🌳 Understanding Food Forests
What Is an Urban Food Forest and How Can You Be Part of One in the UK?
An urban food forest is not just a garden. It is a layered, productive ecosystem that grows food, supports biodiversity, and brings communities together. RunRig Garden is building them across the UK with landowners, skilled growers, and permaculture experts.
The Basics
Layered Design
Food forests mimic natural forest structures with multiple layers: canopy trees, understory trees, shrubs, herbaceous plants, ground cover, and root crops. Each layer serves a purpose and supports the others.
Self-Sustaining
Once established, food forests require minimal input. The diverse plant community creates its own soil fertility, pest control, and water retention — reducing the need for external inputs like fertilizers or pesticides.
Community Focused
Food forests are built to feed communities. They produce diverse crops year-round and create gathering spaces where people can learn, collaborate, and share in the harvest together.
How to Get Involved With a Food Forest in the UK
Land Owner
Share your unused garden and let it become a food forest.
Skilled Grower
Access land and grow food even if you have no garden of your own.
Permaculture Mentor
The Seven Layers
Land Owner
Share your unused garden and let it become a food forest.
Skilled Grower
Access land and grow food even if you have no garden of your own.
Permaculture Mentor
01
Canopy Layer
02
Understory Layer
03
Shrub Layer
04
Herbaceous Layer
05
Ground Cover Layer
06
Root Layer
07
Vertical Layer
Built to Last
Decades
What Makes a Food Forest Different From a Regular Garden?
| Aspect | Regular Garden | Urban Food Forest |
|---|---|---|
| Planting Cycle | Annual replanting required every season | Perennial system, plants regrow and expand each year |
| Structure | Single layer planting (beds or borders) | Seven layers of plants working together |
| Inputs | Relies on synthetic inputs and regular watering | Self sustaining once established |
| Production | Primarily decorative or small scale produce | Significant food production from a relatively small space |
| Maintenance | One person maintains it alone | Collaborative, shared by a team with different skills |
Why Food Forests Matter
Regenerative
They improve soil health, sequester carbon, and restore biodiversity over time.
Water Efficient
Layered design and ground cover reduce water needs by up to 50% compared to traditional gardens.
Low Maintenance
Once established, food forests need minimal weeding, watering, or pest management.
Community Building
They create spaces for people to gather, learn, and share in the abundance together.
How to Get Involved With a Food Forest in the UK
Land Owner
Share your unused garden and let it become a food forest.
Skilled Grower
Access land and grow food even if you have no garden of your own.