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Edible Gardens
Cream-of-the-Crop Vegetable Gardens
Both trendy and traditional, these inspired potager designs turn the everyday vegetable garden into art for your landscape
Did you know that pottage is a thick soup? It makes sense, considering the original potagers (vegetable gardens) were created to provide manor kitchens with ingredients for ... wait for it ... thick soup. The monks of the medieval period took the potager to a new level by elevating the humble veggie garden to a piece of art.
Here are few gardening strategies and design methods based on the classic potager. You might be inspired to add a bed of cabbage or start a rooftop lettuce garden.
Here are few gardening strategies and design methods based on the classic potager. You might be inspired to add a bed of cabbage or start a rooftop lettuce garden.
A traditional potager has separate beds with one crop each. Today's potager-inspired gardens combine edibles and ornamentals but draw design cues from classic plant groupings.
When each bed is planted with a different species, it makes crop rotation easy. Simply plant potatoes, onions, legumes and brassicas in separate raised beds and rotate them so that the same type of plant is not in the same bed for three additional years. This keeps the soil fertile and helps protect plants from diseases and pests organically.
Add Vertical Structure
Many vegetables need to climb to produce a successful harvest. Use this need to provide an opportunity for beautiful design. Pea towers crafted out of sticks add a vertical element and a rustic charm to backyard potagers.
Many vegetables need to climb to produce a successful harvest. Use this need to provide an opportunity for beautiful design. Pea towers crafted out of sticks add a vertical element and a rustic charm to backyard potagers.
Adding iron structures to the potager gives a more formal look while still meeting plants' climbing needs.
A classic trellis provides vertical interest and doubles the planting space in your garden. A sweet potato vine or even a watermelon vine works well.
Potagers don't have to look old-fashioned. Pair classic potager plantings with modern vertical elements for a beautiful, functional combination.
Choosing Shapes
The monks showed creativity in the designs of potagers, creating circular, rectangular and even triangular gardens. This circular garden might not contain beds of vegetables, but it gets its design inspiration from a humble monastic potager.
The monks showed creativity in the designs of potagers, creating circular, rectangular and even triangular gardens. This circular garden might not contain beds of vegetables, but it gets its design inspiration from a humble monastic potager.
Using a variety of rectangular sizes can create interest in an updated vegetable garden.
Try Raised Beds
When soil was composed of hard clay or sand, raised beds were often the solution. Simply piling new fertile soil in a raised bed creates an instant garden without backbreaking double digging.
When soil was composed of hard clay or sand, raised beds were often the solution. Simply piling new fertile soil in a raised bed creates an instant garden without backbreaking double digging.
For a modern, whimsical twist on the classic raised bed, try galvanized watering troughs.
Potager Placement
Living in an apartment? You aren't left out of the potager party! Try growing herbs and salad greens in a planter right in your kitchen.
Living in an apartment? You aren't left out of the potager party! Try growing herbs and salad greens in a planter right in your kitchen.
If you have great sun in the front yard and shade in the back, go ahead and plant your potager out front. Arranging vegetables in orderly groupings keeps the look appropriate for a front walkway.
A rooftop is also a great place for sun-loving veggies and salad greens. Planting rows on the diagonal makes this little bed a charming throwback to the monastic potager.
Potager Plants
Various alliums (onions, scallions and chives are part of this family) are perfect choices for the well-designed potager. They add a vertical element to the design of your beds, offer sweet little spherical flowers and are edible to boot.
Various alliums (onions, scallions and chives are part of this family) are perfect choices for the well-designed potager. They add a vertical element to the design of your beds, offer sweet little spherical flowers and are edible to boot.
Herbs are a classic addition. If you are a beginner, try easy-to-grow herbs such as mint and cilantro.
Thyme is a versatile, tasty potager plant. Use creeping thyme to soften the edges of planters and paths, and sprinkle the fresh leaves on a roast chicken.
Thyme is a versatile, tasty potager plant. Use creeping thyme to soften the edges of planters and paths, and sprinkle the fresh leaves on a roast chicken.
Take a few cues from the potagers of old, integrating raised beds, crop rotations or pea towers into your designs. Stray from the design rules of classic potagers but don't forget to heed the wisdom of organic strategies that have worked for generations.
More:
Raised Beds Lift Any Garden
Herb Gardens for Indoors and Out
Unexpected Edible Gardens
More:
Raised Beds Lift Any Garden
Herb Gardens for Indoors and Out
Unexpected Edible Gardens