Garden planning

by shannon 19. January 2010 18:52

Mid-January at Heritage Farm finds snow blanketing our garden beds, Canoe Creek creeping along its frozen banks, Bur Oak branches glistening with hoar frost, and the usual crowd hanging out at the feeder (cardinals, juncos, chickadees, goldfinches, red bellied woodpeckers and blue jays).

ABOVE: Twin Valleys Shed after snow.

Gardeners know that the best way to warm up in the winter is to sit by a fire with a new seed catalog and plan for the growing season ahead.  When the ground is fallow is a good time to ask yourself two simple questions, ‘What varieties do I want to plant this spring?’ and ‘How can I best use my garden space?’

Edible landscaping is a concept that many gardeners use to arrange their garden space.  This involves treating the landscape as a blank canvas in which vegetable plants mix with ornamentals to create both bounty and beauty.

According to Rosalind Creasy, author of The Complete Book of Edible Landscaping, an edible landscape involves “the practical integration of food plants within a decorative setting.” 

There is often a distinction between vegetables in the backyard and flowers in the front yard.  Ros disagrees with this, “It’s not the plant, its how you use it in a landscape and how well you grow it that makes a garden beautiful.” 

She should know.  Every year Ros, a board member here at Seed Savers Exchange, turns her front yard into an extremely productive and beautiful edible landscape.

Heirloom vegetables are perfect for edible landscapes because they are known for their diversity—they come in all shapes, sizes, colors, textures, and flavors - an almost infinite palate of color and taste outside your door.

We’ve picked a few of our favorite heirloom varieties you can plant to create beautiful combinations for your edible landscape.  For the next few weeks we will share some different landscapes you and your family can create at home.  We‘ll also include some recipe ideas, as well as the cost savings each combination can generate. 

Combination 1: Salsa-fy Your Yard

If you like eating: Salsa, tomatoes, hot peppers, basil, cilantro

If you want your landscape to have: Tons of hot, vibrant colors that are great for attracting hummingbirds, different textures, and lots of different heights.  If you hope to bring a little spice to your landscape this is the planting combination for you!    

Recipe and Meal Ideas

Salsa, of course, (click here to see recipes from our 2010 salsa contest), pasta and pizza sauces, stuffed peppers and tomatoes, fresh caprese salads.

Cost/Savings : What you need to grow for a family of 4

Vegetable

# of Plants*

# of Seeds Needed

Estimated Yield**

Cost

Estimated Savings***

Tomato

8-20

100

48-119 lbs.

$5.50

$114-291

Pepper

20-24

100

10-13 lbs.

$5.50

$10-15

Onion

160

200

160 lbs.

$5.50

$144

Cosmos


100

-

$2.75

-

Marigold


250

-

$2.75

-

Basil


250

2 lbs.

$2.75

$5

Cilantro


250

2 lbs.

$2.75

$2

Totals

 

 

 

$27.50

$275-457

*Information from The Gardener’s A – Z Guide to Growing Organic Food, Tanya Denckla

**Estimated yield data is approximated according to yield data from Diggers Club in Australia.

***Prices found in Decorah, IA, for mostly non-organic, conventionally grown food.  These prices are much lower than what you would pay for the specialty produce you will be growing in your garden.

Heirloom Varieties (click on each variety to learn more or order from our website)

Tomatoes: Federle and Powers

Tomatoes and peppers are in the same botanical family, making them great companions.  Federle is great for salsa and Powers is bright yellow and appetizing on your plate and in the garden.  Did we mention both are delicious?!

 Peppers: Ancho Gigantea and Thai Hot

Ancho Gigantea peppers (heat scale 2) are called poblanos when fresh and green and anchos when red and dried. They are the standard Mexican variety for sauces and stuffing with a distinctive rich flavor.  Thai Hot is a tiny and prolific pepper that packs a lot of heat (heat scale 4). 

Onions: Yellow of Parma & Red Wethersfield

Onions (very important for salsa) help deter many pests—think of it as onion breath for your garden.  Onions store well and having yellow and red varieties will add color to your garden and plate.

Cosmos: Diablo

Cosmos are a beautiful companion flower whose delicate leaves allow sunlight to penetrate to other plants and attract pollinators and butterflies.

Marigold: Red Marietta

Marigolds deter nematodes by secreting a chemical through their roots, and they add dramatic strokes of color! 

Basil: Genovese

Aromatic herbs such as coriander/cilantro and basil go well with these vegetables both in the kitchen and the garden.  This is the variety of choice for pesto.

Cilantro

No Mexican meal is complete without fresh cilantro.

ABOVE: Peppers, Basil and marigolds

Tags:

Comments

1/20/2010 12:44:51 AM #

Thank you for posting such a useful website. Your weblog happens to be not just informative but also very stimulating too. There are a limited number of people who are capable of write technical articles that creatively. we are on the lookout for information regarding this topic. We ourselves went through several websites to find knowledge with regard to this.I will keep coming back !!

mma pound for pound list |

1/21/2010 7:10:01 PM #

thanks for the great blog, and the salsa garden idea.
The winter photo with the little red barn/building is just gorgeous!

natalie aubin |

1/22/2010 4:05:18 AM #

this is really interesting... i've been meaning to do this but haven't had the time... Smile

twin mattress |

1/22/2010 11:57:58 PM #

What a great looking photo, I believe that garden must be awesome.

comforter sets |

2/6/2010 3:08:52 AM #

twin valleys looks gorgeous in the winter time...and you're right, no cilantro = no mexican meal =)

Budget Van Lines |

2/7/2010 12:18:21 PM #

great post. i like the peppers pictures. looks very fresh.

julio |

2/9/2010 2:19:33 AM #

Fresh cilantro "makes" a great salsa.  Can't wait for spring!

accident lawyer |

2/17/2010 10:45:56 PM #

It is my first time I stop by this blog. I discovered a lot of exciting stuff in your blog especially its discussion. With the numerous comments on your articles, I guess I am not the only one experiencing all of the enjoyment here! Keep up the great work.

Gregory Henderson |

Comments are closed

Comments

Comment RSS

Powered by BlogEngine.NET 1.5.0.7 - Eco Theme by n3o Web Designers