|
|
 |
INSIDE
Gardens
dont have to be straight and narrow
By Meg Olson
Spring offers
gardeners a blank canvas. A clean, empty bed is more than space
to line up your lettuces.
Seeds and transplants can be more than the start of a fine summertime
salad, but the brushstrokes that paint tasty pictures in your
garden. Throw in a few items picked up for a quarter at the thrift
store and a vegetable patch can be as eye-appealing as the flower
beds in Peace Arch park.
Break out of the lines. Vegetables dont need to grow in
rows. Try dividing a square bed into quarters with stripes of
parsley or dwarf marigolds. In each of the four boxes, plant something
different: red-leafed lettuce, romaine, spinach, and beets, for
example.
A sunshine bed is convenient and different. Draw a circle of carrots
in the center of a rectangular bed and put tomato plants inside
the circle. Lines radiating out from the edge of the circle can
separate bush beans from turnips and radishes from lettuces
Bright Lights chard makes beautiful rays for your sun. The outer
vegetables and salad greens, often with shorter growing periods
than the tomatoes, are easily accessible along the edges. Outline
a path with the halves of broken dinner plates to guide you into
the tomato patch.
Broken plates are only the beginning of the garden treasures you
can find for pennies. Old forks make perfect stakes put
a card identifying what youve planted between the tines
and stick the handle in the ground. Upend an old glass mixing-bowl
to become a mini-greenhouse that will protect tender seedlings.
Outlines and vertical supports, the foundation of a garden bed,
dont need to be traditional, or expensive.
Think of the shape you need, close your eyes and think where youve
seen that shape before. Its easier to find than you think..
BACK
TO TOP
|