Friday, August 15, 2008

Vegetable Potager

I Know this is very English and formal, but i love the all together nature with flowers thrown in and rambling over the oblesks















This design can turn even a suburban backyard into a potager (loosely translated as "a garden to make a pot of soup"). Gravel paths divide four rectangular beds, anchored by a central terra-cotta oil jar. Each bed is about 6' wide and 8' long, so you can reach in for weeding or harvesting without having to step much into the tilled soil.


The berry patch - Think about how and when you will be picking each crop before you plant. Strawberries ripen daily (and grow low to the ground), so it's important they be reachable from the path.

Guilt-free snipping -Cutting flowers, like these assorted dahlias, are traditionally grown in rows like vegetables. That way, you don't feel like you are spoiling a garden composition every time you gather some.decorative herbs A row of flowering herbs like lavender provides fragrant ornamentation and can be harvested late in the season to dry for the house.

Herb is the word - useful herbs mix up this area with mass plantings of several kinds of herbs. Some annual types such as basil and cilantro will go to seed quickly in hot weather, so include perennials like rosemary, sage and thyme.

Themes and variations - formally designed beds can be symmetrical without being mirror images. Contrast the yellow 'Russian Giant' sunflowers at upper left with a row of dark-brown 'Velvet Queen' sunflowers here.

morning glories, meet garlic. Highs and lows add some height Towering plants like these 'Russian Giant' sunflowers create a living fence. The rows of flowers will make an attractive see-through screen

All-season structure Nonbotanical elements like obelisks have an appealing formality and give composition to the beds early in the season, when seedlings are small.
not just mixed greens Introduce extra color by planting varieties with unusual-hued leaves like dark 'Red Sails' or frilly 'Lolla Rossa' lettuce.

1 comment:

Unknown said...

Hi Carly and everyone. Congratulations on a job well done with the site Carly. Your passion for writing certainly comes to the fore.

Since coming home I have found some punnets for Derek and planted out some corn, and beans. I will fire the others up tommorrow.

In the time I was away My di choggia pumpkin came up further and a mate joined him. Very exciting stuff.