellen Bosgoed
Location: The Netherlands, Loosdrecht (Nieuw-Loosdrechtsedijk 24, 1231 KX)
Instagram: @kip.eigen
Facebook: KipEigen
Tom Green – Round the Field
Bucklebury, West Berkshire
My market garden is called Round The Field.
It’s a family run no-dig market garden in organic conversion supplying West Berkshire.
The website is www.roundthefield.co.uk
Ricky Lubelei
Basecamp Explorer, Maasai Mara, Narok county, Kenya
I am interested in no dig farming technique.
My garden is at Basecamp Explorer hotel, Maasai Mara, Kenya.
I do farming and I asking you to connect me with other no dig farmers in Kenya or Africa.
My email address is: rlubelei@gmail.com
James Aufenast
Muswell Hill, London
I have a no-dig, half plot at Muswell Hill Golf Course allotments in one of the greener parts of north London.
It’s a tiny space compared to the kitchen garden at Chiswick House that I used to manage – but it still provides plenty of delicious, organic produce for my family to enjoy.
Elizabeth Turner
Vancouver Island, BC
A little about my garden and journey to create Joy Acres.
When I was about 12 years old, my family had moved into a new farm and my dad decided to bring the old veggie patch back to life which sparked my interest in growing food immediately. I have never lost this love and have been honing my skills as an adult for the last ten years.
A few years ago I stumbled upon Charles’ videos and started employing a number of his techniques: multi sowing, fleece covers, moving away from wood sided beds. These techniques helped me gain some advantages in a perpetual battle against slugs in the soggy Pacific Northwest Climate of Vancouver Island. I was hooked!
I am fascinated by soil. I am honing my composting skills as I would like to be more regenerative in that regard. I have the great fortune of having a large piece of land in the city and I have converted all of my gardening approaches to adopt the No Dig approach.
Of course, I love growing fresh vegetables. More than anything though, I do it for the joy. I do it because being in the garden, working hard, moving, tending to plants and snacking on veggies is my happy place. I am meant to be a farmer and Joy Acres truly is a dream come true. I
I am happy to connect with other gardeners in my area. My email address is: elizabethmturner1@gmail.com
Alexandra Cretu
Petrovaselo, Timiș, România
I am 42 years old, never gardened in my life until last year when I began killing seedlings. This year I have gotten much better, thank God. Bought LED lights and your sowing calendar, yay!
I am the happy owner of a weekend getaway in Petrovaselo village, Timiș county of România. So I visit my future garden only 3-4 days a month. For now!
I am so grateful and inspired by Mr. Charles' work and your entire team. I want to do my part and help make no dig popular in my little part of the world.
My email address is alexandra.cretu@ymail.com
Darren Stephens
Freshford, Bath, Somerset
After quitting my profession as a full-time chef in 2020 I pursued a career in horticulture.
I was fortunate enough to have the opportunity to create a kitchen garden from scratch in a field next to the hotel to grow food for the kitchen. I knew very little at the time but after watching just a few of Charles’s YouTube videos I knew how I was going to go about it and he has been an inspiration ever since.
I am now growing a large variety of fruit, veg and cut flowers using organic no-dig methods on nearly 1/3 of an acre that go directly to the hotel and chefs within minutes of being picked.
Mike Blake
The Blackdown Hills
I began my no dig journey about seven years ago after attending one of Charles’s courses. I have six 3x2m raised beds for veg, a 7x5m fruit cage and a greenhouse which incorporates an open bed for winter leaves and tomatoes, cucumbers and aubergines in summer.
I work the veg beds pretty hard and try to add 5cm of a manure based mulch once or twice a year. I’m fully organic using just nematodes and netting for crop protection. I make my own compost, but use this on other areas of the garden as it doesn’t get hot enough to kill weed seeds and I don’t have the time or inclination to eliminate these from the heap!
As I’m not far from Homeacres, the climate is similar though with slightly cooler days as we’re 600ft up in the Blackdown hills.
No dig is a revelation in terms of cropping reliability, yields and labour saving. I have eliminated most perennial weeds and it’s relatively easy to keep on top of annual weeds. Spring is the fallowest period and I cover bare areas with cardboard to suppress weed growth.
This all sounds terribly earnest, but no dig has made gardening much more fun and rewarding!
Photos of no dig veg plot in March 2024 (not looking at its best!)
Joe Gaudette
Manchester, Connecticut
I’m an avid follower of Charles. This is my 5th year gardening using the No Dig practices. In addition to the videos, I purchased Charles’s Diary. I’ve learned so much and have never enjoyed gardening more!
My site consists of ledge and sand and is wooded - extremely thin soil. I began 4 years ago by chopping down the small trees & brush and using Charles’s method of covering with plastic for about 6 months. As you know, it’s truly amazing how much can be grown using the no dig method even in poor soil with only about 7 hrs of sunlight around the summer solstice.
I'm continually amazed at how few weeds there are and the strong growth of the plants. I grow most all of the veg we eat. I’m now working on having more veg stored during the off season and saving more seeds.
Like Charles I continually do trials for different things and this past year was to have some salad greens over winter outside with no covering or protection. To my amazement they survived, even through 12"-15" of snow! Our weather is traditionally zone 6a but I tracked temperature this winter and we're now tracking more like zone 8a! .....global warming.....
A tip for folks around the northeast US - I use 'Bumper Crop' organic compost to start my seeds. It's advertised as a soil amendment and not for seed starting but it works great - strong root and plant growth. As Charles mentions in his videos, good seed starting compost is not inexpensive but it works really well.
The photo shows the garden in June 2023.
My email is: gaudettejoe52@gmail.com
Diane Rhodes
Loughton, Essex
I have been using the no dig method for about 12-13 years with excellent results. It is also a lot easier now that I am 80!
I usually get selected as in the top 10 of allotments on our site and even Commended or Highly Commended from all the allotments in Loughton, Essex.
The allotment is on a steep hill and is the second oldest allotment site in continuous cultivation since 1813!
I put the black landscape fabric down so I can use my kneeler.
Tom Green - Round the Field
Bucklebury, West Berkshire
My market garden is called Round The Field, www.roundthefield.co.uk