Monday, December 13, 2010

Oct 12, vegetable garden design


Vegetable garden design has traditionally been in long straight rows, intended for ease of cultivation and the ease of harvest.

The good news is this is no longer necessary or even desirable in our smallish urban gardens. (small compared to acres of plants anyway) If you look at more traditional smaller garden or estate vegetable gardens they were planted on several basic ideas. Smaller but somewhat wider beds.


The first vegetable garden design concept then is to make your garden beds as wide as you can easily reach into to weed and harvest. In my case, I like a 3-foot wide bed or even 30-inches.

I used to use a 4-foot wide bed and garden from both sides but I have gravitated towards narrower vegetable beds because I like the spacing better. It is however more wasteful of space.

I note that as I’m writing this (Mar 08) I’m in the middle of designing a new vegetable garden for my new property. I will likely go with 3 foot wide beds as my vegtable-growing partner and I want to be able to reach easily into the beds

Which leads me to the second vegetable garden design concept

Use flowers and vegetables in the same beds. The new beds I’m working on will combine both vegetable and flowers for the cut flower part of my garden. This means a wide range of vegetables, annuals, perennials and roses will be grown in the same beds.

These are still utilitarian beds however and this is an important point from my design point of view. I know that some garden designers are advocating the use of vegetables as ornamentals in the ornamental flower beds.

There’s a utilitarian notion to the vegetable garden that I resist combining with my thinking of how a flower garden should look. A row of lettuce used as an edging in a perennial bed is utilitarian and initially attractive but it will never replace a row of trimmed lavender..

We should treat vegetable leaves with the same interest we show to flower leaves. We should appreciate the massive flowers of squash and melons as they take over the garden. We can use vegetables such as lettuce around the flower beds but not worry about harvesting them as there is no standard of ongoing ornamental beauty being applied here.

So from a design standpoint, I believe in beautifying the vegetable garden with flowers rather than adding vegetables to the flower garden.  But it's  your garden space.

Which leads me to a third design concept. Use vegetable leaves, flowers and fruit in an ornamental manner but do not depend on them for season long interest.

A stump of harvested lettuce is neither ornamental and no longer useful in an ornamental garden.

And the main trick in all of this vegetable garden design is to learn how to grow your own plants from seed. Modern commercial horticulture will simply not give you the full range of seeds to produce the leaf colours you want. Growing from seed yourself – sowing directly into the garden – will give you a full range of leaf colours to enjoy and practice combining.


The last design thought I want to leave you with is to be bold in your planting and layouts.

There is a place for ornamental statues, glasshouses and the like in the vegetable garden just as there is a place for them in the flower garden design.

Be bold in those choices and you’ll be able to cover the sins of the plants. (the garden ornaments will attract the eye, taking the eye away from the slug-chomped lettuce, the partially harvest spinach and the flea beetle infested cabbage leaves.) :-)

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What Other Visitors Have Asked About Vegetable Garden Design

Click below to see questions from other visitors to this page...

First time garden layout, is this doable?  First time vegetable gardener. I have a bed about 20ft long 14ft wide with rows running east to west, full sun,zone 7/8. Soil is high in clay but I have ...

Four Square Vegetable garden  I was thinking about doing an old fashion 4 square veggie garden this year. Also adding a few cut flower plants. Do you have any suggestions, or any plans ...

Keeping wildlife out of garden  What type of fencing options do you have to keep deer and other wildlife out of garden? Are there plants or other deterents to use on the outside of fencing ...

fruit trees and shrubs  Is it a good idea to plant blueberries, raspberries, and strawberries in the same areas as dwarf fruit trees, or will I attract similar pests and problems?...

raised bed vegetable garden  I am trying to design a vegetable garden which will make my life easier, as I am on my own to do it, and it will includes flowers or lavender to make it ...

What vegetables to plant together  I have four 4x7 raised garden boxes/beds. I was wondering which vegetable to plant together. The four are fenced in by wooden lattice. Two of the beds ...

bed designs  I see some of the more serious gardners in my area (Northy Dakota) with raised beds (about 4-6 inch elevaed plateau sort of bed) as opposed to just a flat ...

Still have questions about which fertilizer is best?

vegetable garden design
parsley, kale, ornamental cabbage as cold-hardy ornamentals


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