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Is Your Yard an Ornamental Desert?

Posted: 07/21/09 06:41 PM ET

If the trucks ran short of fossil fuel and the supermarkets sold off their 3 days worth of food, is there anything to eat in your garden -- or on your patio or balcony? Or in your neighbor's yard?

Most suburban yards (and government and business landscapes) are chock full of pampered plants that perform just one function: looking good.

Our hungry/thirsty lawns, fancy ornamental shrubs and flowery perennials aren't just there for us to enjoy but also to impress our neighbors and the local realtors. In fact, some real estate developments and condo associations mandate certain plantings -- almost always solely ornamental. Dare to plant a few veggies in your front yard and you may hear from the ornamental plant police!

But there's a new movement in landscaping, away from "ornamental deserts" and towards local food security. It's called edible landscaping -- or "foodscaping." These gardens combine beauty and food in an aesthetically pleasing and tasty combination.

The idea is that to be truly sustainable, we must use at least some of the land we live on to provide a portion of our own food. Local food is healthiest as it hasn't traveled for days in a truck or plane, losing nutritional value. And you can't get much more local than your own yard.

The desire to grow at least some of our own food is sweeping the country. Seed sales are up. Even the Obamas are in on the trend, digging up part of the White House "ornamental desert" to put in a few veggies.

For some of us, the goal is just to save a few pennies at the supermarket or eat fresher food. But veggie-mania is part of a larger back-to-nature trend. People are discovering that nature-connection of many kinds is profoundly healing and satisfying.

Pulling up part of your ornamental desert to grow some edibles doesn't mean you have to grow all your food yourself, of course. In many towns around the world neighborhood food exchanges are popping up, where folks share the bounty of their very different gardens. You bring your string beans, and I'll bring my apricots.

And community gardens in many towns offer places for folks without gardens to grow their tasty, healthy edibles and meet the neighbors.

It's all good medicine for our bodies, minds and souls.

For more info check out...

Heather C. Flores' inspiring book Food not Lawns, How to Turn Your Yard into a Garden and Your Neighborhood into a Community.

Food not Lawns International

 
 
 
If the trucks ran short of fossil fuel and the supermarkets sold off their 3 days worth of food, is there anything to eat in your garden -- or on your patio or balcony? Or in your neighbor's yard? Mo...
If the trucks ran short of fossil fuel and the supermarkets sold off their 3 days worth of food, is there anything to eat in your garden -- or on your patio or balcony? Or in your neighbor's yard? Mo...
 
 
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02:31 PM on 07/23/2009
There's a lot to be said for doing nothing, except mowing around the house for a fire break. That way the native plants which sustain the indigenous wildlife. Not using chemicals on the lawn lets the chipmunks eat the vegetation and make their tunnels all over the place. Any trees provide nesting places and help absorb CO2, and if they're natural to the region, they don't require fertilisers or sprays.

Milkweeds are great for butterflies and most weeds are edible for some species. In fact many weeds are edible for us, like the perky little dandelion. Not mucking about with the natural ecology has its benefits too.
03:07 AM on 07/23/2009
If a person grows nothing else in the way of edible plants, they should cultivate tomatoes! Home-grown tomatoes are infinitely superior to store-bought and, if you pick the right varieties and the best site, you may enjoy a great abundance of them. Red and yellow tomatoes are colorful and ornamental too.
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Linda Buzzell
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02:15 PM on 07/22/2009
You're absolutely right, beans77! Edible gardens can be so beautiful. I love the idea of replacing ornamental street trees with food-producing trees and having a local community group harvest the goodies for people in need or a community potluck festival.

Speaking of the prickly pear, we found a cultivar that has no spines! It was hybridized by the famous California hybridizer Luther Burbank almost 100 years ago and is happily growing in a pot near our back door. We want to use the pads to make nopalitos, a Mexican dish, and also look forward to using the fruit (tunas) for juice.

We find that growing some of our own food is a great hobby and connecting with nature in this way is so healing.
12:16 PM on 07/22/2009
There's no reason why edible gardens can't be just as beautiful. I can remember walking down an orange-tree lined street in Athens, Greece thinking how charming it was; or strolling through neighborhoods in Washington D.C. and admiring the beautiful varieties of lettuce, cauliflower, and rainbow chard that embellished people's modest front gardens. There are numerous edible flowers that can provide beautiful landscaping like lavender, thyme, dill, cilantro, day lily, squash blossom, Nasturtiums, chives, basil, and hibiscus. And if we want to be especially conscious of our water usage there is no reason why we couldn't grow beautiful chili or cactus gardens - I would highly recommend the sweet, fleshy fruit of a prickly pear.