With the trend toward organic gardening, homeowners are seeing the many benefits of Tulsa landscape design that includes
edible
plants, which are as pretty as they are tasty. Edible landscaping
is not just about planting a garden in your backyard, but more about including a variety of edible trees, plants, and shrubs throughout
your landscape to provide cost-effective, healthy food right at home.In fact, Better Homes and Gardens (BHG) wrote an article online about how to include edible plants in your landscaping. Here are some of the tips they gave:
A pretty plant that fits well in the flower bed or along the border is Rhubarb, especially when paired with purple-leaved Ajuga or a similar low-growing groundcover. Strawberries are another good groundcover or edging plant for a flowerbed or even planted on a sunny slope as a groundcover.
Miniature and dwarf fruit trees are available that grow about 4 or 5 feet tall and even grow well in pots. These are great for use in smaller yards. Raspberries, the article noted, do great in light to medium shade, making them easy to grow at home.Currant bushes and blueberry make great decorative (and delicious) shrubs.
Instead of traditional vines to grow over an arbor or trellis, the article suggested grapevines or short vining-type vegetables like cucumbers, zucchini, and melons. Gorgeous grapevines will grow well over an arbor, plus you can use the leaves for decoration on platters or to top cheeses and salads, BHG said.
Vegetables
often do well in containers, the article mentioned. Lettuces come in a different colors, making them ideal for window boxes and along edges of
flower beds. Hot peppers also add rich color variety to the landscape,
especially when paired with marigolds and vinca. Swiss chard is another
vegetable that comes in a “rainbow of colors” that can be paired with
other vibrant flowers to create a beautiful Tulsa landscape design.For more great edible gardening tips, check out the Edible Landscaping article on BHG. If you’d like help to incorporate more edible plants into your landscape, call the Tulsa gardening and landscape design/build experts at Oklahoma Landscape.
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